The repercussions of having messy training is that it is harming people's ability to supply quality players on the market. If you train 2 positions, you probably want to retain 2 starters and 2 backups for your team. This means you really have 1 player to sell (or 2 if you choose to give them less than optimal training per week, which means they train slower). Will there be enough players circulating around in the long run? I am not completely sure.And this maybe will help us to avoid too many Divines in Market as much as possible...
The repercussions of having messy training is that it is harming people's ability to supply quality players on the market. If you train 2 positions, you probably want to retain 2 starters and 2 backups for your team. This means you really have 1 player to sell (or 2 if you choose to give them less than optimal training per week, which means they train slower). Will there be enough players circulating around in the long run? I am not completely sure.
Background: It is put forth pretty clearly that scrimmages only serve one purpose: to give minutes to players that hadn't played a lot in league games in a particular week. As such, they bring no revenue and do not affect enthusiasm and fans.
Maybe this is even the main reason why there are scrimages (do not read: main reason scrimages are used for, but do read meant for)
The primary purpose of a scrimmage is to give your team an extra day of training and experience, so try to schedule them every week, if possible.