These guys seem to know the exact probability numbers for every player in every park---In my mind I see them manipulating spead sheets of data for every league-
I don't want to downplay exaggeratedly the role of spreadsheets, but for my part, I use only one, which I take around for all my leagues, and honestly, if I were to lose my file, I would easily live by what I published in March and made available to everyone and follow these as guidelines (see
HERE in these forums or in the newsletter published by Wolfman Shapiro).
Back then in March, I already announced that Arrieta and Greinke were worth in the 11M zone, even above 11M when adjusted to high-power parks. Encarnation, Kinsler, Hosmer and Heyward were already identified as some of the biggest busts. As you might note, these players are all in the 7M-9M range. In this year set, all players between 7M-10M appear to me overpriced, except Bradley JR (probably because I highly value his -3 arm in centerfield) and Stanton, who is ijury-prone (more on this below). Even Cruz, who I know is quite popular, appears to me somewhat overpriced, although his value does cover the difference when he plays dh in a high-power stadium (contrary to Encarnation, who is a bad value in any stadium). This said, some players in that price zone are still worth buying, for example in extreme stadiums (ex. Gordon in AT&T becomes an okay value, or Cruz as dh in power stadiums as mentioned), or when you need a cleanup hitter (Ortiz is still a better choice as clean-up than, say, Calhoun, even if Calhoun is priced accordingly to his value), but overall, a rule of thumb is to try spending your 80M intelligently while staying away from players ranged in the 7M-10M.
To illustrate further my point that my spreadsheets don't really add to what I already published in March, I provided in Wolfman's newsletter my top value picks for Miller Park which I summarize below, and what you see in bold are the players I have on a current team that started in December, 9 months later, a team that leads the league (with stoney18's team) at 58-38: (
http://365.strat-o-matic.com/team/1442913):
Top value players by Position for Miller Park, as announced in the ultimate Strat newsletter:
c-top value over 3M
D'arnaud 0.73M value over his pricetag
c-top value under 3M
Conger1b-
Blanks 1.12M value over his pricetag
2b- top choice: Schoop; second best choice:
Travis 3b- top choice: Duffy second best choice:
Wright ss-
Correa of: top choices among 3M+: Pence,
Grichukof: top choices under 3M+: Stubbs,
Taylorcf: top choice: Trout, but
McCutchen wasn't far behind.
dh: top choices
Santana,
K.DavisPitching-wise, I drafted 4 SP of the 10 value I had set for Miller park (J.Ross, Rea, Tropeano, Blanton, which I set free later in the season).
So, I might sound like I have no challenge, but my ideal team for Miller (or Citizen Ballpark, which is my current stadium) was already set up in March, and I am just following the published guidelines I had already set, and have success following it. This is not to say I haven't learned anything since I've been playing this season. For example, I realized since March that I had overestimated perhaps a bit the value of clutch, so Wright is now my top choice over Duffy at 3b, and I realized that picking up a good platoon mate for Schoop is difficult, so Travis has moved above him in my ideal team.
Of course, there is a common factor to many of these players, and also the reason why I was able to draft almost all the players I wanted (Trout is really the only one I miss in the draft for that Citizen team):most of them are injury-prone players. Somewhat, GMs are allergic to injury-prone players, it seems, but they are really, all other things being equal, the best values in this year set (and in past years as well). They are great values because I believe SOM has set their prices assuming a very bad replacement player, and the key to my success I believe is to find good, but cheap, replacement players, like Sogard at 2nd, Romine at 3b/ss, which are still much better than the average 0.5M player, and allows me spend more money on the pitching.
The other important bargain area in the current pricing system are relievers. Relievers pricetag are set for a relatively low (in real-life normal) usage, probably around 100 innings (maybe 120 innings). If you plan to use a reliever for more innings, it's almost certainly a good deal to open the bank account and spend 5M for that reliever. In my current team, I have Familia who is on his way to pitch 162 innings. Truth be told, he struggled a bit, and he is probably the reason why my team is
only 58-38.
Re-reading this sound, I feel I might sound conceited, but what I mean to say, if I summarize, is that my "success" is in fact very easily explained:
1) I like injury-prone players
2) I like high-priced relievers and know how to use them with proficiency
3) I stay away, the best that I can, from players in the 7M-9M range and pitchers in the 6M-8M, and in turn do the maximum to draft any of the top 5 players and top 4 pitchers
And I would conclude that, other than these three rules of thumb, I feel that the current pricing system is relatively fair and one could rely on it and select players based on sound GM managerial skills (which players is best fit to play in a pitcher's park, which players make most sense to lead-off, to hit clean-up, what kind of pitching roster would make most sense...)