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- Joined: Fri Aug 24, 2012 8:24 am
J-Pav wrote:http://onlinegames.strat-o-matic.com/team/1103604
I went with a McCutchen-Trout-Cabrera concept team early on. Who would think you could ever get those three on one team!? Scored 855 runs. That's 100 more than necessary. Low dollar pitching gave up 836 (in Turner, even). That's about 200 too many. It's pretty hard to win anything doing that. So I stopped!
Thx for posting your draft. Getting your first seven must've been pretty surprising, but it's nice when it works out like that. Unfortunately only one net run isn't going to get things done, as I found out as well.
This brings things back to the draft.
Rowdy,
Getting exactly what you want probably means getting all 25 picks! What do you think is the answer to your question,
"Is the first waiver pick worth missing six of your first ten?"
Or anybody else as well...
My own feeling is that, whatever you managed to do in the auto-draft, and then in the waiver draft - take a look after the waiver and frenzy, and see what your divisional rivals teams look like. Without necessarily giving up home ballpark advantages, I like to remodel my team during the preseason, to take advantage of whatever the divisional rivals might be doing. So if they have lineups with 6 RHB, I like to have R balanced pitchers, usually RHP. If they have lineups that feast on RHP, then I'll maybe drop 1 or 2 of my RHP and add some LHP. Same thing with batters. Fine tuning your lineup/pitchers to what your rivals are doing can add a few wins per season, IMO.
(By the way, I have my own theories about the auto-draft, which have worked well for me - drafting based on relative scarcity. But my main point is in the previous paragraph).
I haven't really tried the secret formula, yet, J-Pav, but it really fascinates me. I will try it sometime in the next month or 2. In terms of the logic behind it, I think it probably involves taking maximum advantage of the hitting at the top of the batting order - especially since the top 1/2 usually gets 1 extra plate appearance in most games. So, you get more bang for your buck with some higher $ guys at the top of the order, and therefore maximize run production per $ spent.
The hitting seems straight forward to me. I'm interested but less clear on how the formula maximizes value for pitchers. Could it be that merging my "matchup" theory with the "secret formula" might be a nice combination? Interesting stuff!
Thanks again, J-Pav!