- Posts: 569
- Joined: Thu Aug 23, 2012 3:53 pm
Nap Lajoie at 10.64 is the not the most underpriced card in the set. Trying picking him and losing him 30 games a season and see what that does for your 80 million team. At 12.89 million he would never again be used at 80 million and probably not at 100 million. For the most part this is a fool’s errand as there are so many parks the players who play the most games and pay for statistical data to find the most underpriced players relative to a park, and then analyze a league to get the most underpriced players to play at a park relative to the league would be at a huge advantage for a couple of months, everyone would notice the trend and then everyone will copy, top players get mad again that their "secrets" are known and the process will begin again.
I did a study of all the 2019 Barnstormer 100 million Small ball teams that won their division in Barnstormers - I came up with 22 teams exactly one used Nap Lajoie at 10.64 million(not Riggo who used the 8.78 version). None used Joe Morgan at all any card, None used Joe Dimaggio (any card), 7 did use the 8.78 Lajoie, and I don’t think that is a highly desired card and 4 used the 6.55 Honus Wagner (Riggo was one use and he also had Lajoie, obviously a big leg up), what stuck in my mind was the fact Honus was able to go 159 games on Riggo’s team, normally if you get an injury for 15 games a couple of times your playoff chances are severly reduced, which is why the 10.64 is not used on winning teams, they don’t want to put 10% of their cap into a player who might miss 30 games.
Ashburn was used 5 times, no one used the Tommy Davis 4.34 card, Joe Kelley, who does not make your list was one of the most popular of the winning teams at 6 teams, I surmise since he cannot be injured your system may not account properly for the fact the average player can get 162 games out of him. 4 people used the Cristano stalwart Bobby Wallace.
The pitchers most frequently used were King SIlver and Sandy Koufax at 6 each. Maddux and Alexander were 6 each, Pedro any card was on two of the teams and Pinero was on only two of the teams for a combined 11-14 record. Gil Heridia was on one team he was 1-11, on Hitmen's team that had Pinero at 6-8 but got bailed out by Doug Brocall who despite having an ERA @ 5.24 in Forbes in relief one full point over the team average, was able to save 23 of 28 games. Atley was also on one of the playoff teams.
I did a study of all the 2019 Barnstormer 100 million Small ball teams that won their division in Barnstormers - I came up with 22 teams exactly one used Nap Lajoie at 10.64 million(not Riggo who used the 8.78 version). None used Joe Morgan at all any card, None used Joe Dimaggio (any card), 7 did use the 8.78 Lajoie, and I don’t think that is a highly desired card and 4 used the 6.55 Honus Wagner (Riggo was one use and he also had Lajoie, obviously a big leg up), what stuck in my mind was the fact Honus was able to go 159 games on Riggo’s team, normally if you get an injury for 15 games a couple of times your playoff chances are severly reduced, which is why the 10.64 is not used on winning teams, they don’t want to put 10% of their cap into a player who might miss 30 games.
Ashburn was used 5 times, no one used the Tommy Davis 4.34 card, Joe Kelley, who does not make your list was one of the most popular of the winning teams at 6 teams, I surmise since he cannot be injured your system may not account properly for the fact the average player can get 162 games out of him. 4 people used the Cristano stalwart Bobby Wallace.
The pitchers most frequently used were King SIlver and Sandy Koufax at 6 each. Maddux and Alexander were 6 each, Pedro any card was on two of the teams and Pinero was on only two of the teams for a combined 11-14 record. Gil Heridia was on one team he was 1-11, on Hitmen's team that had Pinero at 6-8 but got bailed out by Doug Brocall who despite having an ERA @ 5.24 in Forbes in relief one full point over the team average, was able to save 23 of 28 games. Atley was also on one of the playoff teams.