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| OOTP 23 - General Discussions Everything about the brand new 2022 version of Out of the Park Baseball - officially licensed by MLB and the MLBPA. |
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#61 | |
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Join Date: Sep 2013
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Will do, thanks |
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#62 |
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Many years ago Jim Boutin observed that where objective measurements exist - how fast can he run, how high can he jump, etc - modern athletes are far better than old timers. At the time there were no objective measurements in baseball.
Now we have objective measurements, pitch velocity, spin rate, exit speed, exit angle, etc. How does moving an old time star 60 or 70 years into the future improve any of that? It doesn't. Perform any mathematical magic you want but the fact remains the idea of lots of old time players making it in the modern MLB is a starry eyed dream. |
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#63 |
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Join Date: Nov 2005
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So, this is a "Random Debut" league then, correct?
Random Debut is neutralized across era in some way (I don't have details on that specifically). However, I can say that if a pitcher is the best strikeout pitcher of his low strikeout era they will be rated as a high strikeout pitcher in whichever era they get imported into. Importantly, you will also see those ratings. So, you will see that Sam Crawford is a relative "7/8" power when imported in 1961 (just an example in a league I just created). I would recommend creating your own Random Debut league and looking through the players that get generated initially and I think that will give you the best idea of how this works. |
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#64 | |
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That would suggest that even the real stats are at least era-neutralized and, could one fairly assume, ballpark-neutralized? |
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#65 | |
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All Star Starter
Join Date: May 2022
Posts: 1,364
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I dunno. Time machines don't exist so arguments like this always come across to me as just a rationalization for recency bias. Athletic performance should always be measured in the context of its era. Cross-era comparisons are ultimately meaningless. I mean, if we somehow did have a time machine and brought a 20-year-old Bob Feller to the present, then yes he would not do as well for the reasons you mentioned. But if we instead brought a 7-year-old Bob Feller to the present and gave him access to all of the modern training techniques then would he become great? It's hard to know because it's pure speculation, but instinct leans towards "probably". And if that happened, then suddenly all of the talk about the superiority of modern athletes would clearly just be about training regimens, not the athletes themselves, and it would be even more obvious why cross-era comparisons have no meaning. Last edited by uruguru; 02-09-2023 at 12:08 PM. |
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#66 | |
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Join Date: Nov 2005
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Here is a Random Debut league sorted by stuff in the Inaugural draft. See how Ted Gray and Russ Ford are up near the top. https://www.screencast.com/t/Uo3FRqj3XOsD |
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#67 | |
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#68 | |
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Join Date: Nov 2005
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I think if running a random debut in OOTP you are best not using the years before 1901. |
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#69 | |
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#70 |
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#71 |
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Random debut isn't about cross era comparisons. Everyone that played baseball were at the time or still are a human being. If Babe Ruth played in the 80's instead of when he did, he would play like a 80's style player. Why random debut is a blast and why Markus deserves a Nobel Peace Prize for great designs in gaming is, he completely understood that simple truth.. Instead of designing the the game so Ruth is a member of the Avengers playing baseball, Markus made it so he will perform as one of the best to ever play the game according to the period the random debut player is stuffing him into
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#72 |
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I remember one of the saber gurus writing that a super star from decades ago will do well in any era but lesser players from decades ago will not do well in modern baseball.
I can see why people are interested in random debut. I haven't gotten good enough at historical yet that I want to leave it. |
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#73 | |
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#74 |
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#75 | |
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Suppose that Player A and Player B have identical ratings. Let's say they both have 45 power, 50 gap power, 45 contact, 50 eye, and 40 avoid Ks, and they are both rated at 2.5 stars overall. Completely identical. Yet according to the 3-year recalc, Player A's IRL stats on hits per at bat, XBH, walks, etc., lead to a 115 wRC+, while Player B's IRL stats leads to a 100 wRC+—IOW, rated the exact same by the game, but different outcomes in real life. Does the game look beyond just the identical ratings to each guy's IRL stats and note that Player A with the 115 wRC+ is slightly better than Player B and his 100 wRC+, thus giving A a range of potential outcomes that makes it likely he outperforms B? Or does the game look strictly at the ratings, nothing else, and conclude that the two players are completely identical and thus have the exact same potential range of outcomes? |
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#76 | |
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The ratings are then used during the simulation...it isn't going back to stats from there. However, remember that the underlying ratings are more granular than the 20-80 scale...so just because those ratings are displaying as the same doesn't mean there aren't slight differences between the players at the engine rating level. |
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#77 | |
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#78 | |
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OOTP Developer
Join Date: Jun 2009
Location: Here and there
Posts: 16,218
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But yeah, as mentioned, basically actual stats are only used to generate the ratings. If you have development on, it does not look at the stats. If you have recalc on, and 2 players are rated the same, then other than the rounding issues above, the players should play the same. |
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