Posted by taz21 on 6/25/2010 5:02:00 PM (view original):
Bringing this back to the top. Lets say the contract offer, coaching and ball park effects are all similar, if not identical. Whats the next tie breaker? Can a free agent determine who the better franchise is? Does he give preference to his old team? If he goes to the better franchise is it based upon overall player skill levels, success during the regular season, success during the playoffs, just last season or over a 4 year period like HD???
Here is the tie-breaking procedure from the Help FAQ:
"When a free agent has multiple exact offers of any value at the ML level the tiebreakers are as follows: relevant IQs of the coaching staff and ballpark. If the players previous franchise is also bidding on him, then that franchise will receive a small loyalty bonus. When the coaching staff is used to break the tie position players will look at the hitting IQ of the hitting coach and the fielding IQ of the fielding coach. Pitchers will look at the pitching IQ of the pitching coach and the bullpen coach. In cases where the offers are still tied and the coaching staff has been factored in ballpark is used to determine which franchise the player will sign with. Pitchers always want to pitch in a pitchers park, while position players will always want to play in a hitters park."
So, if the offers are the same, the coaches (both coaches, i.e. pitching and bullpen in this case) are exactly the same, and the ballparks are exactly the same, then the original franchise should win because of the "small loyalty bonus". If the original franchise is not one of the teams, I have no idea what the last tiebreaker would be, but there is nothing in the answer above that indicates the quality of the team has anything to do with it. I'd have to think that 2 coaches and ballpark factors would be able to break the tie 99% of the time.
As an aside, I went through this in one of my worlds just a season ago. It was a pitcher returning to my team, so the small loyalty bonus applied. I was behind after offering a max deal. After hiring a pitching coach rated as highly as any other pitching coach (though the same as the team that was likely winning the bidding at the time), I was still behind. After hiring the top bullpen coach (better than the coach of the team that I think was leading), my offer moved to first place and the guy eventually signed. I play in Cincinnati, a slight hitter's park in this game, and more of a hitter's park than the team that I think was leading. So in my experience the answer above seems to be accurate and the combination of better bullpen coach/loyalty bonus seemed to outweigh the ballpark factor.
6/28/2010 2:27 PM (edited)