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Super-League XXIII, Sign-Up Thread A lot of words below, don't feel compelled to read any of them. The Super-League is about building a baseball team from bits and pieces of other, real-life teams. The patchwork, often grotesque, creations, then compete with each other to see who is the best at the Super-League. I could spend paragraphs and paragraphs trying to explain the history, and the logic, and the finer points of the league, but I'm not sure if there's much point. This thread gives you the chance to do something different than the rest of the LP forum. I'm not trying to show off a game here. Quite frankly, Baseball Mogul 2013, the platform I run this game on, is not particularly special. No, what I'm giving you the chance to do is war with your fellow Super-Leaguers to prove that you're better than them at this competition. Some people like it, some don't, I'm not in a position to make a determination either way, since I don't really play in the league, I just run it. Helpful Resources The Super-League, like many baseball fantasy leagues before it, is a game of numbers and stats. When you’re using players from at any point in the last century, it’s vital to have resources to see how good they will do. To that end, we have two major sources of stats you can pour over. Baseball Reference - This one is a no-brainer. Baseball Reference houses stats of all sorts of uselessness from all the way back to the heydays of Cy Young (also known as the 1890s). Fair warning is that guys with incomplete careers and mid WW2 careers don't do as well in Mogul sims. (The former because Mogul likes having a complete career to use as projection, the latter because most true greats were killing Nazi's during the War years, and the ball's quality was lowered due to wartime supply priorities.) This is the place where you can check out your inevitable feeder teams. Of course, the historical data can only go so far in a modern simulation, which brings us to… Super-League Reference - Here it is. The absolute, must-have bookmark to be consulting when it comes to every player you find. Super-League reference was compiled in a joint effort by Mr. Cool Ice and Cthulhu Dreams, and uses the saves from Super-League IV and onward to paint a picture of that player’s performance in the Super-League. This is important since the Super-League, using the best of the best players from all of baseball history, is a marked degree above even the most talent-filled seasons of baseball. And some classically great all-time players, like Bob Feller and Willie Mays, just don’t do well in a Super-League environment. Again, use this. This, in combination with knowing which stats are important, will keep your head above water, even if you’re nowhere near the level of baseball historian that Commissar Dynamo is. The Basics of Baseball by tatankatonk Ok, so even the dumbest/foreign goon knows the basics of baseball. Hell, you know the lyrics to Take Me Out to the Ballgame by heart, and that's half the rules right there. There's pitchers, there's position players (first, second, third base, shortstop, outfielders, catchers), and there's pitchers (starting and relief). Three strikes is an out, three outs is an inning, nine innings and a game is over, unless there's a tie in which case it goes a few more and everyone leaves the stadium early. Anyway, what you should come away with from this is the following: Baseball, more than any other sport in the world, is a game of numbers. Every single thing that happens on the field is recorded and converted into statistics that professional analysts come up with to determine a player's performance. This isn't basketball, where blocks (a vital defensive stat) weren't recorded until the mid-70s. There's records of the game going all the way back to when Ty Cobb was assaulting fans, and even farther than that. Your job, as a Superleague owner, is to learn what all these numbers mean, and how to look at them in a way that can instantly tell you what you need to know about a player. So, What Stats Are Useful, Anyhow? If you know nothing about baseball, then you will be shocked by how many stats that are tracked that are absolutely worthless in the grand scheme of thing. There is only a handful of stats you need to evaluate the quality of a player, and this small area will give you a rundown on the biggest ones to consider. In somewhat arbitrary order of usefulness: On-Base + Slugging Percentage (OPS+): The go-to stat that your eyes should drift to first when it concerns batters. Era and season-adjusted, with average for that season being a flat ‘100’. If you find a guy who had a 115 OPS+, then he was 15% better at generating runs than the average joe that year. Combine that with the fact that he might be at a scarce position (see “Positional Scarcity” below), and you’ll be cooking with a run-generating machine in no time. Earned Run Average + (ERA+): The same thing as OPS+, but for Pitchers. 