Quote:
Originally Posted by pumph
As the Nationals, I had a very difficult time ridding myself of Jayson Werth. First, he had a no-trade that he refused to waive to ANYONE.
But after 2 months on my bench, he finally got fed up enough to allow a trade. Problem was his salary was so high that I basically had to give up players and cash just to get someone to give me a mediocre A-ball player to get him off my books.
The thing I don't like about trading is that I played out an entire season, game by game, and the offseason that followed. I got one trade offer from the CPU in that time. Yet the computer basically made about a trade a day from opening day until the deadline, and averaged more than that in the offseason.
It was too much. I know I could turn it down (It is set on normal), but then I figured I'd get even fewer trade requests. I would hope that my team would receive as many offers as any other team, and that there wouldn't be so much trading overall. I started with a real-life 2013 opening day roster set, and by the all-star break, I had no clue who was on anyone's team.
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Were you dominant? Put another way did your team have few weaknesses? The AI cannot offer players to a team with few or no weaknesses.
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Cheers
RichW
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“Conservatism consists of exactly one proposition …There must be in-groups whom the law protects but does not bind, alongside out-groups whom the law binds but does not protect.” Frank Wilhoit
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