Each time he was traded for $6,450,000 straight up... notice he was traded twice on the same day (July 30th) ... He pitched twice for MIL but never for LAA.
Each time he was traded for $6,450,000 straight up... notice he was traded twice on the same day (July 30th) ... He pitched twice for MIL but never for LAA.
Baseball Mogul Vet ever since version 2000.
In Chris J Nelson's entourage.
Seems legit....
"Here! You want a pitcher?"
"Thanks! Want a pitcher?"
"Thanks! Hey, I have this pitcher you might be interested in."
"Looks good! You're going to need a pitcher for your stretch run. Here!"
Looks okay to me.
Active Dynasties:
A Higher State of Mind: Denver Athletics (1980)
Retired Dynasties I'm Proud of
To Rule in Kansas City Part I and Part II (Kansas City Royals 1969-73, Hall of Fame)
Cardinal Sins (St. Louis Cardinals 1976-78) and it's sequel:
Diverting Destiny (Montreal Expos 1994)
Script for my Requiem (New Orleans Blues (fictional) 1954)
What's wrong here is the nature of the AI being indifferent between Ryan Perry and $6.45 million. Mogul AI appears to set a value on a player without considering the team's needs. In real life, whether in baseball or any other economic transaction, virtually every exchange involves a perceived gain for both sides. Exchanges of indifference are practically non-existent. Even in a straight-up trade like Bobby Bonds/Bobby Murcer or Ozzie Smith/Gary Templeton, both teams felt they were better off, if only for personality reasons.