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| OOTP 16 - General Discussions Discuss the new 2015 version of Out of the Park Baseball here! |
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#21 |
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OOTP Developer
Join Date: Jun 2009
Location: Here and there
Posts: 16,259
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One thing to note is if your stadium capacities are overly huge, we set artificial minimums to attendance that could pull numbers higher than expected. Or perhaps when you relegate teams, if you do it after season ticket sales, that could screw things up too.
Not sure why the minors are so low. They're the one part that I don't think I touched. I can poke around a little to see what's happening. |
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#22 |
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All Star Starter
Join Date: May 2004
Location: Just on the fair side of the foul pole!
Posts: 1,768
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So, if you at historically bad Cleveland Municipal (Mistake by the Lake) seating and see that at times, it could seat over 70k or the few seasons of the LA Coliseum and the game will give that team a higher then league average for base fans?
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#23 | |
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Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Sep 2013
Location: In the canyons of your mind
Posts: 3,194
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Quote:
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#24 |
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Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Sep 2013
Location: In the canyons of your mind
Posts: 3,194
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Actually, I was able to put this together faster than I thought, so below is a screenshot of the attendance difference, by club for 1932 (played in 16) versus 1931 (played in 14).
The main variables side by side in this pivot table, all with two columns showing 1931 and 1932, are: - The capacity of the ballpark. - The total attendance for the club. - The total capacity for the entire season (i.e., home games * capacity). - % of capacity filled for the season. This is one biggie to look at (light orange). Beyond that: - The difference in capacity filled, in points, 1932 over 1931, another biggie (light orange). - Average attendance for ONLY those clubs that spent both seasons in the same division, with percent change from prior year. This is one last biggie here (light orange). The intention from 1931 to 1932 was to have average attendance drop by about 10% across all divisions, each and every one, to be consistent with the story I am trying to tell with my English Baseball League dynasty. There is a lot going on here, so here are the highlights of what I am noticing:
One last thing: I do see some inverse correlation between stadium capacity and attendance change, but if stadium capacity were the main reason, we should be seeing similar changes across all division for stadia of similar sizes, yet we do not. What do you think? I mean, beyond the idea that I'm obsessive about my Dynasty? ![]() |
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#25 |
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Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Feb 2002
Location: Up There
Posts: 15,642
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What constitutes "overly huge"? As a general thought, I think it improper to have any sort of artificial minimum to attendance. There is certainly nothing in real life which sets a bottom for a club's attendance (though for the most part the spread between lowest, average, and highest attendance for MLB clubs will fall within a certain range).
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#26 | |
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Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Sep 2013
Location: In the canyons of your mind
Posts: 3,194
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BTW, I do have different reputation numbers for leagues: 9 for D1; 8 for D2; 7 for D3; 6 for the non-League (minor) league. Does that factor in as well? |
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#27 |
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OOTP Developer
Join Date: Jun 2009
Location: Here and there
Posts: 16,259
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Would you mind uploading your files so that I can have a look? What you're seeing is not anything to do with capacity, but I'd be interested to see why you're seeing such huge jumps. All the tests I've run we track very close to the target attendance value, so it's weird to see your div 3 be nearly double the expected value.
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#28 |
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OOTP Developer
Join Date: Jun 2009
Location: Here and there
Posts: 16,259
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The effect is only noticeable in extremes. I believe it's currently set at something like 1%, so it will only show up if you have your league average attendance set at something like 200 people per game, and the stadium seats like 40k+.
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#29 | |
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Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Sep 2013
Location: In the canyons of your mind
Posts: 3,194
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Quote:
- Post-1931 season (10/3/31) for OOTP 14 - Post-1931 season for OOTP 16 - Opening Day 1932 (5/2/32) for OOTP 16 You can play out each post-1931 season file through 1932 in both 14 and 16 to see how they go. They still have the 1931 attendance targets within. The pre-season 1932 file is the continuation of Post-1931 season OOTP 16, after I make all the changes for the next season, e.g., promotion/relegation, financial changes including attendance targets, etc. Thanks for looking into this! |
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#30 | |
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Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Sep 2013
Location: In the canyons of your mind
Posts: 3,194
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Quote:
My intention with my dynasty is to see attendance reduced commensurate with actual baseball attendances of the time. It was the Depression, after all, so there were a lot of big stadia that were not getting even close to filled. If you take a look at this really great infochart over at Beyond the Box Score: Baseball attendance trends, 1890-2015--a visual analysis - Beyond the Box Score You can check out season attendances for teams during this era, or even teams with humongous stadia during other eras. Under the Team tab, for instance, if you select Orioles, you will also get St. Louis Browns, and during the 30s, they routinely filled only single digit percent for entire seasons' capacities, as low as 4% in 1933. Also, if you select Indians, you also see 6% during 1933, single digit percents during the WWII, and anywhere from 9% to high teens percents throughout the 60s, 70s and 80s, even into 1991. So there is precedent for a team not being able to fill even a tenth of its capacity throughout the season. |
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#31 | |
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Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Feb 2002
Location: Up There
Posts: 15,642
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A general caveat about the link provided (which is interesting, by the way) is that park capacities have changed over the years. Not sure how much such changes are reflected in the link. Oftentimes the 'official' maximum capacity was lower than the number of fans recorded for a game. Cleveland Stadium's capacity is often given as being about 78,000 yet the largest crowd to attend a game there was 86,563 (of which 84,587 were paid admissions). It's led me to the conclusion that the maximum capacity for a real-world ballpark should be based on the largest recorded attendance if such figure exceeds the maximum capacity commonly found in various publications. Last edited by Le Grande Orange; 04-28-2015 at 07:13 PM. |
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#32 |
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All Star Reserve
Join Date: Apr 2012
Posts: 934
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I've also seen huge attendance drops (40%) when transferring a league from 15 to 16. this also came from a 3rd tier league. the finances also seem to have changed drastically for some reason, teams whose payrolls were climbing higher and higher in the top tier are now plummeting for some reason. one team had a payroll of $46 million before I switched versions, then had a solid season and saw payroll slashed to $39 million. next season it will be down to $34 million after winning the title, any explanation?
