Barking Lion wrote: ↑28 Apr 2024 20:32 pm
Following the Quincy-Matt debate. More than half the fun of fantasy baseball is the camaraderie, chat and good-natured ribbing.
I've got one suggestion for next season--Remove the delay on standard waiver claims. Let me try to explain-
1). When a player is dropped by another team, he can be on waivers for, say, three days, and players can bid on him as they do now.
but
2). When a player passes that 3-day period, he should be available for immediate claim and addition to one's roster.
This is how Yahoo public leagues used to work, by default. I think they moved to the FAB system (like we use) about 5 years ago. I didn’t like it at first… but I now believe it levels the playing field. When all FAs are available to the first manager to claim them, it makes quickness a factor - meaning a player will go to whoever makes it their computer/phone the fastest. To me, this gives an unfair advantage to whoever has the most free time dedicated to monitoring who is in a closer’s role, who is losing it, etc. I prefer the FAB system because it gives everyone an equal opportunity to claim the same player, and adds an element of strategy in how you bid/manage your budget.
I have been playing fantasy baseball for about 10 seasons now. My weakness is drafting. But my strength is day-to-day roster management and taking advantage of streaks and matchups. The waiver system currently existing in our league makes it very difficult for people like myself because I have to try and anticipate three days forward and, often, matchups change in that time period.
No, you do not have to wait three days to claim a player. Players who have not been recently dropped are available to claim, and those claims are processed overnight. The only time there is a longer waiting period is when a team recently dropped that player.
It is a long season and I am going nowhere. I love baseball and enjoy fantasy. I'm too competitive to give up. I will continue to stay in the league, even with out adjustments, as long as it is a free league. But it would affect a stay-or-go decision if it became a pay league.
I’m glad to hear you’ll stick with it. I’ve already offered some unsolicited advice… it might be a good idea to deal from your strengths to help your weaknesses. If you do not make adjustments, you have basically quit - please do not do that.
This is a tough league, especially because the FA pool is so thin. If you’re accustomed to making adjustments to your team via waivers, and do not draft well - it gets tougher. Working up trades is really the only way to address major deficiencies, if you have them.
As if you asked for it, my opinion on strategy. I try to be patient. I tend to wait for players to come off IL. I tend to wait out big slumps before I trade someone. As far as categories are concerned, burning a category is a fatal error. you can't compete for a title only scoring 1 or 2 points in any category. It is best to be above average in all of them with 2-3 strong categories. The fun is always in trying to get there.
Agreed on all points.