- Kinds of theme leagues and what they mean
The simplest themes take the idea of an OL and change them in one or more ways:
- Different cap (anywhere from 30M to 255M)
- Roster restrictions (only using players from certain years, or with certain characteristics, etc)
- Most themes do not have the PA and IP minimums that are required by OLs
- Some themes use AAA players, who may either be drafted at the same time you draft your major league roster, or else will be randomly generated by the SLB engine.
You will occasionally other very specific themes, some of which are described below.
Franchise Leagues: Construct a team out of players from 1 franchise.(For example, all Red Sox).Most franchise leagues are very specific about adhering to historical accuracy. So a Dodgers franchise typically means the entire history of the Dodgers (Brooklyn and Los Angeles).There is a
good thread here that discusses accurate franchise histories.Please do your homework.1895 Hughie Jennings and 1964 Brooks Robinson should never be on the same team in a franchise league, even though both played for clubs named the Baltimore Orioles.
Twist Leagues: The basic idea is to take an actual MLB team season, and construct your roster from those players, but using any season of their career (that’s the “twist”).So, if you pick the 1986 Red Sox, you can use any player who played for the 1986 Sox, but from any season in their careers.You could have 1971 Tom Seaver, 1998 Roger Clemens, and 1978 Jim Rice all on this team.Most twist leagues allow you to use any player from the roster on
www.baseball-reference.com, even if they didn’t accumulate enough PA or IP to be part of the WIS roster in your base season.
Soup Leagues: Each member of your team must meet a different criteria.Examples include Season Soup (each player must come from a different season), Alphabet Soup (each player’s last name must start with a different letter), Franchise Soup (each player must be from a different historical franchise), etc.
Progressive Leagues: Easily the most popular of themes, progressives basically mirror the experience of being a real MLB GM season after season.The idea of progressives is that you keep your players and advance from season to season.A full explanation of progressives is beyond the scope of this thread.See
this link for more detail.
- What each salary cap level is like
One way of thinking about what different cap levels mean is as follows:
60M – roughly the equivalent of an average current MLB team. For example, the 2021 Phillies (record: 82-80) have a 25-man roster that costs $59.9M in the WIS database.
70M – roughly the equivalent of a very good current MLB team.The 2018 Boston Red Sox cost roughly $75M
80M – Elite MLB teams (the 1998 Yankees cost ~83M).
90M – Best MLB teams in history (the 1906 Cubs cost ~88M; the 1927 Yankees cost ~110M, but they are an outlier because of the Ruth/Gehrig salary inflation that occurred during dynamic pricing)
100M-110M – All Star Teams from any given league
120M – Great players having their best seasons
140M – Top-tier HOFers having their best seasons
Anything above 140M – The best individual seasons in baseball history
If anything, these descriptions slightly understate the quality of teams you are likely to be competing with at each cap level. An experienced WIS player can almost certainly put together an 80M team that would consistently beat the 1927 Yankees.
Two conclusions:
- When playing 80M leagues (like open leagues), you are simulating a league with an overall quality of players that has NEVER ACTUALLY HAPPENED. This is not real baseball. You should not expect realistic performance at that salary cap level. Most players will underperform their real life stats, because they will be playing against competition that is, on average, much better than what they faced in real life.
- The key to building successful teams is understanding how to get the best value for dollar at each cap level. While most players will underperform their real life stats at 80M, not all will underperform equally, and some will actually overperform under the right circumstances.