The death of neutral parks Topic

So now that FA will have the dimensions of the ballparks be a factor in determining their destination, what the hell is the incentive to have a neutral park?? Seems to me that the best parks will be burlington and sante fe depending on the type of team you hope to build.
1/22/2010 10:23 PM
Not really, you get just that-- neutrality. An extreme pitcher's park won't attract any hitters and an extreme hitters park won't attract any pitchers. You get a moderate ability to attract both. Seems like an neutral park is actually a great way to have the best chance to build the type of well-rounded team that such a park would dictate.
1/22/2010 10:44 PM
Seems to me a neutral park will only get you average FA, no studs. I've never seen a team win a WS without a few studs.
1/22/2010 11:00 PM
how many times have you had an offer out on a FA where it came down to a tiebreaker?
1/22/2010 11:04 PM
Ballpark factors only play into the equation when multiple teams offer a FA a max contract. Which happens, I don't know, about once ever 5-6 seasons?? And if you've got a max contract on your roster, chances are you can't afford a second one.

I think people are making WAAAAAAAAY too big a deal about this.
1/23/2010 10:09 AM
How many MAX FAs are there in a given season?

A FA pitcher will take $1 more to play in Santa Fe. Fact.
1/23/2010 10:12 AM
This has to be one of the dumbest threads started in a long time.

1/23/2010 10:29 AM
Quote: Originally Posted By kingjohndevi on 1/23/2010Seems to me a neutral park will only get you average FA, no studs. I've never seen a team win a WS without a few studs.


Aside from the point being belabored about how this situation rarely happens, anyway, I don't think you understand my point. If you're a neutral park team and you offer a max contract to a player, you've got roughly a 50% chance of nabbing that player whether he's a pitcher or a hitter (since there's about a 50% chance that the team bidding against you is a pitcher's park team bidding for a hitter, or vice versa). So obviously you can nab huge stars this way. Having a pitcher's park increases those odds if you're bidding on a pitcher but decreases those odds when you're bidding on a hitter.
1/23/2010 11:17 AM
And further to prez's point... a heavy pitcher's park makes decent pitchers great, while the converse happens with heavy hitter's parks.

If anything, you'd want the best pitchers in Santa Fe, hitters in Tacoma, etc. for a better chance at winning, no?
1/23/2010 11:32 AM
Quote: Originally posted by iain on 1/23/2010And further to prez's point... a heavy pitcher's park makes decent pitchers great, while the converse happens with heavy hitter's parks.If anything, you'd want the best pitchers in Santa Fe, hitters in Tacoma, etc. for a better chance at winning, no?
That's the way I look at it. If you have bad pitchers in a hitters park, you'll lose too many high scoring games. If you have bad hitters in a pitchers park, you'll lose too many low scoring games
1/23/2010 12:34 PM
That's why I like the neutral park, and always will. You just have to build a generally strong team. A good player is a good player, period.
1/23/2010 12:37 PM
The death of neutral parks Topic

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