I am glad I won that game to make it instead of backing in because DJT lost. The fact that I am even in this position amazes me. Five teams above .500 and one team that gave a new definition, for me at least, in being noncompetitive. I thought I would need 4 playoff teams to have a shot at making a run but my Coors team which rallied back late to get into a playoff spot but couldn't finish the job. In this playoff run, I had 2 teams come back from 3-1 deficits to win LCS series I desperately needed. One against brianjw. Ironically, the team I thought would make the deepest playoff run, lost in the first round.
Back in early September, I threw up my hands after a few days of literally not winning and said I was setting my teams on auto-pilot. I believe that was the secret to my success. I put them on auto-pilot and checked in every other day to adjust pitchers and players that were becoming fatigued. I didn't want the teams to tank and throw of the results for everyone in the tournament. Although, it turns out that fatigue was not a huge issue for my teams, I just needed to make a few tweaks here and there. I would check in on individual team standings about once a week but not look at overall standings. With a few games left in the season, I added up all my wins and was surprised to find out that I was a few games over .500 overall. That's when I realized 4 playoff teams would give me a shot. I didn't look at overall standings to see where I stood until a 2 of my teams made it to the LCS. I believe the hands off approach unintentionally worked to my advantage. So much so, that when my 2 world series teams had that down 3-1 moment, I set everything up the way I wanted before game 5 and didn't check in with those teams until after game 7. Okay, for the last one against brianjw, I looked after game 6 but didn't touch anything until after game 7. In this case, truly, less was more.