Sat Mar 11, 2017 2:05 pm
I don't view Strat as baseball, but as part math puzzle, part exercise in study and concentration.
And therefore I don't see any problem with a manager that, say, has four 10 million dollar 9* starters, two 0.5m starters, and three or four 0.5m relievers. Or a team that uses 5 or more platoons. Or that uses nine lefty hitters in Dunn. Or that use 9 small ball hitters in a small ball park. Or use Murray/Miljus/Wilhelm/Adams for 400 innings. There are lots of ways to try to seize an advantage over your league-mates. None of these team designs are "realistic," but they sure can help the manager in his/her attempt to field a competitive team.
That's regarding overall team design. With specific players, we all try to find the niche to a player that we deem optimal. Billy Hamilton 9m makes often makes sense to bat leadoff. Wallace 2.95 makes to bat lower in the order (except, perhaps, against lefties in very low caps). Brown 5.07 makes sense to use only against righties, to the maximum extent you can manipulate that. Your worst * starter makes sense to place as your #4 starter especially in the playoffs. The optimal use of Murray is not hard to figure out either. The card is begging to be used as much as possible without getting him fatigued.
Switching gears, I recognize that there are multiple views/desires for what Strat is/could be, what Strat represents, or what we want Strat to be. So I agree with the great suggestions put forward earlier in this thread on rules to facilitate limits on relief use: No DH leagues, in-house rules that limit relief use, higher caps.
I would add a few more: if you are concerned about use of Murray that you don't like, draft him in the first round, and then use him in a pure way, maybe 50 games / 50 innings. You'd get the use a great reliever, and you'd avoid another manager using him for 300+ innings.
Other ideas:
1) make starters cheaper (overall)
2) make duration in relievers much more expensive .
To me, #2 has always struck me as an avenue I would (try to) push Strat toward if I was concerned about relief innings of high-end high-duration relief pitchers.