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Showing posts with label OOTP. Show all posts
Showing posts with label OOTP. Show all posts

Monday, April 12, 2010

Out of the Park Baseball 11: Award Predictions

Based upon my 25-season simulations, heres how OOTP sees the major awards working out in 2010.

AL MVP


Joe Mauer (Twins) 28%
Alex Rodriguez (Yankees) 28%
Miguel Cabrera (Tigers) 12%
Evan Longoria (Rays) 8%
Mark Teixeira (Yankees) 8%
Billy Butler (Royals) 4%
Nick Markakis (Orioles 4%
Kendry Morales (Angels) 4 %
Ben Zobrist (Rays) 4%

No big surprise that the reigning MVP, Joe Mauer, and three-time MVP, Alex Rodriguez, are strongly favored, with perennial candidates like Miggy Cabrera, Longoria, and Teixeira most likely to unseat them.  Of the outliers, I though Ben Zobrist was the most interesting.  The OOTP simulator clearly agrees that his '09 breakout campaign was no fluke.  In fact, it could be just the beginning.

NL MVP


Albert Pujols (Cardinals) 52%
Chase Utley (Phillies) 12%
Pablo  Sandoval (Giants) 8%
Lance Berkman (Astros) 4%
Ryan Braun (Brewers) 4%
Adam Dunn (Nationals) 4%
Prince Fielder (Brewers) 4 %
Carlos Gonzalez (Rockies) 4%
Hanley Ramirez (Marlins) 4%
Joey Votto (Reds) 4%

In the unlikely scenario that Prince Albert doesn't three-peat as MVP, OOTP sees the NL as a wide-open race, with only Utley and Kung Fu Panda registering more than one win.  I was pleased to see Carlos Gonzalez, one of my fantasy favorites, taking home the award on one occasion (and performing consistenly well, as you'll see in my next OOTP post).  Joey Votto had the distinction of being the only player in either league who won a triple crown.

Saturday, April 10, 2010

Out of the Park Baseball 11: Royals Win!

The kind people at OOTP Development passed along the most recent version of the baseball simulator, Out of the Park Baseball 11.  Although I'm by no means an experienced gamer, OOTP has piqued my curiosity on several occasions over the years and their product continues to get better and better, mainly by taking into account a range of variables which actually resembles the game of baseball.  For instance, OOTP simulates not only the major-league season, but a complete minor-league season as well, including a draft.  You can track the progress of Pedro Alvarez, Desmond Jennings, and Stephen Strasburg, or (in manager mode) you can eviscerate your farm system via a deadline deal in an effort to make a run at the pennant.  It tracks a wide variety of situational statistics and advanced metrics, not just the "baseball card" numbers.  Another OOTP's advantage is its late release date (mid-April), which means it comes with actual Opening Day rosters already in place.  Jim Edmonds is on the Brewers, Nate Robertson's on the Marlins, and Elijah Dukes is in the free agent pool.

You can entertain yourself with the OOTP software in many ways, including taking over a franchise and attempting to build it into a dynasty on a game-by-game basis; however, I focused on OOTP's aptitude for predicting performances in the 2010 season.  In a matter of three clicks, you can simulate the entire season. I performed this three-click sequence 25 times.  In the coming days I'll take a look at results at the outcomes for player awards, league leaders, and some blue-chip rookies, but today I'll give you the OOTP answer to the most interesting question: Who will win the 2010 World Series?