BuzzerBeater Forums

Help - English > training which positon can earn more?

training which positon can earn more?

Set priority
Show messages by
This Post:
00
78972.5 in reply to 78972.4
Date: 3/4/2009 6:23:06 AM
Overall Posts Rated:
9696
I think the main trouble is that to increase passing skill you MUST train passing.
It is no secondary in any training.

In other training rotations all interesting skills are in 1 maintraining, and in several secondary trainings, so when you rotate it all goes up gradually.

if you rotate PG training, it is as you say, you can better leave 1 main training out of the rotation, because it is as secondary in all the others, while for passing it's not. This creates a sort of imbalance which you try to right by skipping a maintraining on 1 skill, but it's not that smooth as a fluent rotationprogram.

Because you'd have to be more carefull how precicely to rotate your training to get a good effect, I think many choose for the easier "one-of-each-main" training...

In any case, somehow, for a decent PG, you'll have to pay a decent amount on the TL...

They are not your friends; they dispise you. I am the only one you can count on. Trust me.
This Post:
00
78972.6 in reply to 78972.5
Date: 3/4/2009 6:34:18 AM
Overall Posts Rated:
959959
i don't see the big problem in that, because you see every friday the skills, and for OD it counts the same(because handling training isn't very popular i think) and this skill ist needed for many types of players.

And guards ain't cheap too, but i think with an Sf and good starting skills you could earn more money in short time.

This Post:
00
78972.7 in reply to 78972.6
Date: 3/4/2009 6:39:45 AM
Overall Posts Rated:
9696
oh, certainly.

I'm not saying you can earn more money (in short term ,or long term) by traing PGs.

I just thought the question was which types of players are expensive on the TL...

And indeed, from pressure training a lot more players can benefit appart from your PG. It's the passing bit that is biting. ;)

They are not your friends; they dispise you. I am the only one you can count on. Trust me.
This Post:
00
78972.8 in reply to 78972.7
Date: 3/4/2009 6:46:07 AM
Overall Posts Rated:
959959
i am a fan of single position training, so i don't see the problem, and my guard also should play both positions.

From: Calum
This Post:
00
78972.9 in reply to 78972.7
Date: 3/4/2009 5:25:25 PM
Overall Posts Rated:
394394
I'm trainint PGs now. Obviously a large portion of the time is going into OD (which in my opinion is the best skill to have) but after that i only train JS and Passing. This makes it a 3-skill transition but it doesnt benefit from secondary pops as much as big-man training does.

This Post:
00
78972.10 in reply to 78972.3
Date: 3/4/2009 9:41:27 PM
GinaKia
MBBA
Overall Posts Rated:
1919
good idea.

PG salary is low with (handling / passing / OD) skill.
to train a good PG need atleast 2 season.

but

Player which is expensive NOT MEAN earn more because it might take more time to train him...

any good suggestion to train player in 1-2 season can earn 4million above?

From: JohnnyB

To: -CS
This Post:
00
78972.11 in reply to 78972.10
Date: 3/5/2009 12:20:26 AM
Overall Posts Rated:
343343
Good SF's with OD/ID, IS/JS i think that are the most expensive. I actually train 1 right now. My plan is 2 years as a PF (he has good big skills but just 6'3) to go with my other bigs, and an other year on SG. That means that to have a good SF you must train him both as PF and a SG. Which ruin any training plan

This Post:
00
78972.12 in reply to 78972.11
Date: 3/5/2009 4:26:33 AM
Overall Posts Rated:
1212
But for new users there is actually one solution - to buy a young tall guy with good outside skills and train him as PF. There were several players like this on TL this year (I got some of them). It's not too expensive to rookie to buy them and after some time you get a pretty good SF.

This Post:
00
78972.13 in reply to 78972.12
Date: 3/5/2009 5:32:45 AM
Overall Posts Rated:
343343
How do u define the ''good outside skills''?

Potential: perennial allstar 19y/o
Jump Shot: respectable Jump Range: inept
Outside Def.: mediocre Handling: mediocre
Driving: inept Passing: inept
Inside Shot: strong Inside Def.: strong
Rebounding: respectable Shot Blocking: average
Stamina: inept Free Throw: average

After a year of training he got 3 pop ups on shooting, 2 on inside shot and 1 on handling, driving rebounding and inside shot. I just wish that this player was 6'8. Unfortunately he is only 6'3

From: Calum

This Post:
00
78972.14 in reply to 78972.13
Date: 3/5/2009 5:38:53 AM
Overall Posts Rated:
394394
actually. you're quite lucky he's small i think because his 'outside' skills need a lot more work thank inside. He could be a good SF if you train the OD, JS and other skills (DR, maybe PS) up.

This Post:
00
78972.15 in reply to 78972.13
Date: 3/5/2009 7:26:48 AM
Overall Posts Rated:
1212
How do u define the ''good outside skills''?


There is no exact definition of good outside skills. It depends on what you want from the player...and I said it's a good way for new users, so you could have gotten what I meant by that...

Advertisement