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Old 07-23-2009, 07:34 PM   #3
dcd111
Minors (Double A)
 
Join Date: Jun 2009
Posts: 131
Thanks for your quick response, but I do not think it is as straightforward as that.

I decided to do a little experiment. I setup a two-team fictional league, with coaching system enabled.

The two teams, for the sake of reference, are Indianapolis and Staten Island. I made myself the GM of Staten Island.

As commissioner, I changed the Indianapolis manager's strategy preferences to "Frequently", "Aggressive", or "Quick" for every category. I then changed their team strategy to the exact opposite for every situation.

Then, I changed the Staten Island manager's strategy preferences to "Never", "Conservative" and "Slow". And then I changed the team strategy to the exact opposite.

So, if the Manager's strategy preferences were to take precedence, we would expect Indianapolis to attempt more base stealing, use a lot of pinch hitters, do more bunting, intentionally walk more batters, and take their starters out earlier. And we would expect Staten Island to do the opposite.

I Auto-played a full month, and looked at the stats. Indianapolis had attempted 2 stolen bases in the entire month, had 3 sacrifice hits, 27 pinch-hit at-bats, and never issued a single intentional walk. Their starters had 184 IP. Staten Island had attempted 31 stolen bases, had 10 sacrifice hits, 37 pinch hit AB's, and issued 27 intentional walks. Staten Island starters had 140 IP.

I Auto-played another month, and had very similar results.

Then, to make sure these weren't being affected by each team's respective rosters, I switched the managers' strategies to the extreme opposite, and the team strategies to the extreme opposite, and auto-played another month. The results switched with the team strategy, (19 SB attempts for Indianapolis, and they issued 13 intentional walks, while Staten Island had 7 stolen base attempts and issued 0 intentional walks).

This would imply that the team strategy takes precedence, for both human controlled and computer-controlled teams, even when the coaching system is enabled. But if that is the case, then why do Managers have a strategy at all?

I started another league with a similar setup, and noticed that the default team strategy for both teams was the same as that team's Manager's preferred strategies, for all situations and innings (I forgot to check this before I messed with the settings in the first experimental league).

So I think the answer is that the Managers' strategy preferences are used to create the default Team Stategies, but a human player can change his team's Team Strategy to override even with Coaching enabled (and a commissioner can change it for any team). And whatever is on the Team Strategy page is the strategy that takes 100% precedence (at least in long-term Auto-playing, I didn't experiment with assigning the Manager to make decisions in play-by-play mode yet).

So I think I ended up answering my own question here, but hopefully other people find this little experiment helpful.

Last edited by dcd111; 07-23-2009 at 07:36 PM. Reason: Corrected an apostrophe that was out of place
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