Steals seem less relevant to actual baseball with each passing year. I guess it's just a rotisserie baseball relic at this point and why change?
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Why do we use steals?
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You should switch to points leagues . My league has been a points league since 1994 and back then no one did them. Slowly, that has changed.
I just agreed to co-own in a weird h2h category league, though, that deals with the steals issue in a ham-fisted way. To reduce the importance of steals, they double up on power stats by counting both slugging and homers as categories. I've seen other methods to devalue steals with an extra power category, but I guess folks don't wanna give it up entirely.
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I still really enjoy the roto format (and am a creature of habit) but I've done a couple points leagues over the years. I liked 'em okay but keep coming back to the 5x5 (also was in a 4x4 league some years back). Steals just seem very antiquated now, though. You're right that points leagues take care of the issue, for sure.More American children die by gunfire in a year than on-duty police officers and active duty military.
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Originally posted by BigJonEmpire View PostSteals will make a comeback soon.
And bunting. Remember bunting? I don't mean those sharply bunted grounders that are in the fielders glove before the batter is out of the box. I'm talking about real bunting down the third base line and having the ball come to a stop about half way down the line while staying fair. I especially would like to see more bunting to the empty side of the shift.“Two things are infinite: the universe and human stupidity; and I'm not sure about the universe.”
― Albert Einstein
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Wins is another category that often gets questioned.
I like the category as it often keeps me involved in watching games to the end, and also for cheering on the hitters on my pitcher's team.
Just trying to replicate what today's analytics gurus believe in does not make for the most enjoyable watching experience.
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Originally posted by Ken View PostFor me, steals is one of those things that makes roto fun. Limited resource, gotta figure out how to get your speed without overpaying, numbers change every year, etc. It's interesting.
I have found that I would not like using caught stealing, however. Too many CS are result of botched hit-and-run plays or whatever. Seems like adding CS messes everything up. Glad I don't use the format anywhere.Larry David was once being heckled, long before any success. Heckler says "I'm taking my dog over to fuck your mother, weekly." Larry responds "I hate to tell you this, but your dog isn't liking it."
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Originally posted by Teenwolf View PostI like SB because it forces fantasy players to contextualize value from different types of players. I love trying to figure out the differences in value for a 50 hit, 70 speed guy versus a 40 hit, 60 power guy, or a 55 hit, 50 power guy... I love having different skillsets to covet.
I have found that I would not like using caught stealing, however. Too many CS are result of botched hit-and-run plays or whatever. Seems like adding CS messes everything up. Glad I don't use the format anywhere.
Both our AL only and NL only voted to make it S-CS instead of just steals (I was outvoted). That lasted one year before it was overturned.
I had days where I went backwards in that category.
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Originally posted by harmon View PostWins is another category that often gets questioned.
I like the category as it often keeps me involved in watching games to the end, and also for cheering on the hitters on my pitcher's team.
Just trying to replicate what today's analytics gurus believe in does not make for the most enjoyable watching experience.If DMT didn't exist we would have to invent it. There has to be a weirdest thing. Once we have the concept weird, there has to be a weirdest thing. And DMT is simply it.
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Bullshit is everywhere. - George Carlin (& Jon Stewart)
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Originally posted by Gregg View PostI agree.
Both our AL only and NL only voted to make it S-CS instead of just steals (I was outvoted). That lasted one year before it was overturned.
I had days where I went backwards in that category.
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Originally posted by Ken View PostFor me, steals is one of those things that makes roto fun. Limited resource, gotta figure out how to get your speed without overpaying, numbers change every year, etc. It's interesting.Originally posted by Gregg View PostMe too.
I also like them in real baseball.2021 Auction Anatomy
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Originally posted by cavebird View PostI like the theory behind S-CS, but not the practice. Too many guys who never try straight steals get CS's that aren't their fault, as others have noted. Makes it silly.
But why not penalize players for CS? Why should a player who gets caught half the time enjoy the stat boost? And, yes, I recognize the wonkiness of the stat sometimes - but why single it out instead of Sv or Ho or the unfairness of R or RBI (when somebody got on because of an E, e.g.), or others?
I've posted a few times here that Branch Rickey wrote an article in 1954 (in Life Magazine no less, titled "Goodby to Some Old Baseball Ideas" - see, e.g., https://invention.si.edu/branch-rick...ball-innovator) that said that the two most important statistics were OBA and EBA (what he called "Extra Base Power"). Why not use a single stat combining those two (essentially OPS) for offensive players and forget SB, RBI, and R? It might mimic the reality of offensive productivity more properly, but it's not particularly conducive to a game like rotisserie baseball (IMHO)."Instead of all of this energy and effort directed at the war to end drugs, how about a little attention to drugs which will end war?" Albert Hofmann
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