Posted by shoe3 on 8/2/2018 8:46:00 AM (view original):
“But you need to deal with randomness of EEs so that's frustrating.”
Early entries are not “random”. No one loses their backup 650 OVR sophomore PG to the riches of the fake NBA. Elite commodities are volatile. They are expensive to get, and they may not fulfill the term. High risk, high reward. What Benis means to say is at D1 you need to decide how much of that volatility your team is willing to take on. You have to assess every recruit not only for how good he is/will be, but for when he may be good enough to possibly leave.
If you are surprised by a guy who leaves early, you either don’t know how the system works, or you didn’t properly assess your commodity. In other words, user error. Or as Benis would say, “Derp.”
"No one loses their backup 650 OVR sophomore PG to the riches of the fake NBA"
Would a player with.... 90 ATH, 90 SPD, 90 DEF, 90 PER, 90 BH, 90 PAS, 90 ST, 20 WE not go pro early? Especially as a sophomore? I honestly don't know because I don't play D1.
And also, don't some players decide to stay even if they're well worthy of the draft? I don't know this answer either, but I would think that would be the case. If not, it would just be a numbers thing, like..... once your player gets to "this" number, he leaves.
if it's not a set number that causes players to leave, or if it's not just the top 60 players leave, then it IS in fact, random.
no?