I noticed two things of significant interest (at least to me!) in this table.
- Of the four rookies priced around $200k, only Cripps was a real "must have" type. Brayshaw and Sheed were both okay, but Brayshaw was very slow and Sheed didn't top out that high. Hartung was quite good but not outstanding. I've been using "placeholders" for a couple of top end rookies to ensure I don't overspend elsewhere and miss a must have, but Cripps was obviously a real stand-out for a rookie-priced player (both in an SC and an AFL sense), so even expecting one of his type to pop up this year might be excessive - provisioning for two or more might be unnecessary. You could argue that the point that dearer rookies are not necessarily better cash cows is an extension of the point behind the whole thread
- A player's first price jump appears to be a good indicator of his overall cash generation ability. The players who jumped more than $50k in their first price rise averaged an overall increase of $227k until their "green week" in this table. Those who didn't jump $50k in their first rise only made $176k on the same basis. Clearly there is a modest look-ahead bias here (we don't know their third score, which helps determine the first price jump, when we make the decision to pick them - although we do know the breakeven going into that game), and filtering on those who jump a lot early is going to naturally lead to
somewhat higher overall cash generation (these players get a "head start" because of heir bigger first jump). With that acknowledged, the gap in overall cash generation is wide, typically helping delineate between marginal to good cash cows (around $150-175k) and the stand-outs (over $200k). You'd want to be careful about how the breakeven will track in games 4 and 5 (so 70, 90, 110SC is a better scoring profile than 110, 90, 70), but this rule of thumb is something I will keep in mind.