Posted by d_rock97 on 9/6/2018 3:46:00 PM (view original):
I haven’t been around WIS that long. What is wrong with this strategy? Why would this need to be changed?
It was broadly used, including by me, but not universally loved. At the time cheap 1894 pitchers greatly overperformed; the names Dan Daub and George Hemming stick in my mind. Also, "rookie" pitchers could throw far more innings than they can now. So you could have a cheap pitching staff that was decently competent combined with a thumping offense and great defensive range. (I say "thumping" but a lot of it was "walking" - Ashburn, Stanky, Yost, Tenace etc. etc.) Meanwhile you could save not just one Milacki type but two or three -- Jack McDowell and Jeff Heathcock were popular. Or there was a Fred Toney season of about 110 IP with a WHIP of 0.73 I think. Even if you used, say, 70-80 of those innings he could dominate the playoffs.
Bottom line, you could go through three playoff rounds using pitchers in a manner they could not have performed in real life. And some users hate hate hated it. As against that, it only worked if you could make the playoffs using about $70-75 M worth of the value of your salary cap during the regular season.