31 March 2007

Rosters

Am I the only one that finds it strange or unrealistic to watch our teams play for a week and then set out rosters. I know its "fantasy" baseball but it just doesnt seem right for me to watch ty wiggington have a 4hr game and an 18rbi week and put him in my starting lineup after the fact and sit prince fielder. Or the guy that owns johan santana sits him after he gets shelled by the ny yankees for 8 runs in 2 1/3 innings. Anyone agree with me? Or is just me. I would have brought this up earlier but I thought I was just reading the bylaws wrong. I didnt think it was possible to not set a lineup before the teams play. Feedback please. I may be crazy because I also was the one who never thought we could draft 500 players in one day, so it might just be me. Eric

28 March 2007

I Love Ya Louie !!

Brad Hawpe was qouted as saying "I love ya Louie for believing in me so much that you thought your team was doomed without me !---"I didn't even get that much support from my own mother" !! " My mother actually told the associated Press that if I left Colorado I would NEVER hit more than 14 homers" !!

In Case You Were Wondering...


...this is the most controversial player in the history of the NFSL--the infamous Mr. Hawpe. (He's the ruggedly handsome fella on the left.)

Empire Rising

22 March 2007

BREAKING NEWS: Staten Island Dumped


The Empire has taken its first blow of the season, but unfortunately for all involved it was in a courtroom instead of on the field. In what can only be described as an act of malicious pettiness, New York Yankees owner George Steinbrenner has won an injunction against the nascent NFSL squad that will prevent them from using the Staten Island name. Evidently, The Boss's high-powered legal team was able to convince the judge that use of the name infringes on his franchise's Single A Staten Island Yankees' territorial rights--just two days before the inaugural Super League draft.

Empire officials could not be reached for comment, but a source close to the team has said that management is not wasting any time in trying to rectify the situation. He also claims there is no truth to the rumor that Empire ownership was, in fact, looking forward to this decision because they have grown tired of writing out "Staten Island" all the time.

The NFSL league office has issued a statement explaining that due to the legal nature of this name change, the Empire will obviously be permitted to select a new name as long as they do so before the start of the season. After opening day, team name changes will only be allowed in special cases, if at all, to establish and preserve the tradition of the league.

21 March 2007

Check 1 Schedule

North Babylon v. Laurel

Nassau v. Kohler

Ridge v. Bay Ridge

Riverhead v. Simpsonville

New Libertatia v. Setauket

Mattituck v. Brooklyn

Browntown v. St. Olaf

Staten Island v. Westphalia

Coram v. Ninth Street

Philadelphia v. Hampton Bay

15 March 2007

Catching the Blues



The selection of J.R. Towles in the final round of the minor league draft has finally allowed the Folsom Blues' three young arms to pitch to a catcher as they prepare for the opening of the California Penal League season. "It's nice," said towering righty Jeff Niemann. "The cardboard cut-out was okay, but we'd spend half our time standing it back up after every pitch. It got to the point where we'd miss wildly just so we wouldn't have to do it." For his part, Towles is happy to be aboard what he feels is going to be a fun ride. "We have a lot of talent here. I'm a little worried about not having any infielders, but every team has its flaws, right?"

However, the news wasn't all good for the Staten Island Empire's farm club. A lengthy undercover investigation by the Folsom Telegraph revealed that Blues pitching coach, Ricky "Wild Thing" Vaughn, is, in fact, a fictional character. Doubts were immediately cast as to his qualifications for preparing the staff for the upcoming campaign, let alone to help the parent club later in the year. The Empire front office declined comment other than to say that they were fully confident in all their hires.

Blues manager Miller Huggins was unavailable for comment amid rumors of failing health.

Nice farm system

louie, you have a very good farm system with a nice mix of players. Thank You for actually putting the time in to research your picks and submit them in a timely fashion.

rate my farm system

be honest.....the Manatees can take criticism

1)Mike Pelfrey, RHP, New York Mets (14th overall)
2) Jose Tabata, OF, New York Yankees (27th overall)
3) Eric Hurley, RHP, Texas Rangers (54th overall)
4) Jacob McGee, LHP, Tampa Bay Devil Rays (67th overall)
5) Eric Young Jr., 2B, Colorado Rockies (94th overall)
6) Chris Marrero, OF, Washington Nationals (107th overall)

NFSL Minor League Draft: Round 6


101. North Babylon: Chris Carter, Arizona
102. Setauket: Jeremy Hellickson, Tampa Bay
103. Laurel: Josh Hamilton, Cincinnati
104. Kohler: Alexi Casilla, Minnesota
105. Bay Ridge: Alberto Callaspo, Arizona

