I am very new here, so please take my comments as presented with humility, not my coming in like a bull in a china shop.
First, let me say that I really appreciate the high intellectual level of the discussions taking place on this and some other forums here, including some about the site itself.
Naturally as a first season "rookie" I am happy to find it and it will take a while for that to wear off, though having read through a lot posts the past two days to get up to speed, I see that there is some legitimate disgruntlement among players here about how results work and whether they are reasonable or not (ignoring the questions being batted around about the relation of the site's management to users which is a different question I don't feel qualified to address yet).
One issue coming up is about the deadball era pitchers' dominance or the Joss problem (by the way my new teams beat him twice in the past few days in different leagues). I admit that the one concern I have is that this will not be a lot of fun if we can game the game by simply putting in a bunch of deadball era pitchers with 400 innings pitched and ERAs, that, despite some of the legitimate points made in the counter-arguments about fielders' gloves, ground rule doubles and so forth, clearly are lower than they would have been in the 1930s or the steroids era.
I wanted to bring up a few issues that I think address the three most important aspects of the problem as I have come to see it in the past few days (again, admitting that this is new to me, but also evaluating how much time I want to commit to something if it won't be as enjoyable once I get to know it better as it has been so far).
1) It is important the we enjoy this. I think that there are two aspects to that: winning, and enjoying playing this. We can't pretend it is not more fun to win than lose, but it is also true that after a while winning because you figured out that a certain combination of strategies can't be defeated must get boring. So my first suggestion would be to try to campaign to get users to treat this more like baseball and less like an online game. That means that in reality you would not have two copies of Addie Joss and two of Mariano Rivera and then just use them over and over to wear down opponents. It is true that sometimes in real baseball managers with great confidence in a few pitchers just went with them a lot (2001 Arizona Diamondbacks being a recent example) but even they had to turn to relievers and a third starter every third day. So if we just decide that the fun is this is winning at BASEBALL, not at overcoming a math problem, we can tone down the overuse of a few starters and make sure this stays competitive, or does so without everyone using the same players and strategies.
Frankly, with the exception of a few players that I am convinced would have been great anyway - Mathewson, Walter Johnson, Pete Alexander, Ty Cobb, Honus Wagner, Hornsby, maybe a couple of others, I don't trust the deadball era players. The game was too different. Plus, I have no emotional stake in them, the way I do the players i named above, plus the Babe Ruth era and on, partly because the teams aren't even around anymore so who cares how great they were - no one today glories in the accomplishments of teams that no alive ever saw play even in their contemporary versions. That is not true of the Detroit Tigers, Pittsburgh Pirates, or even teams that have moved around like the Dodgers, or changed names like the Texas Rangers, whose fans can include some kid who knows that Walter Johnson and Nolan Ryan once pitched for the team he or she roots for today.
2) Travel. This is a missing element even in the brilliant discussions, on both sides, about the standard deviation etc. Travel may have been physically harder in the deadball era - buses and trains - but it did not include many time zone changes. This is hard to account for, but no one had to go west of St. Louis to play back then.
3) The history of baseball cannot be easily divided into two camps, deadball and post-deadball because themselves were not homogeneous eras. Leagues rose and fell, gloves were invented and improved, the curve ball invented, and so forth even in that era. Since then we have the post deadball inflation of scoring in the 20s and 30s, We then have a leveling off right before the war (in which DiMaggio and Ted Williams and Hank Greenberg among a few others stand out exactly because of this - ask yourself how many players from the 1930s still resonate today emotionally, yet those from the immediate prewar era still do). Then the years 1941-45 for which we can't trust any statistics. Then what we might think of as a reasonably "normal"era from 1947-say 61 except that of course a change arguably much greater than the end of the deadball era occurred whose statistical importance is extremely difficult, or so easy as to be disturbing, to calculate. Then the mound is lowered and there is expansion. Then 1968 you get absurdly low ERAs and batting averages, only to have them go back up a year later when the mound is raised again. Then the 1970s when I was really becoming a serious fan and what seemed then like normal now seem like low batting stats and scores - Graig Nettles led the league with 32 homers once. Then comes the home run boom and steroids, now who knows...
So it is not so simple to just divide the world into pre-and post Ruth without admitting that every period of baseball player has their statistical anomalies. Which brings me to the big one:
4) The Caucasian Leagues. Or the Majors as they were then known. Here is it in a nutshell, the deadball-post-deadball comparison probably pales compared to another, which is either incalculable or very easily calculable - a certain percentage of all players in the majors before 1947 - let's say somewhere between 10 and 20% - I would settle on just a little below 15% to be nice about it - were bums who didn't deserve to be there on the merits, and only had jobs with major league teams because 15% of the population was not allowed to play.
