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  1. #1
    The Commish YanksRockMan's Avatar
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    Millwood MAY be available

    Don't start, but I am putting millwood on the bait, but only if someone here is willing to give up an offensive weapon (15-16+ HRs....50+ RBIs) for him. I know people will say, "You're giving up a person who hasn't had good starts in a while." Yes I know, but look at his season so far. Included in his credentials is a no-hitter this year, devastating pitches, and a proven pitcher.

    If you would like one Millwood (steve, you already don't have anybody I want, just to let you know), send a proposal.

    Don't give me any ................ about this, I want offense, that's all.

    -pete
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  2. #2
    If yer not first, yer last!!!! Bozidar's Avatar
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    do you mean someone who already has 15 HRs and 50 RBIs, or someone who will finish with that?
    Quote Originally Posted by JDPNYY

  3. #3
    Waiting for the playoffs... Big_E's Avatar
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    Originally posted by Bozidar
    do you mean someone who already has 15 HRs and 50 RBIs, or someone who will finish with that?
    ROFL I was going to ask the same question!

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  4. #4
    Waiting for the playoffs... Big_E's Avatar
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    Seriously though...Millwood (or any pitcher) is not worth a 30-40 HR, 100-120 RBI guy in this league. I know you and I have had this discussion before, but look at the facts:

    Millwood this year: 209 points
    Jimmy Rollins (4 HR, 32 RBI, 19 Doubles, 9 SB, 21 BB) has earned 220.5 points

    Now in real life, you might not trade Millwood for Rollins...but in OUR LEAGUE it's a fair swap.

    Furthermore, someone like:
    Austin Kearns (15 HR, 57 RBI, 11 2B, 39 BB) has earned 266 points this year, or 27% more than Millwood has earned thus far...Millwood's a great pitcher, no doubt, but he's not a keeper, and in this league he's not worth more than Jimmy Rollins.

    ETA: I said Schilling in this thread and meant MILLWOOD.
    :rolleyes:
    Last edited by Big_E; 06-25-03 at 02:12 PM.

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  5. #5
    NYYF Legend

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    Actually, Schilling's worth a lot more than Rollins in this and any other league, because of position scarcity. Rollins' production is easy to replace; Schilling's is not.

    Be seeing you,

    Saxmania
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  6. #6
    I'm Dexter. Boo! Hitman23's Avatar
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    Originally posted by Big_E
    Seriously though...Schilling (or any pitcher) is not worth a 30-40 HR, 100-120 RBI guy in this league. I know you and I have had this discussion before, but look at the facts:
    then why did we go Giambi for Mulder??
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  7. #7
    Waiting for the playoffs... Big_E's Avatar
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    Originally posted by Hitman23

    then why did we go Giambi for Mulder??
    I didn't go Giambi for Mulder.

    My one trade this year was Randy Johnson and Byung-Hyun Kim for Pedro Martinez and John Smoltz.

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  8. #8
    Owner of a coconut bra. Yankchic22's Avatar
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    Steve get confused sometimes.....

    .... I think its the voices
    Quote Originally Posted by Big_E
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  9. #9
    I'm Dexter. Boo! Hitman23's Avatar
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    Originally posted by Big_E
    I didn't go Giambi for Mulder.

    My one trade this year was Randy Johnson and Byung-Hyun Kim for Pedro Martinez and John Smoltz.
    ok smack me. someone, please.
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  10. #10
    Owner of a coconut bra. Yankchic22's Avatar
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    I voulenteer
    Quote Originally Posted by Big_E
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  11. #11
    Waiting for the playoffs... Big_E's Avatar
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    Smacks himself for typing SCHILLING when I meant MILLWOOD. (Edited my posts above...)

    Schilling has been worth only 177.5 points this year, for the record. It's Millwood with the 209.

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  12. #12
    Waiting for the playoffs... Big_E's Avatar
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    Originally posted by Saxmania
    Actually, Schilling's worth a lot more than Rollins in this and any other league, because of position scarcity. Rollins' production is easy to replace; Schilling's is not.

    Be seeing you,

    Saxmania
    True. Though as people pointed out every time we listed TSN rankings...we don't use those in this league. People look at points when evaluating a deal.

