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Re: WAR Budget Draft tips
Re: WAR Budget Draft tips
I'm starting to think about my first war draft, but don't know much about them .
how much do you get to spend in one of these kind of drafts?
Then I can start looking at Wars versus player cost. IE: Mauer has a WAR of 55
Newbie here, thanks for your wisdom
how much do you get to spend in one of these kind of drafts?
Then I can start looking at Wars versus player cost. IE: Mauer has a WAR of 55
Newbie here, thanks for your wisdom
Re: Re: WAR Budget Draft tips
@sgtpeppr1964 - You get 85 WAR as a budget. It would be per season for a player rather than for their career. If you wanted Joe Mauer's best year, it would cost around 8 WAR and you would have 77 WAR left. Usually it's a mix of high WAR position players and pitchers and some budget guys that are still serviceable. It's always interesting whether to use the budget more for offense or defense or a mix of both. I've found all three strategies to be successful with the right players. That's part of the fun, you get to completely make your team however you want to!
Re: Re: WAR Budget Draft tips
Everyone has an 85 WAR budget. And your only purchasing 1 season of a player. So not Mauer's career 55 WAR, but say his 2009 season (7.8 WAR). So it's all about balance. Like a salary cap/auction fantasy baseball league. I've done Yankees builds where I go Stars and Scrubs (get those 10+ WAR seasons from Ruth, Mantle and Gehrig, and then piece together the rest). Or you can try to get really good 4-6 WAR seasons at every position. The diamonds in the rough are seasons where an SP or Hitter got just over the minimum innings/AB thresholds (100 IP and 300 AB's) and the ratios were really good (the best example I can think of with that is Elton 'Ice Box' Chamberlain with the Cardinals; a career 1.39 WHIP, but in 1888, he threw 112 innings with a 0.79 WHIP, 4.9 H/9; ace level production for 3.4 WAR). It takes some time constructing the teams (lots of scrolling through players looking at WHIP's, Slugging %, DWAR), but it can be tons of fun. My advice is start with an easier franchise (Astros- lots of good options in pitching and hitting, not 140 years of history to sort through), get comfortable, then branch out.


