Virtual Front Porch Pages

Thursday, March 28, 2019

Small-Sample-Size Alert!

Each team in my nineteenth-century league has now played four games. In baseball, that's not a lot. Intellectually, I know that the sample size is so small that I can't draw meaningful conclusions about the relative strengths of my three teams...but I can't help it! It feels like the Canaries are significantly better than the others. They're sitting at 3-1 with a +5 run differential. The Haymakers are next at 2-2 with a -2 differential, and the snakebitten Blue Legs are 1-3 with a -3 differential. (For the boys in blue, the only highlight of the season has been King Kelly's home run -- the only one hit in the league thus far!) I've made a minor swap of pitchers between the Canaries and Blue Legs to try to even out the staffs a bit, but otherwise I'm just going to keep playing and see what happens. Are the Canaries really good, or just really lucky?

Friday, March 22, 2019

Game On!

In the first game of my nineteenth-century league, Cy Young of the Haymakers opened the first inning by giving up back-to-back extra-base hits to the Billy Hamilton and Nap Lajoie, but then settled down to toss eight straight shutout innings. Meanwhile, Blue Legs starter Kid Nichols had a few shaky frames and allowed the Haymakers to string some hits together. The end result was a 4-1 win for the Haymakers, with Wee Willie Keeler flashing a big bat despite his tiny stature. Next up, the Haymakers try their luck against a Canaries team that features the legendary Honus Wagner, one of the five original Hall of Famers.

Thursday, March 21, 2019

Team Names

They had some pretty wacky baseball team names back in the day. I've decided to use the names of real-life Major League baseball teams for my league of nineteenth-century Hall of Famers, although with the stipulation that the teams can't currently exist in MLB under a different name (sorry, Brooklyn Bridegroom at St. Louis Perfectos!). So, without further ado, say hello to Cap Anson's Haymakers, Nap Lajoie's Blue Legs, and Monte Ward's Canaries.

Wednesday, March 20, 2019

Movie News

A bit of news on the still-in-development-hell D&D movie.

Tuesday, March 19, 2019

Pitchers Are Hard

My little three-team Strat-O-Matic Old Timers' League is now taking shape! I started with position players. After a bit of finagling around the diamond -- for example, Deacon White was primarily a catcher but I'm using him at third base, where he played far fewer innings -- I ended up with between three and five Hall of Famers at each position. Ranking the players at each position was fairly easy. Looking at their game stats, I weighed offensive prowess, defensive abilities, and base running skills (super-duper important for nineteenth-century ball).

As for the pitchers, well, they're another story. I've got 14 of them, and although poring over Strat-O-Matic game stats confirms that, say, Cy Young is better than Amos Rusie, it's been challenging to rank them with any confidence. For one thing, even within the narrow span of nineteenth-century baseball, the earliest stars -- Al Spalding and Candy Cummings -- don't correlate well to their peers in the latter part of this era. The biggest question mark, however, is Rube Waddell, whose real-life dominance as a strikeout artist doesn't (in my estimation) come across in the game stats. I've tentatively broken them all up into staffs of five, five, and four pitchers (the team with innings-eaters Cy Young and Old Hoss Radbourn will have to make do with four), but it still feels like a shot in the dark. I'll draft my ranked position players next and add them to these teams, and then we'll see what we get.

Monday, March 18, 2019

Old Timers' League

I've had a passion for nineteenth-century baseball since I was a kid. I have distinct memories of my twelve-year-old self trying to create a text-based baseball simulation game in BASIC, and then using it to replay the first recorded organized baseball game -- a dust-up between the New York Knickerbockers and the Nine York Nine from way back in 1845.

Fast-forward to today: The Strat-O-Matic Hall of Fame edition has given me the opportunity to explore the simulation of nineteenth-century baseball in a far more realistic fashion. You might have seen posts last fall about our Hall of Fame League, in which the boys and I divvied up the all-time greats into teams based on twenty-year time periods. We had some very memorable games, but Matthew and Nathaniel don't have quite the same zeal for baseball that I do, so it's been hard to get them back into Strat-O-Matic.

After reading another baseball history book while I was on a business trip in Seattle last week, I decided to create a new historical league that I can run all by myself. For this one, I'm using all Hall of Famers who debuted between 1871 (the beginning of Major League Baseball) and 1899. I have just enough players to create three full teams. I'll rank the players at each position and then conduct a draft with the hope of getting three relatively equal teams. Then we'll play ball!

Monday, March 4, 2019

Shadowspear

Shadowspear, the new 40k boxed set, was unveiled today -- and damn those models look cool! Not sure I want to buy yet another boxed set, but I really dig those Primaris scouts!

Sunday, March 3, 2019

Halo Honcho

Not to be outdone by his younger brother, Matthew completed the Halo game that he's been working on. It's funny to see them arguing over which franchise -- Halo or Call of Duty -- is better. I like to pipe up that the Baldur's Gate series is the best of all, but no one ever seconds that motion.

Friday, March 1, 2019

Duty Done

I'm proud to announce that Nathaniel successfully completed his Call of Duty game on the Xbox, and with very little assistance from Matthew or myself!