    I'm bored, so I figured out the pitchers rankings this year. The Top 54 (3 pitchers per NYYFans.com team):



    Stats:

    1 Jason Schmidt 288.5
    2 Esteban Loaiza 280.2
    3 Roy Halladay 277
    4 Mark Mulder 271.9
    5 Kevin Brown 260.7
    6 David Wells 251.9
    7 Hideo Nomo 249.2
    8 Mark Prior 239.2
    9 Woody Williams 238.5
    10 Matt Morris 234.4
    11 Kerry Wood 234
    12 Mike Mussina 233.7
    13 Bartolo Colon 226.4
    14 Cory Lidle 219.2
    15 Randy Wolf 218.9
    16 Shawn Chacon 218.7
    17 Jamie Moyer 217.7
    18 Barry Zito 216.9
    19 Kevin Millwood 209
    20 Sidney Ponson 206
    21 Eric Gagne 204.7
    22 Roger Clemens 204.2
    23 Russ Ortiz 200.7
    24 Ben Sheets 188.9
    25 Kyle Lohse 188.4
    26 Freddy Garcia 187
    27 John Smoltz 186.5
    28 Javier Vazquez 184.2
    29 Kaz Ishii 183.7
    30 Keith Foulke 182.9
    31 Joel Piniero 181.2
    32 Tim Hudson 178.7
    33 Curt Schilling 177.5
    34 Miguel Batista 174.5
    35 Derek Lowe 173.9
    36 Octavio Dotel 172.5
    37 CC Sabathia 172
    38 Pedro Martinez 167.7
    39 Carlos Zambrano 165.9
    40 Ryan Franklin 165
    41 Jake Peavy 164.9
    42 Billy Wagner 161.4
    43 Mark Redman 159.2
    44 Kirk Rueter 157.2
    45 Rocky Bidle 156.2
    46 Ramon Ortiz 154.9
    47 Greg Maddux 152.7
    48 Tim Wakefield 152
    49 Jason Jennings 151.9
    50 Jarrod Washburn 149.2
    51 Brad Penny 147.4
    52 Andy Pettitte 146.2
    53 Al Leiter 137.5
    54 Johan Santana 137.2


    Stats are approximate since I didn't change the .1 to .33 and the .2 to .67

    Fantasy Baseball: Larrupin' Lou's; New York Knights.

  13. #13
    If yer not first, yer last!!!! Bozidar's Avatar
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    4 of my top 5 are in that list. Mays doesn't make it. Woody is up there, but he's not in the top 5..
    Quote Originally Posted by JDPNYY

  14. #14
    NYYF Legend

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    Hey, there's three relievers in the top 30! That's really good to see - I had no idea that a dominant closer could be quite that valuable in fantasy terms. Thanks, Big_E.

    As I say, position scarcity is the key, which is why evaluating a trade based in points value is interesting but not iron-clad. I can get 100 points from any waiver-wire OF, but a pitcher who creates 100 is more valuable because of scarcity.

    Be seeing you,

    Saxmania
    Mayonnaise is a demanding master.

  15. #15
    Released Outright Ansky39's Avatar
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    Originally posted by Big_E
    Seriously though...Millwood (or any pitcher) is not worth a 30-40 HR, 100-120 RBI guy in this league. I know you and I have had this discussion before, but look at the facts:

    Millwood this year: 209 points
    Jimmy Rollins (4 HR, 32 RBI, 19 Doubles, 9 SB, 21 BB) has earned 220.5 points

    Now in real life, you might not trade Millwood for Rollins...but in OUR LEAGUE it's a fair swap.

    Furthermore, someone like:
    Austin Kearns (15 HR, 57 RBI, 11 2B, 39 BB) has earned 266 points this year, or 27% more than Millwood has earned thus far...Millwood's a great pitcher, no doubt, but he's not a keeper, and in this league he's not worth more than Jimmy Rollins.

    ETA: I said Schilling in this thread and meant MILLWOOD.
    :rolleyes:
    just ain't right that a stud ace is less valuable than a mediocre utility player...

    we really should revisit this pitching penalty next offseas...

  16. #16
    If yer not first, yer last!!!! Bozidar's Avatar
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    Originally posted by Ansky39
    we really should revisit this pitching penalty next offseas...
    we will
    Quote Originally Posted by JDPNYY

  17. #17
    NYYF Legend

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    Originally posted by Ansky39

    just ain't right that a stud ace is less valuable than a mediocre utility player...
    Ansky, he really isn't. I know this points structure annoys you, but Millwood is worth a lot more than Rollins because of position scarcity and the possibility that starters can lose points rather than gain them It's two different points scales, and the end results is NOT that Millwood is worth less.

