Any way to stop late game comebacks?
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Yes, Kluber.
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@tylerslikewhoa said in Any way to stop late game comebacks?:
Play better and don't choke. Personally I haven't gave up a late comeback all year
Not helpful. You could have just walked past this post.
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@IIJACKINTHBOXII said in Any way to stop late game comebacks?:
Yes, Kluber.
I just can't bring myself to use Kluber. Nothing against him but I feel like he's so overused just like Kershaw last year.
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@SteelyMacBeam said in Any way to stop late game comebacks?:
@IIJACKINTHBOXII said in Any way to stop late game comebacks?:
Yes, Kluber.
I just can't bring myself to use Kluber. Nothing against him but I feel like he's so overused just like Kershaw last year.
Lol me neither.
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@vox_pestis said in Any way to stop late game comebacks?:
This is so common for me I “price in” a 2 run homer in the 8th when evaluating any lead. If I’m not up by 4, it’s going to be tied at some point. It’s always a crappy hit, followed by a massive homer that feels very fake. This happens especially when you’ve dominated all game, like giving up 2 singles in 7 innings. I don’t get mad about the rubber banding, but I’d really like more game tempo/result variability.
Ah, with some of these replies I see I wasn't clear enough. I've been playing Show for years and years, I'm well aware of the confidence issues, the fragility of bullpen, and changing up pitching patterns. I actually reserve certain pitches and flow them in and out of the mix, which is a big part of keeping ERA down.
To clarify, in the 7th or 8th, when closely monitoring pitch confidence and varying my pattern, a batter will get a ridiculous hit like late/weak on a well inside cutter. My actions have no bearing on this outcome, which is the problem. Then, whether I leave in the dominant starter with his good confidence, or bring in a reliever, I very carefully pitch around the next guy. One of my pitches will ignore my input and go directly down the middle, and the (often incomptent) hitter just needs to touch it with PCI and its a big homer. This has nothing to do with my skill or lack of it, and I benefit from this about as much as I lose from it. Going into the 7th down 2 runs I am pretty relaxed about it, because I know the rubber band will help me out too.
Ironically, I always have a reliever going even if it makes no baseball sense because I'm well aware of the rubber banding that seemed to really start ramping up in 17' version.
Finally, I would find it very unprofessional for any software developer or product manager to use assumed identities on message boards to troll their own customers. I would hope that is not happening here. I run a software product development shop, and If I did that to my customers, I would expect and deserve to be fired by them. Like... whoa.
(I know rubber banding is typically used to describe a position sync error due to latency in online games, not altering RNG odds behind the scenes to keep scores close. I just hate the term "comeback logic" so I'm usingr ubber band because that's how it feels - if you get too far from your opponent it "snaps back")
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It's part of the game. And part of the reason why I didn't buy MLB 20 after a decade of buying the game every year. What they have programmed in is way too frustrating. And it's way too obvious.
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@tylerslikewhoa said in Any way to stop late game comebacks?:
Play better and don't choke. Personally I haven't gave up a late comeback all year
You've never played a game online, per your universal profile. Only 9 inning games against the CPU, sporadically. Almost like your account is, I don't know, fake somehow?
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I love when people say "just turn the shift off, it's that simple" lol. The reason there is a shift is because the hitter has tendencies and the shift is there to help against these. Most of the time the hitter hits directly into the shift. So I have to take the shift off because of game design flaws only to have the batter get a "free" hit because I had to take the shift off?
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There is definitely something written in. If my team had inning splits, i'd be .400 OPS in innings 1-6 and 2.000 OPS in 7,8,9.
I have a theory that its relative to CLT and PCLT and think they kick in in late innings and when behind.
So look for RP/CP's with really high PCLT to balance out the CLT of the batters... idk. -
As soon as you give up a hit...change revlievers
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