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Radagast Brown wrote: I tell you what, I think it is smarter to not make any moves than to make as many as I see some guys make.
This was from your original post, Radagast, and it was what I was responding to. You argue that it makes more sense to make no moves than the many moves you've seen "some guys make," regardless of what cards those managers were "dealt." This is what I argued against in my earlier posts and what Phenomenal argued against in the posts above. The problem with your argument is you allow no contingency for the particular cards a manager has. If many of a manager's players have hit on lousy cards, then of course he should replace them with other cards once he has ascertained (or surmised with great probability) that those cards are lousy...and he might have to replace THOSE cards if they turn out to be lousy. This process required for success in this situation would require many moves. And yet, based on your argument above, you think it would be better for the manager to stand pat with his crappy cards then to make the many moves needed to give him a winning team with mostly good cards....which just isn't logical.
Making few moves (if dealt mostly good cards) can lead to a winning Mystery Games season, and making many moves--even as many as you've seen guys make-- (if poor cards require it) can also lead to a winning Mystery Games season; however neither approach is inherently better than the other.
Last edited by l.strether on Wed Feb 12, 2014 9:20 pm, edited 1 time in total.