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The Minimum Potential of A Trainee

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257380.3 in reply to 257380.2
Date: 4/7/2014 2:42:00 PM
Overall Posts Rated:
3232
I've trained perennial allstar players who went on to become starters in top Pro leagues. You just have to balance their builds. I'd train an allstar if I drafted him, but I'd never rely on him to be more than a backup.

Superstar is the sweet spot for me. Once you cap out a superstar, you're at the peak of the transfer value bell curve. If you train beyond that (MVP, etc.) salary will rise to the point where TL value plummets. 18yo superstars are also much cheaper than MVPs and above. I gobble them up after the draft whenever I can.

Role players are trash, sorry. He'll barely be good enough to start in an IV league.

Last edited by 五毛党 at 4/7/2014 2:44:39 PM

This Post:
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257380.4 in reply to 257380.2
Date: 4/7/2014 4:42:16 PM
Overall Posts Rated:
32293229
I wouldnt, no way. Simply because of his potential. Personally, my minimum potential to train someone is Perennial Allstar. That way i know he will still turn out useful no matter what league im in. Lower leagues he will star, later on he can still be a bench player.


I'd go as low as star at guard, though better is naturally better. Still playing a couple of my original star trainees regular minutes to this day.

This Post:
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257380.5 in reply to 257380.1
Date: 4/9/2014 3:42:40 PM
Overall Posts Rated:
5050
to low potentiel i think. me i train mini all star. It is not too expansive to buy a young all star.You can sell when the training is finish or keep^^

Last edited by jonlamine at 4/9/2014 3:43:29 PM

This Post:
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257380.6 in reply to 257380.5
Date: 4/9/2014 6:10:43 PM
Overall Posts Rated:
5959
thanks everyone :)