1) jfriske: I read your speech. It seems to me that there is a natural objection you don't address in it. Your 12-12-12 guy with 9-10 secondaries is going to be smoked by the standard triple 15 guy (let alone the triple 15 guy "born" with decent secondaries). There are no two ways about this: if you know the game, you'll realize it's true.Â
So, I get the impression that the U21 for you would not be a team designed to win. Now, I don't want to spin this in a negative way, so I'll be constructive: suppose I changed your idea to something like this:
instead of keeping players cheap but losers, let's make them the best they can be BUT allow the owners to make the maximum possible profit on their training investment: what would you recommend?
I think the post I was working on just before your's posted addresses the 12's vs 15's question, but basically yeah there's no getting around the disadvantage we'd be putting our U21 team at competitively. We would have to decide as a community that it's more valuable for us to go all out encouraging the training of players this way than it is to win U21 games.
As far as how to get owners maximum value on their training investment: I don't know. It's my opinion that training U21 bigs is probably not the way to get maximum value from training, so I'm not sure how you fix that.
If I train just primaries and get my center to 150k by 21yrs, then train primaries all season long and sell at the end of the year when his salary jumps to 200k+, in todays market I might not even get 1.5 mil for him.
If I train a balanced 50k center, he costs me more than $1 million less in salary over the season and he also probably sells for twice at much as the first guy. So I just don't see a way to make training the first player an equal value for the owner.
The other point I think is important to raise is that we are still training these players to be 'the best that they can be', we're just focused on making them the best they can be at point when their training is finished, instead of at the arbitrary age of 21.9 yrs.
Ultimately I just think we need to have more public discussion about the fact that a race to 21 is not always the best use of a good trainee, for either the owner or the US community.
Last edited by J-Slo at 10/7/2010 10:17:28 PM