By the end of this very long sentence, you will want to tell me I'm whining, and not because of the following content, which, of course, you haven't yet read (unless you employ a very unorthodox method of reading) though it's likely to give you that opinion, but because I've so expertly planted the "You're whining" seed in the very beginning, thereby neutralizing such criticism, though it probably would have been quite a bit more effective had I made this point much, much more concisely and succinctly, and without such explanation.
So.
WALKS ARE BROKEN! WHARRGARBL!
The case of Hal Haid is interesting. In real life, he pitched 47 innings in 1928, and walked 11. His BB/9 was 2.11. In WIS, he has 50 IP/162, BB/9# of 2.12.
In the Performance History, he averages 52 IP. The BB/9 in his "worst" season is 5.63. The BB/9 in his "best" season is 4.17. His BB/9 overall is 3.75.
This may be an outlier, but not because of small sample size. '28 Haid has been used 119 times since the last major update. At an average of 52 IP per team, this is 6188 innings we're talking about here. In Goose Gossage's entire 22 year career (one year as a starter), he pitched 1089.3 innings.
But you know what? Forget that. If Hal Haid had had (fun word combination to type) 6188 innings pitched in his career, the career innings pitched leaderboard would look like this:
1. Cy Young 7354.7
2. Hal Haid 6188
3. Pud Galvin 6003.3
This is a rather large sample size.
So, why is he walking around 177% of his BB/9# expectation?
1. The expectation is flawed due to league averages.
I dunno, he's got a 149 BB/9+
2. Managers are using him wrong. He's pitching too often or for too many pitches per game.
I dunno, his other stats aren't suffering. I'm making the assumption that he's not being used every day by a lot of his owners (and practically never by many others), and that most people who use him know you don't want him throwing any more than 15 pitches at a time.
3. The SIM isn't real life. He's facing guys who draw more walks, and the likelihood of a BB event is controlled more by the batter in the SIM.
Yes he is, and yes it is. 177%, though?
3a. He's so good, he's often put into the game to face the opposition's toughest hitters.
That's probably true.
4. A fluke, an outlier.
Maybe so, but what's the likelihood of that? That's a serious question. Somebody please approximate the likelihood of that.
5. Something's broken in the SIM, or in Hal Haid.
What say you?