- Posts: 557
- Joined: Sat Mar 05, 2016 2:33 am
thanks for an interesting discussion. i took some bumps early on but now i expect to make the playoffs in most leagues or at least come close and have finally been racking up some championships. here are my observations (based purely upon the small sample size of my experience):
most surefire way to secure a playoff spot, but NOT to win a championship, is to have a team tailor made for an imbalanced ballpark (e.g., stack a bunch of lefty power hitters at Shea '71). my history with this sort of team is to have the best record and run differential in the league then get smoked in the first round. i'm getting more sustained success having a few key players (maybe one star and a few value guys) exploit the ballpark and then even out the roster for better road success.
fielding: i like to think of the overall times each position is tested. a 2b/ss gets (very roughly) twice as many chances as 1b/3b, so if you have a below average ss, good fielding at 1b and 3b can balance that out. same goes for CF and the corners. a good fielding center fielder and mediocre corners is similar to 2 good corners and a mediocre cf. since there are some reasonably priced 1b, 3b, rf and lf with decent offense and great defense, you can go for offense up the middle and punt on defense there and still be ok.
also of note is how many fielding (x) rolls are on your pitchers' cards and at what positions. if your pitchers don't strike guys out and you have a bunch of 3 and 4 range fielders, you're screwed. don't trust his ostensible WHIP.
i agree that chasing homeruns leads to frustration. i've had teams that lead the league by over 60hr but it was basically 8 guys with 50 solo homers each and several teams ended up scoring more than mine. get guys with OBP to set the table!
i still can't bear NOT to spend on my bullpen, but i've gotten smarter with that. one strategy is to have 2 good starters that can be expected to finish a fair share of games, 2 crappy starters on a quick hook and a 6 inning max, and one stud reliever at r3 or better to finish the crappy starter games. (one step further, although it robs you of one start by an ace in the regular season: stagger the rotation to good-bad-good-bad so the reliever gets rest in-between). this can get you into the playoffs but you better get lucky with those crappy starters when you get there.
in general i disagree with the 'don't spend on your bullpen' philosophy for the simple reason that outs are cheaper in the bullpen. you just need to spend smart on your bullpen.
trying to rely on righty- and left-specialists ends in tears.
learn the tricks to manage your bullpen so the $.50 guys filling out your roster don't get into games (won't get into it here but much has been posted in the past about it)
something else i've done, but don't know if its the most efficient strategy, is immediately filter out all position players with an injury of less than 1* when looking for my starting lineup. now i don't have to spend any money at all on the bench (there are decent enough pinch hitters and runners at around $.50) and am spared the heartache of kal daniels going down for 15 games.
fact of life is the more i play the more i recognize the need to actually look at the details of the player card - the stats, Bal L or Bal R, and even the colored bar do not tell as accurate a story as i would like.
most surefire way to secure a playoff spot, but NOT to win a championship, is to have a team tailor made for an imbalanced ballpark (e.g., stack a bunch of lefty power hitters at Shea '71). my history with this sort of team is to have the best record and run differential in the league then get smoked in the first round. i'm getting more sustained success having a few key players (maybe one star and a few value guys) exploit the ballpark and then even out the roster for better road success.
fielding: i like to think of the overall times each position is tested. a 2b/ss gets (very roughly) twice as many chances as 1b/3b, so if you have a below average ss, good fielding at 1b and 3b can balance that out. same goes for CF and the corners. a good fielding center fielder and mediocre corners is similar to 2 good corners and a mediocre cf. since there are some reasonably priced 1b, 3b, rf and lf with decent offense and great defense, you can go for offense up the middle and punt on defense there and still be ok.
also of note is how many fielding (x) rolls are on your pitchers' cards and at what positions. if your pitchers don't strike guys out and you have a bunch of 3 and 4 range fielders, you're screwed. don't trust his ostensible WHIP.
i agree that chasing homeruns leads to frustration. i've had teams that lead the league by over 60hr but it was basically 8 guys with 50 solo homers each and several teams ended up scoring more than mine. get guys with OBP to set the table!
i still can't bear NOT to spend on my bullpen, but i've gotten smarter with that. one strategy is to have 2 good starters that can be expected to finish a fair share of games, 2 crappy starters on a quick hook and a 6 inning max, and one stud reliever at r3 or better to finish the crappy starter games. (one step further, although it robs you of one start by an ace in the regular season: stagger the rotation to good-bad-good-bad so the reliever gets rest in-between). this can get you into the playoffs but you better get lucky with those crappy starters when you get there.
in general i disagree with the 'don't spend on your bullpen' philosophy for the simple reason that outs are cheaper in the bullpen. you just need to spend smart on your bullpen.
trying to rely on righty- and left-specialists ends in tears.
learn the tricks to manage your bullpen so the $.50 guys filling out your roster don't get into games (won't get into it here but much has been posted in the past about it)
something else i've done, but don't know if its the most efficient strategy, is immediately filter out all position players with an injury of less than 1* when looking for my starting lineup. now i don't have to spend any money at all on the bench (there are decent enough pinch hitters and runners at around $.50) and am spared the heartache of kal daniels going down for 15 games.
fact of life is the more i play the more i recognize the need to actually look at the details of the player card - the stats, Bal L or Bal R, and even the colored bar do not tell as accurate a story as i would like.