My own opinion is that the top 4 players (Trout, McClutchen, Tulowitski, and especially Stanton) are great deals this year. Stanton for one stands as one of the best buy in my rating system, even in neutral stadium. Brantley is another good buy if your team plays in a small-ball stadium.
After that, there are very few players in my opinion who are good buys in neutral stadium among the 7.5M-9M range. Some are good values in specific stadiums (Harrison in small-ball, Bautista in a homerun stadium with 30% of lhp, to give a few example). The good buys come rather in the sub-7M.
The only team I had without any of top 10M+ players is currently playing under .500.
Otherwise, I always had the chance to have at least one of these five players in my Tour teams, and I believe this explains in part my success in the Tour (currently in first pick, but likely to be eliminated in the semi-finals).
I even had a team with three of them (McClutche, Tulowitski, and Stanton), in a 60M team--that's 33M, more than 50%, nothing short!! And it went 96-66
http://onlinegames.strat-o-matic.com/team/1402659STEVE F wrote:. A lineup is like a chain, spend too much on any one link and you'll have more weak links which cause the "chain" to break down
I kinda disagree with this. I think that you can produce more runs if you concentrate your best offensive weapons in the top 4 spots and spend disproportionally on those spots, at the cost of having very weak players in the bottom spots of the lineup, rather than spend equally on all spots.
First, because of synergy---I believe there is a greater chance to spread runners and leave them on-base if you have an equilibrated lineup.
Second, because the first four spots have more at-bats than the last four spots. To illustrate, let's say you have 40 at-bats in a given game. If your lineup is composed of 4 above average players and weak players, you end up with 20 at-bats from your star players---50% of at-bats even though only 44% of your players are above average.
Third, by spending on an expensive star, I believe you have a greater access to the better bargains in a set. For example, by spending on Trout, I could go for S.Rodriguez (only 2.38M), a real bargain for right-handed stadium, and then settle for a cheap platoon of Chavez and Espinosa (with Rodriguez moving from second base to third base). If I don't get Trout and select, say Ozuna, I might be "forced" to spend more money on a second baseman who is not nearly as fit for my stadium as Rodriguez.