Help Entries
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Scoresheet Trading Scams
Scoresheet waters are full of sharks. Your best defence against scammers is to understand the tactics and strategies that they use. Typical Scoresheet scams involve some combination of getting another player to accept a trade on the basis of inflated or dimished asset values. What follows is a list of some of the more common Scoresheet trading scams.
- Hospice Scam: In this scam the owner trades an injured player to another owner who is unaware of the injury status of the player involved. This is perhaps the oldest scam in the book, and one that has a good chance of ending up with an officially reversed trade. Always, always, always check up on the injury status of players involved in a trade before you make a trade, including players you are trading. A fast way to check injury status is to do a search for "cbs fantasy news [player name]"
- Evil Twin Scam: This is a scam where an owner switches the target player of the opposing owner with another player with the same name. This is one of the dirtiest trading tricks in the game and will absolutely result in a reversed trade when caught. Always, always, always double and triple check trades before you confirm them. Make sure player names match, and player numbers match.
- Matching Round Scam: This is a scam where an owner switches a later pick in a round for an earlier pick, where that owner has multiple picks to trade from the same round. As is the case with many "scams", it isn't always intentional, accidents do happen. Always, always, always, double and triple check to make sure that, not only are you receiving your desired pick, but you are actually trading the pick you intended to trade.
- Bullshit Baffles Brains/Kitchen Sink Scam: This is a scam where an owner attempts to trade many low value players for one high value player. "I threw everything, including the kitchen sink, at that trade!"
- Hot Catcher Scam: Where an owner attempts to trade a catcher who is on a hot hitting streak, but is unlikely to keep hitting that way. It isn't always a catcher, but often it is. Everyone needs catchers, and catchers tend to run hot and cold, moreso than other positions, in part because catcher is one of the most physically and mentally demanding positions to play, and as a corollary to that, they don't get as many regular at bats as other hitters.
- Hot Baby Scam: This is a variation on the "Hot Catcher Scam". It's cagey and requires smart scouting and an in depth understanding of what is happening in MLB's minor leagues. In this case Sir Shark drafts a number of minor leaguers that are not super high end prospects, solid but unspectacular. Hitters don't just get hot in the majors, they do that in the minors as well. Sir Shark waits for his minor leaguers to get hot, and attract some buzz, then trades them while their value is high. The key to this scam, and what makes it a scam, is that the perpetrator doesn't expect the hot streak to last, and Sir Shark is usually right.
- Fading Star Scam: Where an owner attempts to get another owner to overpay for a former star who is in a funk that appears likely to last for the rest of his career.
- One Foot in the Grave/Retirement Scam: Similar to the "Fading Star Scam" this is where an owner attempts to get another player to overpay for a star player whose days of meaningful contribution are over and who is on the verge of retiring. Hey, we all have our favourite players!
- "And One" Draft Pick Scam: It goes something like this, "Sure we can make that trade, but I can't do that trade straight up. I'll need a little something extra to make it work..." Just throw in that rd 30, or rd 35... Meanwhile that low round draft pick allows Sir Shark to protect yet another hot prospect who will probably be worth more than any of the other players involved in that trade.
- Prospect Capital Scams: In a lot of leagues in Scoresheet "hot prospects" are treated like currency. They are probably years away from being productive major league players, and they are one of the most overvalued assets in the game.
- Amateur Draft Round Scams: In most leagues in Scoresheet the supplemental rounds where the players from that season's MLB amateur draft first become available are considered to be among the most valuable draft picks of the season. It is common for veteran owners to prey on less experienced owners and "acquire" those picks for far less than their accepted value. "Supp picks aren't worth much, but I'll help you out..."
- Undervalued Draft Pick Scams: When you trade a pick for a player, it is a multi-asset trade. You are trading that pick, and getting a player in return presumably for the current season, if you trade away the pick during the off season, the deal becomes even more unbalanced. You are trading away the player you would have picked for that player. If you end up protecting that player, you are also trading away the player you would have protected in that player's place. Not only that, but you are going to be down a player for the entire next season.
If it's a late round pick it may appear that that pick doesn't have much value, although useful, productive players are always available, so there is no such thing as a draft pick that has no value. But more importantly, late round draft picks are used to protect minor league prospects, which can have a great deal of value. So that rd 30 - 35 "throw in" can afford the owner who receives it a great deal of value, and should not be offered lightly.
