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Individual Great Games

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This Post:
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232515.15 in reply to 232515.14
Date: 2/13/2013 8:21:17 PM
Overall Posts Rated:
103103
His coach decided to let Eugene Smith get his points while the defense focused on shutting down the rest of the team. But the coach didn't anticipate Smith outscoring his entire team.



haha, yeah. That guy is just a beast, plain and simple.

This Post:
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232515.17 in reply to 232515.16
Date: 2/14/2013 12:57:34 PM
Overall Posts Rated:
103103
Wow, 5 pops at 27, that is nice. I had a level 6 trainer and I did notice a difference too. Went to lvl 5 trainer this season to save some cash though.

This Post:
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232515.18 in reply to 232515.17
Date: 2/14/2013 2:54:56 PM
Overall Posts Rated:
9898
I had a level 6 trainer for most of the time the staff system has been set up like this. I went down to 4 a couple seasons ago because the offsite forum stuff showed it wasn't much slower. I haven't tracked progress too closely, but the difference hasn't been huge. The really don't like the staff system in this game at all. I think you're right though about how long you can train a player with higher levels. I mostly trained younger guys though, and I think it'd be a fair bet to say I'd have at least 7 or 8 million more in my account if I could reverse time and have used a 4 all those seasons.

This Post:
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232515.19 in reply to 232515.18
Date: 2/14/2013 5:32:26 PM
Overall Posts Rated:
297297
The higher level staff members tend to be most useful for players training U21 and NT players.

An extra pop or 2 a season might not be a huge deal unless you are trying to max out an older player or a player with very high potential. Finishing off a superstar player at 23 instead of 24 does not likely make the investment worthwhile for most players.

From: Digler

This Post:
11
232515.21 in reply to 232515.20
Date: 2/16/2013 7:49:48 AM
Overall Posts Rated:
6161
Smith is a really nice player. Tough to defend for sure. Just a preference, but I would have trained is OD a little more - maybe up to prolific.

This Post:
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232515.22 in reply to 232515.20
Date: 2/16/2013 11:43:00 AM
Overall Posts Rated:
103103
Yeah, he is awesome, SFs are the most valuable, too. I agree with Chickenhawks that the one soft spot may be OD, most SFs I see are heavier on OD than ID. However with so many people using the overpowered Look Inside offense, it may be wiser the way you have it.

Thanks for sharing and I stand by my assessment of 'Beast'

Last edited by buzzerbeatme at 2/16/2013 11:43:27 AM

From: Digler

This Post:
00
232515.24 in reply to 232515.23
Date: 2/16/2013 12:44:53 PM
Overall Posts Rated:
6161
If you pop his OD a couple times, then you can play him at SF all the time. match up nightmare...

This Post:
11
232515.25 in reply to 232515.22
Date: 2/16/2013 12:52:29 PM
Overall Posts Rated:
6161
I have been training SF for a while, and it is a challenge. Probably why they are so valuable. I will list my SF trainee here. This is after almost 3 seasons of training with level 5 trainer. I have been able to get full 48 min training for all but a couple weeks on him. He didn't start out as a great prospect, but his OD and ID were 7 and 5 to start with. That was a key point...

Weekly salary: $ 7 387
Role: rotation player
(BuzzerBeta)

DMI: 145700
Age: 20
Height: 6'5" / 196 cm
Potential: perennial allstar
Game Shape: proficient

Jump Shot: prominent Jump Range: mediocre
Outside Def.: prominent Handling: prolific
Driving: prominent Passing: mediocre
Inside Shot: prominent Inside Def.: prolific
Rebounding: respectable Shot Blocking: pitiful
Stamina: inept Free Throw: proficient

Experience: pitiful

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