Quote: Originally Posted By seble on 2/11/2009
Quote: Originally posted by zhawks on 2/11/2009
. . . but after two years you'd end up at 74 to 76 sure not much if any growth in two years time but it gives us something to use practice minutes on otherwise once its capped we are stuck keeping 8 lousy minutes in it hoping it doesn't decrease.
But if I were able to exceed 70, then that means my potential was higher than 70 to begin with.
I think there's some confusion because under the current rate of improvement, it's hard not to hit potential in every category. Once we slow down the rate of improvement, you won't necessarily be maxing everything out, even after 4 years.
seble also wrote:
"I did not play college basketball, but I've played my entire life including organized high school ball. I'm pretty sure that I could spent 10 hours a day practicing my ballhandling and I'll never be as good as Chris Paul. There are physical limitations. For ball handling, hand/eye coordination, size and strength of hands, body balance, etc. will determine your ultimate potential.
I would also argue that any improvement is still part of your potential, so there's no reason not to have a hard cap. "
my thought is this: what is chris paul's BH rating? since we now know HD ratings can get above 100, isn't he like a 120? and i think the idea would be that you, say a bad d3 talent, would have a BH potential around 40 or 50... but when you concentrated on it in practice, wouldn't you always improve at least a little (given enough minutes)? so you might slow down a ton at 45, then over a season, with 20 minutes a day, gain 2-3-4 points?
i don't think the issue is even the hard caps, but their levels-- I have a SF at NC State who was average potential for rebounding, but low to start with (25 or 26 i think). He is now at 31 and capped out at the beginning of his soph season. It seems that if I wanted to practice him a ton in REB (maybe even to the detriment of other skills), I would be able to improve him somewhat in the next 3 seasons...
(how in the world was this average potential to begin with is a whole 'nother question)