    If you think he is, then I'll happily trade you Joe McEwing for Jarrod Washburn. Deal? No, because Washburn is worth a lot more (even with his poor 2003 performance).

    Think of it this way - a hitter gets you between 10 and 35 points per week, assuming he's not a complete Tiger. A pitcher gets you between -10 and 30 points per week. Therefore, even though a hitter will on average score more points per week, pitchers are still mightily valuable because you can't have 17 hitters on your team, and those 20 or so points per week an ace pitcher give you are MUCH harder to come by than the 25 points a good hitter will give you. The difference between two teams will still often come down to the pitchers.

    I'll say it again - Millwood isn't worth less than Rollins, or Polanco, or Todd Zeile. He just doesn't score points in the same way. Sorry if I get abrupt, but this seems like the fifth time I've explained this concept since the league began. Supply and demand are viable fantasy baseball tools as much as pure points generation.

    (On the same line, you could argue that outfielders were overvalued compared to catchers in last year's fantasy league, because they scored more points on average. But because the best-hitting catchers are so rare, that IN ITSELF raises their value to be higher than an OF who hits the same value. Who's a more valuable player - Paul LoDuca or Ellis Burks? It's LoDuca, because of position scarcity. Same thing here.)

    That being said, we will be revisiting points scoring for pitching in the 2004 league, and you're welcome to join the conversation we've been having in the Ideas and Feedback for 2004 thread - which is why it's there. Big_E and some others have come up with some very good analytical tools to evaluate points-scoring regimes, and we've got some good ideas already. That's the place for this discussion.

    Disclaimer - this reply may be copied and pasted into future threads, because I can see this happening again . . .

    Be seeing you,

    Saxmania
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  18. #18
    Released Outright Ansky39's Avatar
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    Originally posted by Saxmania


    Ansky, he really isn't. I know this points structure annoys you, but Millwood is worth a lot more than Rollins because of position scarcity and the possibility that starters can lose points rather than gain them It's two different points scales, and the end results is NOT that Millwood is worth less.

    If you think he is, then I'll happily trade you Joe McEwing for Jarrod Washburn. Deal? No, because Washburn is worth a lot more (even with his poor 2003 performance).

    Think of it this way - a hitter gets you between 10 and 35 points per week, assuming he's not a complete Tiger. A pitcher gets you between -10 and 30 points per week. Therefore, even though a hitter will on average score more points per week, pitchers are still mightily valuable because you can't have 17 hitters on your team, and those 20 or so points per week an ace pitcher give you are MUCH harder to come by than the 25 points a good hitter will give you. The difference between two teams will still often come down to the pitchers.

    I'll say it again - Millwood isn't worth less than Rollins, or Polanco, or Todd Zeile. He just doesn't score points in the same way. Sorry if I get abrupt, but this seems like the fifth time I've explained this concept since the league began. Supply and demand are viable fantasy baseball tools as much as pure points generation.

    (On the same line, you could argue that outfielders were overvalued compared to catchers in last year's fantasy league, because they scored more points on average. But because the best-hitting catchers are so rare, that IN ITSELF raises their value to be higher than an OF who hits the same value. Who's a more valuable player - Paul LoDuca or Ellis Burks? It's LoDuca, because of position scarcity. Same thing here.)

    That being said, we will be revisiting points scoring for pitching in the 2004 league, and you're welcome to join the conversation we've been having in the Ideas and Feedback for 2004 thread - which is why it's there. Big_E and some others have come up with some very good analytical tools to evaluate points-scoring regimes, and we've got some good ideas already. That's the place for this discussion.

    Disclaimer - this reply may be copied and pasted into future threads, because I can see this happening again . . .

