I would also like to see a comparison between your approach and others, with the same data.
Honestly, the most interesting will be, in the end, to see what method is the most operational and precise.
Personally, I am fond of the method of Josef-Ka, and what we could do with how8 (now, you just need to add +6% because of the reforms of salary, but it still is nicely accurate).
What I am a bit afraid of with your method for the moment is the fact that you seem to use just 2 items to start with : potential and skill caps.
For potential, you seem to base yourself on the theory that there are sub levels, finally.
For skills, you have to trust the fact that players from the data you received have truly capped quite enough.
In my opinion, there is truly a risk that it won't give tools accurate enough.
In any case, it obliterates for example the idea that skills have different coefficients, according to their proportion and the position (like with how8).
So, I truly hope that there will be a comparison between both methods.
I'll be following this interesting thread and waiting for more details
Otherwise, for your theory, I think that SF with a low or medium potential would be really among the most interesting ones to analyze, as they would be the ones that would permit the most directly to precise the strength or the limits of a relationship between the position and the potential cap, basing on your hypothesis that there is not.
I mean that there is a relation between :
- skills and potential cap
But also
- skills and salary
And also
- skills and position
This is for sure.
An interesting question is how much might be linked these relations between themselves (or not).
But the most interesting application will be to help trainers to foresee more precisely when a player will be truly close to the cap, and how much will be his salary.
If there is 2 methods more accurate than only 1 to answer both problems, it doesn't matter.
What is interesting is truly that we can understand, that it works and that it might be easier to calculate in order to train more efficiently, by enjoying these calculations:)
So anyway, I do not only hope that there will be a comparison. I also hope that you will go on in your own way by interesting yourself to salaries, later ;)
Last edited by Dunker Joe at 9/3/2010 3:45:13 AM