09-26-2008, 08:16 PM | #1 | ||
Dark Cloud
Join Date: Apr 2001
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The Life & Times of the Chicago Thunderstorms (1977-present)
THE LIFE AND TIMES OF THE CHICAGO THUNDERSTORMS
Preface I'm going to simultaneously post this in the dynasty forums at OOTP and FOFC, because I figure it might be insightful for people to learn about us and if nothing else, it might be cathartic after figuring out my team over the next few years. I might just try some weird unorthodox things, because really, other than winning after a while, it gets boring doing all of that time. Especially when you run the league. So with that, lemme get into it. |
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09-26-2008, 08:16 PM | #2 | |
Dark Cloud
Join Date: Apr 2001
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INTRODUCTION
The Chicago Thunderstorms are a baseball team in the Front Office Offseason League (About the Front Office Baseball League — Front Office Offseason League), a fast-sim league using OOTP9. FOOL began in June of 2008 with OOTP8/2007 and we simmed three seasons before swapping to the new version. We have sixteen teams all with human owners and we are the only league in the world that sims a season a week. We understand and realize that this is certifably insane and we do take breaks for holidays or whatever, but effectively FOOL is simply a league for people who are interested in playing solo, but want more of a challenge than fleecing the AI each week. With some of the most experienced and savvy owners out there, it's not a cakewalk from week to week and is quickly establishing itself as one of the most solid and competitive leagues in the OOTP universe. The T-Storms were originally the Chicago Comets from the time the league started in 1961 until the end of the 1969 season. That year, Dark Cloud; who had just led the Compton Brothers to the doorstep of the FOOL Classic championship before losing in the 13th inning of Game 9 of the Classic to the Brooklyn Brownstones, left the cushy environs of Jackie Robinson Field in LA and headed to moribund Chicago to try to revive the worst franchise in FOOL history to that point. The first thing he did, was give the team a new identity. He moved them three hours away to the bi-state metropolitan area of the Quad Cities and decided this would be a good way for the franchise to grow and develop. Despite a small stadium and a fan base who simply had not followed the team much, the T-Storms began their first year on the road to redemption. The first four years reflected a resurgence. Quote:
By 1974, the team was poised to contend. And contend they did. After missing the RL pennant by just 2.5 games in '73, the T-Storms claimed their first ever Republic League Pennant in 1974, before losing in six games to the perennial champions of FOOL -- the Valdosta Peanuts -- who steamrolled to their fourth title in five years in '74. In 1975, the T-Storms came back, armed with a new city in tow. Yearning to expand their market base, the T-Storms changed their name to the Chicago Thunderstorms in the Quad Cities. Fans understood that this was just the price of business of a big city team in a small market. But later that year, the city announced it'd build a new ballpark of the T-Storms moved that year, so they did. They were rewarded with a championship, knocking off the Toronto Osprey, the Continental League champs in six games. Dark Cloud claimed his third FOOL Classic title and first title since 1964 when he was the GM of the St. Louis Terriers (a team that folded in 1965.) |
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09-26-2008, 08:16 PM | #3 |
Dark Cloud
Join Date: Apr 2001
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AFTER THE TITLE, COMES TURMOIL
After the title, the T-Storms had high hopes for the 1976 season. But a trade of ace Floyd Yarbrough to Texas and the signing of former Colorado Rancheros hurler Victor Gonzalez to a long-term deal, the T-Storms thought they'd reloaded for the better. Instead, they floundered and finished two games under .500, the first time since 1970 that the team finished the year with a losing record. With that, DC decided it was time to blow the team up. He dealt iconic player and 4-time FOOL MVP Mac Rasmusssen in a heavily derided deal to the defending CL Champion Valdosta Peanuts and instead, began attempting to bolster the team's young core of fielders with younger hurlers, having sacrificed much of their talent over the past few years to build a foundation offensively. As the growing pains are likely to continue as the 1977 season approach tonight, this dynasty will chronicle the efforts of Dark Cloud and the Thunderstorms ascent back to the top of the FOOL standings. |
09-26-2008, 08:16 PM | #4 |
Dark Cloud
Join Date: Apr 2001
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A FOOL PRIMER
FOOL is divided into two leagues of eight teams each: CONTINENTAL LEAGUE --- Atlanta Firecrackers Baltimore Terrapins Brooklyn Brownstones New York Highlanders Rio Grande Roadrunners Texas Travelers Toronto Osprey Valdosta Peanuts REPUBLIC LEAGUE --- Chicago Thunderstorms Colorado Rancheros Columbus Crusaders Compton Brothers Hartford Harpooners Long Island Violators New Orleans Wrens San Diego Fathers The CL does not use the designated hitter, while the RL does. This schism actually happened in the 1967 season, that caused realignment in FOOL as some RL owners were opposed to it and some CL owners were in favor of it. During 1961-1963 all of the teams used the DH. The DH was kept out of the FOOL Classic until 1970. There are no playoffs in FOOL, though a proposal passed a few years ago calls for realignment and/or playoff expansion in 1980, there has been no definitive answer as to whether this will happen or not. Our season gets simmed entirely in one night, usually Friday nights, in our forum. During the week, we make trades, sign players and other fun things like make up new statistics. The FOOL Classic gets simmed on Sunday nights. Injuries are off. |
09-26-2008, 09:01 PM | #5 |
Dark Cloud
Join Date: Apr 2001
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After the disappointment of last season, I decided it was time to rebuild. As it turned out, we were one of the youngest teams offensively last year, but one of the oldest pitching teams.
