- Posts: 2503
- Joined: Thu Aug 23, 2012 5:00 pm
Been some great strategy threads over the years. J-Pav has started and contributed to more than his share.
Sometimes you can get to feeling no matter what you say it has probably been said before. As Solomon wrote there is nothing new under the sun. Is there more?
A manager has read all the recommendations. He has the magic spending balance between pitching and hitting right. He has learned to manipulate the autodraft to get mostly what he wants. Or he has been in enough live drafts he pretty much knows who should be drafted in what rounds, etc. Yet his teams still come up short. What is left he should pay attention to? What is left for us to analyze?
How about this for an idea. The autodraft is over. Waivers have run. Preseason has passed the seasons is 35 games in. A manager looks at his team and he is right at breakeven. A little too early to throw in the towel and too early to start printing playoff tickets. In real life the season is approaching that point where the decision to be buyers or sellers is approaching. What is the strat equivalent? How does a manager tell the difference between an 18-18 team that is poised to take off and one that is treading water just waiting for a fly to light and that little extra weight sink the ship.
What could it be that veteran managers do differently that allows them to begin a playoff charge even though they are currently only in 3rd place? What fatal mistake are novice managers committing that turn their teams south? Been a lot of discussions about how too many drops at this point can doom a team. In every one of those discussions there are beacons of light point to teams who have used add/drops to turn a team around.
In this call for discussions I am not hoping to settle the question of who is right. We could all agree that 80 % of managers would harm their teams by dropping players and taking cap hits. But even then that means there are 20% of managers who have significant reason to expect they are the exception to the rule.
Sometimes you can get to feeling no matter what you say it has probably been said before. As Solomon wrote there is nothing new under the sun. Is there more?
A manager has read all the recommendations. He has the magic spending balance between pitching and hitting right. He has learned to manipulate the autodraft to get mostly what he wants. Or he has been in enough live drafts he pretty much knows who should be drafted in what rounds, etc. Yet his teams still come up short. What is left he should pay attention to? What is left for us to analyze?
How about this for an idea. The autodraft is over. Waivers have run. Preseason has passed the seasons is 35 games in. A manager looks at his team and he is right at breakeven. A little too early to throw in the towel and too early to start printing playoff tickets. In real life the season is approaching that point where the decision to be buyers or sellers is approaching. What is the strat equivalent? How does a manager tell the difference between an 18-18 team that is poised to take off and one that is treading water just waiting for a fly to light and that little extra weight sink the ship.
What could it be that veteran managers do differently that allows them to begin a playoff charge even though they are currently only in 3rd place? What fatal mistake are novice managers committing that turn their teams south? Been a lot of discussions about how too many drops at this point can doom a team. In every one of those discussions there are beacons of light point to teams who have used add/drops to turn a team around.
In this call for discussions I am not hoping to settle the question of who is right. We could all agree that 80 % of managers would harm their teams by dropping players and taking cap hits. But even then that means there are 20% of managers who have significant reason to expect they are the exception to the rule.