How and when can a player increase their energy? Do i have to rest a player for many weeks or should i have to spend money on coaching staff to quicken the process...with limited funds, this may be a problem, when i need them on the field asap....
IBleedPurpleAndGold
Posts: 0
Posted on 2010-08-10 17:12:10
Energy is affected solely based on training. On average training, guys will not gain or lose energy. On high and max, they will lose energy. On low and very low, they will gain it. Most people never go on max & only stay on average since the chance of injuries increass on harder training
machinist
Posts: 2
Posted on 2010-08-10 17:52:56
IBleedPurpleAndGold wrote:
Energy is affected solely based on training. On average training, guys will not gain or lose energy. On high and max, they will lose energy. On low and very low, they will gain it. Most people never go on max & only stay on average since the chance of injuries increass on harder training
+1 - generally accepted advice is to stick to average. It's a shame you cant put just some players on higher training though - like young players who aren't in the starting line up, but ho-hum
viktor
Posts: 0
Posted on 2010-08-10 18:30:53
machinist wrote:
IBleedPurpleAndGold wrote:
Energy is affected solely based on training. On average training, guys will not gain or lose energy. On high and max, they will lose energy. On low and very low, they will gain it. Most people never go on max & only stay on average since the chance of injuries increass on harder training
+1 - generally accepted advice is to stick to average. It's a shame you cant put just some players on higher training though - like young players who aren't in the starting line up, but ho-hum
It works this way:
If some players are working hard, everyone else in the locker room gets pumped and trains harder.....Its contagious. So you are not allowed to set specific players to train harder, since that would mean deviating from the RL scenario
yobby
Posts: 0
Posted on 2010-08-10 18:34:35
viktor wrote:
machinist wrote:
IBleedPurpleAndGold wrote:
Energy is affected solely based on training. On average training, guys will not gain or lose energy. On high and max, they will lose energy. On low and very low, they will gain it. Most people never go on max & only stay on average since the chance of injuries increass on harder training
+1 - generally accepted advice is to stick to average. It's a shame you cant put just some players on higher training though - like young players who aren't in the starting line up, but ho-hum
It works this way:
If some players are working hard, everyone else in the locker room gets pumped and trains harder.....Its contagious. So you are not allowed to set specific players to train harder, since that would mean deviating from the RL scenario
Yeah, tell that to Randy Moss's teammates. I'm sure he gets pumped up when Les Welker is in the weight room or running sprints.
viktor
Posts: 0
Posted on 2010-08-10 18:39:55
yobby wrote:
viktor wrote:
machinist wrote:
IBleedPurpleAndGold wrote:
Energy is affected solely based on training. On average training, guys will not gain or lose energy. On high and max, they will lose energy. On low and very low, they will gain it. Most people never go on max & only stay on average since the chance of injuries increass on harder training
+1 - generally accepted advice is to stick to average. It's a shame you cant put just some players on higher training though - like young players who aren't in the starting line up, but ho-hum
It works this way:
If some players are working hard, everyone else in the locker room gets pumped and trains harder.....Its contagious. So you are not allowed to set specific players to train harder, since that would mean deviating from the RL scenario
Yeah, tell that to Randy Moss's teammates. I'm sure he gets pumped up when Les Welker is in the weight room or running sprints.
Now now you should compare GI to RL
DG_31
Posts: 429
Posted on 2010-08-10 18:45:39
yobby wrote:
viktor wrote:
machinist wrote:
IBleedPurpleAndGold wrote:
Energy is affected solely based on training. On average training, guys will not gain or lose energy. On high and max, they will lose energy. On low and very low, they will gain it. Most people never go on max & only stay on average since the chance of injuries increass on harder training
+1 - generally accepted advice is to stick to average. It's a shame you cant put just some players on higher training though - like young players who aren't in the starting line up, but ho-hum
It works this way:
If some players are working hard, everyone else in the locker room gets pumped and trains harder.....Its contagious. So you are not allowed to set specific players to train harder, since that would mean deviating from the RL scenario
Yeah, tell that to Randy Moss's teammates. I'm sure he gets pumped up when Les Welker is in the weight room or running sprints.
Les Welker? Is that Wes's brother? When did we sign him?