1970s - Reggie Jackson
Posted: Sun May 28, 2017 5:14 pm
I am pretty new to this game, still doing inefficient things like mixing SP* and SP. A question about Reggie Jackson. Have been in a handful of 1970s mystery leagues and have looked through others and he's a guy who often seems to get cut. His numbers are bad at the time and he ends the year as a free agent.
Is his a card where you just have to have some patience, ride out the down times and count on the numbers being there at the end of the year? Or is he one of those players like Jim Palmer, Pete Vuckovich or Rusty Staub who never seems to meet the numbers on his card, even when it's not his one bad year? At least those three examples have struggled in leagues I've been in. Mike Schmidt could be another but he's mixed in a good year or two.
I have the Jackson card right now and he has 1 double in 40-some at-bats facing pretty much all RHP. On one hand I wonder if that is his bad year when he hit only 21 doubles but on the other trying to reach a conclusion on a sample size of 40 at-bats probably isn't the smartest thing to do, either. The problem I have also found after drafts is that left-handed sluggers on the waiver wire are pretty scarce. Usually a guy like Jim Northrup is about the best left.
Don't know if questions from newer members get answered on this board (or if we're forced to fend for ourselves, not sure of the unwritten rules here) and you have to be more of a veteran or contributor but thought I would give it a try.
Is his a card where you just have to have some patience, ride out the down times and count on the numbers being there at the end of the year? Or is he one of those players like Jim Palmer, Pete Vuckovich or Rusty Staub who never seems to meet the numbers on his card, even when it's not his one bad year? At least those three examples have struggled in leagues I've been in. Mike Schmidt could be another but he's mixed in a good year or two.
I have the Jackson card right now and he has 1 double in 40-some at-bats facing pretty much all RHP. On one hand I wonder if that is his bad year when he hit only 21 doubles but on the other trying to reach a conclusion on a sample size of 40 at-bats probably isn't the smartest thing to do, either. The problem I have also found after drafts is that left-handed sluggers on the waiver wire are pretty scarce. Usually a guy like Jim Northrup is about the best left.
Don't know if questions from newer members get answered on this board (or if we're forced to fend for ourselves, not sure of the unwritten rules here) and you have to be more of a veteran or contributor but thought I would give it a try.