keyzick wrote:If they're not consistent in unleashed v leashed, in terms of Games, ABs, or IPs, or any other qualifier, how can their decisions be considered anything other than arbitrary? It doesn't need to be a 2 AB v 500 AB swing to be arbitrary...they're making inclusions/exclusions based solely on their own discretion, otherwise we wouldn't be surprised when someone is or is not carded.
Actually, if their decisions were entirely arbitrary, we
would see 2-8 AB players included in the regular set and 500+ AB players in the Unleashed set. We don't and they're not. You misunderstand the actual meaning of "arbitrary." Arbitrary, by definition means:
" 1.Determined by chance, whim, or impulse, and not by necessity, reason, or principle. Or...
2. Based on or subject to individual judgment or preference."
Considering SOM
does apply certain principles--such as the 30 IP minimum--and reason in deciding where to assign its players, the first definition doesn't apply. The inclusion of whim, chance, or impulse does
not make SOM''s process arbitrary, unless you can determine they are the actual determinants of their decisions. I, myself, wouldn't pay for their product if I thought they were.
Considering SOM has many people working on its player assignment process, the second definition of "arbitrary" doesn't apply as well.
People need to remember that
most professional decisions are made through a mixture of principles/rules and well-informed judgments of the moment than can wrongly appear whimsical. Physicians, teachers, lawyers, and financial analysts all reasonably allow themselves to stray from or modify known rules or principles, using their personal judgments. That does not make their decisions arbitrary; it makes them complex
That same complexity applies to SOM's current decision process until somebody can actually prove it's arbitrary. Nobody has done so yet.