Iguana's chart was a real eye-opener. As noted in OR's post, most guys reach B- in their freshman year; B+ is the most common by the end of their Soph year. But the GPA's and WE's of the players that reach those benchmarks vary widely. In my brief study, two guys with a 3.7 GPA and WE's of 86 and 58 went from B-, B- to B+, B+. But so did a guy with a 2.6 GPA and a 28 WE. Maybe the guy with the 2.6 WE barely made it to B+ B+ in the last game of the season, while the two guys at 3.7 with the good WE's already have 200 minutes banked towards A-. Don't know. Maybe the guys with the higher GPA will end their careers at A, or maybe even A+ for a few games, while the laggard student peaks at A-. But--and this is a big but--is the difference between an A and an A- on offense and defense quantifiable in any way? And what if you adopted the opposite strategy--keeping your guys in the 2.8-3.0 range, giving you a few extra points to pump into a player's areas of high potential, usually LP and PE? Learning a lot from this discussion--which is what this forum is all about.