Hit me up #####.who wants a list for tomorrow am?
Church must have been cancelled this morning.Eeph is Pacfic time zone, but I'm pretty sure he's up by now for early morning church.

I looked at a time-&-date site for the winter sunrise & sunset times for Houghton, MI in the UP. That was about the furthest west sizeable town I could find in the Eastern Time zone.It would be weird to walk outside at a quarter to 8 a.m. and seeing pitch black.West Coast guys -- isn't L.A. the opposite? In the summer, there are nights where it doesn't get dark until 9 p.m.? Thought I heard that before.And yes, I am Eastern time. I live in West Michigan so it's the very far west end of Eastern time.
You're not the only WIS player I've seen do this ... but I've noticed that you'll sell out a ton of other stats for low HR/9. Some other people sell out everything else for low BB/9.'jfranco77 said:Solid rotation, keeps the ball in the park, going to give up a lot of hits, hoping the offense can carry starter ERAs in the 5s.
Here in Minneapolis it doesnt get dark until well after 9pm in the summer.West Coast guys -- isn't L.A. the opposite? In the summer, there are nights where it doesn't get dark until 9 p.m.? Thought I heard that before.
I don't remember days being that long in LA. While you are on the Western Part of the time zone, you are pretty far south.Now, up in the Pacific Northwest, you are even further west, and much further north. But since it's always cloudy and drizzling, you don't know when the sun's up anyhoo.Here in Minneapolis it doesnt get dark until well after 9pm in the summer.West Coast guys -- isn't L.A. the opposite? In the summer, there are nights where it doesn't get dark until 9 p.m.? Thought I heard that before.
Pretty to grab him here, as I sense a LarryPlateau with catchers coming.Edit: formattingIn a twenty-one-year major league career, Simmons played in 2,456 games, accumulating 2,472 hits in 8,680 at bats for a .285 career batting average along with 248 home runs, 1,389 runs batted in and a .348 on base percentage.[1] He ended his career with a .986 fielding percentage.[1] An eight-time All-Star, he batted above .300 seven times, reached 20 home runs six times, and eight times exceeded 90 runs batted in. He switch-hit home runs in a game three times and established a since-broken National League career record for home runs by a switch-hitter (182).[23][29] Simmons held major league records for catchers with 2,472 career hits and 483 doubles, since broken by Iván Rodríguez. He ranks second all-time among catchers with 1,389 runs batted in and 10th with 248 home runs.[23] He caught 122 shutouts in his career, ranking him eighth all-time.
Was looking at him, really solid year and a lot of innings at this point in the draft. But there are few Brewers to be had (still a couple out there that will provide some value), so went scarcity.8.13 P Mike Cuellar/Orioles
Was looking at him, really solid year and a lot of innings at this point in the draft. But there are few Brewers to be had (still a couple out there that will provide some value), so went scarcity.8.13 P Mike Cuellar/Orioles
 you don't have to lie to make me feel better. I know how bad they are!
  you don't have to lie to make me feel better. I know how bad they are!Kind of steal this late, imo.8.14 (182): Twins SP Wolff, Roger
Hope you're right ... been punting pitching awhile. If my squad doesn't rake, it's going to be a long season.Not that he's some kind of HOFer or anything, but I can't remember Wolff ever being selected in a past draft. I'm sure he was, though.Kind of steal this late, imo.8.14 (182): Twins SP Wolff, Roger
HRs hurt a lot. I worry that In This Formattm, hits might hurt worse. But there's only so much you can do to prevent hits (.190oav# is about as good as it gets for a starter, especially those left) and you can cut down HRs a lot more than that. So I'm trying to trade 30% more hits for 80% less HRs. The trick is to build an offense that isn't completely dependent on HRs so I still have a chance in Kaufmann or a park like that where my pitchers give up even more hits.You're not the only WIS player I've seen do this ... but I've noticed that you'll sell out a ton of other stats for low HR/9. Some other people sell out everything else for low BB/9.'jfranco77 said:Solid rotation, keeps the ball in the park, going to give up a lot of hits, hoping the offense can carry starter ERAs in the 5s.
Outstanding pick. I waffled between him and Porter a lot.
Is this a Greco alias? You guys approach this draft the EXACT SAME WAY.HRs hurt a lot. I worry that In This Formattm, hits might hurt worse. But there's only so much you can do to prevent hits (.190oav# is about as good as it gets for a starter, especially those left) and you can cut down HRs a lot more than that. So I'm trying to trade 30% more hits for 80% less HRs. The trick is to build an offense that isn't completely dependent on HRs so I still have a chance in Kaufmann or a park like that where my pitchers give up even more hits.You're not the only WIS player I've seen do this ... but I've noticed that you'll sell out a ton of other stats for low HR/9. Some other people sell out everything else for low BB/9.'jfranco77 said:Solid rotation, keeps the ball in the park, going to give up a lot of hits, hoping the offense can carry starter ERAs in the 5s.
