l.strether wrote:blue turtle wrote:The ratings guide does not "evaluate" players. It merely provides the data from the cards.
I will agree with that evaluating cards might be the most important part; I would take it that last step and say it is the most important part of the game. I also consider it the most fun. But if the guide's authors did the work of counting the HR chances for a HR 1-5 on 2-11, on 2-12, and a 1-7 chance on 3-6, all they have done is save me time doing the math myself, not whether the player is a HR threat or a mediocrity.
The ratings guide absolutely evaluates players.
No, it doesn't. Your statement, as absolute as it is, is also nonsensical. Counting outcome probabilities is not analysis. Heck, it is barely statistics. SOM counts the number of outcomes. Period. Common sense would tell someone a home run is worth more than a single; statistical analysis would tell one how much more the home run outcome is worth. Statistical analysis of player cards is a
huge part of player evaluation. When ratings do their statistical analyses, they tell managers the optimal players to choose so a manager doesn't have to do so himself. So, telling managers which players are the best statistical options
is evaluating players, and it is what complete strat players do on their
own.
Almost none of us used outside ratings guides when we played the Strat board game as kids. We evaluated the players cards on our
own, as we should have done. It made evaluating players on our own part of the Strat skill set, as I mentioned in an earlier post. That was also the way it was on online SOM at the beginning. As I said before, now some managers value winning itself more than winning on their own and being complete strat players, so they use outside ratings guides.
Some of us have fuller lives now than we did when we were 9 years old. If someone wants to count the 21 single chances on Hanley Ramirez's card for me so that I can enjoy SOM, my job, and my family, well, they are providing a useful service that a nine year old can. So I guess by your standard, the SOM ratings disk usage means I am not a complete Strat player. Guess I will take solace on the attempted slight with the reality of being a more complete human being.You apparently use an outside ratings guide, yourself, to evaluate players. As I said before, that doesn't keep you from being an excellent
partial player. But, as you yourself said, evaluating players is the most important part of the game. So, by using an outside ratings guide, you cannot be a complete player who succeeds at the most important part of the game on your own.