Posted by MikeT23 on 9/14/2010 6:54:00 AM (view original):
Good productive seasons from low control pitchers could be less common because few people use them. And, of course, you have to determine "low control".
After your exercise with deano's teams, I did a quick check of mine. I'm not a "must have 70 control" guy. I put no more emphasis on control than I do pitches. Maybe less(I'll use a pitcher with 42 control but ignore a pitcher whose 2nd best pitch is 42). But I don't have a staff of 48-55 control pitchers either. I've got a few sprinkled in but I only have 9 below 70 on my three currently active teams.
No question that - in terms of the raw number of "productive seasons" - there are more from "non low control pitchers" than from "low control pitchers" (however you define low control), largely due to the fact that low control pitchers are often not given the full opportunity (by owners such as myself).
That's a little bit different then saying the low control is
less likely to produce a productive season - which is what I am saying, based on my own experience.
It's interesting that, even with owners who admittedly don't place nearly the same emphasis on control that I do, most successful squads have higher control pitchers rather than lower control ones.
It is possible that, on some level, even those who don't focus on control recognize it's relative value and (perhaps inadvertently) tend to accumulate those types of pitchers?
FWIW, I have 5 pitchers with under 70 control currently on my 4 ML rosters, but two are on a S2 team that isn't made up of all "my type" of pitchers yet, and a third is a late-season FA addition whose job is just to eat meaningless innings.