I agree with doing pitching differently. 6.25 mill for an R1 that does not close seems excessive. Only good two relief pitchers with a bad defense and pretty good starters but for whatever reason not pitching that many innings means the other team is facing tired good relief or bad other ones too much (I am guessing it's mostly a settings problem-the really good ones I am putting do not relieve before F8--but bad defense probably also contributes)The defense is a problem with the one-run losses. 68% X chance is not a good enough D in my IMHO (of course people will win with really bad defense, I am just saying that there are maybe better strategies on average) I had a team that had an overall record of 82-80 with a plus 73 differential but went 16-30 in one-run games, with a 68% on X chances. So to sum up:
(1) bad defense leads to more likelihood of a cheap run late
(2) A bullpen that does not have enough good relief late in games (given that there are only two R1s and the bad defense and starter settings)
(3) I kind of wonder about having lefties in high-leverage situations late. There are guys with huge power against lefties so Perez has great numbers but you get on a guy like Valenzueala's card and that doesn't matter. He gave up 26 hrs in 169 games when he gives up nothing on his card. And a solo hr can decide things.
Here is my team--which is very different than the one being examined--but does have a similar bad defense and lefties pitching in a lot of high-leverage situations:
https://365.strat-o-matic.com/team/fielding/1517918