WHIP
Walks plus Hits per Inning Pitched
This rating is most often applied to pitchers, in these stats it is applied to both individual pitchers and to teams.
Formula:
( [Total Walks Allowed] + [Total Hits Allowed] ) / [Total Innings Pitched]
OPS
On Base Plus Slugging
Standard baseball statistic that has become the gold standard for measuring a hitter's offensive output, On Base Average added to Slugging Average.
This is the basis for the hitter "V" rating on the team rosters pages.
DRAT
Team Defensive Rating
Scoresheet Baseball games are a statistical baseball simulation, but they are not baseball itself. As such Scoresheet Baseball games generate their own unique statistics. One of the biggest challenges in real life baseball statistics is generating actionable data from defensive performances. Thankfully in the Scoresheet Baseball simulation, this is a bit easier because team defence is reduced to numbers.
DRAT is an attempt to generate a team defensive rating based on the defensive data generated by the Scoresheet Baseball simulation. It combines all the defensive stats into a single number. The meta objective of DRAT is to achieve a number that accurately reflects the number of defensive runs saved by team defence per nine innings. This has not been tested, and will likely never be, so what we are left with is an educated guess, and probably a not terribly accurate one. However the final number generated is useful for comparison purposes.
Formula (all stats in the formula are team total stats):
( ( [Outstanding Plays] - [Fielding Errors] - [Passed Balls] ) / ( [Innings Pitched] - [Strikeouts] * 0.33 ) + [Double Plays Turned] / ( [Hits Allowed] + [Walks Allowed] ) * 0.5 + [Opponent Base Runners Caught Stealing] / ( [Opponent Stolen Bases] + [Opponent Base Runners Caught Stealing] ) * 0.05 ) * 3
SRAT
Team Speed Rating
Scoresheet Baseball games are a statistical baseball simulation, but they are not baseball itself. As such Scoresheet Baseball games generate their own unique statistics. One of the biggest challenges in both real life and Scoresheet baseball statistics is generating actionable data from offensive numbers impacted by team speed.
SRAT is an attempt to generate a team offensive speed rating. It combines all the offensive stats affected by team speed into a single number. The meta objective of SRAT is to achieve a number that accurately reflects the number of runs scored impacted by team speed per nine innings. This has not been tested, and will likely never be, so what we are left with is an educated guess, and probably a not terribly accurate one. However the final number generated is useful for comparison purposes.
Formula (all stats in the formula are team total stats):
( ( ( [Stolen Bases] - [Caught Stealing] ) * 3 + [Triples] * 6 + [Run Support] - [Grounded into Double Plays] / 1.5 - [Home Runs] * 1.5 ) / ( [Hits] + [Walks] - [Home Runs] ) * 10 + 10 ) * 0.05
ERA
Earned Run Average
One of the most oldest and well used baseball statistics in the history of the sport. It represents the number of earned runs scored against a pitcher per 9 innings pitched. Runs scored as a result of fielding errors and passed balls do not count toward a pitcher's ERA, while runs scored as a result of wild pitches do. If a pitcher leaves a game the runners already on base will count toward the pitcher's ERA if they score.
In Scoresheet ERA is the single most important pitcher statistic. The Scoresheet game simulation does a very good job of recreating the pitcher's real life ERA, modified of course by the total team range rating.
Player Range
Player ranges are among the most complex elements of the Scoresheet game sim mechanics. Player ranges determine how many Outstanding Plays your team will generate, as well as how many Double Plays your team will turn. Half of the range rating of infielders is a standard Scoresheet range rating, and half is a double play rating. Players playing CF have their range rating doubled.
OP
Outstanding Plays
This is a team stat, as well as an individual player stat. It is a Scoresheet specific stat generated by total team range ratings. When there is a chance of an Outstanding Play the simulation first checks the total team range rating, then if an outstanding play is generated, it is awarded randomly based on the individual player ratings.
See Player Range and DP/Double Plays for more information.
DP
Double Plays
The number of plays turned by the given team. This number is affected by the range rating of infielders in the Scoresheet sim. The higher the range rating of the infielders, the more double plays will be turned.
Catcher Defensive Rating
The catcher defensive rating in Scoresheet is comprised of two numbers. The first number is a hold rating and indicates the percentage chance that a catcher will not be able to hold the runner in the context of an attempted steal. The second number is the percentage chance that a catcher will throw out a runner when the runner is attempting to steal, if the baserunner would have under normal circumstances successfully stolen the base.
