By Brad Cook

March:

Spring training opens with the wide-open promise that accompanies each new season. As the exhibition games commence, you tweak your lineup, trying out newcomers in different slots and attempting to account for off-season losses. Then word comes down from the owner: he expects a .500 season. You demand a playoff spot.

Out of the Park Baseball X

April:

The season progresses as spring training did, full of missed opportunities and struggles to build team chemistry. An injury to your best outfielder puts him on the disabled list for four weeks, forcing you to juggle your lineup when setbacks extend his recovery time. A key starting pitcher acquired in a blockbuster trade fizzles when his breaking ball loses its snap, putting your job on the chopping block. Looking through the list of available free agents, you notice an aging player who is past his prime but whose leadership skills could boost your flagging clubhouse. You offer him a basic one-year contract. He accepts, happy to be playing again.

May:

Your lineup and pitching rotation intact once more, you now contend with the daily dilemmas brought on by the vagaries of hot and cold streaks: Do you bench a player whose performance begins to tail off, or do you stick with him and hope he turns it around? What if that player is your star third baseman, who signed a very expensive contract during the off-season? And how do you handle a rising star whose popularity drops when he’s suspended after an on-field fight? There are no simple answers to these questions.

June:

The team’s first — and hopefully only — prolonged slump of the season accompanies the start of summer. Six games into a losing streak, you leave a starting pitcher in too long and he gives up an eighth-inning grand slam that seals yet another defeat. You turn to your Scouting Director for help. His team assembles reports on key players, and that information proves vital in making decisions. You swap a few players in your lineup and rearrange your starting rotation, hoping to ignite a spark.

July:

Your fortunes begin to turn around. An eight-game winning streak puts you within striking distance of first place. Your key starting pitcher produces two sterling games. That star third baseman earns back-to-back Player of the Week honors, capping those games with a ninth-inning, game-winning double in front of a cheering home crowd. Your closer converts all nine of his save opportunities during the month, putting those two walk-off homers in May behind him.

August:

The dog days of summer bring you a tie for first place, neck-and-neck with your toughest division rival. Sifting through the voluminous statistics at your disposal, you notice something interesting: your back-up second baseman has fared much better against right-handed pitchers than the starter, despite the fact that both bat right-handed. Going with your gut, you start him during a key three-game series and he drills four home runs. Perhaps a platoon at second base is in order.

September:

The race for the division title heats up. In your league, one division leader has a 15-game edge, all but ensuring a playoff spot. The other division is closer, while yours continues to swing back and forth. Your team seems to click as the month draws to a close. A seven-game winning streak, punctuated by your best starting pitcher’s masterful one-hit shutout of your division rival, gives you a two-game edge heading into the final weekend. One of your top minor league prospects, who you summoned when rosters expanded on September 1, delivers two key hits during the streak.

October:

The final series of the year, against your division’s last-place team, turns out to be free of drama, thankfully. You sweep them in three blow-outs, securing the division title and allowing you to focus on the playoffs. Round one breezes by in a three games to one victory, putting you in the League Championship Series against your arch-rival.

Down two games to none, your team limps home for the crucial middle three games of the series. You take two of the three as your line-up comes alive with timely hitting. Now you face the daunting task of taking games six and seven on your opponent’s home turf, but you pull off the feat, a 12-3 laugher capping the series.

Moving on to the World Series against the other league’s champion, game one sees your star third baseman go down with a devastating injury while fielding a sharply-hit ball. He’s out until next year, but his teammates soldier on. His back-up provides key support to your hitting attack, and your pitchers excel in their starting and relief roles. The teams split the first two games, but the next three belong to your club, ending a 20-year championship drought. You had recorded all of the games in the series for posterity, allowing you to relive those thrilling moments any time you want, complete with the roar of the crowd and animations charting the trajectories of batted balls.

There’s little time to bask in the glory, however. You have contracts to negotiate, free agents to peruse, and strategies to formulate. Already your opponents are crying: “Wait ‘til next year!”

Game Hardware
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Recommended Systems For Gamers

Playing field.

Swing, Batter, Batter! The Broadcast view gives you a nice look at the simulated action, with a scrolling commentary at the bottom.

Game information.

Stats, Stats Everywhere. Peruse piles of sortable stats.

Game stats.

Location, Location, Location. The Webcast view presents more data on the screen, including each pitch’s location.

Player stats.

The Face of the Game. FaceGen puts a personal touch on your team.

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System Requirements:

 

What’s New in OOTP X

Major League news page.

Out of the Park Baseball X allows you to easily import leagues from OOTP 9 and versions 6.5 or 6.12. (To import files from other versions, use the demo version of OOTP 9 to convert a file to that format, and then import that file into version X.) Improvements found in the latest edition lead off with revamped artificial intelligence and even better play-by-play, complete with thousands of new lines of play description.

Next up is a redesigned pitching system that features individual pitch ratings and a reworked endurance system. Now pitchers can improve certain pitches or lose effectiveness with others, forcing you to modify their approach. Injuries are also more realistic, with the possibility that players will suffer setbacks during their recovery, and each minor league team now has its own disabled list too.

During games, you can customize what you see by activating the widgets option and moving the information boxes around the screen. Between games and seasons, salary arbitration and free agent compensation have been adjusted so they more closely parallel what happens in real life, where players can make salary demands and teams can agree to the terms or ask an arbitrator to make a decision. Free agency can complicate those situations, and that’s reflected in OOTP X too.

There’s plenty more for baseball aficionados to enjoy, including the ability to enter player statistics and automatically convert them into ratings, improvements to the look and feel of the interface, performance enhancements to the game speed, and more.

Create Your Own Baseball History

Trophey stats.

OOTP X comes with everything you need to start a season of Major League Baseball, but you should visit PadresFan’s OOTP Baseball Mod Website to download stadium photos, team logos, and more, including player images that the game’s FaceGen technology uses to represent everyone on the field. You even get all of the teams’ minor league clubs, allowing you to nurture prospects as they work their way through the farm system and hopefully emerge as Major League stars. OOTP X’s rosters are current as of the beginning of the 2009 baseball season.

Of course, there’s also plenty of fun in seeing what could have been, and that’s where OOTP X lets you play with history to your heart’s content. The new version also includes improved historical simulation accuracy, making older seasons more realistic, even when simulating just one year.

Here’s a roundup of some of the most intriguing seasons from Major League Baseball’s history. Perhaps you can change the course of one or more of them.

Want to take the helm of a beleaguered team and lead it to its glory years? The Seattle Mariners, Texas Rangers, and Washington Nationals (the current incarnation) have yet to appear in a World Series, while the Houston Astros, Milwaukee Brewers, Colorado Rockies, Tampa Bay Rays, and San Diego Padres have participated in the championship but haven’t won it yet. And let’s not forget that the Chicago Cubs haven’t played in the World Series since 1945 and last won it in 1908, the longest such streak of futility in Major League Baseball history.

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