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- Joined: Thu Jul 11, 2024 4:35 am
felixandrea wrote:Do you know anyone who has achieved success with a team that focuses solely on fielding? I mean, really good fielding teams with very few errors and the right X rolls, etc.
It isn't enough to just focus on fielding. It is more that great fielding can be a key for an already well conceived team. There are not enough X rolls on the combined pitcher and batter cards (none on batter cards) for fielding to be a big difference maker, in my opinion. There is no such thing as the right X rolls. Every pitcher card has the same number of X chances. Eric Gagne's best ATG card is an example of an extreme pitchers card (all strikeouts where possible except for X rolls) illustrating the uniformity of X chances (30 X chances).
For example, a good pitching team requires both capable starters and a full bullpen -> enough middle relievers and a closer so that no one is continuing to pitch at low / 0 fatigue. Fatigue is critical to win late / close games. Having a spot starter who hammers RH batters for those teams that don't have a sufficient LH batting presence can help, too.
Great fielding can accentuate the success of a good pitching team. A HR poor ball park can be leveraged by high average / high on-base batters who don't have many ballpark HR chances. Bringing small advantages together on a team such as lineup balance, pitching balance, and a favorable ballpark (whether small ball or HR weighted) is how a team can increase chances to win. Good fielding up the middle certainly helps.