115 ERA+ means he was 15% than the average pitcher that season. Generally speaking, having good pitchers is more important than having good hitters ! Many teams get relegated not because they don’t have huge dudes who can hit the ball and score runs, but because their own pitching gets lit up and destroyed over the course of the season because they forgot to focus on it. Try to focus on pitching before hitting! Defensive Wins Above Replacement (dWAR): Let’s get this out of the way: There is no real great stat to measure a player’s defensive ability. The best we have is dWAR, which measures whether a guy is worth keeping in the field compared to a replacement player. This value can go into the negatives, meaning that some players are such bad players that they will give up plays with their bad ball-handling. If you rely on groundball or deadball-era pitchers, you will absolutely get destroyed if you have bad fielders. Generally speaking, Catcher, Center Field, and the middle infield positions (Second Base, Shortstop, Third Base) are the ones where you want to place defense over offense. Batting Average, On-Base Percentage, and Slugging Percentage (BA, OBP, SLG): Here are the base stats for offensive prowess for batters. Batting Average is how often you can hit the ball, On-Base Percentage is like Batting Average, but also factors in walks. (seriously, you don’t know what a walk is? Ok, a pitcher has to throw his pitches in an area next to the batter called the strike zone for it to count as a strike, or the batter has to swing at it. If he pitches and it's not in the strike zone, it's a ball. You pitch four balls, and the guy walks to first automatically.) and SLG is how far you can hit the ball on average when you hit it. Generally speaking, a .350+ OBP and a .400+ SLG are probably the minimum for Super-League caliber players, but you don’t necessarily need to have both. Walks + Hits Per Innings Pitched (WHIP): Is what it says, how many combined hits plus walks a pitcher gives up each inning he’s in play. This is a good estimate of how ‘wild’ your pitcher is, and whether he ends up keeping control of the ball or he shoots a 100 MPH fastball with no regard for where it lands. Wild guys are bad because wild guys lead to more walks, which lead to more runs, which leads to more games lost. 1.000 WHIP are elite, and 1.300+ WHIP guys are probably too wild to consider, even despite their pedigree. Isolated Discipline (IsoD): This one you won’t find on either of the reference sites, but is decently important, as it describes a batter’s ‘Batting Eye’, his ability to identify pitches and whether he should be taking a swing at them. You get this one by calculating OBP - BA. .070 is generally considered the bare minimum for a good player who doesn’t just whiff at every pitch over the plate. .150 and you’ve got a guy with an elite eye. Hits, Home Runs, Walks, and Strikeouts Per 9 Innings (H/9, HR/9, BB/9, SO/9): Miscellaneous, yet important stats to tell you how your pitcher pitches and what he can be expected to do during a game. Fireball pitchers have huge SO/9 rates, but at the expense of being either really wild (higher BB/9) or giving up big hits (higher HR/9). As a general rule of thumb, unless a guy is really, really good, you want to look for the lowest BB/9 above all others, because Super-League pitchers are forced to face Super-League hitters, who are especially good at drawing walks. Age: Young guys are wild, and old guys fall apart at the seams. You don’t want to pick up a 40-year-old Gaylord Perry and hope he can hold down your rotation. Generally speaking, 24-34 is a nice age range for considered players. Younger than 24, they’re probably a little wild; 35 and older, you’re playing with geriatric fire, which is more like a dying ember. Emphasis on DYING. SMASHER'S NOTE: I want to make this super-clear: Baseball Mogul, the engine the Super-League uses, doesn't work like WhatifSports or OOTP Baseball. It gives players ratings based on both how old they are and how good a career they had overall! For example, if you think you're going to game the system by taking 1996 Brady Anderson (who had one of the great fluke seasons in history), you are going to be sorely disappointed, because he's not going to hit 50 home runs, he's going to hit like he did in every other season around that fluke season! Plate Appearances/Innings Pitched: No one likes small sample sizes. A guy may seem amazing until you realize he only played one game that season. These stats basically serve as a reality check that the guy you never heard of who is really good is only good because he literally batted once or