Posted by italyprof on 1/22/2021 5:18:00 PM (view original):
Posted by DoctorKz on 1/21/2021 10:51:00 PM (view original):
You still need to resolve the chronic underachieving of guys like Seaver, Carlton, Spahn, Dimaggio and Pujols.
Your built in advantage given to deadball pitchers needs to go bye-bye. Put the post-1920 pitchers on par with the early guys. You need more parity across eras. Too many players get little to no usage because they can't produce anywhere near what they should. That's a serious problem. I should be finding ways to get ARod, Spahn, Lefty Grove, Johnny Bench or Joe Morgan onto my roster. I want Seaver or Marichal as my ace. Ed Summers or Joe McGinnity shouldn't be outperforming them on a regular basis...
Get that fixed, then have dynamic pricing make the necessary market corrections...the game will be fluid, not the current stale, static mess it currently is...that I love to play, nonetheless...
I also agree here. Is it possible to factor into the overachieving single seasons something like an overall career corrective, so that Ed Summers with all due respect is not a better pitcher than Tom Seaver or Warren Spahn?
In any case, yes undo by all means the deadball advantage.
Except that for one season, Ed Summers was as good as/better than Tom Seaver or Warren Spahn. Isn't this what career leagues are for? For those that want to look at the whole careers rather than a single season?
When you're choosing single seasons rather than careers, you're playing for the guy that had one career year, not the guy who was very good for 10-15 seasons.
Also where do you draw the line? Should we adjust guys like Bob Milacki or Shane Spencer, who were otherwise average MLB players but had ridiculous stats for one shortened season?
What about guys who had a promising career destroyed by an injury, like Andy Rincon?
How about Greg Maddux? He was a great pitcher, but that 95 season is still an outlier. Same for 2000 Pedro.
When you got a huge database, there are going to be outliers, we don't mind when it's Greg Maddux, but it seems to bother us when Ed Summers is the beneficiary of one unexpected season.