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Draft shame

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This Post:
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28346.28 in reply to 28346.27
Date: 5/7/2008 3:07:01 AM
Overall Posts Rated:
3535
If you have a 7'1" PG, train him in C skills

Not if he has atrocious rebounding and pitiful ID (just an example). It would only be a waste of time

This Post:
00
28346.29 in reply to 28346.26
Date: 5/7/2008 3:12:09 AM
Overall Posts Rated:
3535
I would MUCH rather know how old he is and if he is taller than 6'8 or shorter than 6'4 for example.

For the age a solution could be to make it influence the star rating.
The age would still be unknown, but, for example, if a 18yo 5 star has a 4k salary, a 19yo 5 star could have a 5k salary.

You still only see 5 star, but then at least the year more is (partially) compensated by better skills.

This Post:
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28346.30 in reply to 28346.28
Date: 5/7/2008 4:11:23 AM
Overall Posts Rated:
458458
I totally disagree. By the time he was 22, his inside skills would be well-trained and you would have a 22 y.o center who could pass, drive, shoot, and bang inside for your team for the next 10 years. Does that sound like a waste of time?


Once I scored a basket that still makes me laugh.
This Post:
00
28346.31 in reply to 28346.30
Date: 5/7/2008 4:38:26 AM
Overall Posts Rated:
44
Here's something to think about.

With modest scouting (2/week), you will know the star rating of about 1/2 the players. Or alternatively, 1/2 the teams will know the star rating of any given player.

Now imagine that the top 1/6 of the players (8 of 48) were given a 5 * rating. The average team would know the rating of 4 of them, and move them to the top of their rating. They would use the rest of the information (grade, box score, and potential) to order them, but they are still going to put a player who is a 5 * with no other information among their very top picks. You simply don't pass over a player who you know is in the top 16%. You might put him 4th or 5th.

So with roughly 8 teams having every 5* player in their top 4 or 5 picks, the teams drafting last have almost no change of getting a 5* player.

So it is better havimg a large share of players rated 5*. If 1/3 of players are given a 5* rating, then it is pretty reasonable that every team is going to get a 5* player. Those drafting early, will have the advantage of some additional information, so they're not going to get stuck with the 5* bench warmer, and can probably also draft for position. Those at the end are going to get a player in the top 1/3 and that is about the best that they can hope for.

Likewise, if you gave the $7500 superstars a rating of 9* and had the national anthem play whenever you ran the cursor across his number, he would always go to one of the top few teams. It would be a very lucky team that got such a player with a 6th pick overall. You simply can't have such players visible.

So you either have to have a lot of players with high ratings, or think of some other way to distribute talent.

This Post:
00
28346.32 in reply to 28346.31
Date: 5/7/2008 6:07:29 AM
Overall Posts Rated:
55


if you gave the $7500 superstars a rating of 9* and had the national anthem play whenever you ran the cursor across his number, he would always go to one of the top few teams. It would be a very lucky team that got such a player with a 6th pick overall. You simply can't have such players visible.


But a $7500 superstar MUST be the #1 pick!!! not a #5, #10 or #20 pick! (why should LBJ drafted #16?????)

The draft help to strengthen the weak teams not the lucky teams!!!!

So you must have such player visible!!! (and last 2 season i had a #16 pick!!!)


This Post:
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28346.33 in reply to 28346.32
Date: 5/7/2008 6:17:32 AM
Overall Posts Rated:
22
The draft help to strengthen the weak teams not the lucky teams

I think that it should be somewhere between..

This Post:
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28346.34 in reply to 28346.32
Date: 5/7/2008 6:17:42 AM
Overall Posts Rated:
00
But a $7500 superstar MUST be the #1 pick!!! not a #5, #10 or #20 pick! (why should LBJ drafted #16?????)

The draft help to strengthen the weak teams not the lucky teams!!!!


No, it doesn't have to be the first pick. There are always players drafted a bit lower who turn out to be great players and nr1 picks that can't deal with the pressure for example.

The weak teams will have a large chance to pick a really good player, but it doesn't have to be 100% sure they'll get the Jackpot.

Climbing the BB-mountain. Destination: the top.
This Post:
00
28346.35 in reply to 28346.30
Date: 5/7/2008 7:55:10 AM
Overall Posts Rated:
3535
I totally disagree. By the time he was 22, his inside skills would be well-trained and you would have a 22 y.o center who could pass, drive, shoot, and bang inside for your team for the next 10 years. Does that sound like a waste of time?

Yes :)
I still would not train primary skills starting below inept. I 22yo with all respectable does not have a great value, imo.

More important. To train that player in inside skills you need to position him either as C or PF. How can you do it without losing competitiveness, if the starting skills are very low? As long as i am in the tournament I find it difficult with average skills already :)

This Post:
00
28346.36 in reply to 28346.35
Date: 5/7/2008 9:35:13 AM
Overall Posts Rated:
44
I'd like to emphatically second the suggestions of Solana Steve (and others) with regard to height.

Virtually the entirety of the league in which I play attempted to draft players based on positional training schemes, and used the game suggestion as to preferred position. Virtually every single owner ended up with a first round draft pick whose height made him untrainable. This is a recipe for needless user frustration and serves no competitive purpose that I can think of.

I recognize that there are good reasons to conceal a lot of player characteristics for draft purposes. Height, however, should not be one of those hidden characteristics. It's absolutely fundamental to many players' draft strategy; moreover, it's impossible to imagine a scenario in which scouting WOULDN'T produce this kind of information. Even if the exact height can't be revealed, a S/M/L system would surely be workable.

This Post:
00
28346.37 in reply to 28346.35
Date: 5/7/2008 11:08:21 AM
AS Barroom Heroes
III.2
Overall Posts Rated:
10191019
Second Team:
Lone Pine Productions
Exactly. If I train a guy for 5 seasons and his best skill in a level 8 or 9, then I've wasted a whole lotta time.
I don't know how competitive the league he plays in is, but if I try something like that, I will waste a ton of tome, money, and lose alot of games.

This Post:
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28346.38 in reply to 28346.37
Date: 5/7/2008 1:07:08 PM
Overall Posts Rated:
9696
well...
what can I say...

I had 12 !! 5 star players to rank, 3 of them had A-, which I put in the back of the 5-star row.
I also had 12 !!! 4 star rated players to rank. I was in for some realy good players in my draft.

Even though I had 15th pick in my league, I drafted my 1st choice and 4th choice, so both 5 stars. Both prety much suck. Agreed they have a few respectable skills, but if you look at the skillsets, they are not going to play in my team at all.
Last year I had a 4 star player picked, and he played a lot, and will still play in my team, while none of these 5 stars is going to make it!

How is this possible? Easy, it's scouting. Since the scout only scouted 1 game, and maybe the player was invited for a private session, it might be that the player was in topshape for that game and session, while he is usually not THAT good.
It is scouting, and it is estimations, it's not pure numbers that will be given here, and even though I am truely VERY dissapointed with this seasons drafts for my team, especially after seeing I had 24 players with 4 stars or more, it's just the way it is, and I feel it should stay this way...

They are not your friends; they dispise you. I am the only one you can count on. Trust me.
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