pitched one game. PAs are for batters, and IPs are for Pitchers. Innings Pitched also gives you a decent idea of a pitcher’s stamina. If he can pitch a consistent 300-400 innings of baseball (on bbref, that is. Most SL-starters don’t pitch more than about 250 innings), then chances are he can go the distance. Mogul doesn't like players with short careers either, which is something to keep in mind. Or incomplete careers. So Miguel Cabrera is not the God of Triple Crowns in Mogul, despite what he's projected to do, since he's still got a ways to go. Positional Scarcity Now, you are probably thinking that some positions are a little harder to find good players for than others, and you’d be right! Certain positions are harder to field than others, and baseball comes with an established hierarchy: 1. Catcher 2. Shortstop 3. Second Baseman 4. Center Fielder 5. Third Baseman 6. Right Fielder 7. Left Fielder 8. First Baseman So finding good 3rd basemen and center fielders is hard, great Catchers and Shortstops practically impossible, and halfway decent corner outfielders and first basemen a dime a dozen. In fact, looking for a First Baseman or Corner Outfielder, you should be looking for 130 or better OPS+, as it’s so easy to stick bat first, glove-second guys here that you need an especially good hitter there. Team Building Tips and Tricks: A team-building tutorial would essentially drive the word count of this guide through the roof. However, there are some handy hints to know. -Look to low-point teams first. Low-point teams will usually have one or two good guys and a load of spare parts, but might also have a great player hidden in the rubble of bad teams. Plus, it’s best to start at the bottom, since most people will be starting at the top. -Remember positional scarcity! Look for Catchers, Second Basemen, and Shortstops before loading up on First Basemen and Corner OFs. -A good player with useful teammates is better than a very good player with no teammates. Picking up a whole team for one guy is a raw deal, even for the lowest of low-point teams. Try to find guys who are at least competent in other positions that you can situationally field to go with that legendary player you’re picking up. -Finding an all-time great player on a low-point team is what you should be striving for. The Super League is comprised of some of the greatest baseball players of the last hundred years. There are teams stacked with top-notch talent that even the most baseball-clueless goon will vaguely recognize. If you don’t have to settle for a good-but-not-great player, don’t. Your goal is to be the best. -Make sure you have a modern bullpen. Super-League bullpens are a crapshoot by nature, but having a modern reliever staff means they’re actually suited to bullpen work, since before 1950, nearly all teams were just sticking their worst starters in the bullpen, and graduating their best relievers to starter duty. -Make sure your players' skills complement each other. Have a good assortment of on-base guys, power hitters, defensive vs offensive guys, and pitchers who can play to that. You have good hitters? Look for groundball pitching! -Save points for pitching, because someone's probably grabbing that 1-point Christy Mathewson before you can. -Don't ignore your bench, because you’re going to need them to at least hit a couple times over the season. -Too young is better than too old. -Don't let one gaping hole in your lineup bug you, as long as it's at a lower difficulty position like LF or 1B. -Don't trade high-round Dispersal Draft picks for anything less than a Ted Williams. -Don't rush to trade before you've seen your team play. -Always always always double check your feeders! There might be a great player who only pitched a couple innings languishing on that team, or a future great who’s just a year or two shy of true competency on their bench. Don’t just pick the starters from your feeders! Season Structure By Smasher Dynamo Deep Breath! Expansion Cup All new teams go through the Expansion Cup, which runs through the second-half of the Super-League season at an accelerated rate (each update is one month rather than one week). This is where new teams go to try and figure out what works and what doesn't in a relatively low-stress environment. If your team doesn't do well, that's probably not so bad, because you'll get higher dispersal draft picks, and that's good! Expansion Cup Playoffs The Expansion Cup is traditionally divided into two divisions based on whether the new team uses the DH or not. After the EC is over, the winner of each division faces off for a chance to win the Expansion Cup and with it, an amazing prize! (Nature of prize: TBD). The winners of the two divisions also get to start their first season in the Super-League, the higher division, while the rest of the EC