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Shot Range Hard to Train?

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210733.7 in reply to 210733.6
Date: 2/19/2012 12:56:22 AM
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I agree with you mostly except i dont think all of them need to have similar potentials or be as high as P. Allstar, Superstar and MVP. Allstar potential is actually fine for lower leagues like him and myself i believe. Any higher is okay, but we don't really need players with salaries higher then 30-40k until we promote a few leagues.

Murray/Harris/MPJ/Grant/Jokic - 2020 NBA Champs
From: Mongo

This Post:
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210733.9 in reply to 210733.4
Date: 2/19/2012 9:50:50 AM
Overall Posts Rated:
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Thanks all for responding! I didn't expect so many answers. Yeah obviously I'm only training 4 guards. I thought I could get away with training 2 different positions when I started last season, but so far the progress has been less then impressive. I was toying with the idea of training Raszka and Jardi to small forwards given their potential and height (it'll be easier now to train things like rebounding because they are taller, correct?)

Just for clarification, you suggest 3 trainees so they each can play 1 game the entire time to ensure they get to 48 minutes?

Also, if ya'll have been or were in division 5, what type of trainer dis you have? I have advanced, but I don't know if that's normal.

Lastly, I was under the impression that all trainees progress at the same speed. The potential is used as a cap onto their salary. I don't understand the logic of spending a ton of money to get a player with MVP potential only to not have the trainer to take advantage of that potential. Have I been misinformed on that?



Last edited by Mongo at 2/19/2012 9:52:49 AM