Posted by Qhadow123 on 7/16/2024 12:22:00 PM (view original):
I set 2 goals coming into my 2nd WIS championship:
1) Finish above .500 collectively.
2) Be in the top half of the overall pool.
As we're just about to reach the last set of 162 games, I am 10 games over .500 and exactly 36th place. We'll see if I can finish it off.
I feel that my biggest shortcoming is I still haven't figured out what to do about pitching in the higher salary cap leagues. I cloned 3 of Maddux' best seasons in the $140m league and they're all just getting pounded. Do you just try to beat everybody 13-12, stacking up as many pitcher innings as possible? That's been my primary frustration, which is just a carry-over from my previous experience with all caps above $100m.
Not sure how to take the next step to have a shot at the cage. I had only played a couple of regular leagues since last year's WISC and the formula that has always worked for me didn't seem to work anymore, so it's been a pleasant experience to be competitive against the best at this game.
I certainly spent more time building this year's rosters than in my first go, and made sure to draft both more innings and more PAs. I've been pleased to avoid the fatigue death spiral across the board.
Are we really going to do a consolation Round 2 for owners 25-48? I'm torn. I have loved doing this just as much as ever, but it does take a lot of time if you're going to follow it closely. As I saw someone else mention, I guess I need to get started building rosters if this is a reality.
Looking at your pitching staff for the $140M, your problem there is you didn't draft enough innings. 1,462 is on the lower end of innings I'd want for a $140M DH league, but you're compounding it by having 115 of those innings used on two Maddux's who are only good for mop-up duty at this cap. So you have only about 1350 effectively, and four of the eight good pitchers you have are Kimbrels who can only throw 15 pitches before fatiguing. This will inevitably lead to you blowing the arms off the other four starting pitchers, which is what happened, you had to use those guys in the mid 90s all season. It's generally not a good idea to use pitchers at below 100% at high caps, and it's a doubly bad idea in a league where you will be facing lots of home run hitters, as fatigued pitchers start seeing a rapid increase in their HR allowed rate.
1994 Maddux will be excellent at this cap (he'd better be since he costs a fortune) if you use him at 100% all season.
Your 1994 Maddux allowed a .297/.349/.427 slash line with 31 HR allowed in 296 innings. One owner in my league used 1994 Maddux, he was at 100% for pretty much the entire season, with a few starts at 99% or 98% towards the end. He allowed a .238/.288/.313 slash line and only allowed 13 HRs in 305 innings.