Greco, the guy who took McNally and McLain? If you want a team that could be mine, other than mine, it's rodg12.Is this a Greco alias? You guys approach this draft the EXACT SAME WAY.HRs hurt a lot. I worry that In This Formattm, hits might hurt worse. But there's only so much you can do to prevent hits (.190oav# is about as good as it gets for a starter, especially those left) and you can cut down HRs a lot more than that. So I'm trying to trade 30% more hits for 80% less HRs. The trick is to build an offense that isn't completely dependent on HRs so I still have a chance in Kaufmann or a park like that where my pitchers give up even more hits.You're not the only WIS player I've seen do this ... but I've noticed that you'll sell out a ton of other stats for low HR/9. Some other people sell out everything else for low BB/9.'jfranco77 said:Solid rotation, keeps the ball in the park, going to give up a lot of hits, hoping the offense can carry starter ERAs in the 5s.
Normalized numbers...it's on your spreadsheet, dum-dum.What are the stats that end with #? Should I be using those rather than + numbers? And if so, you're all cheaters.
The jerk store called, they are running out of you.Greco, the guy who took McNally and McLain? If you want a team that could be mine, other than mine, it's rodg12.Is this a Greco alias? You guys approach this draft the EXACT SAME WAY.HRs hurt a lot. I worry that In This Formattm, hits might hurt worse. But there's only so much you can do to prevent hits (.190oav# is about as good as it gets for a starter, especially those left) and you can cut down HRs a lot more than that. So I'm trying to trade 30% more hits for 80% less HRs. The trick is to build an offense that isn't completely dependent on HRs so I still have a chance in Kaufmann or a park like that where my pitchers give up even more hits.You're not the only WIS player I've seen do this ... but I've noticed that you'll sell out a ton of other stats for low HR/9. Some other people sell out everything else for low BB/9.'jfranco77 said:Solid rotation, keeps the ball in the park, going to give up a lot of hits, hoping the offense can carry starter ERAs in the 5s.
Both/neither workWhat are the stats that end with #? Should I be using those rather than + numbers? And if so, you're all cheaters.
Those are log5 numbers. Basically a realistic projection for what the guy should produce based on the combination of their RL numbers and their + numbers.110 AVG+ and .300 AVG is not the same thing as 110 AVG+ and .330 AVG. The first guy would have an AVG# of .310 (guessing) and the second would be .340. So even though they are both 110 AVG+, the second guy is better. It's most noticeable in HR/9+. A guy with HR numbers of 0.12raw/98+ (Dutch Leonard) will give up about 50 less HRs than a guy with HR numbers of 0.90raw/98+. And the HR/9# of a guy like Leonard will be like 0.15, and the second guy will be like 0.85.What are the stats that end with #? Should I be using those rather than + numbers? And if so, you're all cheaters.
I thought that's what the + was?Normalized numbers...it's on your spreadsheet, dum-dum.What are the stats that end with #? Should I be using those rather than + numbers? And if so, you're all cheaters.
Greco, the guy who took McNally and McLain? If you want a team that could be mine, other than mine, it's rodg12.Is this a Greco alias? You guys approach this draft the EXACT SAME WAY.HRs hurt a lot. I worry that In This Formattm, hits might hurt worse. But there's only so much you can do to prevent hits (.190oav# is about as good as it gets for a starter, especially those left) and you can cut down HRs a lot more than that. So I'm trying to trade 30% more hits for 80% less HRs. The trick is to build an offense that isn't completely dependent on HRs so I still have a chance in Kaufmann or a park like that where my pitchers give up even more hits.You're not the only WIS player I've seen do this ... but I've noticed that you'll sell out a ton of other stats for low HR/9. Some other people sell out everything else for low BB/9.'jfranco77 said:Solid rotation, keeps the ball in the park, going to give up a lot of hits, hoping the offense can carry starter ERAs in the 5s.

# is log5I thought that's what the + was?Normalized numbers...it's on your spreadsheet, dum-dum.What are the stats that end with #? Should I be using those rather than + numbers? And if so, you're all cheaters.
Ok, so you are all cheaters.Those are log5 numbers. Basically a realistic projection for what the guy should produce based on the combination of their RL numbers and their + numbers.110 AVG+ and .300 AVG is not the same thing as 110 AVG+ and .330 AVG. The first guy would have an AVG# of .310 (guessing) and the second would be .340. So even though they are both 110 AVG+, the second guy is better. It's most noticeable in HR/9+. A guy with HR numbers of 0.12raw/98+ (Dutch Leonard) will give up about 50 less HRs than a guy with HR numbers of 0.90raw/98+. And the HR/9# of a guy like Leonard will be like 0.15, and the second guy will be like 0.85.What are the stats that end with #? Should I be using those rather than + numbers? And if so, you're all cheaters.
