
Griffith Stadium
I was browsing the ballparks for the ATG4 player set and Griffith Stadium ‘41 caught my eye. The is the only ballpark with zero ballpark home runs from both sides. I decided to browse the pitchers from this set and came up with 9 pitchers that may fit well in a ballpark such as Griffth Stadium:
1. John Cerutti $1.23M (BP – 5 vs L, 6 vs R)
I couldn’t find any pitcher under 1M worth considering. John Cerutti at $1.54 was the first bargain found.
2. Floyd Bannister $1.54M (BP – 6 vs L, 5 vs R)
Cerutti’s card may be a little better than Bannister but Bannister only needs 3 days rest between starts.
3. Fred Norman $1.76M (BP – 7 vs L, 4 vs R)
This reverse lefty may be worth considering but he does allow quite a bit of triples against left-handed batters.
4. Jim Merritt $2.27M (BP – 0 vs L, 8 vs R)
I’m wondering how often this pitcher is chosen. Looks like a good card. He has 91% out chances against left-handed batters. 8 ballpark diamonds from the right side ideal for a pitcher’s park.
5. Pedro Ramos $2.33M (BP – 7 vs L, 3 vs R)
He was 11-20 in 1961 with Minnesota. I wonder how he would fare in Griffith Stadium.
6. Bruce Hurst $2.41M (BP – 8 vs L, 1 vs R)
Here’s another reverse lefty. His low double and triple chances are excellent.
7. Ed Whitson $2.89M (BP – 3 vs L, 8 vs R)
He can work on only 3 days rest. Doesn’t give up and singles against- right handed batters but all other chances are extra base hits.
8. Mike Scott $3.2M (BP – 0 vs L, 8 vs R)
This reverse righty must be hard to get. 81% out chances against left-handed batters. Most of his safe chances are walks which is something to look for in a starting pitcher.
9. Tom Browning $3.39M (BP – 4 vs L, 3 vs R)
Looks like a decent card. He has low bk and wp numbers and a -2 hold.








{ 1 comment… read it below or add one }
You’re absolutely right, there is no decent starter below $1 million. Thanks for the tips. It’s rare that an expensive pitching staff beats the plethora of high-priced hitting lineups, so this will be useful.