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- Joined: Fri Feb 27, 2015 8:50 am
dennispetroskey wrote:Thought I'd share some concrete numbers demonstrating the value of platooning when it works out well:
I'm in a '70s mystery league with a lineup I pretty much run out every day except for a platoon at third base with Wayne Garrett and Rico Petrocelli sharing duties. I think I've lucked into their best years -- they have a combined salary of $5.39 million and through 114 games total:
369 AB, 96 H, .260 AVG, 20 2B, 4 3B, 24 HR, 74 RBI, 60 BB
At the same $5.3 million, Graig Nettles averaged on his card:
575 AB, 147 H, .256 AVG, 22 2B, 2 3B, 26 HR, 89 RBI, 63 BB
At the same rate through 575 AB, Garrett and Petrocelli will have:
575 AB, 149 H, .260 AVG, 31 2B, 6 3B, 37 HR, 115 RBI, 93 BB
Those are very comparable to Mike Schmidt's numbers, and he's valued at $9.13 million.
Of course, this isn't a revelation -- Earl Weaver was killing the league with effective platoons 40 years ago. But seeing the concrete numbers helped me clarify the value of finding two effective halves to make a superstar whole when it can work.
I'd love to hear from others who benefited from powerful platoons.
http://onlinegames.strat-o-matic.com/team/1386314
Hershberger/Lum platoon in LF in a 60's Mystery league ($2.22 million total cost, both 2 fielders with -4/-2 arm respectively);
579 AB 62 R 158 H 16 2B 4 3B 17 HR 93 RBI 53 BB 68 K 1-1 SB 5 E .273 AVG .334 OBP .402 Slug
This cheap platoon, Tug McGraw with 5-1 record and 30 saves at $1.51 million with only 4 blown saves and Mudcat Grant hurling a 16-5 record as a starter with a salary of $1.08 million helped me win the title.