I'm fine with Lofton/Saenz (A little underwhelmed by him, honestly, but whatevs) and C Harvey, with consideration given to D Harvey (can explain his pros and cons in the writeup... but I've also gotta know a bit more about this WAR calculation that we're using here, because it seems like it's going to define a lot of our decision-making going forward and it is giving us some numbers I'd consider quite surprising. For instance, Willis Tanner here - Willis was a good reliever, a couple elite seasons, some late-career usage as a 130-inning guy by Fargo - a career 3.23 ERA/1.21 WHIP over 1439 innings that is certainly deserving of some consideration. But how is it that he is going to blow all these other candidates away with this "92 estimated WAR"? How do those #'s add up to that in any fashion? Mariano Rivera, the best reliever ever by essentially any measure, threw 1200 innings of 2.00 ERA/1.00 WHIP ball and has 56 WAR by BBREF. Now even if we ignore the raw # (56 may not mean 56 in HBD estimated context, which is fine), Rivera's WAR # is the highest of any true reliever, and yet it pales in comparison to most HOF position players or starting pitchers - which makes sense, it is generally agreed that even the most elite reliever ever has a lesser impact on the game than a very, very good starter or position player. So why are these WAR calcs coming up with essentially opposite results? Roosevelt Curtis threw 3,216 innings at 3.42 ERA with a 1.18 WHIP, but according to this, he was roughly ONE THIRD as valuable as Tanner was. That is... um... yeah. So again, while I'm appreciative of the efforts and the attempt to put these numbers into context, I think we need to understand more about how these calculations are coming about before we start blindly using them as gospel.