Posted by rednation58 on 10/3/2011 9:29:00 PM (view original):
late post... what I am gathering from these rating values is that they are not accurately represented. If you think about it, everything seems to be based on a value set from 0-100. If this applies to potential as well then for such a great variation in difference it seems you would need more labels than just low, average, and high. Low could be anywhere from 0-40, average could be anywhere from 40-60, and high 60-100. Essentially you could have a guy labeled average in potential but really be a low to average guy... but you'd never know because the game doesn't have a value per say for his true potential. Your player could actually be closer to 40 instead of say 59. Then you'd have to consider his WE and how much he wants to grow and you could have a guy gaining 2 pts a year... the messed up part is it seems even when you have an idea of potential.. you still are playing a guessing game... I could be wrong...but I could be right.
That's not how potential works.
This is essentially how it does work:
Low Potential: Increase of 0-6 in rating over career
Avg. Potential: Increase of 7-19 in rating over career
High Potential: Increase of 20-29 in rating over career
High-High Potential (Scouting Trip needed to find this): Increase of 30+ in rating over career
This all depends on work ethic. If a guy has WE below 15, he will hardly increase any over his career, even with modest WE gains. With 20-30 WE, he will progress about 40% slower than a player with 40-50. 50+ progresses rather quickly and 80+ reaches potentials by junior season typically.