Wed May 20, 2015 12:16 am
Blue T,
If I understood your question correctly, then the simple answer is: there is no penalty in the sense you mean it because expected innings are factored in the SOM price. If a S7 is expected to pitch 224 innings and if a S6* is expected to pitch 240 innings, "all other things being equal", like you wrote, prices follow correspondingly. You get "penalized" (you overspend) if you don't follow that expected pattern.
I know you made the maths easy in your example, but let me add that the maths are not as simple as fatigue number X number of starts. The expected number of innings that is factored in the price depends on the quality of the card---the less on-base allowed, the slower the fatigue comes in, and the less power yielded on the pitcher's card, the smaller the chance that he gets out early because of a big inning. When absolutely everything is being equalled, the difference between S6 and S7 is roughly 20 innings for the better cards, and it goes as long as 15 innings for cards valued at around 1M-2M.
To give an example, say you limit Zimmerman to six innings max, so he pitched 6 innings max as instructed, and let's say moreover that he has over the course of the season 2 bad starts in which he gets out early, and 4 starts where he's out after only 5 innings. Zimmerman is *SP, so you get 40 starts. With such pattern, though, he sums up to 230 innings. Because of the quality of this card, though, you should expect 40 games of quality starts----according to my estimation, you should expect at least 260 innings of Zimmerman. That's 30 innings lost from what you could expect. "Other things being equal", you lose 30/260 X 5.46M = 0.63M. In this example, you basically play with a 79.3M roster.
Hope it clarifies your issue.