Quote:
Originally Posted by Charlie Hough
If you want players to stay with their real life teams, then you can't turn on free agency. That will potentially allow them to leave and sign with another team, although the game might force them back to the team they're supposed to play for once it imposes historical rosters and lineups again. I'm not sure how it will behave if you try using those historical restrictions but allow free agency at the same time.
|
I've never tried using historical txns and lineups and also enabling free agency. But it appears OOTP will allow you to do so. I'm pretty sure that with historical transactions, while it won't
redo historical transactions, ti will continue to apply them as they happened in in real life. (It's worth reminding that historical txns don't care where a player is at the time of a transaction; it only cares where a player is supposed to go (to a team or to the free agency bin).
So in the example of Fred Lynn, let's say in OOTP AI (or the gamer) signed him as a free agent to the Los Angeles Dodgers on 1/1/81; released him from the Orioles on 6/1/85; signed him to the Expos as FA on 6/3/85, and later signed him as a FA to the Reds on 11/15/88. With historical txns also enabled, his career path would look like this:
Imports to Red Sox
1/1/81 - signed by Dodgers
1/23/81 - placed on Angels
12/11/84 - placed on Orioles
6/1/85 - released by Orioles
6/3/85 - signed by Expos
8/31/88 - placed on Tigers
11/15/88 - signed by Reds
12/6/89 - placed on Padres
OOTP AI transactions in italics... the other txns are historical...
In that scenario, he'd never play for either the Dodgers or Reds. But instead of spending all of '85, '86, '87 and most of '88 with the O's, he's spend most of the time on the Expos...
Now, with historical lineups enabled, here's an indication of what would happen, using a test scenario from a few years ago where I un-did the mid-1964 trade that sent Lou Brock from the Cubs to the Cards (but did not do anything about the other players involved in that trade):
Cardinals: Without Brock to place in the lineup, OOTP AI made adjustments, using lineups similar to real-life but usually replacing Brock in the OF with Bob Skinner, and usually elevating Julian Javier to the #2 spot in the order.
Cubs: Since Brock isn't - historically - included in the Cubbies' lineup after the trade, the Cubs' real-life lineups are still valid, so Lou is relegated to a full-time bench role.
The above example ended up being mostly-isolated deviations from reality. However, with free agency enabled and presumably affecting dozens (or more) players each year, it'd pretty much be like historical lineups were turned off, I'd think.
Not sure if any of this is helpful to the original poster, but hopefully someone will find it useful and/or interesting