here are a tips to get you prepared for recruiting next time around. there are some "core" categories for each player, that are way more important than the other categories. focus on those, and you should be alright :) first, i will touch on 3 special ratings that are unlike any others -
work ethic. this helps a guy improve, nothing else. if a guy has less than 20 work ethic, ignore him completely. after that, work ethic isn't that important, unless a guy has a LOT of room for improvement (lots of high potential core categories). even then, its never as important as cores, but still probably about the 6th to 8th most important category.
stamina. stamina is its own beast. for a bad player, stamina is irrelevant, because the guy is bad anyway. but as a player gets better, stamina matters more. consider two good players, one with 70 stamina playing 20 minutes, one with 90 playing 24. in those 4 minutes, the 70 sta guy is sitting, so either his backup is getting the 4 minutes, or more likely, his backup's backup is getting them. so you have to average that backup's quality with the original 70 sta guy to compare him to the 90 sta guy in terms of how productive he will be for your team. does that make sense? the take away is, for role players, 70s and 80s for stamina is fine, but for your prime targets, you really want guys who will end with 90+ stamina. keep in mind also stamina and work ethic numbers are on totally different scales than the other categories, so if 90 is good for stamina, it surely doesn't mean 90 is the bar for good speed.
durability. durability is basically useless. ignore it completely.
so, here are the player types and the core categories you should focus on. these figures are for triangle/press, it might be different for other systems (in particular, defense is more important in man defense). i will not mention stamina, durability, or work ethic again.
pg: cores - spd, pass, bh. ignore - lp, sb.
sg: cores - spd, per, bh. pass is also pretty important. ignore - lp, sb.
sf: cores - reb, spd, ath. offense is optional. tough to find a good true small forward, often, a reasonably quick big man or a guard (preferably with some rebounding) is your best bet. sf is definitely the toughest, so for now, don't worry about them as much - if you get your guards and your bigs, and use a over for your sf, that will work fine.
pf: cores - reb, ath. also important - lp, sb, def, spd.
C: cores- reb, ath. also important - lp, sb, def, spd.
if you just focus on the cores up front, and ignore everything else, that is a good start. don't try to do too much early, just try to do a good job at a piece of the puzzle. as you grow as a coach, you will add more and more pieces.