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Old 01-23-2013, 05:09 AM   #1
raginhood
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Salary Arbitration and players who are always injured!

It doesn't appear salary arbitration takes into account frequently injured players or those who are on the DL for long periods of time like 8 months to a year. I just got hit with a 3 million dollar increase over what I offered which was only a mere million under what the player demanded and that just ain't right as this player was injured 8 months came off the DL and then got injured again during the playoffs and is out for another 3-4 months. This isn't the first time he's been on the injury list either. You should see his injury record. He gets hurt every single year and is usually how long periods of time but when he's there he's a star player for sure but only having him 1 or 2 months out of the season isn't worth a 3 million dollar arbitration increase.
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Old 01-23-2013, 08:06 AM   #2
Cinnamon J. Scudworth
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Check what players on other teams have been receiving in arbitration and compare. I bet you'll discover that your player's award is reasonable.
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Old 01-23-2013, 10:00 AM   #3
sc_superstar
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decline arbitration or sign him and trade him
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Old 01-23-2013, 10:21 AM   #4
raginhood
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Originally Posted by Cinnamon J. Scudworth View Post
Check what players on other teams have been receiving in arbitration and compare. I bet you'll discover that your player's award is reasonable.
No because "they are playing" he's not. He played maybe 2 months out of the year. Hardly worth the arbitration figures he got. Plus he's been hurt a lot before. Did you even read what I wrote? I think not.

It's not a inside the game issue as much as it's an "inside the CODE" issue of not taking injuries into effect when the artificial intelligence arbitrates.
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Old 01-23-2013, 11:58 AM   #5
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Because thats not always the way real life works either. You pay for talent first and maybe get a discount for injury later.

See Erik Bedard. Made the least starts when he made the most money in his career, did the Mariners get a discount in 2009 after he only made 15 starts in 2008? Nope
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Old 01-23-2013, 12:07 PM   #6
Cinnamon J. Scudworth
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Originally Posted by raginhood View Post
No because "they are playing" he's not. He played maybe 2 months out of the year. Hardly worth the arbitration figures he got. Plus he's been hurt a lot before. Did you even read what I wrote? I think not.

It's not a inside the game issue as much as it's an "inside the CODE" issue of not taking injuries into effect when the artificial intelligence arbitrates.
You said he's a "star player for sure" when he's playing. Assuming you are using modern finances, $3M in arbitration is not really star player money in my experience. Above average, yes. But it looks like there is a discount built in here for his lack of playing time (as expressed in, I assume, his lack of counting stats -- HRs, RBIs, etc). If you take a look around your league, you may be surprised at some of the arb. figures.

The other factor here is that the arbiter can only choose between your offer and the player's offer. It sounds from your post like you put an a offer of $1M under the arbitration estimate, and the player's offer was $3M above that. The arbiter can't choose a middle ground. So if your offer was more unfair to the player than the player's offer was unfair to you, then the player's offer might win, even if it's "too much." The lesson here is: don't lowball too much.
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Old 01-23-2013, 12:13 PM   #7
Cinnamon J. Scudworth
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Real life data point as an example:

Ike Davis and the Mets recently agreed on a 1 year, $3,125,000 extension to avoid arbitration. This was the first year of Davis' arbitration eligibility. The Mets reportedly had offered $2.825 million, and Davis had filed for $3.7 million.

This is a player who has some star potential, but last year he batted only .227/.308/.462. He also missed some substantial time over the last two years to an ankle injury, and potentially suffered from Valley Fever.
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Last edited by Cinnamon J. Scudworth; 01-23-2013 at 12:15 PM.
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Old 01-23-2013, 01:00 PM   #8
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If he's always injured, what the heck are you paying him for, anyway? Let him walk, and use that money on someone who'll actually take the field for you. Even a .200 hitter is better than a guy who's on the DL 3/4 of the year.
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Old 01-23-2013, 01:03 PM   #9
raginhood
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Cinnamon J. Scudworth View Post
You said he's a "star player for sure" when he's playing. Assuming you are using modern finances, $3M in arbitration is not really star player money in my experience. Above average, yes. But it looks like there is a discount built in here for his lack of playing time (as expressed in, I assume, his lack of counting stats -- HRs, RBIs, etc). If you take a look around your league, you may be surprised at some of the arb. figures.

The other factor here is that the arbiter can only choose between your offer and the player's offer. It sounds from your post like you put an a offer of $1M under the arbitration estimate, and the player's offer was $3M above that. The arbiter can't choose a middle ground. So if your offer was more unfair to the player than the player's offer was unfair to you, then the player's offer might win, even if it's "too much." The lesson here is: don't lowball too much.
I said 3 million arbitration money OVER what was already offered. It went over 10 million after all was said and done. The rate was 8 million and some change, I offered 7 million because of his injuries and the arbitrator just gave him nearly 11 million above and beyond the 8 million and change offered by the computer code.
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Old 01-23-2013, 01:08 PM   #10
raginhood
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Originally Posted by Fyrestorm3 View Post
If he's always injured, what the heck are you paying him for, anyway? Let him walk, and use that money on someone who'll actually take the field for you. Even a .200 hitter is better than a guy who's on the DL 3/4 of the year.
This isn't about why's and what'for's this is about the GAME CODE and IS IT WORKING PROPERLY. Does it take into account how often a player is injured an on the DL list when it ARBITRATES. I certainly don't need a lesson in how to manage a team I always come in first in my division and into the playoffs. Please READ the Opening statement and don't adlib you're great managerial stratagies lol I don't need them.
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Old 01-23-2013, 01:08 PM   #11
Cinnamon J. Scudworth
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Originally Posted by raginhood View Post
I said 3 million arbitration money OVER what was already offered. It went over 10 million after all was said and done. The rate was 8 million and some change, I offered 7 million because of his injuries and the arbitrator just gave him nearly 11 million above and beyond the 8 million and change offered by the computer code.
Ah, okay. Thanks. I misread that part. What was his salary the prior year? Like I said, if you lowball too much, the arbiter will choose the player's offer. There is no middle ground.
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Old 01-23-2013, 03:39 PM   #12
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Quote:
Originally Posted by raginhood View Post
This isn't about why's and what'for's this is about the GAME CODE and IS IT WORKING PROPERLY. Does it take into account how often a player is injured an on the DL list when it ARBITRATES. I certainly don't need a lesson in how to manage a team I always come in first in my division and into the playoffs. Please READ the Opening statement and don't adlib you're great managerial stratagies lol I don't need them.
I don't know why I still bother replying to raginhood's threads. Sorry for offering my input. I might have tried to help further if you hadn't somehow taken my post as a personal attack.
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