Originally posted by Walla Walla:
This last year I tried going an allstar pitching route. This was in the online 12 team draft. First thing I heard half way through the draft was how I had screwed everyone in the league by not drafting the normal way. Did I win no. I ended up .5 behind second place. Did I hurt the others from winning the overall? No. They had a chance to pad thier stats on the hitting side.
This would have helped them in the overall. But most of them just gave up after the draft didn't go the way it was suppose to. To his credit Todd Zola was in this draft and drafted like a pro.
He won the league going away. The lesson is the rules don't matter if you can't adjust in the draft.

Walla, you need to perform well in all ten categories to win the overall. There are a finite number of points that can be gained on the hitting side. For example, if you would have finished 50th in ERA and AVG with a normal draft, in a hitting heavy draft, you might get up to 25th in AVG but your ERA drops back to 200th.
Instead of having an average of 50th place, you get an average of 112. If you want to argue you'd be 1st in AVG, I'm not going to go through the trouble of explaining why that's unlikely, but for argument's sake you'd still end up 100th if that happens.
It is mathematically impossible to pad a sub-par or even average pitching staff with good hitting and win the overall, or at least it would have been for the previous six seasons. Maybe next year everyone will perform like crap and you can win with this strategy.
[ October 31, 2009, 05:10 PM: Message edited by: bjoak ]
Chance favors the prepared mind.