I'd love to hear the thoughts of some experienced players on these matters.
I tend to use fairly long pitch counts with my SPs, and to couple those with very low pull ratings. For example, I don't think
Neil Neagle is a guy most people would have at Pull Rating 1, but I do.
I play in pitchers parks, with good defenses, and I want to get a ton of innings and quality starts from my rotation. And I do get a lot of both.
The one spot where I feel like this strategy hurts me is with rest between starts. I feel like my pitchers need to not only be at 100 Fatigue by their scheduled start, but really that they need to be at least at 95 (100) Fatigue, and preferably 100 Fatigue, on the day
before their scheduled start.
My experience has been that if I have a SP who is at, for example, 84 (100) Fatigue on the day before his start, then even though he'll be at 100 Fatigue by his start day, he still winds up getting blown up fairly frequently. I suspect this is due to In-Game Fatigue, and Pull Rating 1.
This makes it difficult for me to, for example, short start a guy to set up my rotation for a big head-to-head series, or to take advantage of off days. It also means I use my LR/Spot Starter about 4-5 times in a typical season just in the normal course of events.
Any thoughts or suggestions based on your experiences? Would increasing Pull Rating to 3 on days when a guy is not "fully" rested help? Should I just accept my 1050-1100 quality IP from my rotation every year and live with a half dozen spot starts a season? Actively manage Pitch Counts up and down when a guy is going into a start coming off a day when he's at 78 (100) Fatigue? What do you guys do with your SPs' rest between starts, Pitch Counts, and Pull Ratings?
Note: My rotations are performing very well, and I'm not looking for an overhaul. Just looking for some small tweaks to maximize the value.