Forum » Doubts and questions » Experience of a player | Date | |
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What affects experience of a player? What is the use of winning in a youth game? I see some teams are playing with full of LB and RB's just for training them. That should decrease some stats of the players if i'm right |
20/10/2012 05:25 |
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Experience makes a player better. You can use these experience point to add skills to your player. For example, you could give your forwards the Net-Breaker skill, your defenders the Defensive Wall o Sliding Tackle skill, and your midfielders the Precise Pass skill. This skill will improve your player, and many have noted that lower average players with high skills perform better than some players with higher average but no skills. Winning a youth game does not really matter, the only benefit is the increase in motivation your youth players receive which makes them train at higher levels. Most top teams pick one or two positions, fill up their teams with those positions, and use only trainings that help out those players. For example you fill your team with LB and RB's and conduct only Sprint and Tackling trainings (just an example). This will not really decrease the stats of these players, but I am not entirely sure what your question regarding this was. Edited by KingOftheHill 20-10-2012 19:26 |
20/10/2012 19:25 |
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Just to clarify one thing. Leadership skill affects experience, the higher it is the more experience your players will gain each match. | 20/10/2012 20:30 |
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making the player as the captain improves his leadership? | 21/10/2012 02:01 |
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wittyprakash said: making the player as the captain improves his leadership? No, just playing in matches. As grantis said if his leadership is higher he will gain those experience points playing in matches faster. |
21/10/2012 02:30 |
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KingOftheHill said: Experience makes a player better. You can use these experience point to add skills to your player. For example, you could give your forwards the Net-Breaker skill, your defenders the Defensive Wall o Sliding Tackle skill, and your midfielders the Precise Pass skill. This skill will improve your player, and many have noted that lower average players with high skills perform better than some players with higher average but no skills. Winning a youth game does not really matter, the only benefit is the increase in motivation your youth players receive which makes them train at higher levels. Most top teams pick one or two positions, fill up their teams with those positions, and use only trainings that help out those players. For example you fill your team with LB and RB's and conduct only Sprint and Tackling trainings (just an example). This will not really decrease the stats of these players, but I am not entirely sure what your question regarding this was. Edited by KingOftheHill 20-10-2012 19:26 Winning does matter on the youth team, simply for the reason that your high-progression players will train much faster. I used to put GKs in all positions, but now I'm only training my subs and bench, and putting ringers in the rest of the positions, because the GKs actually train faster. |
21/10/2012 02:31 |
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phaag said: KingOftheHill said: Experience makes a player better. You can use these experience point to add skills to your player. For example, you could give your forwards the Net-Breaker skill, your defenders the Defensive Wall o Sliding Tackle skill, and your midfielders the Precise Pass skill. This skill will improve your player, and many have noted that lower average players with high skills perform better than some players with higher average but no skills. Winning a youth game does not really matter, the only benefit is the increase in motivation your youth players receive which makes them train at higher levels. Most top teams pick one or two positions, fill up their teams with those positions, and use only trainings that help out those players. For example you fill your team with LB and RB's and conduct only Sprint and Tackling trainings (just an example). This will not really decrease the stats of these players, but I am not entirely sure what your question regarding this was. Edited by KingOftheHill 20-10-2012 19:26 Winning does matter on the youth team, simply for the reason that your high-progression players will train much faster. I used to put GKs in all positions, but now I'm only training my subs and bench, and putting ringers in the rest of the positions, because the GKs actually train faster. I think that if you re-read my post you will see that I previously mentioned the increase in motivation leading to players training faster. |
21/10/2012 02:32 |
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KingOftheHill said: I think that if you re-read my post you will see that I previously mentioned the increase in motivation leading to players training faster. I was trying to point out that your sentence was a contradiction. |
21/10/2012 03:07 |
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phaag said: KingOftheHill said: I think that if you re-read my post you will see that I previously mentioned the increase in motivation leading to players training faster. I was trying to point out that your sentence was a contradiction. It wasn't a contradiction, more a clarification. The impact from an extra point of motivation is nice, but it does not make a huge impact. Anyway thanks for the added value to the thread, it was much needed. |
21/10/2012 03:15 |
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