I started to jettison older players in favor of younger hurlers. We just needed pitching and I felt like we could be back in the saddle again with the club. So I made lopsided deals to get younger in the pitching category. The replacement value on the guys I got probably wasn't worth it, but I did get us massively under the salary cap and we're now last in payroll in all of FOOL. The cap is still at $65 million as it has been since its inception. We use real world dollars and the numbers don't inflate, so it's a standardized pool of finances and we like it that way. The debate for me going into this season, has been deciding whether to assemble the best team of players I can to try to be respectable or try to field a team of youngsters, get them experience and see where that lands us into next year. Being just two seasons removed from a title and knowing that a juggernaut team in Hartford is hovering over us, with the best pitching staff assembled in FOOL history, it makes sense for us to get our kids lots of playing time and to try to just do unorthodox things we'd never do, simply to see if this team has the mettle to survive in the future, rather than giving a bunch of retreads the chance to get in the way just so we win 52 games instead of 50. So with that, I had to go through and try to assemble a lineup with the season less than two hours away. Here is our roster as of Opening Day 1977: Looking at our possible rotation options, I actually almost considered going with a six-man rotation this year. The idea being, mitigate the possible losses of youngsters at the bottom of the rotation, by simply using as many of these kids as possible. Another idea I've considered is going with a six-man rotation and having two spot starters who pitch 45 percent of the time, meaning you effectively have three kids in the #6 spot in the rotation, but you've got five ride or die guys playing shotgun for you in the 1-5 spots of the rotation. Our relief corps are nothing special, to be honest. I'm tempted to use the strategy settings, to put a long hook on my starters and effectively making them pitch themselves out of jams and going with a skeleton crew in the relief pen. The rotation is: (how we acquired them) 1. Sam Godbout (FA) 2. Harry Mason (via trade) 3. Gabriel Riggs (via trade) 4. Micah Green (via trade) 5. Hisashi Hoshino (home grown) 6. Max Hughes (via trade/prospect, tho.) Strange? Of course it is. But I figure that if there is a year to do this sort of wackiness, this is the year for that. We decided to go with the unorthodox six man rotation, with two spot starters who pitch 15% of the time each. We won't have a setup man or a closer and I'm going to set our strategy to have a long hook on starters, effectively leaving the game in their hands. Our strategy will try to play to our strengths. In some ways all of the tinkering I'm doing with this team -- although I'm sure it won't do much -- is a good opportunity for me to test the limits of my club and to figure out ways to squeeze our wins from a talent laden but VERY green ballclub. I've set pitch counts on everyone, have gone through and even figured out the individual stealing/pinch hit settings of my offensive stars, too. I want them playing and playing a lot. I'd rather have them then a shell of themselves on the field, even if it's a lot on them. On the offensive side, I look at our lineup and I'm actually excited about it. While it's no doubt young, the names are players who have demonstrated that they have some offensive talent and now that I've gone through and set my own lineups, I'm curious to see how they'll fare. Here are our starters and how they were originally acquired (none of the trades were this past year, just FYI) C Cris Segura (FA) 1B Luis Mendoza 2B Rodrigo Cruz 3B Marcos Montoya SS Jeremy Rigsby LF Fernando Herrera CF Theirry Fournier RF Cheng-qian Khu DH Bob Arnold We have a phenom in waiting in C Holden Sims, who was a creeper who didn't initially look like a guy who would factor in, but the former 2nd round pick in 1975 looks like he could be the real deal in a year or three. We've got a few prospects we're waiting on, which could make some of the starters this year -- especially in the outfield -- expendable. We're hoping statistically for a strong season. Our new ballpark is a pitchers haven, meaning that our guys will have to cover a lot of ground and be strong defensively. I'll be intrigued to see what happens this year. If we win 70 games, I'll consider it a coup, but in spite of that, I'm more excited about this season than I have been in a while about any team I've run. Last edited by Young Drachma : 09-27-2008 at 04:03 AM. |
09-27-2008, 02:08 PM | #6 |
Dark Cloud
Join Date: Apr 2001
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1977 SEASON RECAP
We finished the 1977 season last night at 74-80, in sixth place but 3 games out of a tie for 4th. I'm fine with that, because we surpassed my expectations to be honest. FINAL REGULAR SEASON STANDINGS, 1977 Code:
