I believe Andrew has talked about the points system Live uses. He figures EA doesn't want the players to seem like money guzzling spenders, so they use points instead.
I wrote:Something that is hopefully implemented in Live 2004 is the ability to make an offer that is independent of the length of the contract.
99-90 are worth $20 Million - $15 Million
89-80 are worth $14 Million - $10 Million
79-70 are worth $9 Million - $4 Million
69-60 are worth $3 Million - $1 Million
59-50 are worth $900,000 - $300,000
And have a veteran's minimum. Players that are 12+ years in the league and aren't super anymore, but still decent.
And when you wanna sign a player that is like a 92, you gotta offer him a contract that looks something like $17 Million/4-Years.
Or maybe $14 Million/7-Years, cuz he will get a total of $98 Million after the 7 years, and only $68 Million with the 17 Mill/4-Year deal.
killerht wrote:EA should make players and agents smart. In 2001-2003 players don't re-sign randomly. I had a guy he was 89 overall and we won 4 straight titles, and after his contract, he didn't wanna re-sign, and he was the best player on the team, best in NBA. So, there shouldn't have been one fu**ing reason why he shouldn't have re-signed with me.
What ya'll think?
Also the happiness meter could affect the players game performance... You know, when happy he plays better and when not so happy, well you get the idea
Goodz wrote:Also the happiness meter could affect the players game performance... You know, when happy he plays better and when not so happy, well you get the idea
i like that. so that there would be some senarios like Van Exel in Denver where he just didnt try because he wanted out.
I agree, i also like that than if the happyness meter is low you could do certain things to improve it like signing new players including the player more in the rotation(if not in the rotation) or liek making the offence run through them(if they are the star player) etc.
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