Or to be more precise, were not allowed to compete with them. They played anyway and from all accounts a high quality game, one where Jackie Robinson learned to play the way he did when he got to the majors and where Hank Aaron learned to hit. Not every player in the Negro Leagues was that good either of course, but we can figure that by definition every statistic for the majors before 1947 for pitchers and batters is inflated by - let's say 10% to be on the conservative side. That means that 10% of the pitchers that both Ty Cobb and Babe Ruth faced were minor leaguers. Not only, but the 10% of black players missing were by the definition the best of that 15% of the population. So instead of .367 lifetime, Cobb hit .330. Very, very good. Ruth hit 643 homers, or 20 less than Willie Mays (though in the argument about the greatest player remember that Mays never pitched a shutout in the Series). Joss' and the rest also likewise have ERAs lower by 10% than they would have been.
Now, one way to compensate for this would be to do what I just did, in a rough and undeniably over-simplified way to just decide how much we should cut the pre-47 stats. By the way this whole thing puts the issue of Barry Bonds, Mark McGwire etc. stats in perspective doesn't it? I don't like them holding the record personally because of the steroids thing, but it is not the first time someone used a completely unfair advantage to set records.
Another way is perhaps more interesting: include the Negro records and stats, inasmuch as we have them, and many we do have, as equally reliable as those of the Caucasian Leagues. Addie Joss or Satchel Paige? Now it gets interesting, and some of the advantage of all pre-1947 players, not just the deadball era ones, is compensated for by their own contemporaries.
Anyway, as anyone who looks my teams will see, I have on the one hand learned already much from my competitors (you all) whose intelligence I have already come to respect greatly. My initial attempt to deal with the whole innings pitched requirement to compete through using 5-man rotations ended in fiasco in one week, as pitchers with 200 innings or a little less quickly showed wear and tear - though some of this I have learned is due to this weird timing of fatigue hitting after a long winter's rest after one or two starts - Jim Palmer pitched opening day, went 6 innings, this from a season where he had over 250 inning pitched, and he is already listed as worn out. But this aside (I digress) I saw that 5-man rotations, which in real baseball I have always hated as unnatural, and Yankees fan though I am and worshipper of Mariano and the gods that sent him to the Bronx, I hate closers as an institution. Not the individuals obviously.
So in keeping with my own first suggestion, I am going to go with my own strategy: four man rotations with good amounts of innings but nothing super-human; my own assessment of how much I trust the greatness, or quality, stats aside, of those before my time (Ted Williams, Dimaggio, Ruth, Paige, Josh Gibson, Mathewson, Walter Johnson - yes, Jack Chesbro, who knows? Maybe, some of the others, not so much - arbitrary, but my arbitrary);: I will load up on good quality long relievers and try to use good relief pitchers like Lyle, McGraw, Gossage, Clay Carrol, and Bill Lee among others to come in when the starter can't finish the job - as they used to: sometimes to get the last two outs in the 9th with people in scoring position in a close game, sometimes in the 6th inning and pitching the rest of the game. I know what kind of hitters I like - power, average, don't strike out, good OBP. Take a look at some of the power hitters from the 40s and 50 and their SO ratios, they are more like contact hitters' today, then look at Reggie Jackson, Richie Sexson, etc. some of these guys strike out once a week. Don't like it.
Baseball is like chess often, that is part of what we love about it. Chess is fun too because it is a challenge, a puzzle, and is more likely to be solved by someone that has a mathematical mind than baseball, though since there is another player even chess cannot be guaranteed. But they came up with a computer that beat Kasparov more times than he beat it. OK. But I wouldn't go to see it hit a baseball, or watch robot baseball sometime in the future, with 900 foot homeruns. What would be the point. So let's keep this to baseball with its element of chess and we can probably enjoy it more. Want to use Joss because you like him? Get him and use him. Once around the rotation. If you spend enough on him then your numbers two and three will be more like, say Don Drysdale and Bert Blyleven or Frank Viola, or David Cone. Or fill in the blank yourself. Good players. I like to play mostly the ones I have seen play and then learn about ones that have become good more recently, and add one or two from long ago that I have a gut instinct can play - Yogi and Jackie and Stan Musial.
Anyway, I repeat that while this may seem like I have barged in here after a very, very short time playing, I do so out of respect for the seriousness of mind of my fellow competitors. I hope to see you on the field. play ball,