freeman wrote:First, you provided no support for your assertion that play-off performance is a significant mark of the quality of a team.
Yes, I did, I explained exactly why it is. You, however, did not. You just gave an insufficient explanation of your position with no evidence. So, you are in no position to be criticizing my sound argument on the matter.
Secondly, it is not determining who the best manager is in the abstract--it's determining who the top 36 managers are as evidenced by their performance over 4 events...which is best determined by regular season performance for the most part.
No, it is not the 36 managers as best determined by regular season performance, although the current point system worked hard to make it that way. It's for the managers who accomplished the most over the 4 events, and part of that accomplishment is playoff performance and title wins. You, for some reason have forgotten the purpose of SOM--as in MLB--is to win championships, not rack up regular season wins.
Thirdly, I disagree about managerial strategies in the play-offs. If pitching staff management mistakes, line-up management mistakes, and strategy mistakes are important in a 7-game play-off why wouldn't that be even more reflected in a 162 game season? Even if you make mistakes in managing in a short play-off that is more likely to be overriden by luck in a 7-game play-off than your strategic mistakes over a year.
I'm sorry, if you can't see that a game screwed up by bad management in a 7-game series is more costly and destructive than in a 162 season, then you're not looking at the basic math. I know you can. A game lost in a 7 game series is inherently more costly--because of percentages--in a grouping of 162 games than in 7...end of story. And just because luck can be more damaging then also, that doesn't take away from the fact that bad management in a 7-game series will be more costly than in the regular season.
And with regard to randomness I am talking about random chance, the fact that statistical variances from what on average should be expected are far greater in a 7-game play-off than in a 162 game season. You can just get lucky in a 7 game play-off; not true in a 162 game season.
Ok, thanks for clarifying. Firstly, randomness is just as likely to occur in a regular season game as it is in a playoff game. In fact, the shortness of a 7-game series opens up greater possibility for randomness
not being a factor than in a 162 game season. And, as I said before, randomness does not take away the importance of tighter management with greater expertise in the playoffs.
I am not opposed to giving a reasonable bonus for winning a championship. But it should be carefully thought out so as to not give too much of advantage. The current system is fine. Put it to this way--given the commish invests a lot of time to make this possible, unless the point system is clearly unfair I don't think it is cool to complain too much about it.
At least we agree that there should be a point system without giving too much advantage. That's solid common ground. As to not questioning the commish on his policy, that's wrong.
We are the participants who pay $100 to play the series, we should be able to have our input. J-Pav certainly didn't just let GBrookes have his way with his point system last year. Greatly disagreeing with it, he made around 8 posts against the policy...as was his right.
Good players will advance--it's like the 69th team complaining they should have gotten into the NCAA tournament. Anyone who wins a championship in this tournament and does not make the top 36 because they did not get bonus points would be whining in my view. Just win and you need not worry about the fine details of the point system. Let every commish put their own spin on the point system within reasonable limits. J-Pav's system is within those limits.
It's not just a matter of who advances, it's the matter of a fair system rewarding players for their accomplishments. Making the playoffs and (especially) winning the title are great accomplishments that should be recognized and amply rewarded. And again, J-Pav felt free to actively criticize GBrookes' point system last year, so potential participants in next year's tournament should feel free to do so, too.