- Posts: 418
- Joined: Wed Sep 05, 2012 5:00 pm
asgreenberg wrote:I'll try to post the team later as it's after 4am in the east. Which page would I link to?
I'm not trying to duplicate stats so much as noticing a huge anomaly. A slumping hitter who's had ups and downs I can handle (programmatically, so could their engine, allowing both hot and cold streaks to regress more slowly to the mean, but I recognize they don't do it that way), but it's unlikely that downs would be the first and only thing I would get unless I was doing something wrong, which is my fear.
I knew streaks were possible but when the whole team is this lousy for 21 games (6-15, 3-0 followed by 3-15) I feel like I have to blame myself. Real managers are fired for better (1985 Yogi Berra?). That's not .475 versus .525; that's historical futility on a '62 Mets scale. Remember also it was against other novices, which does not bode well once I'm against seasoned players. I recognize I would get better over time but it's an expensive hobby to wake up to a sweep every morning for months (years?) until I do. I can enjoy it even if I don't win, but I won't enjoy it if I can't possibly win.
Thanks, all.
Well, 6-15 is "only" futile on a 2014 Arizona Diamondbacks level, not a 1962 New York Mets level, so you are no Casey Stengel...and he was a HOF manager!
I am a seasoned player, both online now, and in the tabletop game since 1974. I win enough to keep coming back, but I also find my team getting the 4-15 collapse in the homestretch of the Players Championship. It happens, and the small sample you experienced is painful. But it sounds like you would have the time and interest to "study" the player cards and evaluate who can do what.
My personal thought is that the All Time Great games (which must be what you were playing) is a very difficult game to play as a beginner/casual player. Sure, you get all the greats, but you wind up with the weird results because the competition is so skewed, so losing because Walter Johnson pulled a 6.00 ERA or Ty Cobb hit .230 becomes that much more noticeable (and 21 games offering an even smaller sample worsens it). If you decide to buy in with a team, my advice would be to try the latest set of cards (based on the 2014 season). I think the learning curve is aided by simple following of baseball in the media, even if headlines do not always translate to dice rolls.