It just gets me thinking, "what am I really getting for a player?". I have several mega studs that sit at about 70-80 in durability. This means if kept at 100% I am getting (just a quick guess, don't go all math on me) about 130ish 100% games out of them during the course of a season.
So for 30 games or so I have a utility guy in their spot of the lineup and in the field. If I smear both players stat lines into one another, the conglomerate may look something like this (using rudimentary easy to follow stats):
Mega Stud: .320 AVG, 25 HR, 100 RBI (over 130 games)
Utility Guy: .275 AVG, 4 HR, 18 RBI (over 32 games)
For all intents and purposes, I have, say, a position player with a season stat line of something on the order of .305 AVG, 29 HR, 118 RBI. Not bad, but I'm thinking I may be able to fill that with a slightly less mega stud at a lower price with a higher durabilty, using one guy to get the same result.
One benefit of this is, once you make the postseason, providing you kept your guy at 100%, you now have a mega stud rolling in a short series, which makes your team better for that series. I can handle one or two guys like this on a team of mine....but I'm thinking in some cases it may be better to put more emphasis on durability to keep one guy on the field.
Or you can push said lower DUR guy, get those 550 AB's, and have him hover in the 85+ range in fatigue later in the year. I just don't know if you want to hit the postseason with a guy at lower than 100%.