Posted by Benis on 1/25/2020 11:43:00 AM (view original):
Posted by garmansouth on 1/25/2020 11:04:00 AM (view original):
Posted by Benis on 1/25/2020 9:17:00 AM (view original):
Just lost my THIRD early entry that wasnt even on the big board. There is a <1% of losing a guy to EE that wasn't on big board so this kind of luck is insane. I need to get my *** to the casino asap.
what a ****** *** system they created to determine who leaves early.
And in Wooden I had #2 on the Big Board stay??
Yup makes sense! Makes for an ultra competitive and fun game by introducing crazy randomness that you have no control over.
I'm starting to dig the idea of adding this randomness to the projection report. Every couple seasons there will be a team projected as a 1 seed that gets snubbed from the tourney while a team in the 100-150 range is randomly chosen to make the tourney. Itd be fun to roll the dice and see!
Regarding “Randomness”, “no control over”...
Unexpectedly losing a key player to early entry is always 100% user error. Either the coach doesn’t understand player evaluation, or the coach doesn’t understand how the system works.
1. You let Jackson’s LP increase 11 points this junior season, up to 96. If you didn’t want him to possibly leave early, that’s your first and most obvious mistake.
2. His athleticism and defense started the year at 99 and 91. He started with 70+ speed and rebounding. He was a top 20 by position recruit, and his overall began the season in the mid-800s. This is a player who is going to be close to the big board, and you should have known it.
3. There were only 22 graduating seniors on the big board. That’s a very low number, and it means a lot of decisions will be down to probability; this being the case, you should know odds increase for the draft going off the board. Instead of just looking for 25-30 “yes” answers from early entry candidates, the system was looking for 38 this year.
4. The big board is not designed to tell you what is going to happen. It’s a tool to help you get a picture, but it is not the picture. Coaches are supposed to use their own evaluation skills to determine if they will need to develop contingencies, or try to mitigate the risk of EE by limiting certain attribute growth areas.
5. Comparing it to the projection report isn’t totally invalid, but your analysis is silly (when real life teams start declining invitations to the NCAA tournament in favor of the NIT, perhaps your idea will get some traction). The projection report doesn’t tell you who is going to be in the final four. Both compilations give a 100% accurate *snapshot* of how teams and players stack up. But the snapshot is not the outcome. Each outcome - whether it’s a tournament game result, or player early entry decisions - results from probability.
The game isn’t designed to tell you exactly what will happen. It’s designed to give you a look at what is likely, and then run a simulation. Lists and projections are not outcomes. Until this gets through to you, you will continue to misunderstand the game, and spread misinformation among the coaches you influence.