OK...I have noticed something that I don't understand.
Before the recent salary change, it was the case that players traded within the same league would have 2 versions of their combined stats, one for each team, and those versions would have the same salary. The only exceptions to this that I was aware of were if one of the teams played a different number of total games that season.
This no longer seems to be true.
Take 1979 Oscar Gamble. His combined versions for both Texas and New York used to cost $3,523,308. Now the Texas version costs $3,542,661 and the New York version costs $3,559,527.
I assume there is no statistical difference between the two players...all of his numbers, both actual and normalized, show up exactly the same. So there is no reason to believe there is ANY performance advantage from having one version of this player over another. This assumption does not hold if the player was traded between leagues, obviously, because the normalization would be different, so I am only interested here in players traded within the same league.
And I assume that WIS has not done anything new to the formula, like normalize based on park, as this would be a major change and would presumably have been accompanied by some documentation.
So the only thing I can come up with is that when they did the salary adjustment, they must have considered these versions separately. And their data must have showed that the NY version of Gamble was chosen slightly more often than the Texas version, and so received a slightly greater price increase.
If true, I think this represents a slight flaw in their methodology...and that in the future they should consider these versions to be identical. It should be the total number of "1979 Gamble, Combined" that drives the salary adjustment, rather than individual adjustments for "1979 Gamble, Combined, NY" and "1979 Gamble, Combined, Texas."
Thoughts?