Posted by tecwrg on 8/23/2010 10:58:00 PM (view original):
The lower they get, the higher they are at risk for sustaining injury. I don't believe there's a "magic number" or threshhold.
I generally start watching for fatigue in the second half of the season, right after the All-Star break. Rest guys here and there as they start to dip below 98-100%. When you get to the last 30 games of the season or so, and it looks like you have to fight for a playoff spot, then you start to push them as hard as you need to. earlier if you have to.
My bad, this response was for my major league roster.
For minors, I let simmy manage my rosters, lineups, rotations, etc. Autorest set for 98% for position players, 99% for pitchers. Keep full rosters at all levels (19 pitchers, 16-19 position players).
For my major league position prospects, I keep track of who they are. If they're at 100%, they're on the active roster and playing. If they fall below 97%, they go inactive until they get back to 100%. It's a two-minute check-in after each game cycle to make sure the ML prospects are playing if not fatigued.