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free agents
Posted: Tue Apr 22, 2008 3:20 pm
by Cubby37
seems almost comical posting this now, but the truth is I tried to pick up John Lannan this last sunday. I had Schumaker qued 1, and someone out bid me. I had Lannan qued second. Since I didn't think anyone else was going to pick him up I bid $1. My 3rd que, Jesse Litsch, I thought other people would try to get, so I bid $30. T ended up getting Litsch and no one picked up Lannan. Why didn't it give me my second choice? I checked it a bunch, I am sure I had them in the correct order.
free agents
Posted: Tue Apr 22, 2008 3:23 pm
by Hard Heads
Pretty sure it won't allow you bid less on your #2 choice then you would've on your third choice. At least if I remember right that is how it worked in the past. Maybe a long time vet would be able to answer for sure.
free agents
Posted: Tue Apr 22, 2008 3:37 pm
by KJ Duke
It always will take your higher priced bid before a lower priced bid.
free agents
Posted: Tue Apr 22, 2008 3:41 pm
by Cubby37
Thanks guys....Good to know. In a perfect world however, I think you should be able to try a low bid on one player and if you don't get him pay more to make sure you get the second. Oh well, I can adjust.
free agents
Posted: Tue Apr 22, 2008 3:52 pm
by Top Dawg
Originally posted by Cubby37:
Thanks guys....Good to know. In a perfect world however, I think you should be able to try a low bid on one player and if you don't get him pay more to make sure you get the second. Oh well, I can adjust. I COMPLETELY AGREE!
Seems to me you should be able to ask for players in any order, regardless of price. Maybe someday soon this too shall come to pass.
Pete
free agents
Posted: Wed Apr 23, 2008 6:44 am
by mrhambone
Agreed! One of the most frustrating things I've found in this league. I thought you could get around this by making Waiver claim 1 a one dollar bid and than Wavier claim 2 a larger bid. But if your dropping the same guy in both waiver claims it ignores the fact that you want everyone on wavier claim 1 before going to Waiver claim 2 and searches for the highest bid in both. This limits what you can do FA wise. Somehow stats and the NFBC need to find a way to get around this.
free agents
Posted: Wed Apr 23, 2008 6:52 am
by DOUGHBOYS
Agree as well. The player should be the priority, not the amount of money bid. Too bad this wasn't brought up before STATS overhauled the free agency bid pages.
Any chance of putting this on STATS plate, Greg?
free agents
Posted: Thu Apr 24, 2008 1:43 am
by Raiders
I also agree. As an example two weeks ago, i had one player I could drop and needed a starting pitcher. The two pitchers I focused on were Kuo and Greg Smith. I would have preferred getting Smith for about 20. But I bid much higher for Kuo as I knew he would go higher. I got Kuo which is OK. If I wanted Smith, then I basically couldn't bid on Kuo. Again, as I needed one of them, I was in a bind.
free agents
Posted: Thu Apr 24, 2008 2:11 am
by Gordon Gekko
i know what u guys are talking about, but i don't see it happening.
free agents
Posted: Thu Apr 24, 2008 3:30 am
by Gordon Gekko
which owners would get Kuo, Lannon, and smith under your system? bids are listed in order
Owner A
Kuo 120
Lannon 120
Smith 120
Owner B
Kuo 110
Smith 150
Lannon 150
Owner C
Kuo 130
Lannon 40
Smith 40
Owner D
Smith 1
Kuo 2
Lannon 2
Owner E
Lannon 1
Kuo 2
Smith 2
free agents
Posted: Thu Apr 24, 2008 5:20 am
by BigHurt
Originally posted by Gordon Gekko:
which owners would get Kuo, Lannon, and smith under your system? bids are listed in order
Owner A
Kuo 120
Lannon 120
Smith 120
Owner B
Kuo 110
Smith 150
Lannon 150
Owner C
Kuo 130
Lannon 40
Smith 40
Owner D
Smith 1
Kuo 2
Lannon 2
Owner E
Lannon 1
Kuo 2
Smith 2 C - Kuo
B - Smith
A - Lannan
How else could it go?
free agents
Posted: Thu Apr 24, 2008 5:25 am
by Gordon Gekko
Owner D had smith ranked higher than owner B. Isn't that what the folks on this thread want or am I misremembering?
free agents
Posted: Thu Apr 24, 2008 7:38 am
by Raiders
Look at this example. What I want to do is:
1. Smith --20
(a)--conditional--Kuo 80
If the next highest bid in my league for Smith is 15, then I get Smith. If the highest bid in my league for Smith is 25, then I don't get Smith and my conditional bid for Kuo comes into play. I order the player I want regardless of dollar value bid.
free agents
Posted: Thu Apr 24, 2008 7:57 am
by Gordon Gekko
Originally posted by Raiders:
Look at this example. What I want to do is:
1. Smith --20
(a)--conditional--Kuo 80
If the next highest bid in my league for Smith is 15, then I get Smith. If the highest bid in my league for Smith is 25, then I don't get Smith and my conditional bid for Kuo comes into play. I order the player I want regardless of dollar value bid. I understand completely what u are saying. Please use the same logic and tell me what owners are awarded which players in my example above.
free agents
Posted: Thu Apr 24, 2008 8:09 am
by Raiders
In your example, C got Kuo at 130. A and B did not get Kuo so their first conditional bids came into play; B got Smith at 150; A got Lannan at 120. Any conditional bid that comes into play is counted. B and C's conditional bids that came into play were higher for Lannan and Smith than D or E.
