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l.strether wrote:LMBombers wrote:Well that isn't the case unless you only play in a certain type of park. If you know who the top whatever players are for a HR park they are not the top whatever players for a pitcher park so you would need to evaluate all over again. Same is true for other types of extreme parks. Each will have their own set of top whatever players.
That isn't what Valen said. He said: " you know who the top whatever is before you even start looking at cards." He didn't say anything about parks, he just said the ratings guide tell you who the "top whatever" are, period.
Even telling managers who the best players are for each park is a lot, since managers are almost always putting their teams together for particular parks. You combine that with telling managers every player's OBP total, and the ratings guides are providing substantial information.
It doesn't come right out and say " so and so is best in Coors" but it does list, by position, who the top 48 on base guys are the top total base, top Pure HR's top Ball Park hr's both left side and right side for each position. With the spread sheets you have to manipulate Excel to do that yourself, but if you know Excel at all it's pretty easy to do.
Lists all this info for pitchers too, fewest Ballpark HR's, fewest clean HR's, Highest gba's(double play chances), so it's pretty east to extrapolate who benefits from playing in the Bam boxes and which pitchers shouldn't pitch in them etc.
These charts are in the back of the ratings books after each team by team breakdown of every card is presented.
As has often been said it is a HUGE time saver and a fantastic tool to understand the current set and which players should be effective.
Sure you don't want that free peek?