Forum » General » junior special training | Date | |
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Cadet
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I have been noticing a couple of threads where managers volunteer to train a specific position. Does this method rapidly increase their average as opposed to training a "mixed bag" of youths? | 26/12/2011 05:45 |
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Best scorer
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Yup...If you balance training they will all move a bit slow but if you train one type then the players being trained will progress faster......But then you may have to found people to train the other "future stars" you would really like to train. | 26/12/2011 06:09 |
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Cadet
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Thanks | 26/12/2011 06:12 |
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Cadet
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What is best? train them all or specifically...I am not a fan of always buying players..I wanna have a steady team | 26/12/2011 13:51 |
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Golden Ball
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This comes down to basic economic theory: it's a risk to farm out your players to other teams. If you are risk-averse, you should accept a slower training rate (and ultimately, lower potential final average). If you can accept risks, then sell your youths with high forecast of a position you don't train, and buy them back later. If you have planned well, you should be able to sell a number of the players you have been training and use the cash to buy the great players (or ones just like them) from one of the other position farms. If you're in the middle, save some of your players and train intensively a few positions with occasional training for the others. Make sense? |
26/12/2011 16:05 |
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International
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@CelloG said: This comes down to basic economic theory: it's a risk to farm out your players to other teams. If you are risk-averse, you should accept a slower training rate (and ultimately, lower potential final average). If you can accept risks, then sell your youths with high forecast of a position you don't train, and buy them back later. If you have planned well, you should be able to sell a number of the players you have been training and use the cash to buy the great players (or ones just like them) from one of the other position farms. If you're in the middle, save some of your players and train intensively a few positions with occasional training for the others. Make sense? Yes, I guess it depends on your preferencies, some managers may prefer a balanced team and some other may risk to get a high quality player in a certain position. My opinion is that the first option is appropriate for lower divisions, but you'll end up specializing your junior team when you have a reasonable senior team. |
26/12/2011 17:58 |
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