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Al Ayers-Spicola

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200815.4 in reply to 200815.1
Date: 11/3/2011 1:53:09 AM
Overall Posts Rated:
766766
Something i wish i had done with a trainee of mine in years gone by was train him up so that he could play in a trainable position during league games. It became difficult to manage his minutes, and i was relying on him to get 48 mins at one position in a scrimmage, which, if he fouled out, meant he missed out on his full training minutes for that week.

So may advice.

I would train OD for the first 5 weeks.
Once his OD becomes, say, level 4, then you will be able to play him in normal league games (albeit against moderate opposition) at SG/PG without taking such a massive defensive hit.
This will in turn make it easier to manage his minutes in the long term, and wont leave you fretting over getting him 48 mins at PG in a scrimmage every week.


This Post:
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200815.5 in reply to 200815.1
Date: 11/3/2011 4:28:41 AM
Overall Posts Rated:
952952
Ah...really unfortunate combination of skills and height. Don't get me wrong, he's a good trainee. But either he becomes a PF and his inside skills train quite slowly because of his height, or he becomes a SF with at least two seasons of OD training (not in a row of course). I suggest you talk to U21 and NT coaches, as each of them will proably have different opinions on how to train him. I imagine U21 coach would like to make him into a killer multitask PF, but after three seasons of inside training you will be stuck with a 50k guy who has to play on PG for 3 seasons because his skillups will be a bit slower since he will be turning 22 at the time.

Or you can appease to NT manager, train mainly OD for most of his first three years and have a mediocre SF for U21, but a great potential for NT. I say go with the training plan that suits your team's plans because you will never be able to satisfy both U21 and NT.

Last edited by Koperboy at 11/3/2011 4:30:21 AM