I guess were on the same page here. I have been fairly lucky with big injuries for 3-4 years now, then this year I lost:
1) A young (25 YO, 75 health) #5 starter for 100+ days, who because of the injury is now a long relief guy (droped from a 72 overall to a 69 upon recovery)
2) a young (24 YO, 99 health)) #2 (could be a #1 on other teams) to 200 day injury. (droped from a 78 now (84 projected with 1 year of progression likely left) to a 72
3) a young (26 YO, 43 health)) replacement for #2 to a 200+ day injury dropped from a 78 to a 72 no progression left... Granted I took the chance with the low health on this guy, and would do it again given he would have been a dominant #3 starter..
4) my starting shortstop for a few weeks.
Ok I get it, it happens, tough luck, move on. So I started looking at the history of the league and it seemed like this was happening to one or two teams a year, same thing. That is what sparked my question. Is there logic that causes it to be this way or is it just bad luck for those teams it happens to. Wouldnt it be more realistic if over the last 4 years I had lost 1 or 2 of those guys a year? Maybe not.
I agree there are less injuries in HBD, but also in HBD the longer injuries are more commonly big deals. Like when you loose a third year player (first in majors) to a long injury. He is now less valueable, even if when he returns he gets most of the loss back. In the majors that happens too, but I would say far more recover and continue to progress then in HBD.
Just what thoughts, I could be totally off base here.