[USML Announce] Fwd: From Contact Us: FAAB processing

rickgam at comcast.net rickgam at comcast.net
Mon Jul 30 12:10:40 EDT 2012



    I stand corrected.  I think the instance(s) of contingent bids losing out to solo bids I referred 

to was probably an iteration, i.e. the Onroto system preventing hedging.  Thanks, 

 Rick 



----- Original Message -----


From: "Mark Blocker" <blockermark at gmail.com> 
To: "USML" <announce at usml.net> 
Sent: Monday, July 30, 2012 9:50:39 AM 
Subject: [USML Announce] Fwd: From Contact Us: FAAB processing 

League: 


  See below regarding guidance from Onroto on FAAB bidding.  Anything written below should trump what I am about to tell you, but I think the bottom line is that the Onroto system treats contingent bids as having the same priority as non-contingent bids.  This was not true before we started using Onroto.  In Onroto, a contingent bid of $X will win over a non-contingent bid of less than $X; it was the opposite in our old system.  While not really relevant, my own view is that the Onroto system is a fairer way to do things.  Note also below how Onroto handles the fascinating circumstance of placing both a contingent and non-contingent bid on the same player! 


  Hope this helps.   


  -- Mark B. 


---------- Forwarded message ---------- 
From: < support at onroto.com > 
Date: Mon, Jul 30, 2012 at 9:04 AM 
Subject: Re: From Contact Us: FAAB processing 
To: mbblocker at aol.com 


Hi Mark, 

The commish always get a blow-by-blow of what happened each week:  Commish 
Pages -> Transactions -> View Bid Logs. 

You guys are a FAAB league, so that makes it a simple explanation:  Dollar 
values always trump priority *except as a team runs out of money*. 

Example: 

1.)  replace X by bidding $10 on A 
2.)  replace Y by bidding $17 on B 

If you have more than $27 to spend, the program will go ahead and give you 
player B to replace Y in all instances.  If you have $17, however, it will 
try to give you player A first, before moving on to see if you've won 
player B. 

If you do this: 

1.)  replace X by bidding $10 on A 
                  bidding $15 on B 
2.)  replace Y by bidding $17 on B 

the program will try $10 on A first -- if you're not the high bidder, it 
will try $15 on B -- and there it will see that someone has a $17 bid on B 
and so will quash your $15 bid.  In effect, you trumped yourself.  This 
prevents people from hedging, as it were. 

You can also induce an infinite loop if you mix and match higher and lower 
contingent bids on the same sets of players. 

Hope this helps. 

-- Scott 





> Sir/Madam:    Is there somewhere on the website where you explain how the 
> BidMeister system processes FAAB bids?  Some of our owners are interested 
> in knowing how the system process contingent and non-contingent bids.  Any 
> help you could provide would be appreciate.    -- Mark B. 
> League Abbrev: USML 
> User: mblocker 
> Sport: baseball 


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