From another thread:
BDWard wrote:MARCPELLETIER wrote:..... I'm getting annoyed to see no improvement by the SOM management for the online game and the lack of customer services. I'm fed up to see the same loopholes continue year after year, some I was exploiting, most notably the fact that SOM does not implement the new rules they have created to restrict bullpen overusage.
Amen brother! I've been harping about "super reliever" abuses in the ATG game for years, but SOM continues to ignore the problem. No way should relief pitchers be routinely pitching 150+ innings a year, but it's not unusual to see Dale Murray and Bruce Sutter get 300+ innings.
Obviously those in the community know that I am an outspoken critic of the rules that permit such relief pitcher over usage. As we all enjoy playing this game, most managers, while acknowledging the problem, and as noted by Marc above, take an "if you can't beat 'em, join 'em" approach. Although super reliever abuse is not for me, I can't say that I really blame managers for engaging in such, as it is allowed by the rules.
The online SOM gaming community seems to be divided over whether a problem even exists. Many of the big spenders, some whom are no longer playing the game, have been vocal proponents of the super reliever, as they view it as an opportunity to continue to win credits. Their argument, in a nutshell, has been, that they spent their money on a team, this is fantasy baseball where reality doesn't matter, that there are no restrictions on hitter usage, that there is an imbalance in favor of hitting in the ATG game, and thus they should be free to use players any way they see fit, including relief pitchers. That argument is unpersuasive, as it ignores the reality that no relief pitcher EVER has been physically capable of pitching 250+ relief innings. However, money talks, and those big spenders have had the ear of SOM, while the rest of us have not.
SOM's response, or lack thereof, to the super reliever problem has been curious, to say the least. The hallmark of the game, highly touted in its advertising for 55 years or so, has been REALISM. That alleged realism has sold hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of card sets over the years and is what has us playing the online ATG game today, many of us 40+ years after that first roll of the dice. It almost goes without saying that the mere existence of the super reliever is extremely contrary to such realism. It makes me question whether SOM founder Hal Richman has any involvement in the online ATG game whatsoever.
It's not that SOM hasn't placed limits on pitchers in the past. Deadball pitchers routinely pitched 400+ innings, with some pitching 600+ innings. There are 15 400+ inning pitching cards in the ATG game, yet none of them has a chance to pitch 400 innings in an ATG league, as they are limited to starting once every 4 days. In 1972, Wilbur Wood, Mickey Lolich and Stan Bahnsen pitched most of the season on 2 days rest and SOM, in the 1972 card set, allowed them to pitch every 3rd day, but not so in the online '70s game or ATG game, where they are all every 4th game starters. Also, as a general rule (there are a few exceptions), SOM mostly limits starting pitchers with less than 200 IP to starting every 5th day. Given this history, it is especially perplexing that SOM has ignored the super reliever problem.
While the super reliever problem has been hotly and routinely debated in this forum over the years, with the topic arising about once a year and then simmering down, I can't recall SOM EVER directly commenting on the problem, and it is both arrogant and sad that SOM does not have a public forum page where it answers questions and engages in a discussion with the community on various gaming issues, including card usage. The closest SOM has ever come to acknowledging the problem is when it raised the prices on super relievers upon creation of ATG8, thinking that it would reduce the number of people using the super relievers, but that "solution" has been a miserable failure.
Since the community raises the super reliever problem from time to time and then moves on, all the while continuing to play the online game, SOM's focus (sometimes) has been on what it has concluded is the most important issue to the community, being new ATG cards, which seems to placate most of us. However, without action from SOM, the super reliever problem will not go away any time soon and is a threat to the integrity and viability of the ATG game.
Various solutions have been offered by the community over the years, the most popular of which seems to be to reduce the endurance rating of the super relievers. However, reducing the endurance rating is a band aid approach at best, as it would require repricing all of the super relievers (that won't happen any time soon) and ignores the fact that some relief pitchers can pitch longer than others.
When MLB had a problem 45 years ago resolving the DH issue, the owners comprised, and split the baby. When SOM had a problem with whether to include the extra player cards with skewed numbers in the seasonal online baseball game, it compromised, giving managers the choice of playing with the conventional card set without the skewed extra players or playing the "unleashed" card set with all of the extra players included.
In the quote that opened this post MARCPELLETIER stated he's "annoyed" and "fed up" that "....SOM does not implement the new rules they have created to restrict bullpen overusage." While I must confess that I haven't seen the rules, anything would be an improvement over the present system.
So I'm going to propose something that I've never seen proposed in the years that the super reliever debate has raged in the ATG game:
1. Publish the rules limiting relief pitcher usage for all to see.
2. As with the various choices for the player card set, DH, salary cap, waivers, drop penalty, live draft, etc., give league creators the option to use the relief pitcher limits rules.
With a choice as to which type of league to join, the managers who like using super relievers can all join the same league and fight over Murray, Sutter, Wilhelm and their corresponding sub $4 mil SPs, while the rest of us can enjoy a more realistic game. It would cost SOM virtually nothing to implement, would require no relief pitcher repricing, would require no major programming changes, as such rules are already in effect in the annual game, and would give managers a chance to dip a toe in the water to test the relief pitcher limits rules. Further, Murray, Wilhelm, Sutter, etc., would still be available for use, but would no longer be pitching 150+ innings.
The annual game already uses such rules. Most of the players in the ATG game were part of the backbone of SOM's success starting many years ago and we are not second class citizens. We deserve the chance to use the same rules used to improve the annual game.
I hope you are listening SOM. MARCPELLETIER, DOHowser1, bontomn, Casey89, supertyphoon, BC15NY and I are just the tip of the iceberg among those dissatisfied with the lack of relief pitcher usage limits.