Forum » General » Training Formula | Date | |
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7 msgs.
Cadet
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@rebsiot said: Progression (Approximate) = Today's Change / (player motivation * Yesterday Training * Coaching %) Example.... Player = RDF @ age 20 Change today = .243 Coach = 70% Motivation = 105% (team won that day) Training yesterday was Organize Defense = .55 in that matrix (org defense for RDF) .243/ (1.05 * .55 * .7) = .601 = 60.1% You have a player that can learn reasonably well... what you do with him is your business. ---------------------------------------------- I know it says approximate, but if the motivation changes, then the Progression changes, can that be right? Say his motivation is an 82% that day, going by the example above - that means his Progression comes out to roughly 77%. That's a substantial jump from 60.1%. Isn't Progression a fixed number until the player gets old? So shouldn't there be an equation where the Progression comes out about the same each time? OR should the equation be --> Today's Change / (1.00 * Yesterday Training * Coaching %) Where 1.00 is a constant and replaces the daily player motivation # and that gives you the true Progression, when your player is at their regular, which is at 100%. I think I'm right, but I'm not 100% sure. |
06/11/2011 02:06 |
- Div/Gr | ||
Username
67 msgs.
Rookie
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I think what your missing is that when a players motivation changes the change today would be different. ex: your player would not have increased by .243 if your players motivation was at 82% instead of 105%. Edited by Rodstein 06-11-2011 02:33 |
06/11/2011 02:31 |
- Div/Gr | ||