Yes, it does.
One thing I like to do is check back throughout the day, usually my rarity score gets better as more people play. I’m down to 64 already
Yes, it does.
One thing I like to do is check back throughout the day, usually my rarity score gets better as more people play. I’m down to 64 already
9/9. I used Biggio, Bagwell, and Altuve. Got a 60 rarity score.
Easiest immaculate for me as well with my 2nd best rarity score at 90.
Again, easy to work, but also the most enjoyable grid I’ve worked yet. Working again on another browser for fun.
Agree most enjoyable. 9/9 and a 65. Biggio and Bagwell forevs.
It was so easy I got 7/9 trying to keep my rarity score low. And I didn’t even do that. Ratfarts.
I got 9/9 with a 36 score. No one above 5% except the 500/300 square.
Used Altuve , Bagwell, and Grienke
I expected the rarity scores to be pretty high. I don’t remember a grid with so few answers, every one of them pretty famous. There are no obscure answers to today’s grid.
Barry Larkin (GG/SS) was my lowest percentage pick at 0.8%
Ty Cobb at 4%? Biggio/Bags/Tuve totalled 2.7%. Mantle & Gwynn in non-obvious spots were each less than 5%. Interesting grid.
I was just surprised I pulled off a 9/9 with none of the most common answers, because I thought my .300/500 was absolutely the most obvious.
The non obvious spots helped me. I used 500/MVP for Aaron and it was a 2%. He was a top choice for two other spots.
Proud the both I and my son put Grienke in the GG/SS square.
Ken Caminiti with a nice 0.4%. Ended up at 78 9/9 today
I only got 8/9 today because apparently Rod Carew was never a Silver Slugger.
Julio Franco was not a career .300 hitter.
.298
Carew spent most of his career before the SS was a thing. First year was 1980
They didn’t start awarding SS until 1980, Carews career was almost done then
First thing I did when I saw the categories was google when SS started so I didn’t hit any land mines because it didn’t exist when they played.
Another 0.4% my wife got, Mike Hampton
I am amazed to see how many of y’all have such profound funds of knowledge about players throughout the years and across the game. Certainly helps explain why this site is so special.
(I can barely remember what I had for breakfast now, but even at my best, I only knew about Astros players from early 70’s on.)
Mine mostly comes from Astros, or players in the 80s 90s when I collected baseball cards and played Fantasy Baseball.