OK, DodgerDon. You got spared a lot of really awful teams, as I spent these past couple rounds scratching out all the possible choices I'd scouted one after another. There are a few bad teams left, but I feel like they all seem to help you somewhere you need it. I'd like to avoid that!
Your 74 Dodgers give you options everywhere, and that's a nice flexibility to have. But you can only take 7 of them after all. The 64 Mets only give you a couple useful players and a lot of scrubs, but not much flexibility to mix and match. I wanted to give you a team that didn't improve your weakness at SS or give you extra choices as infield backups either, one that basically kept you with the same strengths as before. At this point, it seemed the best way to go.
I normally would not have considered giving you a team that actually was good, but sometimes good records don't add up to "6 players I can roster in an $80M league." So I have decided to give you the 1944 Detroit Tigers.
The Tigers have two very durable SP, but they're $12M and $10M guys. It's pretty tough to use too many $10M players in an $80M league, and these gus cost more $/IP than your other best choices. Would be a shame if one of them were to get daggered, too. The Tigers only have 7 pitchers period, and the other 5 are worse than options you already have.
On offense, the Tigers had a stud half-season Dick Wakefield, but again it's tough to spend $4M on 350 PA in a league like this. And take him away and you're left a group that slugs a combined .348. A couple decent corner infielders in York and Higgins, but you already had those in Garvey and Cey. You're also very RH-heavy offensively, and aside from Wakefield the Tigers didn't have a good lefty bat either.
This league is a challenge, and you've done this before. Maybe this move backfires and you manage to maximize the talent here despite the salary issues. But I just don't look at this group and think it makes your team any better or easier to assemble. Good luck, but not too much of it.