but if it's the difference that matter so much, why has my 20 YO pg with skills at average or higher in all the "guard" skills only had one pop in JS over 3 weeks of training? Also, where did you get this info from, regarding the difference in skills mattering more than the skill itself? Did you just infer it from the rules or is this discussed else where?
Here is what the rules say:
For example, a great inside defender and rebounder will find it easier to improve his shot blocking than a poor inside defender and poor rebounder would. This encourages you to develop players with a combination of skills, but there are many combinations of skills which work well together -- you can develop players who will be a good fit for your team's needs.
Technically, as I understand this text, training a skill that is surging ahead of the others in a particular
skill group will be slower relative to the skills that are lagging behind. I cannot say for sure whether this entails slowing down training for the surging skill or speeding up training for the lagging one, but it shouldn't really matter. The obvious conclusion from this part of the rules is skill level matters
relatively, not
nominally.
"I don't know half of you half as well as I should like; and I like less than half of you half as well as you deserve."