jeronemitchell
02-01-2005, 11:05 AM
In playing around with my team, I've observed that teams seem to perform better if you mix up any given set of possibilities instead of simply sticking to one's strengths. For example, if your tackles are very good but your inside blocking is mediocre, you do better running a large, but minority percentage of running plays towards the middle rather than putting, say, 70% of your plays to the outside.
Has anyone else noticed this? How much of an effect do you find utilizing your weaknesses has when dealing with
(a) OLine running percentages
(b) linebacker/secondary blitzing percentages
(c) formation usage
(d) depth of passing percentages
How do you decide how to split things if you do mix it up? For example, for formations, I look at what my QB knows, and rate the formation as Total Run, Run +, Mixed, Pass +, or Total Pass. From there, I assign a weight value based on the situation (for example, in extreme pass, Total pass may be 3, Pass + may be 2, and Mixed is 1). From there, I assign the weight in the boxes, and let the game balance out the percentages.
Has anyone else done anything similar, or markedly different enough to toss out as an idea?
Has anyone else noticed this? How much of an effect do you find utilizing your weaknesses has when dealing with
(a) OLine running percentages
(b) linebacker/secondary blitzing percentages
(c) formation usage
(d) depth of passing percentages
How do you decide how to split things if you do mix it up? For example, for formations, I look at what my QB knows, and rate the formation as Total Run, Run +, Mixed, Pass +, or Total Pass. From there, I assign a weight value based on the situation (for example, in extreme pass, Total pass may be 3, Pass + may be 2, and Mixed is 1). From there, I assign the weight in the boxes, and let the game balance out the percentages.
Has anyone else done anything similar, or markedly different enough to toss out as an idea?