teams end up in the Sub-Par League, which, as you can guess from its name, is the lower division. Dispersal Draft Held in the offseason, the Dispersal Draft is where teams have a chance to pick the carcasses of relegated teams for useful parts. The draft pool is usually made of players from the rosters of 4-6 teams that were relegated the Gauntlet (see below). The first three rounds of picks go only to the EC Team Owners, who pick in descending order of finish in the EC (that is, the team who did worse in the EC picks first in each round, and so on.) The fourth and fifth rounds use a lottery system to assign pick order, and have picks given out to both new and returning teams. Super-League The Show! The Super-League is the higher division of Super-League Baseball, and features 24 teams playing 26 weeks of games to determine who is best at fantasy fantasy baseball. There are six divisions with four teams each, organized into two leagues (DH and no-DH), each with twelve teams. At the end of 26 weeks, the division winners and two wildcards from each league advance to the playoffs. The bottom team in each division get demoted to the Sub-Par League after the season. Sub-Par League Not the Show! The Sub-Par League is the lower division of Super-League Baseball, and has been outsourced to McFreeze. It has a variable number of teams depending on how many teams are in the EC, but it's usually 16 or 18 teams divided into four divisions in two leagues (DH and no-DH.) The season lasts 26 weeks, and at the end, the division winners (no wildcards!) advance to the playoffs. Everyone who doesn't win the division, though, is subject to the Gauntlet. Super-Draft In the middle of the season, teams will have a chance to fortify their rosters through the Super-Draft, which lasts for three rounds, and has a draft pool made up of players from relegated teams not already used in the Dispersal Draft. The first and third rounds have picks for the Sub-Par League teams, while the Super-League teams pick in the second round. Playoffs Both the Super-League and Sub-Par League feature playoffs. In the Sub-Par League, there are four teams, who play in two rounds of playoffs to determine the Sub-Par League Champion. Just by making the Sub-Par League Playoffs, the teams have already qualified for next season's Super-League, but by winning the Sub-Par League Championship, the winning team gets to pick what division they'll be placed in the next season, which can, in theory, let them pick an easier division. Traditionally, McFreeze has streamed the Sub-Par League Finals live on a stream. In the Super-League, the two wildcard teams from each league play each other in a one-game playoff. That leaves eight teams, who go through the League Division, League Championship, and Super-League Final rounds to determine the Super-League winner. Whoever the champion is then has the right to challenge the Macho Men in a bid to prove that they are the greatest team in Super-League history. When they inevitably fail at that task, they are destroyed, and their owner must build a new team out of leftover feeder teams for the next Super-League. Gauntlet There comes a time every season when you need to clear away the brush, and that's where the Gauntlet comes in. In the first round of the Gauntlet, the four worst teams in that season's Sub-Par League are forced to play a 40-game mini-season. The two teams that fare the worst are relegated, that is to say, forever killed. The two remaining teams then must play the two Sub-Par League teams with the next-worst records, and play 40 more games, after which the bottom two teams are eliminated once again. And that continues until such time as McFreeze and I decide that no further culling is needed. Tag Team Tournament There's also a tag team tournament. I'd give more explanation, but it's either about to start, or has already started in the main thread, so check it out there to get a sense of how it works. In Closing: Have Fun, And Don’t Give Up! That's a lot of words, but none of them really matter. The Super-League is about the journey, not the destination, because, let's be honest, the end of every great team is being smashed out of existence by the Macho Men. Yeah, there are a fair number of rules, and it's a bit confusing, but you can also ask questions in IRC or this thread or the main thread if you need to know something. So relax, give it a try, and, hey, what's the worst that could happen? New Team Form Fill out Now This needs to be done to secure a spot in the Super-League Teams Selected: Pick eleven points worth of teams (twelve points for people who have never owned a Super-League team before), spread out over as many teams as you'd like. Hell, you could have eleven one-point teams if you really wanted. Fill Out Soon These items also need to be filled out, but