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This is great information, thanks. A couple of things I'll throw in, not that anybody cares ...(1) It irks me a bit that OOTP will often rate a guy as a terrific rightfielder, but a terrible leftfielder. Realistically, it makes no sense. I've played both positions many times and frankly if you can play RF you can play LF. At most, I'd say the difference would be a factor of one point --- say, if you're a 7 in RF you should be no worse than a 6 in LF. The idea that somebody like my RF, Sangha, can be a 7 in RF and a 1 in LF seems crazy to me. I can understand it when the rating is different in CF, because there's more ground to cover there. But from my personal experience, I've seen very, very little difference between playing LF and RF.(2) Is it a sure thing that a guy's position rating will improve if he spends a whole year at a position? Case study: Bao-tian Qian, one of my outfielders. Way back in 2103 he had a rating of 5 in LF and 6 in RF. When I took over the team he was a marginal prospect, so I put him in RF for one of my farm teams and forgot about him. But his hitting ratings went up and up and up, so last year I decided I could use him in the majors. Only problem was, RF is locked down by Sangha; where I needed help was in LF. And by this point Qian had a rating of 7 in RF but 3 in LF. So I reassigned him to LF and made him play that position all of last year in the minors. His RF rating declined to 6, but his LF rating didn't improve; it's still 3. I want to use him as my big-league LF this year but my pitchers may mutiny if I put him out there. Fly balls will be dropping around him like mortar rounds. Is it a sure thing that he'll move up to an acceptable 5 or so if given more time? He's 23 years old, so it's not like he's gotten old and slow.
Thanks Huck! After doing some reading I understand that position ratings are determined by a formula which factors fielding ratings + experience, but also factors position. So if I understand correctly, though this prospect does not have good fielding ratings, he is given a 7 at 1b because the scale is weighted for first basemen? Is that correct? Is he a good fielder or no?http://www.worldbaseballassociation.com/reports/news/html/players/player_4426.html
This is great information, thanks. A couple of things I'll throw in, not that anybody cares ...(1) It irks me a bit that OOTP will often rate a guy as a terrific rightfielder, but a terrible leftfielder. Realistically, it makes no sense. I've played both positions many times and frankly if you can play RF you can play LF. At most, I'd say the difference would be a factor of one point --- say, if you're a 7 in RF you should be no worse than a 6 in LF. The idea that somebody like my RF, Sangha, can be a 7 in RF and a 1 in LF seems crazy to me. I can understand it when the rating is different in CF, because there's more ground to cover there. But from my personal experience, I've seen very, very little difference between playing LF and RF.
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