Posted by topdogggbm on 11/25/2020 8:59:00 PM (view original):
https://imgur.com/a/yhXmnDd
This is the best example of low WE, and handing the situation properly. 14 WE to begin with. I redshirted him as a freshman. He started every single game of his career. He has literally 1 day of growth left in his career. As tonight is the CT Final of his senior season.
The reason I like this example a lot, is because the way his ratings were setup to begin with. When you see a player with low WE and all greens, don't be fooled. You won't max them all. So you have to make the decision to forget about some ratings. In this case....... a wing with green ATH/DEF/LP/PER and blue ST. I ended up with basically 20s (practice minutes) in conditioning, defense and perimeter his whole career. Everything else I basically punted. That LP began so low it would've barely moved the needle. Sure I'd love to have a nice 30 LP with it. But not sure I would've made it very far.
14 is F-. So as another coach said, 14 is different than 2. I know some will argue against me, but this is why I personally never have signed a player at L3. Sometimes you can get lucky. But I just like to know exacts ahead of time
this is great advice from dogg for how to manage these low work ethic players. about 6 months ago we signed a 14 WE player to an A prestige d1 program - so i am totally willing to do these myself, too - however, its generally a rare thing and the less experienced you are, the less these players make sense.
if you look at dogg's player, 2 important things to note - by the start of his 4th season, he was not nearly capped (the redshirt is part of that, but still), and also, if his green per was no so lofty, the eventual payoff for all those crappier earlier seasons would be much lessened. despite his insistence on being a knuckle dragger who just wings it, dogg knows whats up. he's a good coach - he knew the gamble he was taking, he knew his dude would be garbage, a waste of space, for a good long while. and he knew he could manage that, that he could afford to start him the whole way. or maybe he just guessed and got lucky :) i suppose i don't really know, but i'm banking on the former!
these are just high risk, medium reward type players in general, hence my advice to sort of steer clear in the beginning. smart coaches can manage the risk and maximize the reward, but even for someone like me or dogg, these players are almost never our first choice, and are not common occurrences on our teams (i am guessing a bit, i never coached with dogg so sort of generalizing, i've only checked in briefly from afar). its more like, a tool in the toolbox, and one we almost never reach for first.
i will say this to the OP. dogg runs m2m. if he ran press, would he give up that slot for so many seasons? perhaps not (the 14 WE guy i signed was with fb/fcp which is press on steroids but he was a high d1 player who started out good with like 90ath/def - so its a little different - outside of high d1 those types mostly do not exist - and therefore its less common to see worth-while low WE guys outside high d1). you run press, and almost definitely should not have signed the guy - but that's fine! there's only one way to learn for sure! also 9 WE and 14 WE are very different - it will take you approximately 1.5 seasons of starting to get up to 14WE. dogg's player was able to get to 38 WE - after 4 seasons of starting, your guy might get to 25 if hes lucky. its a lot more different than you'd think, without the experience this stuff is not obvious. just 2-4 points of WE at those low levels (under ~20 WE) puts a player an entire season of WE growth behind another - and mostly these guys are 2nd, 3rd, 4th choices for folks like dogg and me. so if you take the same guy who is our 2nd/3rd/4th choice, and drop a mere 3 WE, that is huge and often ends the discussion right there. we'll find someone else or take a walkon instead.