not immediately, just as soon as you have some spare time Team Name: Team Logo (150x150 preferred): Home City: Home Stadium: (Give me the dimensions and playing surface if it's a custom stadium) DH Preference: 30-Man Roster: 25 in the majors, 5 in the minors Lineups: Pitching Rotation: Strategy (Rate on a scale from -5 to +5) Hit and Run: Sacrifice Bunt: Squeeze Play: Trying for extra bases: Stealing Bases: Aggressively Tagging Up: Pitch Outs (to prevent stolen bases): Giving Intentional Walks: Pitching Around Good Hitters: Bringing the Infield In: Guarding the Lines: Making Cutoff Throws: Bringing in Pinch Hitters: Bringing in Pinch Runners: Bringing in Defensive Replacements: Starting Pitchers on Short Rest: Letting pitchers pitch throw trouble: Letting Pitchers rack up high pitch counts: The Big, Big List of Feeder Teams Pick eleven points of feeder teams, twelve if you've never owned a team in the Super-League. 6 Point Feeders Players that hit World Series Walk off Home Runs + The pitchers that gave them up! 5 point feeders 4 point feeders 1876 White Stockings 1909 Tigers 1911 Cubs 1913 Giants 1933 Cardinals 1967 Giants 1973 Reds 1978 Yankees 1987 Mets 1993 Blue Jays 1999 Braves 2001 Diamondbacks, but instead of Curt Schilling you get a second 2001 Randy Johnson 2006 Cardinals 2010 Phillies 2012 Detroit Tigers 2013 Angels 2014 Dodgers 3 point feeders 1897 Beaneaters 1919 Cubs 1924 Reds 1928 Pirates 1936 Giants 1943 Dodgers 1959 White sox 1961 Cardinals 1968 Orioles 1972 Twins 1980 Royals 1983 Expos 1987 As 1993 White Sox 1997 Astros 1998 Orioles 1999 Giants 2001 Indians 2004 Marlins 2014 Mariners 2015 Royals 2 point feeders 1877 Red Stockings 1887 Browns 1917 Yankees 1920 Brooklyn Robins 1920 Red Sox 1953 Tigers 1965 Yankees 1968 As 1974 Angels 1974 Phillies 1976 Expos 1980 Cardinals 1984 Indians 1988 Brewers 1990 Royals 1992 Rangers 2002 Blue Jays 2002 Reds 2003 expos 2007 Mariners 2008 Rockies East Central University Booster Pack 1 point 1889 White Stockings 1903 White Sox 1915 Braves 1915 Newark Pepper 1917 As 1932 White Sox 1933 Browns 1948 Phillies 1955 Reds 1957 Pirates 1965 Astros 1970 Royals 1974 Padres 1975 Braves 1980 Blue Jays 1981 Padres 1982 Mariners 1992 yankees 1994 Angels 1994 Tigers 1999 Royals 1999 Twins 2001 Rockies 2002 Padres 2007 Rays 2008 As 2010 Diamondbacks 2016 Kansas City Stars Participating Teams 1. Fair Games 2. Giovanni Volttiani's Baseball Resorgimento 3. Thaddeus Mansfeld Madman's Excelling Ballmen 4. Theodore Kildare Bomber's Playing Men of Gentlemanly Skill 5. Jampact's Backup Kenseis 6. pungry made a team 7. Stalin 8. Cthulhu, in theory. 9. I will fight Nissin Cup Nudist Smasher Dynamo fucked around with this message at 00:00 on Jun 22, 2017 |
# ? Jun 17, 2017 19:51 |
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# ? May 15, 2024 03:46 |
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Hello I made the feeder list so if you have questions please direct them my way.
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# ? Jun 17, 2017 19:58 |
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Paul Zuvella posted:Hello I made the feeder list so if you have questions please direct them my way. Does the MLB The Show pack include all the Blue Jays that are on the Canadian covers for some dumb reason
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# ? Jun 17, 2017 20:08 |
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Yaya posted:Does the MLB The Show pack include all the Blue Jays that are on the Canadian covers for some dumb reason Yes, you also get both Joe Mauers
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# ? Jun 17, 2017 20:10 |
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Craig, forgive me for not taking either of the available Pucketts. Team post to follow, but reserving the following teams (11 points): 1891 Phillies (3) 1926 Indians (1) 2015 Marlins (1) 1921 White Sox (2) 1979 Angels (3) 1941 Senators (1)
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# ? Jun 17, 2017 20:31 |
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Welcome I'm CraigK and I'll be running the league in between dota matches and path of exile farming Deal With It
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# ? Jun 17, 2017 20:52 |
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1965 Chicago Cubs - 3 1938 Pittsburgh Pirates - 2 2001 Texas Rangers - 2 GVOLTT fucked around with this message at 17:17 on Jun 18, 2017 |
# ? Jun 17, 2017 20:52 |
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1958 NL All Stars (5) 1998 Red Sox (3) 1994 Dodgers (2) 1916 Cardinals (1)
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# ? Jun 17, 2017 21:09 |
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GVOLTT posted:1991 Atlanta Braves - 4 not in the pool, i assume you meant '99 braves?
