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OOTP 24 - General Discussions Everything about the brand new 2023 version of Out of the Park Baseball - officially licensed by MLB, the MLBPA and the KBO. |
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#1 |
All Star Starter
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Age old question - League Expansion
So I want to banter about this topic again as I'm trying to figure out how to not take advantage of the AI when it comes to roster decisions.
I know that I am going to expand the league but of course the AI doesn't and therefore is making roster decisions in a disadvantaged state. I've read before that some people do it the first day of the offseason and others wait until January 1st. I don't know if I should do it immediately after the World Series but before the first day of the offseason as I don't want the AI teams to make contract decisions without knowing that they might be losing guys in the upcoming expansion draft. I'm going to run a series of league tests but don't know what exactly to look for right away since every game is different and the AI makes different decisions each sim. Open to thoughts.
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- - - World Series championships: 1926, 1931, 1934, 1942, 1944, 1946, 1964, 1967, 1982, 2006, 2011 |
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#2 |
Hall Of Famer
Join Date: May 2006
Posts: 3,640
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Expansion drafts happen in November in real life, for the same roster management and free agency reasons, so you should definitely schedule yours for soon after the World Series.
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#3 |
Bat Boy
Join Date: Jan 2024
Posts: 6
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I make all my changes for the following year as soon as off-season starts (salary cap, expansions, etc). Don't see any upside to waiting.
I don't think the game recognizes 1 january as any sort of time mark, as humans do. they mark time with off-season, pre-season, spring training, regular season, playoffs. Happy to be corrected. ymmv |
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#4 |
Hall Of Famer
Join Date: May 2016
Location: St Petersburg Florida USA
Posts: 6,309
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I don't see how having the expansion draft early helps roster decisions. There's a player who could become a free agent. Should his current team protect him? If not should an expansion team draft him?
How about an arb eligible player? How would an expansion team know if it can afford him if the draft is pre arb?
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Pirates Play Moneyball 1951 to 2008 46,000 views and counting!... Wow, up to 47,000, thank you. Wow, I hadn't checked for weeks. Oct 9 2024 its 79,561. Why do people use different players, different lineups, different strategy, development, talent change randomness, and the development lab, but judge the game on whether it produces historical statistics? |
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#5 |
Hall Of Famer
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Not to complicate your path, but I had pretty much the opposite thing happen. Because, I think, of the way I set up my expansion rules, the existing teams overreacted, and went into a frenzy of trading. This was, in retrospect, because I prefer narrow rules on draft-exempt players (only twelve per team, plus players with less than three year service time). This caused teams to panic and deal players they could not protect. At least it does show that the AI has the capability to anticipate the expansion draft. My expansion was back in the reserve clause days (1961), so free agency was not an issue. I think November makes sense for a draft date. You need to give teams time after the WS to prepare their draft lists.
I wish there were a way to set expansion for a year ahead, and allow the new franchises to field a minor league team or two, and to draft minor league free agents. It also would make sense to allow the expansion franchises to participate in the amateur and foreign player drafts a year ahead, to begin the development process. Of course MLB would never do this, so I really can't blame OOTP for not creating the alternative.
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#6 | |
Hall Of Famer
Join Date: May 2006
Posts: 3,640
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Quote:
Arbitration can also play into a team's decision to protect players. If an arbitration-eligible player isn't really living up to expectations, but it's likely that he's going to get more money in arbitration, then he potentially becomes a good candidate to be left unprotected. You can leave him unprotected and hope that someone drafts him and assumes the risk. Expansion team owners have already paid a huge expansion fee and will also pay a fee for every player drafted from another team. So, budget isn't necessarily an issue. But they have to weigh the potential arbitration cost and the fee to the other team, plus the immediate and long-term value of the player. To illustrate the potential budget non-issue, here are some examples from the Marlins' free agent signings in December 1992. These were not arbitration-eligible players, but the numbers are telling. The Marlins signed Benito Santiago at $3.6 million per season, Orestes Destrade for $2 million, Dave Magadan for $900,000, and they signed me for $800,000. So, clearly, they were willing to spend money on free agents. I'm not sure if anyone they drafted in November 1992 was eligible for arbitration, but the risk might not have detracted them much, if they really wanted the player. They were clearly willing to spend. Last edited by Charlie Hough; 02-08-2024 at 03:28 PM. |
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#7 | |
All Star Starter
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__________________
- - - World Series championships: 1926, 1931, 1934, 1942, 1944, 1946, 1964, 1967, 1982, 2006, 2011 |
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#8 | ||
Minors (Double A)
Join Date: Apr 2011
Posts: 148
Infractions: 0/1 (3)
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