Eddie E wrote:I am not sure of the best way to do this, but I agree whole heartedly that pitchers get hosed in Strat. A hitters card is all hitting results so the best hitters have at least a 50% chance of affecting the result. A pitchers card has 30 chances for the X chart which has nothing to do with how good the pitcher is. 30 chances = 9.2% of the pitchers card so the pitchers only have a 40.8% chance of affecting the outcome.
I feel the top 5% of pitchers should get a boost to their card somehow.
Yes, pitchers have Fielding X chances on their cards. However, doesn't actually matter. You could put them on the hitters' cards, and it would work out the same. There are enough chances on the pitcher's card to differentiate between a great pitcher and a horrible one.
While the original poster indicates it's homerun-hitting teams that dominate (usually playing in homerun friendly parks), I'd be willing to bet if you had the same rosters and ballparks in real life, the results would be very similar to SOM. I've seen more than one good pitcher come to my Colorado Rockies only to be done in by Coors Field. So put a team in a homerun friendly park and load it up with more homerun hitters than is possible to do in real life, then yes hitters would dominate in real life as well.
The way to make pitchers matter more would be to limit the salary cap to 60 (which is possible) or 70 million. This would make it difficult to stack a team with homerun hitters without completely gutting your pitching staff. However, I don't think too many managers would be willing to have less money to spend on their rosters.