Well I completely agree. However, use the same logic you applied in your last comment and apply it to the second last. You'll find out that all you can apply all the arguments to the current system as well and maybe more.
Point 1 you made:
a team play all three players in one thrown game
I was trying to explain that the situation would not be worse than today where you have to train
every game out of position because the same regime must be applied to all trainees. All you have said in your last comment applies equally to the current system as well. As I was trying to argue, on average teams would be a bit more competitve in the new system than they are today.
Point 2:
You need to make more of an effort. The effort comes from the fact that you need to train out of position. Under the system you described absolutely nothing would change, you still have to do that and make the effort. With the current regime you are also forced to train all your trainees with the same regime any given week, be it out of position or not.
This is not a matter of effort it is only a matter of convenience and flexibility. Right now you can't train a guard and a big man together, with the system you described you could. Nothing else would change.
And since you seem to think people who advocate a different system are whiners (not your words but pass me the term) who can't get it done with the current system, this is what happened to me last season:
http://www.buzzerbeater.com/team/91040/schedule.aspx?seas...I trained 5 weeks out of position (which prevented my trainee from being considered for his U21), during the regular season and I never trained ST, GS or FT. I know, it's possible, I know it's challenging and whatnot, I'm arguing that the system you depicted isn't any easier, it's just more flexible (you can train at different positions rather than having to train all the trainees the same way and then swap one of your trainees for another guy through the TL).
Last edited by Lemonshine at 1/8/2015 6:08:18 PM