
- Posts: 1134
- Joined: Tue Apr 02, 2013 12:40 am
I haven't played enough online to know if the pricing of players is generally correct, but I assume there is a formula to it and some of the smarter guys here should be able to pick the formula out, more or less.
I would like to know if the pricing formula includes the park the player played in, or is based on a neutral park--say a 8 singles and 10 homerun park---(I assume an 1-8 singles park is neutral as there are 2 singles on the cards if you ignore this BP effects for the board game.)
Players like Phillips 2013--4.8 is too much I think--make me wonder about pricing--I don't think he has enough BP hrs for his price even for for GAP--though I tried him on one team as I missed on the guy I wanted--he was awful, OB below .250 for the season.
I'm still on the fence as to most saying that one fielders are overpriced--to me some are, and some aren't just like the rest, and sometimes it depends on where they bat in the lineup--for instance a one fielder that has low ob.pct as a hitter low in the lineup is more valuable than if he hits up in the order, and a poor fielder that is a good leadoff guy will get more ABs--somewhat making up for the bad defense.
I can see why some cards are over or underpriced generally--Venable comes to mind for me--he is a steal for the price in Progressive. My limited playing tells me the park and the cards you pick for the park are paramount.
On another note--- I think luck is a bigger factor than some realize---playing the CD rom version of the game you can replay seasons and/or drafted teams over and over -- I have done this dozens, even hundreds of times for the same teams and settings and have found that +/- 12 game swings for any team in a 162 game season are pretty common, probably falling into a 50% range of a bell curve.
I would like to know if the pricing formula includes the park the player played in, or is based on a neutral park--say a 8 singles and 10 homerun park---(I assume an 1-8 singles park is neutral as there are 2 singles on the cards if you ignore this BP effects for the board game.)
Players like Phillips 2013--4.8 is too much I think--make me wonder about pricing--I don't think he has enough BP hrs for his price even for for GAP--though I tried him on one team as I missed on the guy I wanted--he was awful, OB below .250 for the season.
I'm still on the fence as to most saying that one fielders are overpriced--to me some are, and some aren't just like the rest, and sometimes it depends on where they bat in the lineup--for instance a one fielder that has low ob.pct as a hitter low in the lineup is more valuable than if he hits up in the order, and a poor fielder that is a good leadoff guy will get more ABs--somewhat making up for the bad defense.
I can see why some cards are over or underpriced generally--Venable comes to mind for me--he is a steal for the price in Progressive. My limited playing tells me the park and the cards you pick for the park are paramount.
On another note--- I think luck is a bigger factor than some realize---playing the CD rom version of the game you can replay seasons and/or drafted teams over and over -- I have done this dozens, even hundreds of times for the same teams and settings and have found that +/- 12 game swings for any team in a 162 game season are pretty common, probably falling into a 50% range of a bell curve.