- Posts: 1594
- Joined: Wed Nov 07, 2012 4:58 pm
- Location: Dover, Delaware
I’ve done a bunch of teams like this for this season, with varying degrees of success.
What I’ve learned:
A. It’s WAY better to protect your pitchers in the strongest pitchers park you can get (AT&T).
https://365.strat-o-matic.com/team/1583844
Unless you ignore defense completely and try to ramp up SLG instead:
https://365.strat-o-matic.com/team/1589646 (400 doubles and .472 SLG in AT&T )
B. In a hitters park, your offensive surplus likely won’t overcome your pitching deficits no matter their output, whether it be HRs or hits.
https://365.strat-o-matic.com/team/1591376 (900 runs and 450 HRs in a super competitive vet league)
https://365.strat-o-matic.com/team/1586130 (930 runs and 1700 hits)
C. If you even make it that far, you’re really vulnerable to a short series in the playoffs.
https://365.strat-o-matic.com/team/1589140 (despite nearly 1000 runs scored and 400+ HRs).
To answer your questions, I found four R2’s maxed out to the hilt to be necessary. Your defense is solid behind $5 mil SPs, but it will likely hurt your low budget staff, where your ballpark is already stretching them out too far. No catcher’s arm also hurts more than you know. Matchup pitching doesn’t work well without favorable matchups. Most teams won’t lean with more RH bats, so I’m not sure how well you will do there.
Not a lot you can do from here except observe and draw your own conclusions.