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#33 | |
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Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Sep 2013
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#34 | |
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Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Feb 2002
Location: Up There
Posts: 15,642
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Capacities for the older parks which had bleachers is problematic in any event due to the nature of bleachers, which were just long benches rather than separate seats. (There's also the matter of standing room only tickets.) There was an article in an early 1950s issue of The Sporting News which listed the ticket prices for each type of seat (box, reserved, grandstand, bleacher) as well as the number of each type for the 16 MLB teams. What was curious about it was that different seat counts were used for the Browns and Cardinals despite both clubs using the same ballpark. |
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#35 | |
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Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Sep 2013
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Quote:
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#36 | |
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Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Feb 2002
Location: Up There
Posts: 15,642
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Quote:
ETA: The article was published in the April 16, 1952 edition of The Sporting News. According to the article, these were the seating capacities for each park: American League Boston: 34,831 Chicago: 48,556 Cleveland: 73,811 Detroit: 54,151 New York: 67,163 Philadelphia: 33,222 St. Louis: 30,808 Washington: 29,920 National League Boston: 37,746 Brooklyn: 31,902 Chicago: 38,710 Cincinnati: 29,939 New York: 55,131 Philadelphia: 33,222 Pittsburgh: 33,730 St. Louis: 30,808 I was mistaken about the article listing a different seating total for the two St. Louis clubs. The total capacity is the same (30,808); what was different was the breakdown of the seat types. The Browns were listed as having 3,297 box seats, 20,308 reserved grandstand, 2,203 general admission, 2,400 bleachers, and 2,600 pavilion. The Cardinals had 2,646 box seats, 20,959 reserved grandstand, 2,203 general admission, 2,400 bleachers, and 2,600 pavilion. Last edited by Le Grande Orange; 04-30-2015 at 12:18 AM. |
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#37 |
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Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Sep 2013
Location: In the canyons of your mind
Posts: 3,194
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Since this Financial issue is related to the Attendance issue, I would guess, I guess I will post this here.
There is some extreme goofiness showing up in my Third Division regarding revenue. Here, on October 10th, 1932, the attendance and gate revenue is showing up in my financial report thusly: I'm looking at this and wondering, how on God's green earth is Bristol Rovers second in the league in attendance while Merthyr Town is 39th, but Merthyr Town cleared £1,182 in gate revenue, three times more than the next team, while Bristol Rovers have only £82 for the entire season? As I review the Merthyr Town attendance info: versus the same data for Bristol Rovers: The only conclusion I can come to is, something is seriously messed up about the way the game is calculating and reporting on all this. It appears that the links between the tables in the database is not working. |
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#38 |
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Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Feb 2002
Location: Up There
Posts: 15,642
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Do you have gate sharing on? And if so, what is the percentage? (Gate sharing means the visiting team gets the specified portion of the gate receipts for that game.)
Such sharing would affect the numbers shown, and OOTP does not offer you a raw breakdown of the gate receipts in such a case, only the final result. |
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#39 |
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Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Sep 2013
Location: In the canyons of your mind
Posts: 3,194
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Yes, 20%. But unless there's some theory in which the math actually works (i.e., a bona fide mathematically plausible theory rather than an anything-is-possible hypothetical theory), I can't believe gate sharing is the culprit. After all, there's no way a team averaging £95 of gate revenue per game ends the season with a grand total of £82 in gate revenue for the entire season because of a 20% gate sharing clause.
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#40 | |
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Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Feb 2002
Location: Up There
Posts: 15,642
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Quote:
There was a small bug a version or two ago where attendance on one screen was for the regular season only but on another screen it included attendance from post-season games in the total. This discrepancy naturally affected the per game average attendance shown on each screen as only the number of regular season games was being used to calculate the per game average. So it's possible the revenue per game or other data could be suffering from the same sort of issue. |
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