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- Joined: Tue Oct 09, 2012 3:49 pm
J-Pav wrote:Fun With Conventional Wisdom
1. HAL sucks with platoons and pinch hitting.
2. Do not use Very Aggressive runner settings.
3. HAL steals home and third too much.
4. Don't use 3s up the middle.
5. You need a big bat to stir the drink.
6. A $0.53 backup has no place in the everyday lineup.
7. Don't overspend on pitching, $32 mil is plenty.
8. Catcher's who are 4s with a +1 arm are probably good to avoid.
9. High injury guys are also good to avoid.
10. Sit high injury guys prior to beginning the playoffs.
http://onlinegames.strat-o-matic.com/team/1391740
I had fun reading this. Not sure I agree that "conventional wisdom" had it that we shouldn't overspend on pitching. It's more your own secret formula which insisted on this---and you probably remember well how I disagreed with that part of your formula. I've seen too many teams with 35-40 M spent on pitching succesful to support your conventional claim. There's surely an upper limit---you should probably not spend high money on both a set-up And a closer if you're spending 35m on your starting pitchers---but that upper limit is certainly higher than 32m.
About your first claim: Hal does suck with pinch-hitting, but this shouldn't prevent someone against going with platoons. Since the gold old days of cristano, we know that teams with lots of platooning can overperform. There's moreover some synergy to combine platooning with high-injury ratings.
About injury-prone players, there are so many bargains in that category, I have no clue why people are so careful about using them.
As for the other claims, I've written in the past that in some contexts, 3-rated infielders are the best buys--Walker in power stadiums---SOM has never been better to balance defense and offense in their ratings, in my humble opinion. But I still find that 1-rated often make more sense--you need hitters in the #8-#9 spots who will have 150 less at-bats than your leadoff, so it makes sense to put a guy whose salary will be more on defense than on offense.
So bottom-line, I stand on the side of conventional wisdom on 3 claims, so I guess this makes me more iconoclast than most managers. I do believe in claim #3, but I agree with you that going conservative might be overshooting. I do believe that a gm maximizes his line-up by chasing at least one big bat and putting it at the clean-up spot. Can you win without one? Of course, just like you can win by mixing *Sp/non SP--- but not optimal--might cost you the 2 wins you lack to make the playoffs one given season. And finally, I do believe you should sit your injury-prone players beofre playoffs begin if you wish to win the finals---other than laziness or missing the monday cut to adjust the lineups, I can't see why one coach shouldn't.