Jeepdriver wrote:I think it had to do with the S4 & below SPs. Before they realized their mistake of leaving them in as SP/RP instead of solely RPs, they expanded the pitcher limit to 11. They fixed their mistake, but left the pitcher min. at 11, therefore the min. 25 man roster. Plus a lot of other stuff messing around with tiredness, etc. So basically it's a mess that we are going to have to adjust to. Starters do not seem to be going as deep into games, even the S6 & above.
After taking the time over the weekend to split my new 2018 cards I'm not so sure I even like where Major League baseball has gone with respect to pitchers, particularly starters. Trying to find 5 stable SP on many teams was very depressing. I don't blame Strat at all, but their ratings and settings definitely reflect the decline of pitchers' stamina.
The "Golden Age" of starting pitching in Major League baseball was certainly the 1960s and 70s, with each team having at least 2 or 3 real workhorses. Athletes today in all sports are without a doubt bigger/stronger/faster/more durable than ever before, but why have Major League pitchers gone in the opposite direction? Is it as simple an answer as managers believing that they're smarter than everyone else? Did it all start with Tommy Lasorda and his 5-man Dodger rotation in the late 70s?
Where have you gone McNally, Cuellar, Palmer, Dobson? Strat Nation turns its lonely eyes to you...