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Draft: Questions, help and more...

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This Post:
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241797.51 in reply to 241797.44
Date: 6/5/2013 3:59:46 PM
Overall Posts Rated:
129129
I would go with player 1 myself.

Player 1 - Player 2 - Player 3. In that order.

Player 1 is awesome. First off he's a taller PF rather than center which means he has decent starting outside stats. With A+ stats, you make up a lot of ground that you miss since he can't be trained at 18. Overall, he could well be in the 5,000 range for salary which is HUGE for a 19 yr old. He could be an All Time Great. Or at worst an MVP. That far outweighs the 18 year old possible P-All Star. Overall, you will never have to worry about capping his stats for a long time with such great potential.

Player 2 is also awesome. He is still better than player 3. Having uncapped potential is extremely valuable especially as they player gets older (23-26).

Player 3 is pretty good. He'd make a great draft pick in any year.

Overall you have been amazingly lucky. My best draft pick using 10,000/week is a possible all-star B- 18 yo old

Last edited by lawrenman at 6/5/2013 4:01:58 PM

This Post:
11
241797.52 in reply to 241797.50
Date: 6/5/2013 4:13:54 PM
Overall Posts Rated:
26152615
No need to apologize. However, anyone that doesn't think there's a significant difference between an MVP potential player and a P. All-star potential player hasn't thought this through properly.

Murray/Harris/MPJ/Grant/Jokic - 2020 NBA Champs
This Post:
00
241797.53 in reply to 241797.52
Date: 6/5/2013 7:09:53 PM
Overall Posts Rated:
3434
my drafting sucked no good players. should i go with a 5/2 and 4/2 above players with 3/? on draft order since i dont know the 3 star rating players potential? do i take the risk cuz i have a feeling they have potential?

This Post:
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241797.54 in reply to 241797.53
Date: 6/5/2013 7:12:18 PM
Overall Posts Rated:
26152615
I would pick you favorite number of the blank draftees and hope for the best. Although, I don't think you have a very good chance of getting someone good due to your most likely weak draft and having a mid round pick.

Murray/Harris/MPJ/Grant/Jokic - 2020 NBA Champs
This Post:
00
241797.55 in reply to 241797.54
Date: 6/5/2013 7:28:31 PM
Overall Posts Rated:
3434
ok. i still going for it cuz i wasnt expecting to make playoffs. i was going for 5th seed and 6th pick since like half the picks before me would have been to new to actually invest. and one was going bot. i had a chance but now idk but i already started so im going all in. those werent my top pick. my top pick was 5/4 and then its 5/3 then 4/3

This Post:
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241797.56 in reply to 241797.55
Date: 6/5/2013 9:42:14 PM
Overall Posts Rated:
111111
I would do the 18 guy first then the 5/5 A+ guy Whois 19 as my 2nd pick. Maybe I get both, or the 19 if 18 guy is picked.

This Post:
00
241797.57 in reply to 241797.52
Date: 6/5/2013 9:52:50 PM
Overall Posts Rated:
455455
We disagree on a lot of stuff. No surprise really.

This Post:
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241797.58 in reply to 241797.57
Date: 6/5/2013 11:45:55 PM
Overall Posts Rated:
26152615
Which is fine. I just don't appreciate you saying that I haven't thought something through by making a vague statement with no detail or backup information. I'm simply saying that regardless of how good a players skills are when they start out and whether they start out as an 18 or 19 year old, the higher potential a player has, the better that player can be. This is why I advise him to pick the 5/5 A+ 19 year old, because with MVP+ potential he will ultimately become a better player than the P. All-star-Superstar potential through time. Now if he wants his player to be better when they are 20-21 in order to make the U21 national team, then I would advise him to pick the younger player because he will be better when he is younger, but the higher potential player will surpass him later in his career.

Murray/Harris/MPJ/Grant/Jokic - 2020 NBA Champs
From: Turtle

This Post:
11
241797.59 in reply to 241797.58
Date: 6/6/2013 12:35:48 AM
Overall Posts Rated:
9393
I don't want to presume to speak for anyone here, but I presume Beener understands and agrees with you that the higher potential means that the 19yo 5 potential player can theoretically become a better player than the 18yo 4 potential player, just like I think you understand and agree with Beener that missing the extra year of training puts the 19yo significantly behind the 18yo in terms of training, at least initially. I think Beener's point is that although the 19yo can eventually make up this difference and surpass the 18yo, it will take a lot of slow, laborious training during his later seasons when he is 25 years old or older to reach that greater potential. So although it is theoretically possible to make the 5/5 19yo a better player than the 5/4 18yo, his slower training makes it inefficient and impractical to do so.

And for those reasons, I would take the 18yo. But obviously there's room for debate there.

From: E.B.W.

This Post:
11
241797.60 in reply to 241797.59
Date: 6/6/2013 2:24:25 AM
Overall Posts Rated:
26152615
I like your analysis. Personally I do not think that it is that impractical to train a 5/5 19 year old that you drafted to his full talent and although it is not as efficient as the 18 year old, I believe he is still worth it. I never pass up on 5/5 A+ players.

Murray/Harris/MPJ/Grant/Jokic - 2020 NBA Champs
This Post:
11
241797.61 in reply to 241797.60
Date: 6/6/2013 9:27:07 AM
Overall Posts Rated:
455455
Which is fine. I just don't appreciate you saying that I haven't thought something through by making a vague statement with no detail or backup information.


Fair enough, that was an unfair statement on my part.

That said, I was by know means being vague. My opinion was made quite clear and in a previous post I was also clear in my reasoning on why I would rank the 18 year old higher.

But I'll expand a little further. I think if you take a 19 year old that has MVP+ potential it's highly unlikely that they will ever reach their full potential due to missing their best/fastest season of training. Or they just end up being mono-skilled which greatly diminishes their value (destroys their value I would argue). So what's the point of having a player with higher potential if you can't ultimately use it or you just create a flawed player?

I think a lot of people get a little too obsessed with the potential but the smart owners are looking for well trained, well rounded players that give them great bang for their buck not just a roster full of $150K+ players. And any player per all-star and above can ultimately start in D1 so it's not like that's a level not worth training.

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