Highlights From Diamond Mind April 2024

NEW “CLASSIC” SALARIES ARE HERE!

As foreshadowed in last month’s newsletter, new Classic (career-rated) player salaries are now in effect.  In what has to be one of the more improbable juxtapositions, the biggest salary increases in dollar and percentage terms ($2 million minimum salary in the case of the latter) went to Pop Lloyd ($2,375,000) and Matt Albers (+50.7%) respectively.  In all, 11 players went up over $2.3 million and a whopping 153 over $2 million.

The biggest decreases: Rogers Hornsby ($2,062,000) and Dave Berg (19.79%).  Hornsby was the only player whose salary dropped by over $2 million.

In general, there are always larger salary increases than decreases, because certain players are always identified as bargains and used heavily. Their usage in numerical terms is far more than the average usage in their salary range/for their position, which is relatively low.  (So, in numerical terms, the difference in usage below average is much, much less, even for players who are hardly used at all, than usage above average for the most heavily used players.)

Because of this concentration of usage in a relatively small number of players, there are always more salary cuts than raises. The total value of the player pool doesn’t change, so the cuts are spread over more players than the raises.

In total, this time around 1976 players received salary increases, 206 were unchanged and 3266 dropped.  There are 282 minimum salary ($500,000) players.

Who are the new biggest bargains?  Why not join a Classic standard or custom league and see for yourself?

REGISTER NOW FOR THE LADDER LEAGUES STANDARD ASSN SEASON 45

Registration is now open for the Ladder Leagues Random 600 Association Season 45.

For those unfamiliar with them, the Ladder Leagues operate like European soccer, with a ranked leagues structure. At the end of each LL season, the top teams from that season are promoted to higher leagues and the bottom teams relegated to lower leagues for the season to follow.  The promotion/relegation system ensures competitive leagues of comparably skilled owners.

RA600 leagues draft manually from random limited pools of 600 players. They are set in the Moneyball Era of Play with or without the DH in alternate seasons. All other league parameters (cap, income, injuries, etc) are standard.

There were five leagues in Season 44, which played without the DH.  Season 45 will be played with the DH.

Many consider the RA600 leagues to be the most entertaining and challenging format.  Why not give it a try and register here.

TOURNAMENT NEWS

The Grand Open Tournament XVIII and the 2024 Masters Tournament both have advanced to the second round.

The GOT field was narrowed in Round 2 from 144 to 108 contenders.  Leading the way from Round 1 were three 100 win teams:  Joseph (blueshammer) Lacey’s GOT Rd 1 Haters (106-56), Andrew (abywaters) Bywaters’s MoreThan Conquerors (104-58) and Neil (nrfellows) Fellows’s GOT Mighty Poodles (101-61).

Sitting atop the Masters points table after Round 1 is defending GOT champion Alan (WhatsMyID) Herzberg, who is playing in his first Masters.  After a Round 1 Classic 19th Century theme, Round 2 presents team owners with an SSG “rags to riches challenge.

CUSTOM LEAGUES KINGS

This month we’re back with Jim (jbaird) Baird.

Click here to read more.

THE TIPPING POINT

The Tipping Point

Each month we’ll offer a few tips in this space that may come in handy for the beginner as well as the experienced team owner.

This month we have two completely unrelated tips – one Classic, one SSG:

Classic: Your Best Pitchers Should Pitch As Much as Possible

Sounds obvious, doesn’t it?  Yet basically since the inception of the game, I personally used a 5-man rotation with a spot starter and rarely, if ever, the “Ace” setting.

These days I play mostly SSG, but when I do play Classic, it’s with a 4-man rotation, more often than not set to “Double Ace”.  And if your “best” pitcher is “just” some pretty good value $6-7 million guy, you still “ace” him, since you want your best guy, even if he’s not exactly great, getting every inning you can squeeze out of him.

SSG: Playing the Pumpkin

I wouldn’t do this for a whole season in a “normal” league, but as a way of saving money up front and creating a spot you can upgrade later, or even for all or most of the season in a low cap league, playing a minimum salary (or nearly minimum) Ex fielder in CF or at SS can be a handy strategy.

In the Big Fishes Small Pond leagues, teams have a $62 million cap and must have two players on the roster from the same season with a combined salary of at least $32 million.  Real splits are off; DH on; injuries off; 26-man rosters; standard weekly cash, loans and interest; and your eligible players are everyone from your Big Fishes’ season.

In the current league, my team from 1973 began the season with two L-hitting $500k Ex CF’ers: Dave Schneck and Rich Chiles, in a park that favors L hitting.  At the 148-game mark of the season, the starter, Schneck, batting in the 8 or 9 hole all season, has a batting line of .228/.290/.321 with 7 HR and 59 RBI.  We had a great PH’er (more about him in a moment) to hit for Schneck when needed, with Chiles on the bench to replace him or serve as a defensive replacement for one of the corner OF’ers.  (Chiles was an upgrade casualty late in the season.)  In a league where every PA, IP and dollar count, that strikes me as great value.

Now, about that pinch hitter.  Mike Corkins tossed 122 not completely putrid innings for the woeful (60-102) ’73 Padres.  But, as a hitter, in 36 PA’s he had one 2B and three HR.  That was worth 40 PA (110% PTL) as a pinch hitter, when he wasn’t mopping up, and he posted this insane batting line: .359/.375/.897 (that’s an OPS of 1.272) with three doubles, six HR, 14 RBI and three game-winning hits.  And the “cherry on top” is his pitching line: 47.2 IP, 2-1, 3/4 3.02.

When filling that last spot at the end of the pen, I’m always looking for a pitcher who hit well and had lots of (not totally awful) innings, so lots of PA.

NEW BLOG ARTICLES

2024-04-29T09:18:05-07:00By |0 Comments

Share This Story, Choose Your Platform!

Leave A Comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Go to Top