- Posts: 16929
- Joined: Thu Aug 23, 2012 4:23 pm
See league Google doc at
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/ ... 1367205067
I have thoroughly enjoyed the AL and NL round robin tournaments, even if my W/L records might not show a good reason for that. It's been fun to remind myself about some of the legendary stars of the game and to put them in a lineup every day. Even so, it was troubling to leave some great players sitting on the sidelines since we had no room to draft them all.
Likewise, the 2-4-6 league has been entertaining as a first look at the 6-team format -- especially since I plan to win the post-WW2 era season. Once again, though, great players have not seen action, since there were only so many spots available.
So here's a new idea: How about a 20th century keeper league? This would be a 6-team league, playing 10 seasons, decade-by-decade:
1. 1909 and earlier
2. 1910-1919
3. 1920-1929
4. 1930-1939
5. 1940-1949
6. 1950-1959
7. 1960-1969
8. 1970-1979
9. 1980-1989
10. 1990 and later
We would use the ATG8 set (or whichever set was the current one as a new season started) and use the DH rule for the 1970s and later (when it was adopted by the AL).
There would be at least 164 hitters and 114 pitchers available in every season, so there would be plenty of players for 6 managers to draft. Likewise, there are almost 400 players who are carded in more than one decade (along with a few carded in 3 decades!), so keepers would be an important part of the league.
Managers would announce their keepers prior to the start of each annual draft and then complete their 25-player rosters during the draft. As is my custom, each season would have a $200 mil (effectively unlimited) salary cap and the drafts would start with no draft clock in the first round and a two-hour clock in every round after that.
What do you say? Want to go back to the 20th century?
1. tcochran
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6.
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/ ... 1367205067
I have thoroughly enjoyed the AL and NL round robin tournaments, even if my W/L records might not show a good reason for that. It's been fun to remind myself about some of the legendary stars of the game and to put them in a lineup every day. Even so, it was troubling to leave some great players sitting on the sidelines since we had no room to draft them all.
Likewise, the 2-4-6 league has been entertaining as a first look at the 6-team format -- especially since I plan to win the post-WW2 era season. Once again, though, great players have not seen action, since there were only so many spots available.
So here's a new idea: How about a 20th century keeper league? This would be a 6-team league, playing 10 seasons, decade-by-decade:
1. 1909 and earlier
2. 1910-1919
3. 1920-1929
4. 1930-1939
5. 1940-1949
6. 1950-1959
7. 1960-1969
8. 1970-1979
9. 1980-1989
10. 1990 and later
We would use the ATG8 set (or whichever set was the current one as a new season started) and use the DH rule for the 1970s and later (when it was adopted by the AL).
There would be at least 164 hitters and 114 pitchers available in every season, so there would be plenty of players for 6 managers to draft. Likewise, there are almost 400 players who are carded in more than one decade (along with a few carded in 3 decades!), so keepers would be an important part of the league.
Managers would announce their keepers prior to the start of each annual draft and then complete their 25-player rosters during the draft. As is my custom, each season would have a $200 mil (effectively unlimited) salary cap and the drafts would start with no draft clock in the first round and a two-hour clock in every round after that.
What do you say? Want to go back to the 20th century?
1. tcochran
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
Last edited by tcochran on Fri May 27, 2016 2:18 pm, edited 20 times in total.