Sat Sep 30, 2017 3:50 am
I did it once with Wagner, not every day, but I went from the 5L card to the 2R back and forth. I first did it without much thinking about it, but when I heard it made some GMs unconfortable, I did not repeat it. This said, I agree that a 999M league has this flavour of "anything goes" that a 225M does not have.
don`t forget though that the number of transactions allowed in a season is limited.
There are also a few rules that appear to me questionable regarding pitcher usage that we should decide as a community if we accept them or refused them based on unwritten rules. I`ve seen all the usage described below at least once in the context of ATG.
ACRONYM: RRS (Relief-Relief-Starter)
WHAT IT IS: For an important series, a manager sets his rotation so that he can use a fresh SP/RP as a reliever for the first two games of the series and still use him as a starter for the third game.
STATUS: unethical. It is forbidden by the Strat book. Book says a reliever should rest after two games (at most, under strict usage, a reliever can be available for a third game of relief, but he should not be available to start for the three games). The pitcher can start in fact because of flaws on the on-line game.
ACRONYM: SRS (Start-Relief-Start)
WHAT IT IS: A SP/RP starts game 100, comes in relief in game 104, and then starts game 105.
STATUS: Very borderline, but I think we must accept it. The reason I think we should accept it is because sometimes this behaviour is created by HAL, not by the manager, even though most of the times, it is forced by the manager.
ACRONYM: RSO (Relief after a short output)
WHAT IT IS: A SP/RP starts game 100, but has a very short outing (example 2 innings). He comes in relief in game 103. And he is fresh for his regular start in game 105.
STATUS: Acceptable. It is within the rules of the STRAT manual. The Strat rules allows a manager to use a pitcher after 1 day of rest if he's removed before the end of the first inning, or after 2 days of rest if he's removed before the end of the 3rd or 4th inning (can't remember exactly). Moreover, the pitcher has a full rest before starting his next game.
ACRONYM; OSR (Open-Spot-for a Reliever)
WHAT IT IS: This rule is beneficial in leagues where cap is no limit (or is played as if no limit). I don`t want to give too much details but with some tweaking and some critical free agents transactions, there are ways to force HAL to start up to 3 games by a super-reliever instead of a legitimate starting pitcher.
STATUS: Unethical. Relievers starting a game should be kept for emergency only, such as when an injury occurs.
ACRONYM: ISR (Injury-Spot-taken-by-a-reliever)
WHAT IT IS: This is similar to the previous usage, except that the starting pitcher is lost to a long injury instead of being dropped to the FA pool. Again, with a few twists, a manager can set his rotation so that a reliever starts the game instead of the 5th starter.
STATUS: Within the limits of ethics. Otherwise, we are forced to accept that a reliever starts a game when injury occurs for rotations based on 4-day rests (when no other starting pitcher is available) while we wouldn't accept it for rotations on 3-day rest.
ACRONYM: EDT (Extra-day-per-trade)
WHAT IT IS: The pitcher fatigue status gets waived when traded. Thus he can pitch on consecutive days for two different teams.
STATUS borderline I guess. The advantage is small if done only once. But it would be highly unethical if two owners agree to repeat that. Both owners could otherwise end up with 54 starts of either Pete Alexander or Walter Johnson if they accept to trade one for each other instead of 41 starts of either alone.