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# ? Jun 17, 2017 21:11 |
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Craig K posted:not in the pool, i assume you meant '99 braves? Can you blame a guy for wanting Lonnie Smith and Charlie Liebrandt?
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# ? Jun 17, 2017 21:32 |
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FairGame posted:Can you blame a guy for wanting Lonnie Smith and Charlie Liebrandt? Should have put more Lonnie Smith feeders in
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# ? Jun 17, 2017 22:36 |
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SOMEONE SAID LONNIE SMITH https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wTM_eN8AZeQ
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# ? Jun 17, 2017 22:52 |
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Craig K posted:SOMEONE SAID LONNIE SMITH This is pretty good
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# ? Jun 17, 2017 23:15 |
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Alright, time to try and build another team. 1990 NL All-Stars (4) 1917 Phillies (3) 1929 Senators (2) 1984 Twins (1) 1974 Brewers (1) TKBomber7285 fucked around with this message at 00:21 on Jun 18, 2017 |
# ? Jun 18, 2017 00:18 |
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Alright, let's get this in so I can ignore it for a few weeks until the EC starts or whatever. TEAM NAME: Motorville Mites LOGO: MASCOT: HOME CITY: The Fairy Ground HOME STADIUM: Mr. Drippy Field. I'll see if I want to cook a ballpark after the EC. For now, put them in Busch Stadium circa 1987. DH PREFERENCE: No DH for meaningful games. For the EC, I'd like everyone to be DH since it allows us to learn about 1 more hitter on our rosters. But whatever works for you. 30-Man Roster code:
Vs. BOTH Hamilton, RF Collins, 2B Speaker, CF Delahanty, LF Carew, 1B Travis, 3B Downing, C Sewell, SS Hooper, DH (if we end up going no-DH, just drop Hooper from the lineup and bat the pitcher. BENCH: Schalk, C Grich, 2B Prado, UT Chapman, OF Myer, UT MINORS: Dyson, RP Stanton, OF Thompson, OF Burns, 1B Ferrell, C STARTING PITCHING 1.) Faber 2.) Ryan 3.) Keefe 4.) Fernandez 5.) Tanana BULLPEN CL: Ramos SU: Barraclough SR1: Cishek SR2: LaRoche MR: Leonard LR: Uhle SLIDERS Hit and Run: +4 Sacrifice Bunt: +1 Squeeze Play: +1 Trying for extra bases: +3 Stealing Bases: +3 Aggressively Tagging Up: +3 Pitch Outs (to prevent stolen bases): 0 Giving Intentional Walks: 0 Pitching Around Good Hitters: 0 Bringing the Infield In: 0 Guarding the Lines: 0 Making Cutoff Throws: -2 Bringing in Pinch Hitters: -3 Bringing in Pinch Runners: -3 Bringing in Defensive Replacements: -3 Starting Pitchers on Short Rest: 0 Letting pitchers pitch throw trouble: 2 Letting Pitchers rack up high pitch counts: 1 FairGame fucked around with this message at 04:28 on Jun 22, 2017 |
# ? Jun 18, 2017 00:31 |
The East Central University Booster Pack links to the alumni page for the East Carolina University. You should probably clarify what you mean with this, mks.
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# ? Jun 18, 2017 00:43 |
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TheMcD posted:The East Central University Booster Pack links to the alumni page for the East Carolina University. You should probably clarify what you mean with this, mks. It's supposed to link to this http://www.baseball-almanac.com/college/east_central_university_baseball_players.shtml
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# ? Jun 18, 2017 01:19 |
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1933 Yankees 6 World Series MVPs North Carolina Tar Heels Booster pack This is going to be brutal.