    Be seeing you,

    Saxmania
    sax we clearly have a philosophical difference here... i appreciate and understand your take, i just cannot endorse it...

    in baseball at every level pitching is more valuable than hitting w/o reference to the number of available pitchers vs hitters.. the yanks have proven the value of pitching when we won and when we lost, the dbacks have proven heck look at the dodgers, they're proving it and the rangers and arod are living proof...

    however in our league a stud ace like millwood has accumulated less points thus contributed less to his team than a mediocre scrub like rollins..

    in the majors there is a scarcity of quality arms also, but that is not the reason pitchers are more valuable like you suggest in this league.. they are more valuable because unlike position players they contrubute more to a team's production ie wins, by having the greatest impact on limiting the opposing team's offense... a position player is but 1/9th of the offense, whereas a pitcher is prolly something like 60-70% of the team's dee... a avg innings eating pitcher like appier in reality is more valuable than an above avg bat...

    secondly the philosophy of baseball and fanatsy baseball by extension is the team w/ the most points wins... most stats quantify measures of production.. in our league we also detremine value based on measures of production... for batters anyway.. in this league, pitchers are the sole player that loses points based on extrinsic factors like whether they're teammates scored more than the opponenet... batters do not lose points for going 0-4 in a win or loss... but a pitcher that records 7 innings work limits his opponenet to 3 runs w/ 0 k's and a few walks can still end up losing points for his team... there is no correlative penalty for batters... it's like two diffferent scroing schemes one for pitchers where they are penalized and one for batters where they only accrue positive points for positive production... it's out of whack sax, honestly, that's my honest opinion..

    now mind you i ain't bitching for this seas, what's done is done, everone's at the same disadvantage, but this ain't baseball where a rollins is contributing more to his teams produiction than a millwood... it don't matter that there are less millwoods available then rollins the point is rollins in his best year could not be as valauble as millwood to a real baseball team and although we call this thing "fantasy" baseball the goal should still be to try and replicate the real game as much as possible...

    i'm presently in several leagues on several different softwares w/ different scoring scheme's one simulated the others fanatsy and this is the only league where pitchers are singled out for this kind of penalty...

    alright i'm off my soap box... sorry for whining this early in the morning but right oir worng i had to speak my mind... no offense or disrepect to our prestigious loyal dedicated tirelessly hard working honorable commisioner intended sir..

    peace and hair grease my brothers...

  19. #19
    The Commish YanksRockMan's Avatar
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    Originally posted by Bozidar
    do you mean someone who already has 15 HRs and 50 RBIs, or someone who will finish with that?
    so far...

    I will add another player if needed
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  20. #20
    If yer not first, yer last!!!! Bozidar's Avatar
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    Originally posted by YanksRockMan
    so far...

    I will add another player if needed
    oh, you would most certainly need to.. Do you think 30HR guys grow on trees? Trading him for an underperforming starter?
    Quote Originally Posted by JDPNYY

  21. #21
    Owner of a coconut bra. Yankchic22's Avatar
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    Originally posted by Bozidar
    oh, you would most certainly need to.. Do you think 30HR guys grow on trees? Trading him for an underperforming starter?
    For some reason this post cracked me up.
    Quote Originally Posted by Big_E
    Oh yeah, things are always better when Randi's around.

  22. #22
    NYYF Legend

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    Okay, Ansky, sorry if I gave the impression that I'm angry. I do feel that Millwood is worth a lot more than Rollins, because a starter who churns out 20 points regularly is worth more than a hitter who churns out 25 points regularly, just because the points are harder to find there - like a catcher who churns out 20 points regularly is worth more than an outfielder who churns out 25 points regularly. Same principle.

    In this case, penalising bad pitching makes it a little less clear, and certainly I agree that the points scheme this year is less than ideal. It will be changed next year, and the Ideas and Feedback thread is the place to discuss those changes.

    But until then, we've got 300-400% more participation, discussion, and smack-talking than last year going on, and I'm enjoying it.

    Be seeing you,

    Saxmania
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  23. #23
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    I'll take Millwood... if you throw in Erstad. The Phillies need to turn it up a notch if they are going to give Atlanta a run for the money. Plus you have the revenge factor, the Braves felt they would do fine without him. So far they are. But maybe Millwood will come back to haunt them. I like intangables.
    Erstad is one of my favorite non-yankees. He's clutch at bat and plays some outstanding defense. I know defense matters not in this league, it's just more fun for me to have players I like on my team.

    I always said Thome was available for the right price, and so here he is.
    The offers I got for him all season were not even in the "ballpark"
    This one I like.... because I like the players.
    That don't make me no nevermind.

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