I don't normally bite on this kind of stuff, but since I know zero people will apply what I have to say in this instance
, I'll go ahead....
Anything over a 60mil cap, I spend the most I can possibly spend on an efficient pitching staff, and use the rest on offense. 50/30 is great for an OL. Anything 60mil cap or less, I spend the most I can possibly spend on an efficient offense, and the rest on pitching (of course, due to the database being what it is, it ends up being 30/30 or so).
The reason I do that is because of the OBP curve. Players have a curved pricing relative to their OBP.
In OLs and beyond, players underperform their real life numbers. So, as a players OBP decreases linearly in high caps, my dollars value goes down exponentially. From the pitching end, my dollars value alsom decreases exponentially as their WHIP goes up linearly, however, the incline of the curve is much lower coming from their end, thus a lesser loss.
In leagues where players overperform their real life stats, your dollars value goes up exponentially as their OBPs go up linearly. Because the curve goes up much steeper from the hitters end, I always buy as much OBP as I can. In every 60mil league I've ever played in, you can go to the 'team rankings' page, and sort by OBP, and it will show you your playoff teams with striking accuracy.
I'm in an OL with llamanuts, where I spent 54mil (I think) on offense just for kicks. I'm winning 57% of my games, which is un-Booger like, but its just the nature of the split. The .500 OBP players I bought aren't close to their RL #'s and you just can't the return on your dollar to compete at a high level.