- Posts: 1855
- Joined: Fri Nov 02, 2012 3:53 pm
l.strether wrote:l.strether wrote:Regardless of what lineup they go with, Epstein has done an excellent job rebuilding the franchise and putting them in the position to compete for many years to come. Having Lester as their bonafide ace and Joe Maddon at the helm will certainly help.
Forget Baseball America, I called that two days ago...
As to Niners' interesting notion, I think all of our views on MLB have been somewhat shaped by SOM. I know I, myself, sometimes catch myself telling my wife, friends, or kids that Crawford is a 1 shortstop or that Morse is a 4 outfielder. On the good side, it has taught us a lot about team building, the value of OBP, and shaping team building to stadiums. On the bad side, it makes us look at MLB through rules and perspectives not applying to it.
I'm not critiquing Keyzick here, but Online SOM does undervalue left-handed pitchability pitchers like Miley often. To major league clubs, a left-handed innings eater like Miley is a valuable and desirable commodity. To Online SOM, he's a non-dominating pitcher worth less than 2Mil. So, using SOM to inform our views on MLB is fine; we just need to be wary of letting them shape them.
It's not the online game entirely for me anyway. I first started playing Strat in the mid 90's in a FTF C&D league made up of ten teams drafting from 24 of the 30 MLB teams, and let me tell you, I saw first hand LHSP's get absolutely pulverized. I guess the format would be pretty similar to the online given the number of teams and the cards in play, the rosters were closer to all-star type than real MLB so maybe that's why my experiences were like this. Bottom line was, unless you had Randy Johnson or the occasional Chuck Finley or David Wells you did NOT start LH pitchers there were simply to many lefty killers in that era.