106. Riverhead: Hank Conger, Los Angeles (A)
107. Brooklyn: Chris Marrero, Washington
108. Staten Island: J.R. Towles, Houston
109. Coram:
Brian Barton, Cleveland
110. St. Olaf: Trevor Crowe, Cleveland
111. Simpsonville: Jamie Garcia, St. Louis
112. Westphalia: Matt Lindstrom, Florida
113. Ridge: Eric Patterson, Chicago (N)
114. Browntown: Angel Villalona, San Francisco
115. Philadelphia: J.A. Happ, Philadelphia
116. Nassau: Bryan LaHair, Seattle
117. Ninth Street: Sean Rodriguez, Los Angeles (A)
118. Mattituck: Tony Sipp, Cleveland
119. New Libertatia:
Kurt Suzuki, Oakland
120. Hampton Bay: Jeremy Jeffries, Milwaukee

11 March 2007

06 March 2007

2007 Minor League Draft: Round 5

81. Hampton Bay: Neil Walker, Pittsburgh
82. New Libertatia: Joba Chamberlain, New York (A)
83. Mattituck: Miguel Montero, Arizona
84. Ninth Street: Sean West, Florida
85. Nassau: Carlos Gomez, New York (N)
86. Philadelphia: Kyle Drabek, Philadelphia
87. Browntown: Dexter Fowler, Colorado
88. Ridge: Daric Barton, Oakland
89. Westphalia: Ryan Sweeney, Chicago (A)
90. Simpsonville: Blake DeWitt, Los Angeles (N)
91. St. Olaf: Glenn Perkins, Minnesota
92. Coram: Brandon Morrow, Seattle
93. Staten Island: Will Inman, Milwaukee
94. Brooklyn: Eric Young Jr., Colorado
95. Riverhead: Jeff Baker, Colorado
96. Bay Ridge: Carlos Ruiz, Philadelphia
97. Kohler: Chris Parmalee, Minnesota
98. Laurel: Daniel Bard, Boston
99. Setauket: Elvis Andrus, Atlanta
100. North Babylon: Joe Smith, New York (N)

02 March 2007

Idea

Hey, I think i came up with a way to incorporate everything in a fair way that we should have no problem finishing. It is 16 rounds of auction draft, followed by 9 rounds of snake draft. Here are the particulars.

-100 million dollar budget
-25 players
-players 1-260 are auctioned off by Tom as the auctioneer
-we will bid using green/red cards to indicate whether we are in/out of the bidding
-until there are two people remaining, when those two will bid directly against eachother
-bids are for yearly contracts and owners assign contract length (1, 2 or 3 years) after winning bid
-only eight players can be given three year contracts
-players 261-320 are bid on auction style but are called up by the owners. So each owner will eventually call up three people during this phase.
-The rest of the draft will be done as a snake-style draft in reverse order of the minor leauge draft.
-Player salaries for this phase are defined as follows:

round player # yearly salary
17 321-340 2 mil
18 341-360 1.75mil
19 361-380 1.5mil
20 381-400 1.25mil
21 401-420 1 mil
22 421-440 .75mil
23 441-460 .5mil
24 461-480 .25mil
25 481-500 .25mil

Note: this adds up to 9.25mil so you must have at least that much remaining to be fully involved in this portion. If you don't, see below...

-contract length of drafted players are assigned after you draft them

OK, now for the tricky part...

-after the auction part (320 players taken), for every player more than 16 players you have on your team, that is one fewer than 8 players that you can give a 3 year contract to.
Ex. if you have 18 players after 320 players have been auctioned, you can only give 6 players 3 year contracts.
-once we hit the draft phase (post-320) the draft only involves teams that meet the following criteria for each round

ROUND 17: Fewer than 17 players AND no more than 90.75 spent
ROUND 18: Fewer than 18 players AND no more than 92.75 spent
ROUND 19: Fewer than 19 players AND no more than 94.5 spent
ROUND 20: Fewer than 20 players AND no more than 96.0 spent
ROUND 21: Fewer than 21 players AND no more than 97.25 spent
ROUND 22: Fewer than 22 players AND no more than 98.25 spent
ROUND 23: Fewer than 23 players AND no more than 99.0 spent
ROUND 24: Fewer than 24 players AND no more than 99.5 spent
ROUND 25: Fewer than 25 players AND no more than 99.75 spent

-An owner can have more than one pick in a round. The round will continue until 20 players are taken or no owner is eligible
-Any owner that winds up with less than 25 players, must make the highest paid player with a three year contract become a one-year contract for every player under 25 players...


well, that's my idea...is it too complicated? Have i made it clear enough? anything you disagree with? anything you wanna add? any part that you don't understand why it's been implemented?