Quote: Originally posted by duece112 on 11/17/2009I haven't seen it on the high side too much (except injuries or abuse) but I have noticed many if the projections on the low side. I've only ran it out for about a dozen guys in my system so it's a small sample size...
I have a couple of guys who gained 0 in a category from S1 to S2 (1st ST to 2nd ST) but ended up gaining around 7 or 8 in that category. Did you see similar things when 'testing on vets' etc?
Sorry for ignoring a legit question.
I have not seen a player gain 0 from ST S1 to ST S2 and then go on to gain 7-8 points without some other circumstance being at play - like an injury or DITR. Ignoring the formula just look at which seasons players gets the largest gain to ratings boost.
For the question about if the formula is too conservative that was still subjective. The modifier I ended up using was 2.5, but I played around with lots of numbers. What I ended up doing was just reverse engineering a whole bunch of vets to see what their modifiers were. Somebody might find a modifier they like better, but I was happy with the results.
Actually I was just working with vR numbers on hitters and got a number that gave me good data. I figured it was the same for vR, but didn't know about eye, contact, and certainly not power. But I tested it and it worked for all the major hitter ratings. I assumed it certainly wouldn't work for pitchers, but then I tried it and it was still good data.
When you were saying the numbers looked low, were you comparing them to projected numbers? Because it would be lower than most projections.