I drafted an OL team with the idea of reclaiming the record for most pitcher wins (which is 77) that I used to own with Silver King. This time I chose as my stud starter 1885 Ed Morris (848 RL innings, $29.8M) to go with 8 mostly 480-ish PA batters who would start in Morris's games only. I figured we wouldn't make the playoffs, but that possibly I could get Morris 78 wins.
As it transpires, with a couple games left in the season Morris is "only" 61-16, but we're headed to the playoffs anyway.
The pitching is essentially a one-man staff. Besides Morris, I have 1888 Frank Gilmore (116 mop-type innings), two very tired 200K scrubs, two not-terrible rookies (ERA's under 5), and three relievers with 26-37 RL innings and ERC#'s in the 3's.
Morris is underused (will finish with under 800 innings) but I've noticed that in back-to-back starts his fatigue level always dropped to the mid-80's for the second game. In fact, in back-to-back-to-back starts, it went 100-85-84. There was no apparent fall-off in performance when Morris pitched tired (his fatigue never dropped below 84, though).
My thoughts: Start Morris in game 1 of every series, start one of the relievers (they all have decent IP/G stamina) in game 2, then Morris for the duration of the series. That way Morris is at 100% for at least 2 games, and I have a decent pitcher going in game 2 at 100%. The downside is that the reliever who starts game 2 will probably be done for the rest of the playoffs.
Anyone want to argue another strategy? I could start Morris every game, but I never started him 4 or 5 straight in the regular season, and I'm worried he might drop below 80% in a must-win game. Which I don't want to see.
12/22/2011 1:08 PM (edited)