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# ? Jun 18, 2017 02:08 |
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1934 Crawfords (5) 1983 Phillies (3) 2013 Nats (3) Time to die.
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# ? Jun 18, 2017 02:12 |
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Jampact posted:1933 Yankees Thank you for picking my weird gimmick feeders
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# ? Jun 18, 2017 02:19 |
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Paul Zuvella posted:Thank you for picking my weird gimmick feeders Not 100% sold on the North Carolina team but I reserve the right to swap
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# ? Jun 18, 2017 02:26 |
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Jampact posted:Not 100% sold on the North Carolina team but I reserve the right to swap Honestly that might not be the worst option, its pick your own year and gives you a bunch of maybe usable bullpen options. and oh boy does your team need bullpen arms.
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# ? Jun 18, 2017 02:29 |
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Time to have a completely new team under my control for the 1st time since Super-League 12 that hopefully doesn't remind me why I hate picking teams from the feeders in the first place. Team Name: Everett Eagles Home City: Everett, MA (Just put Boston if Mogul doesn't recognize it) Logo: Home Stadium The Eagle's Nest (Atlanta–Fulton County Stadium) DH Preference I'd prefer DH, but will go to the non-DH league if a team is needed 30-man roster gwynnto01,1990,,,,Tony,Gwynn bondsba01,1990,,,,Barry,Bonds clarkwi02,1990,,,,Will,Clark cronijo01,1929,,,,Joe,Cronin puckeki01,1984,,,,Kirby,Puckett sandbry01,1990,,,,Ryne,Sandberg stockmi01,1917,,,,Milt,Stock porteda02,1974,,,,Darrell,Porter myerbu01,1929,,,,Buddy,Myer yountro01,1974,,,,Robin,Yount gosligo01,1929,,,,Goose,Goslin santibe01,1990,,,,Benito,Santiago gaettga01,1984,,,,Gary,Gaetti bonilbo01,1990,,,,Bobby,Bonilla alexape01,1917,,,,Pete,Alexander bendech01,1917,,,,Chief,Bender violafr01,1990,,,,Frank,Viola martide01,1990,,,,Dennis,Martinez rixeyep01,1917,,,,Eppa,Rixey francjo01,1990,,,,John,Franco dibblro01,1990,,,,Rob,Dibble smithda02,1990,,,,Dave,Smith brantje01,1990,,,,Jeff,Brantley rodried01,1974,,,,Eduardo,Rodriguez martira02,1990,,,,Ramon,Martinez smithoz01,1990,,,,Ozzie,Smith scottge02,1974,,,,George,Scott jonessa01,1929,,,,Sad Sam,Jones sciosmi01,1990,,,,Mike,Scioscia ricesa01,1929,,,,Sam,Rice Lineups With DH DH Tony Gwynn 1B Will Clark LF Barry Bonds RF Goose Goslin CF Kirby Puckett SS Joe Cronin 2B Ryne Sandberg 3B Milt Stock C Darrell Porter Without DH RF Tony Gwynn 1B Will Clark LF Barry Bonds CF Kirby Puckett SS Joe Cronin 2B Ryne Sandberg 3B Milt Stock C Darrell Porter Pitcher Pitchers SP Pete Alexander SP Chief Bender SP Frank Viola SP Dennis Martinez SP Eppa Rixey CL John Franco SU Rob Dibble SR Dave Brantley SR Dave Smith MR Eduardo Rodriguez LR Ramon Martinez Bench Robin Yount Buddy Myer Goose Goslin (No DH) Benito Santiago Gary Gaetti Bobby Bonilla Minors Ozzie Smith George Scott Sad Sam Jones Mike Scioscia Sam Rice Strategy (Rate on a scale from -5 to +5) Hit and Run: +1 Sacrifice Bunt: -5 Squeeze Play: -5 Trying for extra bases: 0 Stealing Bases: -2 Aggressively Tagging Up: -1 Pitch Outs (to prevent stolen bases): -1 Giving Intentional Walks: 0 Pitching Around Good Hitters: 0 Bringing the Infield In: 0 Guarding the Lines: 0 Making Cutoff Throws: 0 Bringing in Pinch Hitters: -3 Bringing in Pinch Runners: -3 Bringing in Defensive Replacements: -3 Starting Pitchers on Short Rest: -5 Letting pitchers pitch throw trouble: 0 Letting Pitchers rack up high pitch counts: 0 TKBomber7285 fucked around with this message at 04:11 on Jun 18, 2017 |
# ? Jun 18, 2017 02:33 |
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For the AL CY Young pack, they Cy Young covered both leagues until 1967. If I wanted a pre-67 winner, would he had to have been from an AL team?