I planned to jettison the 6-man rotation, but forgot to push 5-man rotation instead of 6-man rotation and as a result, the season ran with a 6-man using the spot starter as the 6th guy. It wasn't as terrible as I would've expected. 25-year old rookie Max Hughes went 11-11, with 4.99 ERA as the 6th starter and while his VORP was negative, he wasn't really intended to be the option there and so, I'm fine with that. Sam Godbout went 12-8 with 3.64 ERA in 26 starts and the real sad thing is I wish I could've gotten him the ball more, because I think he'd have been more effective. I hate wasting "effective good years" of a player, but at least I have good players to waste, right? Our lineup was the youngest in FOOL this past year, with an average age of 24.5 and I'm fine with that. We're still en route to finding the sort of pitching that could complement it and start to be contenders again, but squeezing close to .500 record was impressive to me, given that it wasn't a forgone conclusion at the start of the year and we probably should've been worse. TEAM BATTING, 1977 Code:
TEAM PITCHING STATS, 1977 Code:
This tells an obvious story. Until we got out and get some reliable, battle tested, top tier pitching arms, we're going to continue to languish. I'm not sure if the trades I made to deal some of my better acquired pitching was really all that smart. I mean, it's possible. But I'm not really sure that we managed to improve the team for the long term with my most recent moves. I think we probably saved ourselves some major salary cap issues and were smart to try to get some value for guys who would've been good but wouldn't have taken us to a title. But trading Gonzalez to Compton was probably a misstep, though in the end, we effectively made deals that completed the Mac Rasmussen trade that was still incomplete from years ago when we got him from Hartford. We dealt him for future picks, but once future picks trading was outlawed, Hartford was screwed and came looking for us to pay up. At least that's out of the way now and we didn't give up anything so devastating that it'll hurt us forever and ultimately, that was a deal that build our title run and now we sent Yarbrough to them in the off-season (via Texas) and they won the RL pennant this year. They'll face off against Valdosta, who have won the Continental League pennant for the sixth time in eight years. Hartford is favored, just as Columbus was last year. But Columbus ended up getting taken to 9 games before winning it late. Hartford has the best pitching staff we've seen in this league in well over a decade, so really, they ought to steamroll. But Valdosta is the best TEAM I've ever seen in a sim league. They just are well managed and know how to do what they do, very very well. We'll evaluate what's out there and see if we can make some deals to bring in some real strong pitching. Trading prospects is always hard. But no point in having prospects if you have to wait for them and know you'll not win with what you have without getting quality now. So now that I have a farm system that's actually got a few pieces, I'm gonna see what we can go out there and pick up to try to make our team better. We're probably still 2-3 years away from being a strong contender in the Republic League again. But given that we've moved into our new stadium and have learned how to be successful with the guys we have, I'm confident that we can be a factor sooner rather than later. We've got the best young offensive core in the entire league, so really, if we get them some help, I see no reason we can't dominate. |
10-01-2008, 03:06 PM | #7 |
Dark Cloud
Join Date: Apr 2001
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What do you do when it's time to complete end an era? I didn't even realize that it'd been almost eight seasons since I took over this Chicago franchise until I started looking at the players on my squad and started to realize that these guys had been with me since literally my first season.
I didn't think I was getting attached, but our decline in the standings signaled to me that I was getting a lot more attached than I realized. That it was it was time to make a change that could ultimately affect the club and take us from the middle tier to closer to the top. So that meant it was time to make some moves. Painful ones, but moves nonetheless. I think the result of what we'd come out with will be such that we'll be in a much better place after this coming season, than we've been in recent years. Our real issues are a lack of offense, more than even a lack of pitching. We needed to get help in the rotation, to be sure. Now how we accomplish that, is anyone's guess. But once this off-season ends, I'll be able to relay how we went about rectifying our issues and hopefully, showing after Friday night whether those were enough moves to put us into contention or whether it was a foolhardy exercise. |
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