- Posts: 2143
- Joined: Tue Aug 28, 2012 5:32 am
Ninersphan wrote:
You know, ninersphan, I thought we were gonna be polite and agree to disagree, but since we're being frank now, I think your opinion on the matter is full of sh-t, too...but I'll give you a polite response anyway. The problem with your argument is you don't recognize the significant difference between variations in simulated game play from actual (Major League) play and variations between the models of a simulation (i.e. players' cards) and the actual things they represent(i.e. the players themselves and the seasons they had)...and how the latter allows for less deviation from the first in preserving minimal (or acceptable) semblance of reality.
The first variation (game play) can and will be greater because, as you yourself noted the simulation itself (The Strat Game) is considerably structurally different from actually Major League play. As you noted, there are only 12 teams and there are salary caps; there are also allowances for 17 hitters (among other differences); therefore, it is an accepted given that game play will vary from what it is simulating...we all know that such variations are unavoidable. So relief pitchers throwing 200 innings may be a deviation from major league play, but it Is an unfortunate example of variation produced by simulation, a variation that actually allows the game to be more successful in avoiding other variations in its simulation of gameplay.
Allowing players with minimal at bats and production to appear in Strat as statistical leaders or significant contributors would not have such an innocuous effect on the game's simulation and it's acceptable semblance of reality. Strat is a fantasy simulation, but it is a fantasy simulation of a real world. Its stadiums represent real stadiums, its teams represent real stadiums, and its players represent real players who had real seasons What makes Strat a successful fantasy simulation is its ability to most successfully reproduce those elements of that world. And if the players and the seasons they have in strat do not adequately represent actual players and the seasons they actually had, then Strat fails to adequately represent the world it simulates and fails as a simulation. Allowing players with minimal ABs and production to become statistical leaders or significant contributors would radically damage that minimal degree of representation that makes Stat successful...Matt Dominguez hitting 35 homers stretches that degree of representation; Pete Kozma leading the league in hitting snaps it.
Anyway, I hope you yourself enjoy that CD Rom you recommended, since your argument begs for a degree of "realism" and 'game" in Strat as well, albeit a different one than mine.
WOW,
I'm not that wordy, so probably not that smart ( doff of the cap to you) but I'll give it a go, the reason I don't have a problem with Kozma and the others on the leader board is simple, his card is the way it is, 'cause that's the way he produced from the previous season. Was his (their) appearances limited ? Yes, but as you stated, the game doesn't allow for that. And, who's to say that if his appearances weren't limited in real life, that he wouldn't have gone on to produce a break through season?? But that's not even the real reason I'm against keeping them all in.
My biggest problem is, there is no set criteria for inclusion/exclusion, it's a constantly moving target. I've already shown you cases you stated were mistakes by the powers that be. And simply because of the mere fact that from a marketing standpoint, now that they've gone down this road, they have to make at least 8-12 cards Unleashed to justify having a separate set which leads to problems like last year where maybe 4 guys were truly unleashed ( Moss being the poster child based on past years, yet he wasn't) and the rest didn't.
If you just include everybody, there's no mistakes. The salary is great equalizer, price these cards high enough and they won't come into play in most leagues, just the high salary cap ones. And therefore won't be on most of the leader boards. Problem solved, your happy, I'm happy. There's no disagreements.
And you still haven't addressed the how RP pitching 200+ ( in the early years it was not uncommon for Gagne to be getting 250+ in some leagues) is any more "realistic" then Pete Kozma being on some simulation stats leader boards for batting average.
And 1 more time. the game in this format is not a simulation. The ONLY time it's a simulation is when you use the cards exactly as the real season played out, limiting at bats, innings pitched and setting match ups exactly as they happened. Once you mix the players up, it becomes a big game of "what if", in in a game of "what if", why does it matter who is on a leader board??
Sorry it just doesn't matter to me.
Great discussion though, thank you for your responses. [/quote]
This is a great discussion, which is ironic since it all started with Scooter Gennett.
First of all, I completely agree with you about criteria. Strat should either set fixed criteria for inclusion or establish general criteria with established principles for changing that criteria. However, simply including all players and pricing them accordingly would not make everyone happy since, as has been stated before, many of us do not want to see players with minimal production and appearances in major league play coming in and dominating Strat play, regardless of their salary.
I did address how a reliever having 200+ IP was more "realistic" than Kozma leading the league in hitting; you need to go back to my last post and read again. If you have problems with the arguments I make there, I would be happy to address them.
Finally, Stratomatic is ABSOLUTELY a simulation. Simulation by definition means "reproduction of the essential features of something," or an "imitation;" it is NOT an exact reproduction of something. Stratomatic baseball doesn't exactly reproduce major league baseball but it absolutely, if not entirely or entirely successfully, simulates major league baseball and major league baseball play. So the players actually do matter. Nobody would want to play this game if all the cards were merely assigned numbers and given random data on those cards; a major part of the game is that minimal semblance between the player cards and the actual players they represent..........and I'm sure it even matters to you, perhaps to a lesser degree.