Post by Sam (Rays & Commish) on Oct 1, 2012 17:54:15 GMT -5
60 Man Roster[/size]
Each franchise will retain the rights of a 60-Man Roster made up of only players within their franchises organization at the end of the 2010 season. You must start out with exactly 60 players. Once your 60-Man Roster is posted to the board entitled "Official 60-Man Rosters," this will be your roster throughout the season unless you make Free Agent Acquisitions and/or trades. Lastly, your 60 Man Roster must be under the assigned cap. The 60 players are broken into two parts, the 40-Man Major League Roster and 20-Man Minor League Roster.
40-Man Major League Roster
* You 40-Man ML Roster can contain both major leaguers and minor leaguers.
* Only players on your 40-Man Roster can accumulate statistics for you on Fantrax during the in-season matchups.
* You do not have to have to fill all 40 spots.
* All players must have a contract listed - for minor leaguers whose contract is not known, the default is $300K
20-Man Minor League Roster
* The 20-Man MiLB Roster can consist of up to 20 players who must be defined Minor Leaguers (see below).
* These 20 players will not count against your salary cap
* None of these players can accumulate stats in Fantrax
* None of these players can have a salary of more than $1M (a player with a contract of $1M or more must be listed on your 40-Man Major League Roster)
Player Designations
For our purposes there are 3 types of players that receive the following designations at the beginning of a season (for example, a player who appears in a major league game for the first time during 2012 is still considered a "minor leaguer" until the 2012 season is over):
* Minor Leaguers- A player who has not met prospect status by appearing in a major league game in any prior seasons
* Protected Prospects (PP)- A player that is under control through the 6-year prospect protection (PP) system. To determine how many years of protection a player has used, see below for the Qualifying Season rules
* Major Leaguers- A player that has exceeded the 6-year PP system.
Rounding Third Qualifying Seasons:
1.) appeared in MORE than 50 games for a position player
2.) started MORE than 10 games for a starting pitcher
3.) pitched in MORE than 40 innings for a non-starting pitcher
In the event a team has a pitcher that has both started and relieved, the "MORE than 40 innings" limitation would apply.
Each franchise will retain the rights of a 60-Man Roster made up of only players within their franchises organization at the end of the 2010 season. You must start out with exactly 60 players. Once your 60-Man Roster is posted to the board entitled "Official 60-Man Rosters," this will be your roster throughout the season unless you make Free Agent Acquisitions and/or trades. Lastly, your 60 Man Roster must be under the assigned cap. The 60 players are broken into two parts, the 40-Man Major League Roster and 20-Man Minor League Roster.
40-Man Major League Roster
* You 40-Man ML Roster can contain both major leaguers and minor leaguers.
* Only players on your 40-Man Roster can accumulate statistics for you on Fantrax during the in-season matchups.
* You do not have to have to fill all 40 spots.
* All players must have a contract listed - for minor leaguers whose contract is not known, the default is $300K
20-Man Minor League Roster
* The 20-Man MiLB Roster can consist of up to 20 players who must be defined Minor Leaguers (see below).
* These 20 players will not count against your salary cap
* None of these players can accumulate stats in Fantrax
* None of these players can have a salary of more than $1M (a player with a contract of $1M or more must be listed on your 40-Man Major League Roster)
Player Designations
For our purposes there are 3 types of players that receive the following designations at the beginning of a season (for example, a player who appears in a major league game for the first time during 2012 is still considered a "minor leaguer" until the 2012 season is over):
* Minor Leaguers- A player who has not met prospect status by appearing in a major league game in any prior seasons
* Protected Prospects (PP)- A player that is under control through the 6-year prospect protection (PP) system. To determine how many years of protection a player has used, see below for the Qualifying Season rules
* Major Leaguers- A player that has exceeded the 6-year PP system.
Rounding Third Qualifying Seasons:
1.) appeared in MORE than 50 games for a position player
2.) started MORE than 10 games for a starting pitcher
3.) pitched in MORE than 40 innings for a non-starting pitcher
In the event a team has a pitcher that has both started and relieved, the "MORE than 40 innings" limitation would apply.