PB
Passed Balls
This is both a team total and an individual stat for the number of passed balls allowed by catchers.
OSB
Opponent Stolen Bases
This is a total team statistic for the number of opponent stolen bases allowed. See Catcher Defensive Rating for more information.
OCS
Opponent Caught Stealing
This is both a team statistic representing the number of times opponents were caught stealing. See Catcher Defensive Rating for more information.
V
Player Value
The "V" rating attempts to assign a percentile value rating to the contributions of each player on a team's roster. It is based on the player's Scoresheet statistics, not the player's MLB statistics. The formula is different for hitters and pitchers, but the goal is to allow hitters and pitchers to be compared with each other.
The "V" rating attempts to answer the question, "How important was this player to this team?" This is not a theoretical question, it is a practical question, and as such, is based on how the player was actually used by the given team. The value of a player to the given team will be affected by factors such as roster and platoon decisions, as well as how many games the player actually played with the team.
The formula for pitchers uses WHIP and Innings Pitched while the formula for hitters uses OPS and At Bats. It is intended to be simple, robust and easy to understand. The word "robust" is intended to mean "not easily prone to failure or statistical anomalies". In each case the basic calculation is modified by a constant. Results less than 0 in the stats are displayed as 0.
The results of the following formulas are prorated relative to a 162 game season, which means the results are divided by the number of games the team has played and multiplied by 162.
Pitcher Formula:
( 2 - [WHIP]) * [IP] * 1.666 / 1000
Hitter Formula:
[OPS] * [AB] * 0.595 / 1000

Stages of Rebuild
In professional sports, and in fantasy sports such as Scoresheet Baseball, where you actually build and play teams, there are four pretty clearly defined stages of team building:
1. Disaster Recovery
2. Rebuilding
3. Win Now
4. Domination
Disaster Recovery
The first stage is the most discouraging, and the most difficult to move out of. It tends to be a bit easier in Scoresheet in AL/NL only leagues due to high value free agents changing leagues, but in BL leagues moving out of that first stage can be extremely difficult. It is the stage where nothing is going well, where your options for trades and reshaping your team are limited because your team will have very few assets with any value. The end of the tunnel can seem a long distance away and very dark in this stage.
The focus in this stage should be on accumulating assets with value, even if they don't match your team "philosophy". Even if you don't like them. In this stage you need to take advantage of high round draft picks to pick the players that have the most perceived value, regardless of position or injury status. The key to this is research. Find out who the most coveted players in the amateur draft are, keep an eye on the international signings, snatch up the crumbs with value that other teams let fall. In this stage your team will not have chips to play with, and you need to accumulate those.
Thankfully very few teams actually fall this far, but it can, and it does, happen. If you have a team that falls into this category you need to take on the mindset of a hoarder. Hoard those players that have value, no matter who they are. Always be ready to take advantage of good trade offers, but in all likelihood, in this stage, your focus should be on building through the draft, and if you do make trades, ignore all positional factors, focus on players that have trade value, more than anything else. Your team is going to lose a lot in this stage, embrace it and have fun with it.
Rebuilding
This is the stage where you need to make specific goals and plans for your team, without losing sight of the fact that winning teams win with good players. What kind of team do you want to build? What kind of lineup do you want to build? Winning teams need at least something of everything, they need both run prevention and the ability to score, but you can choose to focus on one or the other, or take a balanced approach. This is the time to start spending those chips you accumulated and focus on making smart trades.
In some ways this is the most fun stage of all the stages, and some owners never leave this stage, because, apparently, that's what they enjoy. Winning at this stage should not be a big concern, but at some point, if your plans are well made and players are developing, you should start to see your team become more competitive. You shouldn't see the unending strings of blowout losses that are a feature of the first stage. Your team will still likely be losing a lot of games, but they should be closer, and you should see far fewer blowout losses.
In this stage you will want to start thinking about your team's "competitive window". Focusing on youth is a good idea, but more important than that is trying to build a team where, if all goes according to plan, most of your core players will be in their prime years at the same time. The key to this stage is patience. Understand that most young players entering the league for the first time will struggle. It can take as much as five full seasons for a minor leaguer to make that transition to the major leagues, that time frame can be even longer for pitchers than it is for position players.
