Basically I have a bunch of the 2000 cards in a spreadsheet, plus a lot of the cards that were made on this site. It seems players that don’t have home runs lose a lot of points because he matched closely with a card that had been created already by someone else. I may have short changed him a little bit tho
I have noticed that cards that do not hit HR lose point value. That is an exceptional card, with the 380 points would probably be the 1st overall pick in a draft
i see what you mean. i wish when they were making the cards they had given out some type of formula on how they calculate points. i also started looking back at more cards and say the roger cedeno card from pennant run and he was 430 points with a 20 triple not 19+ and a better defense and speed. So i can say that the point calculation on this card was a mistake, and he should be somewhere between 430-450 points
I totally forgot about Justin Masterson
ReplyDeleteHow is Kenny Lofton only 380 points? That card is incredible
ReplyDeleteBasically I have a bunch of the 2000 cards in a spreadsheet, plus a lot of the cards that were made on this site. It seems players that don’t have home runs lose a lot of points because he matched closely with a card that had been created already by someone else. I may have short changed him a little bit tho
ReplyDeleteI have noticed that cards that do not hit HR lose point value. That is an exceptional card, with the 380 points would probably be the 1st overall pick in a draft
ReplyDeletei see what you mean. i wish when they were making the cards they had given out some type of formula on how they calculate points. i also started looking back at more cards and say the roger cedeno card from pennant run and he was 430 points with a 20 triple not 19+ and a better defense and speed. So i can say that the point calculation on this card was a mistake, and he should be somewhere between 430-450 points
ReplyDelete