Posted by paul0613 on 11/24/2010 10:30:00 AM (view original):
*fairly new to HBD, but I have an opinion on everything.
If I could start my Sioux Fall team over, I would "unintentially" tank my first year or two. Build the minors through IFA and the draft. Fill the ML team with veterans left over after the Type A drops off, signing them to 1 or 2 year deals. But instead I.....
Immediately promoted anyone 21 years old or over that had ML ready current ratings. Now I am 2 years into the regime, been just below .500 both years and my service years just keep ticking away. Finishing just below .500 gave me the middle round draft pick, so picking up more than one impact player is unlikely. Now I have the youngest team in the majors, a thin minor league system, and big payroll looming for all the raises that are due.
I wouldn't call your first strategy "unintentional tanking." I would what you actually did, "making rookie mistakes." I don't think it's "tanking" to leave a stud prospect in the minors until his 4th pro year to let him fully develop, while you sign stop-gap FAs. It's tanking to leave the stud prospect in the minors and throw out a crappy Rule V or waiver wire-quality guy. For example, in No Quitters, I have a guy who was a big-money IFA sign late in S16. Next year in S18, I could certainly bring him up and he would be a borderline All-Star. But I'm probably going to leave him down for one more year, because I don't NEED him next year, I'm trying to spread out my arb raises, I have the money to spend 5-8M on a decent FA (but might not in a couple seasons), etc.
I think it also has to do with how successful your ML team is. The above strategy (especially when you consider that I traded an in-his-prime All-Star OF to get that prospect), is a borderline "tanking" strategy, but I also won 99 games and went to the ALCS in S17. If you're winning 45 games and delaying prospects, I think you get closer to tanking. Just like in the real ML, if the Phillies or Yankees want to keep prospects down, they can do so. The Nationals, on the other hand, had to get Strasburg to the majors pretty quick.
So I think there's a lot of factors involved there.