Brooks_Piggott wrote:The game has always been built in such a way that if a player has the ratings to perform, they'll perform. There isn't a notion that just because someone doesn't play they start reducing their demands. They know what they're worth and they hold you to it. It's HEAVILY affected by their personalities... that's a major reason why some guys seem unsignable, or they don't want to give your team a hometown discount, etc. They are also HEAVILY influenced by contract amounts and contract length... and adjusted by personality, so just because you think a 1.5 mil 7 year deal is good and they should just take it, that doesn't make it so. Players love to hit free agency... some probably overestimate their own value and after going through it realize there is not a demand for them, but the majority expect to get paid... a lot.
Again, I'm not opposed to making changes, but I still need concrete examples that I can test for, code for, and adjust until we get the right behavior. Your example of a 5th string DT doesn't work in this case because I don't know his ratings, his personality, or what other players of his rating/personality are already making. If other players of comparable ratings are making 5 mil, then that's what his number will be. I don't see a fix there I can make.
Personally I like the regression... I think it's realistic if players skip camp, or if players stay home an extended period of time they're going to be rusty or decline. If you don't want these guys to decline, then I suggest increasing budgets for re-signing, looking into trading for guys going into FA that won't resign, or offering more in FA Days 1-10 to sign guys that you do think have value. If these guys don't get resigned, and don't get good offers in FA, then that to me means the league doesn't value them and they should stay home... you can't really say these guys are valuable and you want them, but then complain that they're asking for too much money.
So, given all that, if we feel like the decline is too harsh, then I'm more than willing to discuss what would be realistic... but if players can gain 3 OVR in camps, then it seems to me losing 3 OVR for missing camp isn't unrealistic. And obviously if you sign these guys from the FA wire they'll get put on a training schedule and will resume improving throughout the year. I can double check that it's more tied to age/experience so younger players have less of a decline than older ones, but other than that I'm happy with where the feature is at.
I can't disagree with your logic, until the last couple paragraphs- which is the problem I initially brought up.
1) The guys that are left after free agency are already fringe rotation guys. We don't see many starting level players left over after free agency. The players that are left are typically situational players that essentially get killed by these rating drops.
2) I agree to a point that there should be a negative effect for skipping training camp. HOWEVER, these negative effects are so severe that they can never recover. In 4 seasons of PF20 and now 1 training camp of PF21, I have never once seen someone gain as many total points as the average free agent is losing (which is roughly 20+ points spread across all ratings).
I personally brought 56 players into my camp this year, and had less than a third of them added a single point in anything. I had some vets decline, but over half my roster did absolutely nothing. Nobody improved more than 5 total points. More than half my roster is 0-3 years of experience, several being high draft picks, and very few have a bad work ethic trait. My coaches are supposedly decent talent developers though not top notch. In theory my team should be above average during training camp. If my training camp experience is typical of the average team, no players don't gain the same amount in training camp as they lose by missing it. They could be in training camp for the rest of their careers and will never recover fully from the damage that was caused by one missed training camp.
As I wrote in my initial post, yes there can be rust, maybe some permanent declines for older players. But if you think these guys should be able to have a chance, these drops need to be position skill for young players, rather than their ratings. That way they can actually play their way into game shape over the course of a season or two and continue their development.
3) I think you missed st0nfacd's point about players asking too much. This issue mainly comes up in extensions rather than free agency. So a lot of the fringe guys at certain positions (DT being one of them) hit free agency, and then some of them refuse to sign for cheap in free agency, then get their ratings decimated (effectively ending their careers) when they're not on a team for training camp. I'm trying to find the logic in that and I can't.
I appreciate detailed responses, so thanks.