While making a completely new substitution system would be great, it's unnecessary (this one works fine in most cases, therefore I prefer fixing the cases in which it doesn't) and unrealistic (given the coding resources atm, which are basically - yours truly
).
I removed most of the rest of your post for brevity. I understand the constraints you're working under and your perspective on this, and appreciate you sharing with the community.
I have to respectfully disagree at this point about the substitution system working well, especially with regard to stamina. I just finished playing a PL game with a fairly typical lineup for my Princeton tactic.
(75690750)Since I'm short on depth at the bigs at the moment, I just did one guy backing up both PF and C, and nothing too unusual there - it took a foul out in the fourth to get roughly a 40-40-16 split (with 5-5-4 stamina). I'd of course much rather see more subbing or at least an option to do so, but that's not too egregious and with a proper starter/backup at each position, I'd be under 36 thanks to the low stamina.
But alas, the SF position today hit both of my personal annoyances - the minutes and the exceptionally high incidence of Princeton having a player projected above 90 PP100 who ends up putting up less than 50 PP100. Some day I'll actually go through and document that because I know some of that is selection/confirmation bias, but there's something there.
Anyway, on this topic,of the three outside-ish positions today, the SF is probably roughly even with the SG - the SG is a better outside shooter, but slightly worse defensively, as a pure jump shooter and inside. Both are a fair level away from the PG in terms of overall talent, though they're all built to do different things. The backups are set up so that the worst of the three is the backup PG and the reserve SF, the middle one is backup SG and reserve PG, and then the best of the three is the backup SF and reserve SG. The backup SF, incidentally, is actually the best inside player of the six by a sizable margin.
So as for the minutes/stamina: my starter at PG has average stamina, and with the worst backup of the three the coach had the backup in for ten minutes. Given the disparity between the two, that seems fitting. The starter at SG has inept stamina, so the backup played eleven minutes. Keep in mind that both starters in these positions were performing well, and that their backups were not as good as the SF. The SF only has respectable stamina, two levels down from the functional maximum, and was having a terrible shooting day (2-14 in the first half). So how much time did the backup get? Two minutes, for the whole game - including never leaving the bench until 0:00 remained in the first half, where he came in to stand around while free throws were being shot.
Now, of course, I do realize that playing a slow offense does have an impact here, as does the fact that rebounds fumbled out of bounds don't trigger substitutions, and that teams with good passing and handling that don't foul may therefore not have substitution opportunities triggered for minutes at a time. (E.g., the last three and a half minutes of the first half after my opponent's timeout). I agree that there shouldn't be an "easy" solution of just saying "I want this guy to get X minutes". But a player with respectable stamina, a quite competent backup, on a horrible cold streak getting 46 minutes in a game is something that can't be solved just by management - unless, of course, there was a button we could push to make a player lose a level of stamina, which would be freaking awesome (though NT coaches would kill me for suggesting it). ;)
I'm not sure if there's a better or easier solution than adjusting the substitution pattern options. But I can't agree that the problem here is one that is in the realm of manager decisions - there's no training to drop stamina.
Last edited by GM-hrudey at 10/17/2014 1:40:26 PM