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# ? Jun 18, 2017 03:42 |
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Nissin Cup Nudist posted:For the AL CY Young pack, they Cy Young covered both leagues until 1967. If I wanted a pre-67 winner, would he had to have been from an AL team? pretty sure its just the 1967 onward players since the "AL Cy Young" didn't exist till then also because thats how MKS talked about the feeder
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# ? Jun 18, 2017 03:46 |
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Team Name: Cape Cod Great Whites Team Logo: Home City: Orleans, MA Home Stadium: Eldredge Park (even though it's a real park, it probably needs to be custom-made, here's the dimensions: 314-350-434-359-314) DH Preference: Yes Feeders: 1942 Red Sox - 4 1965 Cubs - 3 1938 Pirates - 2 2001 Rangers - 2 Roster: code:
code:
1. Arky Vaughan (SS) 2. Paul Waner (RF) 3. Jimmie Foxx (1B) 4. Ted Williams (LF) 5. Billy Williams (DH) 6. Ron Santo (3B) 7. Bobby Doerr (2B) 8. Ivan Rodriguez (C) (Ed Bailey is the personal catcher for Larry Jackson) 9. Lloyd Waner (vs. RHP)/Dom DiMaggio (vs. LHP) (CF) Strategy: code:
code:
GVOLTT fucked around with this message at 05:59 on Jun 21, 2017 |
# ? Jun 18, 2017 04:00 |
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Nissin Cup Nudist posted:For the AL CY Young pack, they Cy Young covered both leagues until 1967. If I wanted a pre-67 winner, would he had to have been from an AL team? They need to win the American League Cy Young.
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# ? Jun 18, 2017 04:06 |
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Ah, screw it. I'm switching from the 1999 Braves to the 1942 Red Sox.
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# ? Jun 18, 2017 05:09 |
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Paul Zuvella posted:They need to win the American League Cy Young. gotcha For the booster pack players, what years are they? Rookies?
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# ? Jun 18, 2017 05:10 |
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Nissin Cup Nudist posted:gotcha You pick
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# ? Jun 18, 2017 05:14 |
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Cool. I pick the Al Cy Young x 6 Integration Booster SDSU Booster
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# ? Jun 18, 2017 05:27 |
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Nissin Cup Nudist posted:Cool. I pick the You are literally my favorite human ever
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# ? Jun 18, 2017 05:36 |
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Like poo poo you might have well have selected my children
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# ? Jun 18, 2017 05:47 |
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Does this mean you will rig Mogul in my favor?
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# ? Jun 18, 2017 06:01 |
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unluckily for you, CraigK will be running the EC this time, so probably not
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# ? Jun 18, 2017 06:04 |
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TheFlyingLlama posted:unluckily for you, CraigK will be running the EC this time, so probably not Yeah but CraigK likes fun poo poo so
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# ? Jun 18, 2017 13:38 |
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No he plays Dota
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# ? Jun 18, 2017 13:48 |
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Yaya posted:No he plays Dota :|
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# ? Jun 18, 2017 16:20 |
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CTHULHU MAKE YOUR loving TEAM TODAY BEFORE YOU "augh all the good feeders were taken i don't want to bother :|||||" FOR THE FIFTH GODDAMNED EC IN A ROW
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# ? Jun 18, 2017 16:22 |
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# ? May 15, 2024 03:46 |
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Is the integration booster really "first for each team?" Because "first black players in MLB" is a separate list, and includes Paige and Mays, whereas "first for each team" doesn't.
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# ? Jun 18, 2017 16:25 |