GREAT MOMENTS IN STRAT
Have you experienced a game of Strat-O-Matic so thrilling, unique or bizarre that you just HAVE to share it with someone? That would be us. Send your Great Moments in Strat to SOMTalkShow@aol.com. Please include your name and hometown. Readers like to see that and you deserve the credit.
Why Some Teams Win and Others Don’t
I’ve had a lot of highlight moments over the years when I play S-O-M computer games – which is how I play football, basketball and, for the first time this past year, hockey. Our GKSML face-to-face baseball league is still going and we’re currently wrapping up our 69th, 154-game replay.
The special moment I’m writing to you about occurred last fall when I was replaying the Detroit Lions season (I also replay the playoffs), which means I’ve become a good loser. The Lions were 3-13 in real-life and I “coached” them to a 4-12 record.
In the second game between the Lions and
Del Newell,
Fantasy + Replay = All in One
When I got the cards and dice baseball game based on the 2006 season last year, I immediately had a 30-team fantasy draft. I opted for up-and-coming stars like Hanley Ramirez, Nick Markakis, Felix Hernandez and Matt Cain much of the time, building for the future. After the draft, I started a 162-game season. I didn’t finish it then, but when baseball started up again this year I picked up where I had left off and finished all 162 games. Strat-O-Matic certainly delivers all the feel of baseball, with many players going through slumps and hot streaks over the course of the year. My team, the Toronto Blue Jays, started slowly with a record of 19-31 through the first 50 games, a slump I attributed to how young the team was. It wasn’t until after the All-Star break that the team broke .500 with a four-game sweep of
While most players posted stats very similar to their ‘06 line, my team had many great stories, like Wilson Betemit hitting .279 with 25 homers and 107 RBIs, Matt Stairs hitting .298 with 21 homers in only 349 at-bats, Dontrelle Willis going 19-6 with a 3.24 ERA over 247 IP, and even Yadier Molina hitting .244 (when he only hit .216 for the ‘06 Cardinals). My Jays also had a few disappointments, too, like Jonathan Broxton posting a 4-13 record with a 4.02 ERA and Hanley Ramirez hitting .253, albeit with 61 stolen bases. Thanks again, Strat-O-Matic, for all the good times playing the most realistic baseball game on the planet.
Nathan Groot-Nibbelink, ONT,
Here’s How to Make the Old Cubbies Great
One of my favorite season replays was the mid ‘60s Cubs. Combining cards from the 63-67 seasons, I created a monster team that won 102 games and defeated
Scott G,
A Cluster of No-Hitters
I have Version 13 of the SOM Baseball game and I love it because I can play it in a solitaire fashion. I play all of the Oriole (home team) games (2007) manually and a few other select games in a 16-team stock replay season. (
After the 1994 season in real MLB, I became disenchanted with baseball. All of the season records, games, cards, and floppy disks slowly became either lost or thrown away after 1994, as I have moved several times. My most prized possession was the box scores and lists of no-hitters that I was involved in numbering either 6 or 7 in about 3,500 games.(All my records were either hand-written or typed before I acquired the computers). All I can now remember of these no-hitters is:’79 Jack Morris,
The most famous no-hit type of game I remember was when I was pitching Nolan Ryan for the 1979 California Angeles. He had pitched 8-2/3 innings of no-hit ball, and the ball was hit to Jim Anderson the short-stop. The result was on Ryan’s card and it read ssX. The result was a split card reading of 1 or 2 on the X-Fielding chart, resulting in a single for the batter. I can’t remember the opposition batter or team, but I still remember the player Jim Anderson (ss-3, lol, really a good ballplayer). So to people who struggled for years, even 45 years, to get a no-hitter, it appears I have been involved in an average of 6-7 no-hitters in 1 fully played season. I am retired now, and my interest in baseball has been rekindled, as I have spare time to play computer baseball. I truly love the Version 13 game and have played about 190 games auto/and manual. But zero no-hitters so far!
Cliff Burris,
Just One More Game – Until Dawn
Background, Part 1: I’m playing a 64-team tournament, cards and dice, best-of-5 series, using eight teams each from the “super-advanced” seasons 1963 through 1967, 1971, 1975 and 1978. I’m at the “Elite Eight” level – the fourth round, with 8 teams left in the tournament.
Background, Part 2: In earlier times, when I would often write my games up for Strat bulletin boards, I regularly used the title “Last Game of the Night”. Whenever I tried to squeeze in “one last game” before going to bed, it always seemed like that last game was remarkable in some way – marathon extra innings, major hitting or pitching feats, heroics or late-inning comebacks. This concept also applied to when I was trying to squeeze in one last game before work, while my wife was waiting for me to join her on a shopping trip or outing, whatever. This doesn’t happen as much anymore, since I have many fewer obligations now, and much more time for Strat.
And so it was one day this week, I had a minor medical procedure scheduled for the morning. Although I am in full possession of all my faculties, this procedure did require that a responsible adult drive me home after the procedure. My wife and I planned to leave at
The first game was an 8-0 shutout by Jim Bunning, took hardly any time at all. It was still only
So, I decided to play “just one more game” to see if the Phils got their sweep into the next round.
The game remained scoreless into the 11th. With one out, Dick Allen comes up against TJ again. One out, nobody one. The exact same situation in which Allen nailed Vida Blue for a game and series-winning homer in their series. I couldn’t walk him again. Luckily, TJ escapes with “just a single”. Allen immediately steals second, but following two walks, he’s thrown out at the plate on an infield grounder. John reaches point-of-weakness on the second walk, but Forster gets out of the jam. Still scoreless after 11.
The 11-inning outing also puts Short at POW, although the hits/walks he’d given up were nowhere near it. Had Tommy John survived the 11th, I’d have been very tempted to let them both go in a Marichal-Spahn type of duel, but propriety reigns. I enforce the 11 inning POW rule. Darold Knowles relieves Short. Still scoreless into the 13th. In the Philly 13th, the leadoff man reaches on an error, and once AGAIN, here’s Dick Allen against a lefty, with 1st base occupied. This time, I walk him. Forster gets the next three outs, still scoreless after 13.
Somewhere in the middle of all that, needless to say, my wife calls out “almost time to leave!” from downstairs, with all due annoyance.
I wasn’t going anywhere, of course, until I finished this game. Luckily for me, the Dodgers finally break through in the 14th, a big double by Ron Cey. Forster holds it, 3-0 Dodgers in 14 innings. It was, of course, The Last Game of the Night.
Jim Beauchemin,