Posted by gillispie on 3/5/2023 2:37:00 PM (view original):
generally, folks shouldn't be giving up too much important growth for this. its more about that semi-superfluous stuff to help your EEs around the margins. occasionally there are instances where you should be significantly holding cores on key players, but usually this is not the case. it kinda takes a lot to hit those ones right anyway. you usually need to see it coming early, preferably 1st practice early, and to make intelligent decisions about what you'll be able to afford to give up at the times when the player is particularly important. otherwise you end up giving up too much of value (chances at deep runs) to justify it all.
i partly dislike EE planning for its gimmicky nature, but to its credit as a facet of the game, its a decent skill expression that leans heavily on team planning.
3 times when holding a guy back is super obvious to me:
1. I am really into holding back some selected cores on Ineligible players. You can't develop the stud guy normally or risk a ridiculous chance of losing them after 2 years. I try to transfer most of them into 4-year role-player guys, although they can get pretty elite by NT senior year with a full year of growth.
2. There is never any reason to let a Junior finish 90 on the big board.
3. Getting a SO to drop from 10 to 40 reduces his chances of leaving from ~75% to ~25%. Some people get a bit out of control with their studs so quickly, but I see no reason to not try to get a 3rd year out of them.
Unless you are developing PER or STA, a guy who is 35th on the big board has got to be good enough as a SO anyway... without great IQs it's not like they'll be insanely different with +5 BH, PA and DE...