Revising my example:
Player A: 1.Smith 20
a. Kuo 80
Player B: 1.Kuo 40
It may not work because the computer would have to decide which player to look at first--but is it possible that Player A gets Smith and Player B gets Kuo.
free agents
Posted: Thu Apr 24, 2008 8:17 am
by Gordon Gekko
Originally posted by Raiders:
In your example, C got Kuo at 130. A and B did not get Kuo so their first conditional bids came into play; B got Smith at 150; A got Lannan at 120. Any conditional bid that comes into play is counted. B and C's conditional bids that came into play were higher for Lannan and Smith than D or E.
Revising my example:
Player A: 1.Smith 20
a. Kuo 80
Player B: 1.Kuo 40
It may not work because the computer would have to decide which player to look at first--but is it possible that Player A gets Smith and Player B gets Kuo. Correct. The computer needs to know how to proceed and does so based on dollar amount. There is no other way to do it.
free agents
Posted: Thu Apr 24, 2008 9:17 am
by DOUGHBOYS
You're overthinking this, Mark. Priority on an individual list doesen't override a bigger bid by another team.
Lets say you'd like to have Lannan for a buck, more than Washburn at 120. Lannan is first priority, followed by Washburn at 120. Nobody else bids on Lannan, he is yours. The Washburn bid could be a runnerup bid that is actually higher than the winning bid.
The answer to your question would be c,b,a.
free agents
Posted: Thu Apr 24, 2008 9:24 am
by sportsbettingman
Originally posted by Gordon Gekko:
quote:Originally posted by Raiders:
In your example, C got Kuo at 130. A and B did not get Kuo so their first conditional bids came into play; B got Smith at 150; A got Lannan at 120. Any conditional bid that comes into play is counted. B and C's conditional bids that came into play were higher for Lannan and Smith than D or E.
Revising my example:
Player A: 1.Smith 20
a. Kuo 80
Player B: 1.Kuo 40
It may not work because the computer would have to decide which player to look at first--but is it possible that Player A gets Smith and Player B gets Kuo. Correct. The computer needs to know how to proceed and does so based on dollar amount. There is no other way to do it. [/QUOTE]That would make priority irrelevant if it's dollar value priority over-ride.
Dan gets it.
~Lance
free agents
Posted: Thu Apr 24, 2008 9:24 am
by bjoak
I wish this would be fixed.
free agents
Posted: Thu Apr 24, 2008 9:29 am
by Gordon Gekko
Originally posted by DOUGHBOYS:
You're overthinking this, Mark. Priority on an individual list doesen't override a bigger bid by another team.
Lets say you'd like to have Lannan for a buck, more than Washburn at 120. Lannan is first priority, followed by Washburn at 120. Nobody else bids on Lannan, he is yours. The Washburn bid could be a runnerup bid that is actually higher than the winning bid.
The answer to your question would be c,b,a. if a computer program is NOT to consider dollar amount, but rather who is first on your list, how does it know which owner's bid to process first, then second, etc...
[ April 24, 2008, 03:29 PM: Message edited by: Gordon Gekko ]
free agents
Posted: Thu Apr 24, 2008 9:35 am
by DOUGHBOYS
It will consider the dollar amount. A personal priority list would just take precedence over the amount of money bid.
free agents
Posted: Thu Apr 24, 2008 9:41 am
by JohnZ
I don't see that it can.
While it makes sense that it should, in the long run, it makes the system several times more complex than it already is. And that is never good for the masses. The average owner is not as sophisticated as most here.
High dollar bids are 100% transparent when the reports are run, and not 100% if based on a priority list.
It could be done, but it would be very difficult to program, and again, much more complex with all the variables that would be added into it.
free agents
Posted: Thu Apr 24, 2008 9:42 am
by Gordon Gekko
Originally posted by DOUGHBOYS:
It will consider the dollar amount. A personal priority list would just take precedence over the amount of money bid. dan - please tell me how the bids would be processed (in what order) in this example using the system you guys are pushing for...
Owner A
1. Lannan $50
a. Washburn $120
b. Kuo $5
Owner B
1. Washburn $130
a. Lannan $1
b. Kuo $5
Owner C
1. Kuo $6
a. Lannan $1
b. Washburn $120
Owner D
1. Kuo $5
a. Washburn $200
b. Lannan $100
free agents
Posted: Thu Apr 24, 2008 9:46 am
by Gordon Gekko
Originally posted by sportsbettingman:
Dan gets it.
~Lance feel free to chime in on my last example
free agents
Posted: Thu Apr 24, 2008 9:47 am
by JohnZ
Originally posted by DOUGHBOYS:
It will consider the dollar amount. A personal priority list would just take precedence over the amount of money bid. Multiple tie bids would be very hard to program.