- Posts: 1906
- Joined: Wed Aug 29, 2012 9:13 pm
Notice that the phrase trash talking did not appear as the topic subject.
Just want to begin share a few thoughts on the semifinal leagues currently in progress (note the great restraint shown by my not calling them lottery leagues). I was browsing through the semi-finals league 2, where Outta Leftfield is currently leading. I was really struck by the prevalence of small ball teams as well as the seeming ascendance of what some folks are now calling Cristano pitching staffs, in reference to his 4 dominant starters from the 2017 finals. I have seen many similar teams proliferating in leagues outside the BS tour, over the past year. I also have tried a couple myself. Here is one currently in progress, the finals start tomorrow night: https://365.strat-o-matic.com/league/438213. This is actually a pretty high class league, a lot of very good managers in this league, two of whom are currently near the leaders in BS Semifinal 2 league referenced above. My +195 is very similar to what Cristano obtained in last years finals as is the W-L record, although I did not use a small ball park as he did.
As a strategy the Four Aces approach has it's limits. To be maximally effective there needs to be a dh and also not a lot of high offense ballparks which can send even the very best pitchers to an early shower. This year, is looking like a no dh league is quite possible, so we may not get to see this approach tested again in the 2019 Finals. Since the last tour ended, I spent the first few months using only bomber teams, mostly Fulton, testing my theory about such teams being a viable antidote to the Four Aces strategy as there was certainly no shortage of such teams after Cristano's championship win.
Without going into my conclusions regarding the efficacy of my anti- Aces strategy, I can state that the 4 aces strategy is a very solid approach but it certainly is no holy grail of SOM team composition. It is a very good strategy when the conditions are right and gives one a strong shot at making the playoffs. What I haven't seen much of is teams winning 105+ games with this approach.
I also predict that the 2019 semifinals of the BS Finals will include last year's semifinalists with the possible substitution of djmacb for one of us. As I see it these are the best managers in the current event and I look forward to matching wits with them. Then again, one never knows who will win it in a given year. There have been quite a few of the previous winners who were not elite managers but still managed to win. Clearly for many, that is an incentive to participate in the Tour.
Just want to begin share a few thoughts on the semifinal leagues currently in progress (note the great restraint shown by my not calling them lottery leagues). I was browsing through the semi-finals league 2, where Outta Leftfield is currently leading. I was really struck by the prevalence of small ball teams as well as the seeming ascendance of what some folks are now calling Cristano pitching staffs, in reference to his 4 dominant starters from the 2017 finals. I have seen many similar teams proliferating in leagues outside the BS tour, over the past year. I also have tried a couple myself. Here is one currently in progress, the finals start tomorrow night: https://365.strat-o-matic.com/league/438213. This is actually a pretty high class league, a lot of very good managers in this league, two of whom are currently near the leaders in BS Semifinal 2 league referenced above. My +195 is very similar to what Cristano obtained in last years finals as is the W-L record, although I did not use a small ball park as he did.
As a strategy the Four Aces approach has it's limits. To be maximally effective there needs to be a dh and also not a lot of high offense ballparks which can send even the very best pitchers to an early shower. This year, is looking like a no dh league is quite possible, so we may not get to see this approach tested again in the 2019 Finals. Since the last tour ended, I spent the first few months using only bomber teams, mostly Fulton, testing my theory about such teams being a viable antidote to the Four Aces strategy as there was certainly no shortage of such teams after Cristano's championship win.
Without going into my conclusions regarding the efficacy of my anti- Aces strategy, I can state that the 4 aces strategy is a very solid approach but it certainly is no holy grail of SOM team composition. It is a very good strategy when the conditions are right and gives one a strong shot at making the playoffs. What I haven't seen much of is teams winning 105+ games with this approach.
I also predict that the 2019 semifinals of the BS Finals will include last year's semifinalists with the possible substitution of djmacb for one of us. As I see it these are the best managers in the current event and I look forward to matching wits with them. Then again, one never knows who will win it in a given year. There have been quite a few of the previous winners who were not elite managers but still managed to win. Clearly for many, that is an incentive to participate in the Tour.