the are edge case strategies, and always will be. i don't play d3 but it doesn't seem like this one is too bad, i dont think it needs to draw the focused attention of a nerf stick, as some would suggest. i do think ath/def should be decoupled, but that is a belief i hold in general, not because of anything here.
i think you have to look at why the system works, and to see if that is really a problem. one time, this guy gave 50 distro to his starting sg, 50 to his backup, and 0 to everyone else, and the results were somewhat obscene. to me, thats more of a gimmick, than what you guys are talking about.
the ath/def teams ive seen killing it, they worked for good reasons. defense is obviously an important thing, and being that good at defense, its got to count for something, no matter which ratings making up the defensive ability formulas. running fb/fcp with a full, experienced team, is always going to be a very powerful strategy - it has to be, in the best case scenario, to compensate for how bad it is when teams are short. the hardest team to beat, in any division, would be an experienced, even 12 man rotation running fb/fcp, and to me that is right - if a system forces you to have more depth of talent than anyone else - when you get super deep - its got to take advantage of that depth of talent, more than the other systems, or its a broken (useless) scheme.
so, take the two above, great d and great depth with a fb/fcp, and you already have a really dangerous team, on the up years. with solid offensive talent, for a ft based scoring system, you can definitely see how a team would be hard to beat - and i don't think that is really an ath/def gimmick - its taking a variety of edge case strategies and combining them for good effect. i really don't see a problem with it. plus, a well prepared team running slowdown will certainly have the upper hand, as jsa points out.
the last comment ill make is, to me, for a gimmick to require adjustment, pushing further and further to that gimmick must yield better results (well, not must, but sort of a litmus test). if you take a mfnmyers team, and asked if you traded out 1 elite defender guard for 1 elite scorer who could pass, would the team benefit? my take is, absolutely. i'm not sure playing that strategy to the extreme actually yields the best results - and im pretty confident it doesnt. in this game, diminishing returns are everything, and putting too many eggs in one basket rarely helps. i think what is happening is, mfnmyers just happens to be a great coach, and is doing well with a very interesting scheme (which is much more than an ath/def scheme). i don't think its the best scheme, but i suspect he could be highly successful with other schemes - this just happens to be the one hes drawn to. hes leveraging the natural synergy of 3 systems, the ft based scoring allowing him to really focus on defense and depth, the fb/fcp benefiting from a ft-drawing scheme, all that good stuff (fb/fcp or just fcp ft drawing schemes are fairly common and generally very successful on their own, even without elite ath/def). i don't think there is anything wrong with the setup for any of those 3 systems, outside of minor tweaking - ft only scoring should be penalized more from the inability to spread the offense - that kind of thing. anyway, i just think its a great coach running an interesting system, nothing more... now if the d3 worlds start seeing champion after champion running the same strat, it probably deserves a closer look, but at this point its just interesting, not problematic, in my view.
12/24/2015 4:45 AM (edited)