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A Very Basic Guide To Tactics

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145498.12 in reply to 145498.11
Date: 6/2/2010 10:53:07 AM
Overall Posts Rated:
4040
Yes, we are in agreement. It's the other poster that seems to think you should slow things down when playing an inferior opponent even if your guys could practically shoot with their eyes closed and still make the shot.

This Post:
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145498.13 in reply to 145498.12
Date: 6/2/2010 11:06:41 AM
Overall Posts Rated:
112112
Yes, we are in agreement. It's the other poster that seems to think you should slow things down when playing an inferior opponent even if your guys could practically shoot with their eyes closed and still make the shot.


The game manual was written as a brief guide for new players. What it says is not the law. I would take the advise of a D.I team that has been around for a long time and has experienced the game. If I was to play a neutral tactic against and inferior team I would never use PTB. I feel from experience that Base and Patient get you a lot better shots. The risk of have a bad shot at the end of the shot clock is diminished by the fact that you are the superior team.

For example. Say in 1 Possession your players see shot opportunities w/ the following chances of making the shot:
15% 20% 25% 30% 10%


If your playing push the ball your players would probably chuck up the 20% or the 25% Shot. In base or patient they will wait until they see a shot that is above a certain threshold percentage chance. If your the better team your overall looks will be better and by waiting you are going to have a vastly superior shooting percentage.

Yersan: I appreciate you working on this guide to help the new guys, but please do not take the Manual as Law. It is there to be a guide and you will preform much better and learn much faster if you listen to the experienced managers who have been learning from this game for a while. Whether you agree with their points or not at least consider what they have to say (Unless the poster's name is Edju in which case just 1 ball his post)

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145498.15 in reply to 145498.11
Date: 6/2/2010 11:42:39 AM
Overall Posts Rated:
459459
However, let's say your team is SLIGHTLY better than your opponent and they play a neutral defense... you would still play Patient over Push The Ball to gain the scoring advantage? PTB seems like the better tactic in my opinion, based on the quote above.


In this situation I would probably not play patient, although there are a lot of factors involved. Home or away? His team's OD rating vs. my offensive flow. If I think that my offensive flow is good enough to combat his OD and I am at home, I might play patient. If his team has a great OD, patient is going to result in increased turnovers and a lot of shots at the end of the shot clock. In a game where I am slightly better I usually try to exploit my offensive advantage. So, if I have a better inside scoring game than his inside defense I would go for an inside tactic and try to play a SF with strong inside skills. If the reverse is true and I have a better outside attack than his OD, I will play motion or Princeton and put a shooter at SF. If I don't see a clear advantage, then PTB is a good way to go.

Especially for newer teams, I think it is important to realize that focused tactics penalize you more than they help you. By this I mean that, for example, if you play RNG, your outside shooting gets a bump in effectiveness but your inside shooting is weakened by more than your outside game is improved.


Once I scored a basket that still makes me laugh.
This Post:
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145498.16 in reply to 145498.3
Date: 6/2/2010 11:50:33 AM
Overall Posts Rated:
8989
I've been playing BuzzerBeater for about 2 weeks now

ugh.

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