I was just looking at the analysis by frewho of the 2015 and 2013 winners. Last years winner only had 13 keepers to begin with and DimmaWit in 2013 started with 14 keepers. I've always been of the belief that the more keepers you begin with the less trades required to complete my team. It's really got me thinking about whether this is the prudent approach, and in so doing taking away decisions like forcing in Wines and having Bird. Perhaps it's better to go Premium and rookie. Of interest is that they both started with a 5 Premium midfield and light on in defence.
Here's the nub of my thinking - what value does your SC team have to attain to be fully upgraded using some measures that are found in KLo30 and Rowsus's threads? .
A parting scenario, remember Wells $243K had to score at 85 to meet our minimum threshold after round 8 and a low rookie 60. Do you take Wells expecting 85 or a low rookie (actually you could get two for the price of one) expecting 60-62? One outperforms that average by 10, 15 or 20 points, who is the more likely? How do you use the $120K differential?
Obviously the more points the more cash generated for your bench, but anything on field should be set to an exceedingly high standard - one which we probably need to be certain of before selecting a mid pricer AND the cheaper rookies.
For example, lets say I think Pendles will average what he is priced at, 116, and I think Selwood will increase his average from 105 to 110. I would have said that Selwood is better value because he is cheaper and increases his average. But I now see that this "value" only has a short life. So if supercoach went for 7 rounds you would pick Selwood. If supercoach went for 14 rounds it wouldn't matter because Pendles better average would negate Selwood's better value. But because we pick a premium hoping they will play 20+ games the higher averaging player eventually becomes better value.
Another example is where I thought paying $50k less for a player after round 6 was saving me money but I'm getting that players average for 6 less rounds than if I had started with them.
I also like KLo30's quote that a player expected to score at 60 can easily score 15-20 points more but a mid pricer expected to score at 90 is unlikely to score 15-20 points more. Who would have thought Saad and Oxley would be our best cash cows last year.
I guess the art, or the maths, is in knowing how much life a player's value has?