The way that I look at it is that I need to have enough players on my team that are not eligible for DITR, but are good minor league players. This way, they will still help my minor league team win games. For the guys that I have on my team for the sole purpose of hoping that they get DITR, I target two types of players.
1. players with makeup in the high 80s that are less than three years pro.
2. players that have low durability (typically pitchers, catchers, 1b/COF), but already have a good chance to make the MLB due to high ratings. These type of players are much more rare and either need to be traded for, drafted or signed in the INTL free agent market. But if you can get a guy that has projected 60 across the board in all of his hitting ratings, but has low durability and fielding ratings, he could get hit on the head with DITR with a makeup rating of under 50 and he will still make it as a C, DH, or 1b. Or, if you can get a guy that is only going to have a stamina of 11 and a durability of 28, but his splits, pitches, and control are still going to hit somewhere in the 50s or 60s, he could turn out to make the MLB even with a low makeup rating.
In the end, most DITRs are not going to make the MLB, if you can get the max DITRs [3] every year and 1 of them makes it to the MLB, you are doing yourself a huge favor. Every now and then, you will get a guy that is really nice, but to expect one of those types of players every season is unreasonable.
12/14/2018 10:49 PM (edited)