rburgh wrote:Please define what you mean by "not performing up to expectations."
Does Morgan not walk 100 times, steal a lot of bases with a high success rate if asked, play great defense, and hit double digit HR's for you?
Do you think that defense is overrated? Don't pay for it. I'm sorry that some of your favorite players have great defensive ratings in Strat.
This is not a fan site. This is a competitive game where the idea is to assemble the best possible collection of gae numbers for your team within the parameter defined by the league settings and the strategic decisions made by your competitors in the league.
Personally, I detested Pedro Martinez as a player. He was a pu$$y who headhunted on the mound without fear of retaliation because he seldom had to bat. But I use him a lot because his cards are good values and I win with them.
Craig, I'm more than a little bummed by your response. I would have "expected" a bit better from you, from what I have seen in leagues I've been in with you.
We all get it, this is a numbers-crunching game, and the best here are probably those that replace "Joe Morgan" with "xxx". Believe it or not, I play the game by reading the cards (though you might not be able to tell by the results I get). Am I in your league when it comes to reading the cards? Not by a long shot. And I bow to your abilities to find the right combinations that allow you to be on top much more often than not. And I mean that sincerely; I take no small pleasure in finishing above you in a league (which I believe might have happened once, maybe twice).
But this thread was just a way of saying that baseball is a sensorial game. Sounds, smells, sights. We all are intimately linked to the game by those. Yes, if any game is number-centric it is baseball, even more so today. But for me (and this is the historian and the little boy speaking), the player represented on the card is missing an element less of fantasy than of a contextual reality. I'll continue to play Morgan's card (though maybe not Rose's, because I can't seem to get it to perform even to its numerical expectations) because it's good. But forgive me when I see in a corner of my mind that left elbow flapping while you see a series of numbers. It also makes me wonder what other small tics earlier ballplayers might have had that established them in a visual reality of their time that is lost forever (the visual historian speaking now). I would have loved to have seen some of those slick fielding firstbasemen of the thirties (if the cards are to be believed), Kuhel, Judge, Suhr, Sheely, these are just names and numbers for us today, the ultimate "xxx"s. But what might we be missing? Did you know that Lu Blue was a chinchilla farmer after baseball or that he started one of the first baseball schools?
https://www.newspapers.com/clip/4923319/lu_blue_tiger_star_of_20s_dies/All that to say, Craig, that again I admire your abilities here, especially that dispassionate way you have of severing yourself from the "reality" that led to the card. I understand this is not a fan site, otherwise I would have Hal Lanier on every one of my teams. All of us approach this game differently with varying degrees of success. You let me dream, I'll let you crunch.
All good wishes,
Bill