March 01, 2002 at 02:45AM View BBCode
Obviously it's a bit early in the season to draw any hard conclusions, but glancing at all the team ERA's in the Connie Mack League leads me to believe that the game is tilted a little too much in the hitter's favor.
Cincinnati 3.33
Pittsburgh 4.08
Boston 4.30
Brooklyn 5.19
New York Highlanders 5.37
New York Don Rickles 5.40
St.Louis 5.45
Milwaukee 6.00
Detroit 6.06
Kansas City 6.33
Chicago Cubs 6.34
Washington 6.85
Baltimore 7.24
Cleveland 8.14
Chicago Sox 9.94
March 01, 2002 at 02:58AM View formatted
March 01, 2002 at 03:13AM View BBCode
Fair enough.March 01, 2002 at 03:33AM View BBCode
...hope you don't view any of this as negative :)
March 01, 2002 at 01:09PM View BBCode
I was thinking the same thing. Tyson, did you modify the player creation logic? It seems to me that the number of hitters with high ratings has gone up. The fact that there are just many more excellent hitters is probably contributing more to the increase in runs than any changes to in-game logic.March 01, 2002 at 02:31PM View BBCode
I remember modifying the player creation logic, as well as some other game attributes. I'll keep an eye on it and make adjustments for next season if necessary.March 03, 2002 at 07:23PM View BBCode
I haven't touched a thing, but the league averages has dropped to 5.333.March 04, 2002 at 12:50PM View BBCode
After looking at the stats more closely, I'm convince there is too much offense. In 18 of my 21 games, the winning team has scored 7 runs or more. 11 times in those 21 games a team has scored in double digits. Time to start calling the high strike.March 04, 2002 at 02:29PM View BBCode
There may be a tad too much offense, I agree. I will probably make a few adjustments after the season. I'd like to get an idea about what exactly is causing the problem, too many singles, doubles, triples, homeruns, or combination of them all.Pages: 1