Posted by jmcraven74 on 8/17/2021 3:54:00 PM (view original):
Posted by chargingryno on 8/17/2021 11:14:00 AM (view original):
To expand on why owners felt it was a disadvantage for newbies:
All AAA were/are based off a RL players despite being given a fictitious name. Veteran owners knew how to calculate the AAA ratings to determine Who the RL players were, and could potentially make bad faith trades with new owners who didn't know how to determine this.
Veteran owners also had a better grasp on how much help they could expect to get from AAA and could use their $80m salary in the draft center much more efficiently than a newbie who wasn't as experienced with those nuances.
I still don't know if I agree with those arguments, as I feel the benefit of AAA for new owners outweighs the disadvantages, however, I am glad they're trying new things and my anecdotal experiences May differ from how newbies actually feel.
I personally feel they should remove AAA from champs leagues and add them back for Open leagues.
Interestingly, it seemed to be the vets here who wanted the AAA gone, not the newbies. In any respect, the $1.6 mil extra that we now get does nothing to mitigate against the loss of 1800 PAs valued at +/- $11 mil. It's laughable if anyone at WIS thinks they've "fixed" that in some way. Not to mention the $3 mil value of the 2 pitchers we used to get.
Essentially, OLs have been turned into low-cap leagues where newbies cannot really play with a roster of their all-time favorites and historical greats (as advertised).
They either need to bring back AAA in a sensical way or up the cap, imo. Or offer a second OL option that is more cap-friendly to newbies. And by cap-friendly, I just mean like $90 mil or $95 mil, so a newbie can actually field a player he's heard of before.
I don't think anyone actually asked for AAA to be removed. The removal was a surprise for everyone. Admin made the change in response to a large number of complaints from new (and old) owners over the knowledge gap that AAA created and the unbalanced advantage it gave experienced owners.
The removal of AAA has had 0 effect on the salary cap except for experienced owners who were under-drafting PA and IP to maximize the value (you know, the knowledge gap thing that new owners weren't doing because they didn't understand it, or the value of the AAA players in $$$ or PA/IP). Your complaint is proving the reasoning correct.
You also qualify for champs leagues, so if you like AAA in your OL, come play in the champs leagues with us. Otherwise your complaints just make it seem like you just miss taking advantage of new owners with your knowledge gap over them on how AAA functions (not saying that's why or how you play OL, just that that's how your argument comes across).
AAA exists in champs leagues where owners all have the experience such that the knowledge gap doesn't exist, which is why AAA wasn't removed from champs leagues. But in leagues where new owners can get taken advantage of both in drafting and in trading, AAA don't exist. While it wasn't asked for, it was a surprisingly good move by admin and has increased OL participation, champs league participation, and (anecdotally) increased OL parity. good move.
I'd also argue that a friendlier OL cap to newbies would be closer to $65-75m where they can still draft their favorite players, a few HOF players, and even an all-time great season or two, while still having it play out close to RL and expectations. They can also draft a favorite RL team and enter into an OL somewhat-competitively and not just get destroyed by streamlined OL teams. The lack of realism is the biggest complaint among new owners and that lack of realism has more to do with the higher (than RL) cap allowing teams of all HOF and all-time great seasons while they draft a team full of their favorite players from the 60s, 70s, or 80's Cubs or A's or Reds or some-such thing.