Posted by TulsaG on 12/25/2022 4:15:00 PM (view original):
You're missing something though:
MLB in 1990 has 26 teams, if your progressive has only 24, that'll make the lineups he faces a bit tougher. What stadium are you using? That could matter a lot.
So again assuming you are talking about 1990 Glavine, his pitching stats also aren't going to be normalized in his favor, where as the hitters it will be. His stats for 1990 were pretty poor, those numbers might have looked better in 4-5 years when there were two new teams and steroids were a lot more widespread, but the league just hadn't gotten there yet
I used Fulton County. In progressives, you pretty much always use the stadium the team played in IRL. Anyhow, on average the hitters in a 24 team progressive will also face better pitchers (since we can leave the dumpster fires out, just as one can with offense), yet they suffer no negative effects.
It makes zero sense for there to be a "normalization" factor when every player in the league is from the same season. At any rate, I certainly don't notice a bias towards pitching in progressives that take place in heavily offensive eras. Just wrapped up a 2001 Progressive. My team hit .299 (including Robert Fick and Craig Counsell both hitting 40 points above RL AVG) and all five of my starters had ERAs over their RL numbers, some significantly (Matt Morris 4.44 vs 3.16 RL, Jason Johnson 5.86 vs 4.09 RL). Pitching ALWAYS underperforms, hitting ALWAYS overperforms. It's a fact of the game.
WIS themselves essentially admitted that excessive offensive is a problem. I submitted a ticket and got this:
"The game code is a bit older and pitching is one of the more difficult things to manage in the game. We plan on working on a rewrite of the game in the near future and hope to look into some issues with how the game simulates. I'm sorry for the unexpected outcomes with the players performances."