- Posts: 959
- Joined: Mon Aug 27, 2012 12:01 am
There's always debate on when to cut bait on players during the season. My argument has always been - mid-level players who may not be the right fit should be looked at to swap out, but studs who start slow should not get the quick axe. Here's an example:
http://365.strat-o-matic.com/team/sim/1420859
140M league (Dream Team theme) - I had pick #3 and selected 3-Finger as my #2 starter. Here's his stats through 15 starts:
W L S IP H R ER BB SO ERA WHIP
5 8 0 89.5 126 95 89 45 38 8.95 1.91
I stayed with him rather than cutting him for a starter in the 9-9.5M range. Here's his stats since then:
W L S IP H R ER BB SO ERA WHIP
18 7 0 196.5 181 102 87 60 81 3.98 1.23
There's always a lot of board kvetching about bad luck, whoa is me, this one game or series, this guy stunk for me. Most of the time, over a season, the rolls even out, and a stud will perform close to his expected level. Does that always happen? No, but the odds of a worse player outperforming the stud from that decision point forward is not likely unless there was a park / team / league fit issue in the first place. Just wanted to share....
http://365.strat-o-matic.com/team/sim/1420859
140M league (Dream Team theme) - I had pick #3 and selected 3-Finger as my #2 starter. Here's his stats through 15 starts:
W L S IP H R ER BB SO ERA WHIP
5 8 0 89.5 126 95 89 45 38 8.95 1.91
I stayed with him rather than cutting him for a starter in the 9-9.5M range. Here's his stats since then:
W L S IP H R ER BB SO ERA WHIP
18 7 0 196.5 181 102 87 60 81 3.98 1.23
There's always a lot of board kvetching about bad luck, whoa is me, this one game or series, this guy stunk for me. Most of the time, over a season, the rolls even out, and a stud will perform close to his expected level. Does that always happen? No, but the odds of a worse player outperforming the stud from that decision point forward is not likely unless there was a park / team / league fit issue in the first place. Just wanted to share....