Post by Milwaukee GM (Souriyo) on Feb 18, 2016 17:03:03 GMT
All players called up or sent down to the minor leagues will be processed through this board.
MLB: Any players with <130 AB and/or 50 IP will be eligible for the AAA roster
NFL: Any player with <16 games played at the NFL level will be eligible for the practice squad
NHL: Any player with <82 games played at the NHL level will be eligible for the AHL roster
NBA: Any player with <82 games played at the NBA level will be eligible for the D-League roster
Players must be called up/sent down on this board as follows:
The Milwaukee Brewers send [insert player],[position], [real team] from active roster to AAA roster.
That way, the move can be processed on the roster spreadsheets, available in "Roster Central"
To call-up or send down a player, create a new thread in this board (DO NOT POST ON THIS THREAD)
NOTE: Players who have surpassed the allotted game limits cannot be sent down to the minors after being called up and their contract timers start automatically UPON call up. Now, technically if there is not room for a player on your active roster (No empty roster spot because of injury, and buyout is not a preferred option), a player CAN remain on the minor league roster past the allotted limits but will obviously not have an impact on the team's points or statistics. Also, if a player is called up before they have hit their allotted time, they CAN be sent back down to the minors while still under the threshold, but their contract DOES NOT PAUSE during this time.
Example:
If I own D'Angelo Russell on a 3 year deal and I called him up from the D-League roster after he had played 15 games at the NBA level. His contract with me HAS started and will not pause for any reason. He will technically be off my books after the 2018 season. However, if I want to make room on my roster for a more productive player now, I CAN move him to my D-League roster now because he has played 53 games, under the 82 game threshold. This does mean that once he hits 82 games he HAS to be called back up to my active roster and cannot be stashed in the minors indefinitely.
MLB: Any players with <130 AB and/or 50 IP will be eligible for the AAA roster
NFL: Any player with <16 games played at the NFL level will be eligible for the practice squad
NHL: Any player with <82 games played at the NHL level will be eligible for the AHL roster
NBA: Any player with <82 games played at the NBA level will be eligible for the D-League roster
Players must be called up/sent down on this board as follows:
The Milwaukee Brewers send [insert player],[position], [real team] from active roster to AAA roster.
That way, the move can be processed on the roster spreadsheets, available in "Roster Central"
To call-up or send down a player, create a new thread in this board (DO NOT POST ON THIS THREAD)
NOTE: Players who have surpassed the allotted game limits cannot be sent down to the minors after being called up and their contract timers start automatically UPON call up. Now, technically if there is not room for a player on your active roster (No empty roster spot because of injury, and buyout is not a preferred option), a player CAN remain on the minor league roster past the allotted limits but will obviously not have an impact on the team's points or statistics. Also, if a player is called up before they have hit their allotted time, they CAN be sent back down to the minors while still under the threshold, but their contract DOES NOT PAUSE during this time.
Example:
If I own D'Angelo Russell on a 3 year deal and I called him up from the D-League roster after he had played 15 games at the NBA level. His contract with me HAS started and will not pause for any reason. He will technically be off my books after the 2018 season. However, if I want to make room on my roster for a more productive player now, I CAN move him to my D-League roster now because he has played 53 games, under the 82 game threshold. This does mean that once he hits 82 games he HAS to be called back up to my active roster and cannot be stashed in the minors indefinitely.