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Trainee continually foulling out

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This Post:
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215229.15 in reply to 215229.14
Date: 4/30/2012 1:54:22 PM
Overall Posts Rated:
99
Theoretically, players who are highly agressive should not only foul more but get more fouled. It could be nice to have a player drawing lots of fould, if not for two things: These players are so hard to train that it is improbable that he can reach a high level in skills (in comparison to a equal player with less agression) and the fact that it appears that injuries in this game are a random chance every time a player is fouled. If he is constantly fouled he has a bigger chance of injury which will further hinder the training. (Dont quote me on this, tough. I dont think any GM has confirmed that injuries happens ramdonly with a chance on each foul - it just appears to me that thats the way the game is)

I am with everyone who told you to sell this player ASAP. I gave up on training for a season because of one trainee like this. It screwed his training and my other trainees were not that great and I lost all motivation for training.

So, to avoid frustrations, drop this guy and better luck in your next trainee.


From: G Khan

This Post:
00
215229.17 in reply to 215229.16
Date: 4/30/2012 3:10:01 PM
Overall Posts Rated:
9191
I tend to notice it in the number of free throws a player attempts. For aggressive players, they get to the line quite often.

This Post:
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215229.19 in reply to 215229.13
Date: 4/30/2012 6:02:35 PM
Overall Posts Rated:
406406
Train defense. As his defense improves, his tendency to foul decreases. But his ability to draw fouls can be a valuable strategic tool once he is better developed.


The ability to draw fouls is a myth - no one has ever seen a correlation between aggressiveness and drawing fouls. Improved defence does not help either.

[expletive] waste of time to train such a player

From: 7ton
This Post:
00
215229.20 in reply to 215229.19
Date: 4/30/2012 8:26:17 PM
Overall Posts Rated:
4545
It's a trainer's job to scout the opposition's tendency to draw fouls. Some players do draw more, some less. Then you try to have your trainee (especially if he is aggressive) defends those who draw less fouls. Don't try to create mismatch though - guards never defend bigs and vice versa. It also helps if your trainee is a guard and he defends guard position and you play 3-2. This way you don't need to play too much attention to opposition. But not sure if it would work the other way round.

From: strilfe

This Post:
00
215229.22 in reply to 215229.12
Date: 5/3/2012 11:51:25 AM
Overall Posts Rated:
246246
I wouldn't put my chances on foul prone player, If I keep him would be as a role player or a sub. I had this PG that draw 3, 4 fouls every game. THat wasn't bad. Until he fouled out on final matches. Given that he was very important in my offense, I sold him and got another.

It's up to you but I wouldn't hace a foul prone player as any of my top 3 or 5 players... Lost too many finals, learned the hard way =(