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What about your best trainee?? (thread closed)

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155426.851 in reply to 155426.849
Date: 5/30/2011 8:15:07 PM
Overall Posts Rated:
1313
And why exactly should I train OD first? Sorry but training one skill up first, than the next skill and so on makes NO sense to me.

From: Fluff

This Post:
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155426.852 in reply to 155426.851
Date: 5/31/2011 5:07:57 AM
Overall Posts Rated:
8989
i agree it makes no sense.

my advice to you would be to decide what you want him to look like in a few seasons time and work out a training schedule that can achieve it. In terms of the order of training, i am a fan of keeping OD one or two levels ahead of the other skills but you still maintain a player that is fairly rounded.
the difficulty then is making sure you have trainees that suit this training schedule and making sure you can still win on court

If you are concerned about competing for U21 you should get their advice and find out his chances of making it as you will be competing against other talent that started out with similar/higher skills. For NT level you have many many seasons to build him up to what they want, but do what you want to do first!

In terms of elastic effect (whatever size it is!) youll be working against it as OD leaves the other skills behind, but then itll be with you as you make the other skills catch up. Overall? Probably a teenyweeny elastic effect on training time!


This Post:
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155426.853 in reply to 155426.852
Date: 5/31/2011 9:33:21 AM
Overall Posts Rated:
22
Weekly salary: $ 9 096
Role: rotation player
(BuzzerBeta)

DMI: 55800
Age: 20
Height: 6'9" / 206 cm
Potential: star
Game Shape: respectable
Jump Shot: strong Jump Range: pitiful
Outside Def.: respectable Handling: pitiful
Driving: inept Passing: pitiful
Inside Shot: proficient ↑ Inside Def.: prominent
Rebounding: strong Shot Blocking: respectable
Stamina: respectable Free Throw: strong

Experience: pitiful


what does everybody think about this guy i was thinking one more season of inside skills and then do one on one and jump shot next season

Last edited by William528 at 5/31/2011 4:11:00 PM

This Post:
00
155426.854 in reply to 155426.851
Date: 5/31/2011 4:08:28 PM
Overall Posts Rated:
4242
Um to me it does. OD takes a LOT longer to train when the player is older. The NT coaches want an NT players OD to be at least 16. Otherwise it will take a long time(more than now) to train OD when they are older.

and I wasn't responding to you, so I don't know what the player your training looks like.

Last edited by shoe lover at 5/31/2011 4:09:08 PM

This Post:
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155426.855 in reply to 155426.854
Date: 5/31/2011 4:35:42 PM
Overall Posts Rated:
206206
So you're saying that a player that goes to the u21 and starts the 21 season with 13 OD, has no chance at the NT? Makes no sense.
Plus, 16 OD probably isn't going to cut it for the NT.

This Post:
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155426.856 in reply to 155426.855
Date: 5/31/2011 8:26:01 PM
Overall Posts Rated:
4242
Im not saying that he does not have a chance at all. what I am saying is that the US u21 manager told me to make sure I have OD at 15 by the first couple weeks in his season as a 21 year old. with your player, It would probably take you longer than that.

I have no clue what nationality your player is, so your manager might have told you something different.

This Post:
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155426.857 in reply to 155426.856
Date: 6/2/2011 12:30:31 PM
Overall Posts Rated:
2222
Yes i have been in contact with many people from the NT and U21 team on the off-site. I have been gettinng him 48+ minutes each week and he has popped 4 times in the 5 weeks this season and i have a level 6 trainer to train him and my 5.8k guard i just bought. Thanks for all of your advice

This Post:
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155426.858 in reply to 155426.1
Date: 6/8/2011 8:23:49 AM
Overall Posts Rated:
00
Gerto Tamm (19765313)
Power Forward
Owner: BC Saldainiukai

Weekly salary: $ 4 783
Role: draws a paycheck
(BuzzerBeta)

DMI: 15400
Age: 18
Height: 6'8" / 203 cm
Potential: star
Game Shape: respectable

Jump Shot: respectable Jump Range: average
Outside Def.: mediocre Handling: respectable
Driving: inept Passing: respectable
Inside Shot: strong Inside Def.: average
Rebounding: awful Shot Blocking: respectable
Stamina: atrocious Free Throw: respectable

Experience: atrocious


Im training him to be a SF. Any advice?

This Post:
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155426.859 in reply to 155426.858
Date: 6/8/2011 12:19:25 PM
Pszczyna Team
Naismith
Overall Posts Rated:
224224
concentrate on rebounding first, then get his defences up. After that I would do shooting and leavie driving/passing/handling for last

This Post:
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155426.860 in reply to 155426.859
Date: 6/8/2011 1:29:52 PM
Overall Posts Rated:
11
Owner: Caldera

Weekly salary: $ 15 446
Role: rotation player
(BuzzerBeta)

DMI: 177100
Age: 20
Height: 6'4" / 193 cm
Potential: allstar
Game Shape: proficient
Jump Shot: sensational Jump Range: proficient
Outside Def.: tremendous Handling: prominent
Driving: prominent Passing: proficient
Inside Shot: respectable Inside Def.: average
Rebounding: pitiful Shot Blocking: atrocious
Stamina: pitiful Free Throw: mediocre

Experience: pitiful


This is my best trainee, I was wondering where I should take him, if I should bother with inside skills or just keep going and make him a nice combination guard.

This Post:
00
155426.861 in reply to 155426.860
Date: 6/8/2011 3:01:43 PM
Overall Posts Rated:
204204
He's not all that tall, and his Rebounding would need a lot of work if you want to make him a SF. Better stick to making him a SG or Combo G. He'll need some JR and some passing. Also, a lot of driving would help him as you want to take advantage of his good inside shot.

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