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Re: Help w/ reading the cards for Mystery Tournament Manager

PostPosted: Tue Apr 04, 2017 11:19 am
by mstingone
When the result for a given hitter is 1-3, does that mean the result is derived from hitters card and 4-6 pitchers?
If so what does a 7 mean?

Re: Help w/ reading the cards for Mystery Tournament Manager

PostPosted: Tue Apr 04, 2017 1:42 pm
by mstingone
FALCON29 wrote:If a player who has "W" power rolls a ballpark Homerun on a pitchers' card, it's rolled back to a single. Does anyone know if it is included in the Ballpark FX HR Opp with the Misc stats on your roster page? If not it could be a further clue as to whether or not you have one of the years with W power or not.



How do you know the hit is on hitter or pitchers cards
I see 1-7 come up
I thought the AB would be either 1-3 meaning hitter card or 4-6 for pitcher card, but I see ABs showing a 7 entry.
I'm confused.

Re: Help w/ reading the cards for Mystery Tournament Manager

PostPosted: Mon Apr 10, 2017 1:17 pm
by mstingone
Another Q
in the play by play with mystery cars, when the roll shows 1,2,3 does that mean hitter cvard?
Also, I've seen 7, what's that (presuming 4-6 are pitcher card rolls.
Anyone?

Re: Help w/ reading the cards for Mystery Tournament Manager

PostPosted: Mon Apr 10, 2017 7:31 pm
by Mumford
mstingone wrote:Another Q
in the play by play with mystery cars, when the roll shows 1,2,3 does that mean hitter cvard?
Also, I've seen 7, what's that (presuming 4-6 are pitcher card rolls.
Anyone?


'Those are pitch counts. Nothing to do with which card the roll is on.

Re: Help w/ reading the cards for Mystery Tournament Manager

PostPosted: Mon May 15, 2017 5:52 pm
by mstingone
So there really is no way to know which year you have despite all the back n forth about clues.

In the Park HR's

PostPosted: Tue Feb 27, 2018 3:21 pm
by stratorat
Playing 80's Mystery and Miguel Dilone is off to a red-hot start!- .462 BA in 26 AB's.
Was assuming I had his best (1980) card until he HR'd last night.
That eliminates 1980, UNLESS he stretched a triple into a HR?
Any way to read that event??

Re: In the Park HR's

PostPosted: Tue Feb 27, 2018 6:38 pm
by coyote303
stratorat wrote:Playing 80's Mystery and Miguel Dilone is off to a red-hot start!- .462 BA in 26 AB's.
Was assuming I had his best (1980) card until he HR'd last night.
That eliminates 1980, UNLESS he stretched a triple into a HR?
Any way to read that event??


Some day it may cost me, but I always a assume a homerun is legitimate and not a triple stretched into a homer or a rare play off of the outfield X chart. Now if Mr. Dilone had 400 ABs (instead of 26) when this happened, I might make an exception.

The Mystery Game certainly can break our hearts when we find out a key player who started hot actually has a sub-par card.

Re: Help w/ reading the cards for Mystery Tournament Manager

PostPosted: Fri Mar 09, 2018 10:02 pm
by jayhawk81
visick gives great info above. My only caveat would be for the 90s game the Tilt option is incredibly unreliable. I've had players on 4R or 4L type cards and hit better against the opposite pitcher...

Re: Help w/ reading the cards for Mystery Tournament Manager

PostPosted: Sat Mar 17, 2018 7:23 am
by tdkearns
“First find out how they got injured (HBP+inj, Lomax+inj, ground out+inj etc.).”

Where can you see the roll? I can’t find the place where the dice roll is listed. It’s not in play by play that I can see.

Re: Help w/ reading the cards for Mystery Tournament Manager

PostPosted: Sat Mar 17, 2018 12:22 pm
by coyote303
tdkearns wrote:“First find out how they got injured (HBP+inj, Lomax+inj, ground out+inj etc.).”

Where can you see the roll? I can’t find the place where the dice roll is listed. It’s not in play by play that I can see.


You can't see the roll. However, say one of your players gets injured when he flies out against a right-handed pitcher. Look at the injury roll for each year for your hitter (against right-handed pitchers of course). If there is only one season with a flyball + injury chance, you know exactly which season you have. Sometimes there is more than one such season, but you usually can eliminate at least some seasons from consideration.