July 23, 2014 at 03:36PM View BBCode
I got nostalgic this morning in reviewing the careers of the best pitchers in my leagues' histories. So I thought I'd start a thread. I am sure there are edit leagues and some freaky things out there that might hijack the thread (if it even takes off), but I'm sticking with guys who were just awesome without any crazy settings or rules.July 23, 2014 at 03:44PM View BBCode
I feel compelled to point out that the MML had guys who were actually better but couldn't put together the career Martino did. Part of that was starting 1950 at a later age, I'm sure.July 23, 2014 at 09:16PM View BBCode
in my other leagues, I've never seen anyone anywhere remotely close to Martino. Once I tried deciphering how many CYs he won, but I don't have it or really remember, I think it was like 7 or 9.July 27, 2014 at 05:27PM View BBCode
What the H was going on in Philadelphia in 1958, 1959 and 1960? I see Drysdale going 18-5 with a 1.60 E.R.A, followed by a 14-1 with 1.56, but he only started 19 and 15 games? Give that boy the 60 starts he missed, and he makes a run at 300 wins.July 27, 2014 at 05:27PM View BBCode
What the H was going on in Philadelphia in 1958, 1959 and 1960? I see Drysdale going 18-5 with a 1.60 E.R.A, followed by a 14-1 with 1.56, but he only started 19 and 15 games? Give that boy the 60 starts he missed, and he makes a run at 300 wins.July 27, 2014 at 10:24PM View BBCode
that's one of the earliest pay leagues, i wasn't in it then of course, but from what i've heard (mostly from redcped) is that PHI at that time was stupidly dominant, they would sort of loan their young guys out to other teams to get ICs (even major leaguers, not just CP trades), they must have been doing some shenaniganish things with their pitching too...the sim landscape was the wild west back then, haha.July 27, 2014 at 10:47PM View BBCode
Originally posted by paulcaraccio
that's one of the earliest pay leagues, i wasn't in it then of course, but from what i've heard (mostly from redcped) is that PHI at that time was stupidly dominant, they would sort of loan their young guys out to other teams to get ICs (even major leaguers, not just CP trades), they must have been doing some shenaniganish things with their pitching too...the sim landscape was the wild west back then, haha.
July 27, 2014 at 11:44PM View BBCode
The early days were big fun if you didn't mind a total lack of realism.July 28, 2014 at 03:08AM View BBCode
Oh yeah, it was wild and wooly.July 28, 2014 at 04:57PM View BBCode
My favourite pitcher manipulation of all time, Brian Lucy was one of the great masters of "gaming the game" and what he did with [url=http://www.simdynasty.com/player.jsp?id=1668539]Bo Baracus[/url] back in the old days, particularly his spectacular 1961 season, was simply amazing.July 28, 2014 at 05:12PM View formatted
July 28, 2014 at 05:34PM View BBCode
Originally posted by redcped
I got nostalgic this morning in reviewing the careers of the best pitchers in my leagues' histories. So I thought I'd start a thread. I am sure there are edit leagues and some freaky things out there that might hijack the thread (if it even takes off), but I'm sticking with guys who were just awesome without any crazy settings or rules.
[url=http://www.simdynasty.com/player.jsp?id=21052]Pat Martino, Mickey Mantle League[/url]
At one point, Martino was considered the best pitcher in any league in SD history. The MML had a lot of excellent pitchers in its first two decades, but Martino topped them all. We have no CYA history or All-Star history that's easy to track, but clearly he won a lot.
451 wins (95 more than anyone else)
12 straight seasons with 22+ wins
7 seasons under 2.00 ERA
31-4 in 35 starts in OS37 year (only guy to win 30 games in a season still)
[url=http://www.simdynasty.com/player.jsp?id=3367917]Andy Bomback, Tony Conigliaro League[/url]
We still speak in reverential tones about Bomback. He won 12 straight CYA and 13 in all. His 419 wins are 84 more than anyone else in league history. His 2.50 ERA is a quarter-run better than anyone else who's retired (active guy is at 2.56 but hasn't hit decline yet ...)
Bomback's consecutive 29-3 seasons remain unmatched. We had a guy win 28 this past season, which got me on this train of thought.
He was also money in the playoffs, with a league-best 24 wins to go with a 2.66 ERA.
So, there you go. Feel free to share your legends of the mythical SD mounds.
[Edited on 7-23-2014 by redcped]
July 28, 2014 at 06:50PM View BBCode
Originally posted by tworoosters1. Baracus lost 28 games during the 1961 season, and carried a WHIP & ERA higher than during those other seasons of sustained excellence. Would those additional innings pitched have been better used by other pitchers, enabling Baracus to perform at peak level during more of its appearances?
My favourite pitcher manipulation of all time, Brian Lucy was one of the great masters of "gaming the game" and what he did with [url=http://www.simdynasty.com/player.jsp?id=1668539]Bo Baracus[/url] back in the old days, particularly his spectacular 1961 season, was simply amazing.
The ASL was my first pay league, and while I suffered for my innocence it taught me a lot .
July 28, 2014 at 07:56PM View BBCode
It was purely an experiment by Brian, the ASL was kind of his petri dish, and the National league was basically a two team league at the time so he was going to make the playoffs regardless.July 29, 2014 at 09:04PM View BBCode
Yeah...I'm glad Admin made that change. In my first Dynasty League, I remember naively renaming players that already had a long history. But I've never named a high performing player after a somewhat mediocre major leaguer.Pages: 1