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Make the best players actually desirable

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This Post:
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158188.21 in reply to 158188.20
Date: 10/7/2010 5:23:04 PM
Overall Posts Rated:
404404
A lot of people seem to say this is a problem, but I don't see it. It's just bad management of a team to create a player no one can afford.

And considering those national teams, if the player switches teams often he won't be trained a lot, therefor those players which are trained more allround will eventually be better than them.


That first part says it all. It is bad management at the moment to create players no one can afford. However, that isn't the way it should be. We shouldn't be penalised for creating really good players. At the moment, if a player is too good, and hence has too high salary, then no one wants him because his salary is too high. In real life people don't say well we don't want you because you are too good. If there was a salary cap then the skill that can be reached by teams will increase substantially which is great.

As for creating players that no one can afford, the problem isn't about creating new players, its the fact that there are so many players currently on the market that switch teams every week because no one can afford to keep them long term.

In regards to the national teams, there is a 500k center, who will probably dominate any other center because this player is too old to be trained and has really high skills. So no one will catch up.

Toronto Raptors's management don't agree :P

This Post:
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158188.22 in reply to 158188.21
Date: 10/10/2010 6:22:05 PM
Overall Posts Rated:
209209
Prices on the market not only reflect the player's attributes, but also how much of an asset he can be to your team.
I mean, if a 27 years old is a beast, the only value he's going to give your team is going to be his on-court production.
However, if he's not that good, but is 20 years old, he could be a much more valuable asset to your team because you can make money out of him.

"Air is beautiful, yet you cannot see it. It's soft, yet you cannot touch it. Air is a little like my brain." - Jean-Claude Van Damme
This Post:
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158188.23 in reply to 158188.21
Date: 10/10/2010 6:26:30 PM
Overall Posts Rated:
209209
Toronto Raptors's management don't agree

Actually, as a Raptors fan I know there are a lot of people around the team who think they will benefit from not having 6 more years of Bosh being the franchise player.
He's an exceptional player offensively, but some people feel he isn't a player you can build a team around.
And they got something from losing him. They actually got a draft pick back and a huge trade exception.
(/OFFTOPIC)

"Air is beautiful, yet you cannot see it. It's soft, yet you cannot touch it. Air is a little like my brain." - Jean-Claude Van Damme
From: Marot

This Post:
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158188.24 in reply to 158188.17
Date: 10/10/2010 7:58:11 PM
Overall Posts Rated:
916916
I think you see a problem where none exists.

The best paid players are more often than not, not the best players. The best players are the players with the most skills, not with the highest salary.


If you dont see the difference or imbalance between the trainings-skills around outside players and inside of course then you dont see any problem.

The secundaries skills trained on a outside player are still really cheap related to the effect they have on the game engine, that its usually really high. You can argue that its the same for the inside players, but the fact is that is really easy to train a SG-PG, with 22 years you can have a multiskilled player with a ''low'' salary and if you compare it to an inside player, that player is really difficult you train them on passing, JR, OD etc or it takes much longer...


The training of an outside player is really easier than the one in inside(if we are talking about multiskilled ones), thats the fact i suppose lot of managers only train IS-RE-ID. The only training its ok for them is JS-1vs1 in SF-PF if you consider that 1n1 is important.

Not to talk about small-forwards that are usually trained in all skills, with a 0 cost on secundary skills...


This salary formula is in general really bad and having the TL low doesnt help

This Post:
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158188.25 in reply to 158188.1
Date: 10/10/2010 9:24:56 PM
LionPride
III.11
Overall Posts Rated:
246246
Most of this economic struggle began when they limited arena seating, and removed some teams seats. Teams could make tens of thousands more per home game, and maybe some Top teams won't go bankrupt in a month with high salaried players.

This Post:
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158188.26 in reply to 158188.25
Date: 10/11/2010 4:26:07 AM
Overall Posts Rated:
959959
but they also raise the money which the visitors spend, so the income wasn't that much more and the salary system include the income structure to calculate the salary ;)

This Post:
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158188.27 in reply to 158188.26
Date: 10/11/2010 6:15:02 AM
Overall Posts Rated:
458458
I agree with Naker that nobody says, "You are too good, nobody wants you," but I do think a lot of teams in real life say, "You are too expensive, we don't want you." And then the Yankees or the Lakers or Chelsea buy them.

Last edited by somdetsfinest at 10/11/2010 6:16:03 AM

Once I scored a basket that still makes me laugh.
This Post:
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158188.28 in reply to 158188.27
Date: 10/11/2010 6:52:09 AM
Overall Posts Rated:
522522
But in real life the player chooses their own salary, the best basketball player in the world isn't going to say he should be paid 10 billion dollars because he is really good. Also, I believe teams have salary caps (not 100% sure) in most sports, and so that often limits the salary that a player can have. Obviously the player can't have a salary that is higher than the salary cap, or even close to the salary cap or otherwise he would be the only player on the team.

This Post:
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158188.29 in reply to 158188.28
Date: 10/11/2010 7:59:45 AM
Overall Posts Rated:
209209
They could implement a soft cap, like in the NBA, where if you go over the salary cap, for each dollar you go over, you have to pay one dollar to the league. And I think that the money is redistributed amongst all teams.

"Air is beautiful, yet you cannot see it. It's soft, yet you cannot touch it. Air is a little like my brain." - Jean-Claude Van Damme
This Post:
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158188.30 in reply to 158188.29
Date: 10/11/2010 9:04:48 AM
Overall Posts Rated:
13361336
This would make it even more harder for high salary players to find a home.

This Post:
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158188.31 in reply to 158188.23
Date: 10/11/2010 9:11:41 AM
Overall Posts Rated:
404404
Toronto Raptors's management don't agree :P

Actually, as a Raptors fan I know there are a lot of people around the team who think they will benefit from not having 6 more years of Bosh being the franchise player.
He's an exceptional player offensively, but some people feel he isn't a player you can build a team around.
And they got something from losing him. They actually got a draft pick back and a huge trade exception.
(/OFFTOPIC)

Bosh's leaving is really the only good thing the Raptors management did in the last year after the pick of Bargs

When Bosh was in Toronto he didn''t care about defence,so every PF in the league could score 20 against him.It's useless to score 30 points if your adversary can score 30 too,especially in the way Bosh score that points(playing a lot with isolation with low percentages)
[End OT]

Last edited by Steve Karenn at 10/11/2010 9:14:06 AM

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