Harold Homers wrote: 1) how do we manage players who will miss a season (not carded) =does the commissioner maintain a list -do these players count against the team roster spots.
You can keep players on your roster who are not carded, but they DO count as one of your players. In practical terms, Strat requires a team to load 25 guys at the start of a season, so you can never have more than 3 non-carded ones.
Non-carded players will be listed as such in the rosters on the league Google doc.
Harold Homers wrote:2) as has been already discussed clarity and consistency in the number of players that can be drafted -for example I have an addition 1 round draft choice in 2009 does that mean I will be drafting 5 or 6 players in that draft
There will be
120 draft picks in each of the future drafts. You can grab as many of them as you'd like, as long as you have space available on your roster. If you do not have space available, then you would forfeit the pick when it rolls around, if you had not already traded it away.
Harold Homers wrote:3) How do we plan to manager and self regulate -"dumping" lets say that during the last week of the season two teams are close to having the "worst record" and one team purposefully sets their lineup with its worst players so that they can get the 1 overall choice in the next draft -what is our league position and guidance on this.
On the one hand, it's certainly poor form to try to take a "dive" like that -- but on the other hand, we've all seen HAL let unlikely wild-card teams win the playoffs, too. We can't control either individual managers or HAL in cases like that.
In any given draft, there are likely to be a certain number of players who will be outstanding choices. In a typical 12-team keeper, I always expect the top 5 or 6 picks to be truly worthwhile. With the talent more scattered in a 24-team league like this, I imagine that the first 10 or 12 picks will be well worth having.
Further, as we'll see in the first couple of seasons, there are a number of managers who have been playing the long game in this initial draft. For example, as I posted once before, I have no interest at all in the 2007 or 2008 seasons. I've been letting others fight over the stars for those years, while I packed my roster with guys who will shine in a 2009 - 2014 time frame.
I will be playing my best players in 2007, but my team will still be terrible. In a couple of seasons, though, when other stars are retiring, my guys will shine (I hope!)