- Posts: 270
- Joined: Sun Dec 09, 2012 1:23 am
After years of playing ATG, I've come to the conclusion that clutch is just dumb. It adds nothing to the game, and it causes HAL to make really stupid decisions like intentionally walking weak hitters with good clutch ratings to get to good hitters with poor clutch ratings. Yes, it's adds a layer of strategy, but it's a completely arbitrary layer of strategy.
From comments I've read from SOM, clutch is used to force players to closer replicate their real life RBI numbers. It has nothing to do with how players actually performed in clutch situations. At the most basic level, it appears to be some kind of ratio between RBI and either OPS or SLG. Consequently a player with high slugging and low RBI totals gets a poor clutch rating (see 1924 Hornsby), and a player with low slugging and high RBI gets a high clutch rating (see 1945 Dixie Walker).
The end result of this is that Hornsby gets penalized for (in real life) batting 3rd behind a couple guys with a .330 OBP, while a smallball guy like Glenn Wright gets a clutch boost because he batted behind the Waner brothers.
What value does this add to the game? What pitcher in 1924 ever thought "well, even though Rajah is hitting .424, I'm going to pitch to him anyway because he stinks in the clutch." Or, "I've got to pitch around Glenn Wright here with a .300 hitter on deck."
It doesn't make sense that we penalize cards for something that player couldn't control, that being runners getting on base in front of him. SOM doesn't do the reverse for hitters with low OBP and high run totals. Imagine Frank Crosetti getting a positive "tablesetter" roll with less than two outs because he scored a lot of runs batting in front of the Yankee sluggers. It seems stupid, so why do it on the flip side for RBI?
Anyway, consider this my petition to remove clutch settings from ATG.
And if it sounds like I'm bitter because Mantle had two clutch pop outs last night, you're correct...
From comments I've read from SOM, clutch is used to force players to closer replicate their real life RBI numbers. It has nothing to do with how players actually performed in clutch situations. At the most basic level, it appears to be some kind of ratio between RBI and either OPS or SLG. Consequently a player with high slugging and low RBI totals gets a poor clutch rating (see 1924 Hornsby), and a player with low slugging and high RBI gets a high clutch rating (see 1945 Dixie Walker).
The end result of this is that Hornsby gets penalized for (in real life) batting 3rd behind a couple guys with a .330 OBP, while a smallball guy like Glenn Wright gets a clutch boost because he batted behind the Waner brothers.
What value does this add to the game? What pitcher in 1924 ever thought "well, even though Rajah is hitting .424, I'm going to pitch to him anyway because he stinks in the clutch." Or, "I've got to pitch around Glenn Wright here with a .300 hitter on deck."
It doesn't make sense that we penalize cards for something that player couldn't control, that being runners getting on base in front of him. SOM doesn't do the reverse for hitters with low OBP and high run totals. Imagine Frank Crosetti getting a positive "tablesetter" roll with less than two outs because he scored a lot of runs batting in front of the Yankee sluggers. It seems stupid, so why do it on the flip side for RBI?
Anyway, consider this my petition to remove clutch settings from ATG.
And if it sounds like I'm bitter because Mantle had two clutch pop outs last night, you're correct...