Win Now
This is the stage that most of the well managed teams in Scoresheet consistently exist in. You've build a solid core, you have a grand strategic vision for your team, it's time to fill in the holes, build depth, and spend your time playing whack-a-mole with the injury gremlins that pop up. The keys to this stage are to not trade away too many draft picks and not protect too many minor leaguers. If you are going to win consistently in Scoresheet you need, more than anything, to avoid Pitcher AAA, and to do that you need to draft and hoard pitching, pitching, and more pitching.
This is the stage where you get to just "play the game". Have fun with lineup strategies, plot to throw wrenches in the spokes of your fellow owner's bicycle wheels, relish the carnage. As long as you are within 3 games or so of a playoff position at the end of August, and you have a full roster with some depth, you have as good a chance as anyone to win a championship.
This is also the stage where you need to start thinking about "maintenance" and "churn". You don't want to fall back into stage 1, whatever you do, so you need to think about replacing core players as they near the end of their playing years, or develop physical problems. This is the stage where you need to start thinking about building a "farm system". You don't want to protect too many minor leaguers, but you do want to protect a few quality ones. The focus there should also be on value, rather than positional or philosophical objectives. You can always trade a player with value for a piece you need.
Domination
This is the final stage of team building, and it is a stage that few teams ever reach. It is also the most difficult to maintain, and can even be harmful to a Soresheet league's health. Thankfully, in Scoresheet, it doesn't guarantee championships. Scoresheet playoff mechanics ensure that any team that is within range, with some depth, at the end of August, can win a championship, you just need your team to have a good September. So while having a dominant team can be good for the ego, it doesn't guarantee championships, not by a long shot. And if you've brought your team to this level, you no longer need my advice, so you aren't going to get any of that here.
How Do I Tell What Stage My Team is In?
When you are mucking around in the basement of your league, and looking for some light at the end of the tunnel of lopsided losses and Mr. Pitcher AAA, it can be a little difficult to know exactly what stage you are in, and whether or not any of the advice given here applies to your team. As is the case with this entire article, here are some ideas, you can take them or leave them, as you like.
I use something I call "The Star Index", although it might be more properly called "The Super Star Index", as one tool to help assess what stage of team building my team is in. While the judgment can be somewhat subjective a "star" for the purposes of the index rating is a player that the vast majority of baseball fans will look at and agree, "that's a star". These are "impact players", players that, if you drop your team, will be a reason why a potential owner would pick up that team.
For the purposes of this rating a player like Mookie Betts would be a "star", while a player like Randal Grichuk, no matter how much you may like him, would not be. While most star players have an established track record some few players merit the "star" rating before they've played a game in the majors. Wander Franco was one of those. Star players should also have some form of long term value as well, so Corbin Burnes would qualify as a "star" while, even though the point could be argued, perhaps Max Scherzer and Justin Verlander do not. It can get a little messy, but most of the time it is not.
So a quick rule of thumb would be the rule of twos. A team in stage one, Disaster Recovery, will likely have a Star Index rating of 0. A team in stage two, Rebuilding, would likely have a star index rating around 2 A team at the Win Now stage might have a Star Index rating of 4, while a team at the Domination stage might have a Star Index rating of 6 or better.
Another quick way to judge how strong your team is to build a quick protected list. Try to be objective. A protected player should be one that is better than most of the players available in the draft, especially in a BL league, although in an AL/NL only league the players at the top of the draft, free agents that have changed leagues, will likely be better than most players that most owners protect. I'm also not talking about protected minor leaguers, I am talking about players that will help your team win games, and most protected minor leaguers are not going to do that, with a few notable exceptions.
If you are having a hard time putting together a list of 13 protected players, there is a good chance you are either in stage 2 or stage 1. If you can objectively find only 8 or less on your team that are worth protecting, there is a very good chance you are in stage 1. Teams in stages 3 and 4 will typically have lists of players worth protecting that are much longer than 13 players.
And of course, the final, most obvious measuring stick for your team is it's winning percentage. If you have a winning percentage at the end of a season that is lower than .400, there is a very good chance you are in either stage 1 or stage 2. Stage 2 can run the gamut from as low as .300 to as high as .500. I think to be legitimately in stage 3, your record in Scoresheet needs to be .500 or better, and if your record at the end of a season is .600 or better, you are flirting with stage 4, Domination. If your team record is .700 or better, especially for more than one season running, you have probably arrived at stage 4, Domination, and some of your fellow owners might be getting discouraged.