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- Joined: Sat May 03, 2014 4:49 pm
I’m not sure how the # home run rating works. The rule is copied below. Example: if a righty hitter’s card is
# HR 1-5 but the ballpark is rated 1-12 for righty homers, are there 2 rolls or does the ballpark rating control? In this example, if the first roll is 6 does the batter not get a homer or does he? I had assumed Hal did a second roll so if the original roll was a 1 through 5 then there would be a second roll based on ballpark rating. But that’s not what the rule seems to say. But if that’s the case why didn’t Strat just have a simple # rating rather that the # 1-5 or 1-2 etc?
# -- Ballpark home run reading. An additional roll determines whether there is a home run or a flyout. Obviously, the probability varies by ballpark and whether the hitter is lefthanded or righthanded. The original result listed is ignored -- in effect, the result will be determined by "rolling against" the ballpark's home run rating (a random number from 1-20). If the number rolled is equal to or lower than the ballpark's rating for a left- or righthanded hitter, it is a home run.
# HR 1-5 but the ballpark is rated 1-12 for righty homers, are there 2 rolls or does the ballpark rating control? In this example, if the first roll is 6 does the batter not get a homer or does he? I had assumed Hal did a second roll so if the original roll was a 1 through 5 then there would be a second roll based on ballpark rating. But that’s not what the rule seems to say. But if that’s the case why didn’t Strat just have a simple # rating rather that the # 1-5 or 1-2 etc?
# -- Ballpark home run reading. An additional roll determines whether there is a home run or a flyout. Obviously, the probability varies by ballpark and whether the hitter is lefthanded or righthanded. The original result listed is ignored -- in effect, the result will be determined by "rolling against" the ballpark's home run rating (a random number from 1-20). If the number rolled is equal to or lower than the ballpark's rating for a left- or righthanded hitter, it is a home run.