- Posts: 4253
- Joined: Tue Mar 19, 2013 2:08 pm
STEVE F wrote:And better yet, why can't we just have access to ALL the cards? It's a freakin' computer!
ALL the cards? Yikes!
Baseball-reference.com indicates that there have been 19,690 total individual MLB baseball players since 1871. I don't know how many full seasons these 19,000 players produced, or how many of these seasons have been turned into Strat cards, but the number is bound to be in the tens of thousands. Perhaps Andy could tell us the exact number of Strat cards currently in existence, if it's not too much trouble to count them.
There are currently, I think, more than 5,400 Strat cards. Many of these cards are never used. What if providing every Strat card ever made brought this total to 35,000 cards? Would that make for a better game? I'm not so sure.
Just how realistic a possibility is it that this onslaught of cards could take place, or would be welcome? For one thing, all these new cards would need to be priced--and priced accurately. Ryne Duren shows us that even a few badly priced cards can throw the game out of whack. Could we enter all of these new cards into Diamond Dope? Or would D-dope simply collapse under the strain?
And how many of us would really want to take the trouble to keep track of--say--35,000 card, or whatever the actual number is. I personally feel that some condition of scarcity--even if that scarcity is defined to include a total of more than 5,000 cards--actually makes the game more interesting.
Beyond all of this is the stark and well-established fact that it takes SOM months to deliver the twenty-five or so cards that we choose with each vote. How realistic is it to expect that Strat could or would agree to deliver 20,000 or 30,000 or 40,000 accurately-priced new cards at any time in the foreseeable future?
So, given that it's highly unlikely that we're ever going to get every card in the set, and given that having every card in the set might even be desirable, I come back to me earlier suggestion. If we only get to vote in about 25 cards in any given round, and given that some baseball greats already have as many as six excellent cards, why don't we consider limiting the number of cards for any one player at six. There are a lot of players with long careers to have no cards. There are a lot of excellent players who have only crummy, unrepresentative cards, And there are a lot of franchises that are still under-represented in Strat.
Why don't we consider taking care of these needs before we add a seventh Mike McGwire or Al Kaline?