Perhaps I am responding to the wrong thread but whay you guys say just proves my point. Players in the top leagues love to train but it is way too hard to draft a decent player yourself.
GM-CrazyEye said:
and i trained 3 of my player since day 1, and 2 other over multiple seasons. This doesn't include 2 dudes i am currently training. So i "designed" 7 dudes of my 10 men rotation.
Also i am still training players ;)
Why is it bad when i decide to search my trainee, who fit to my team?
Great manager and great trainer, but guess what, none of those players are his draft picks. None!
GM-Perpete said:
I only have one 20 y old, yet I'm training three guys. You need to understand that players can be trained after their 21 years. In fact, they have to as players under 22 will never be dominant in D1 and rarely enough to fight with opposition.
Before selling some players recently, I had 7 out 11 players trained in my team. Currently, they are 5 out of 7. Proof that I trained i think.
But out of all of them only one is his draft pick. Johannes Morin (19503749) 20 year old 11k Point Guard Johannes Morin was pick 6 in the season 15 draft by Forty Two.
Me too! I have trained a ton of players but are any my draft picks? Nope. I keep on saying it the players the draft produces are just too bad to use in 90% of cases. You can pick up a brilliant young trainee for a few hundred thousand easily, or a 19 year old superstar with reasonable skills for less that $100,000.
Look at the NBA.
Transaction Meter
Team Draft Picks FA or Waivers Trade Total
ATL 4 9 2 15
BOS 3 5 7 15
CHA 3 3 9 15
CHI 4 5 4 13
CLE 4 4 7 15
DAL 0 7 8 15
DEN 1 4 10 15
DET 8 5 0 13
GSW 6 5 3 14
HOU 3 2 10 15
IND 5 3 5 13
LAC 4 6 3 13
LAL 6 6 2 14
MEM 4 5 6 15
MIA 2 9 4 15
MIL 6 3 6 15
MIN 5 3 7 15
NJN 2 7 6 15
NOR 0 5 10 15
NYK 3 5 7 15
OKC 7 1 7 15
ORL 4 3 8 15
PHI 8 2 4 14
PHX 2 7 5 14
POR 4 5 6 15
SAC 7 2 5 14
SAN 7 3 3 13
TOR 3 6 6 15
UTH 6 4 3 13
WAS 7 1 7 15
Total 128 137 169 434
Out of 434 players on rosters at the moment 128 were drafted by their current team. Five, six or seven draftees is typical. Most good teams have maybe at most one of their drafts pick on their roster BB. Identifying with your players and watching them develop is one of the addictive things about BB and it should be made MUCH easier to draft reasonable talent.
So I will bump my suggestion which is the easiest change in the world to make, just editing some numbers in a line of code.
The problem is simply the ratios are wrong at the moment.
This is wild speculation based on my observations only in India (where I have studied every draft for the last few seasons) and Australia but the current breakdown is something like this.
announcer 2/48
bench warmer 6/48
role player 6/48
6th man 6/48
starter 6/48
star 6/48
allstar 6/48
perennial allstar 5/48
superstar 3/48
MVP 2/48
hall of famer 1/100
all-time great 1/1000
Consdiering that all players with potential of announcer to starter are really just varying degrees of useless that all get fired within a week of the draft there is half the draft gone already. Then consider the one or two MVPs you get in the draft can be a $2,000 salary 18 year old and a $4,000 19 year old 7'0" PG with atrocious ID and IS then you can start to see how few useful players we really get per draft. The figure of 10% has been often raised and I think that is a good ballpark figure.
I would suggest a MUCH better distribution of potential would be something like
announcer 2/48
bench warmer 2/48
role player 2/48
6th man 2/48
starter 2/48
star 10/48
allstar 10/48
perennial allstar 10/48
superstar 6/48
MVP 2/48
hall of famer 1/100
all-time great 1/1000
So no change to the top three potentials at all but a lot more players that can be trained and at least become useful players in decent leagues.