Sat Nov 07, 2020 10:25 pm
The way I conceive of the strategy is get really cheap starters that I can pull really quickly and then have elite relievers (who dont cost nearly as much as elite starters) come in and finish the last four or five innings. With the extra money from a cheap staff then get a good power/on-base/defensive team. With that in mind--and remembering these are just the way I like do things, there are a lot of different ways to do things that work, everyone has to make up their own mind--I would make the following observations:
(1) Citizens is probably the best park to run this strategy as it has low bp singles. That and having a good defense is necessary (imho) to ensure those cheap starters dont completely blow up;
(2) You chose R1s. I prefer R2s to make sure I have enough innings. But it looks like your relievers are doing pretty well. But that might not work if you had your cheap starters pitch less.
(3) I like S4s (usually). They pitch a max of 5 innings. And normally I have relief quickly on all mycheap starters. The idea is to get them out of the game quickly. The problem is that Irvin, Snell, and Heaney are better than S4s. There is no right answer here; just have to decide which works best for you.
(4) Youre only converting 71% of X chances. I think, given cheap starters, you want to be 75-80%.
(5) You talked about solo homeruns. To me, you need some guys with higher raw power numbers (7,8,9,10 non-bp numbers) along with guys with high on-base. Some guys might have only 4 non-bo hrs with 7-8 bp hrs...but then they should have a high on-base. (Urshela is definitely not a good fit for that park.) You might have a few cheap guys like K. Cron or B Miller who have a lot of power but dont have great on-base... but they are balanced by guys they do. Of course, Trout or Yelich have everything. I think team on-base stats of at least .320 in your results (youre at .305) is what you want and you should be way ahead of the opposition homerun totals.
Good luck!