I was really pleased with the whole game - totally balanced scoring. Check it:

I'm liking this team a lot so far...

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Interesting. He was ranked fairly high in my game (somewhere in the 1st round) but he didn't look all that good to me. I think it's another case of random potential. I'm hoping this guy turns out good in real life though. The Bruins drafted him.gibson41 wrote:Draft recap:
#22 - LD Ryan Button - Projected 1-2 defenseman, more skilled version of Lasse Kukkonen
Man, I hate playing Canucks, but somehow I found way to win a few games over them in Season 1, including a 5-1 win. Take That Roberto !CatchUp wrote:Oh man, the Canucks were already out in front in the division (and conference) and now in late January, they just traded for Brad Richards. Not good. Not good.
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EDIT: and 5 days later they have traded with Calgary for Craig Conroy. I guess they Gillis felt they were a little weak down the middle.
bruins72 wrote:Interesting perspective. Looking at Kopitar and Toews, I wouldn't exactly say they're both the same kind of player. Toews isn't very strong. He's got a 15 strength compared to Kopitar's 18. I like to use the Overload Slot tactic and you need big, strong centers for that. Also, I wouldn't say that Kopitar is far from being fully developed. He's got 7 attributes in the green while Toews has none. Also, when you do a player comparison, Toews only beats Kopitar in Aggression, Influence, and Checking. He's 1 better in Agression, 2 better in Checking, and 6 better in Influence. They're tied in 6 attributes. Kopitar is better in 18 attributes.
Looking points production, Toews had 102 in 82 games last season centering Tkachuk and Selanne. Selanne has really slowed down this season and is retiring at the end. Tkachuk retires the season after and he's already showing signs of slowing down. Toews has 37 points in 30 games so far this season centering Ruutu and Doan. Kopitar had 82 points in 73 games last season on a bad Kings team. He's got 25 points in 30 games so far this season. But Kopitar's Average Rating was 8.81 last season and 8.80 so far this season. Toews was 7.59 last season and is 8.30 so far this season.
I don't know if I'd call this a no brainer. Looking at all of that, I'd say that Kopitar is an upgrade over Toews but if I do the Kopitar deal I'll have both of them as a 1-2 punch. The Ladd deal doesn't substantially upgrade one position.
I don't know if it was that many but I do have an AHL team that is full of over 90% players under contract to me. I've also got a few in the ECHL. I had to sign some players before losing their rights. I think I might be a couple players under the reserve limit max right now.gibson41 wrote:Then again, players vary game from game, in my game Toews is producing very well, and his avg. rating was 8.00 in his first season. I have to admit that I didn't check Kopitar's atrributes, I just judged from his young age. If you are looking to upgrade your center position, I personally would trade Chipchura for a proven veteran. But after all, you will win cup anyway. And if Kopitar is a two-way forward and a good hitter, then I might say yes after all. darn, its moment like these that makes me wanna play a EHM online game full of TBLers!![]()
Anyway, bruins72, I checked your blog and I saw you let a lot of your AHLers go away, who did you fill these spots with? I swear it was like 10 players...
I don't think that I would lump Kopitar into the same category as Marleau, Thornton, and those others. I used him once before back in the LA Kings challenge and while he was good for me, he wasn't god-like as those other guys are. You disagree and that's fine.selne wrote: Well, I'm not taking part in the challenge and don't really have the right to comment here. But reading the last posts, especially those from Bruins72, i got a bit disappointed.
All the experienced guys here, you start a challenge and talk about "challenge". But then you trade for the kind of players that make life very easy on EHM. What's the sense of trading for Kopitar? He's the Marleau, Thornton, Jokinen, Sundin type of player. You know that he will garantee goals for you (don't say it's not true, because you know those guys on EHM[-X ).
Remember my "No more heavyweights" post? You always win with those centers. Why do you want to trade for him? Because you see Tkachuk getting older and he was the reason why Toews played well? These big players make EHM boring. I don't see any challenge, if you always trade for those players!
bruins72 wrote:I don't think that I would lump Kopitar into the same category as Marleau, Thornton, and those others. I used him once before back in the LA Kings challenge and while he was good for me, he wasn't god-like as those other guys are. You disagree and that's fine.selne wrote: Well, I'm not taking part in the challenge and don't really have the right to comment here. But reading the last posts, especially those from Bruins72, i got a bit disappointed.
All the experienced guys here, you start a challenge and talk about "challenge". But then you trade for the kind of players that make life very easy on EHM. What's the sense of trading for Kopitar? He's the Marleau, Thornton, Jokinen, Sundin type of player. You know that he will garantee goals for you (don't say it's not true, because you know those guys on EHM[-X ).
Remember my "No more heavyweights" post? You always win with those centers. Why do you want to trade for him? Because you see Tkachuk getting older and he was the reason why Toews played well? These big players make EHM boring. I don't see any challenge, if you always trade for those players!
As for making the challenges more challenging, we've consistently done this over the last 4 or 5 challenges. We've never made rules where you weren't allowed to get certain players. We've limited the trading so you can't build a super-team overnight. We've also limited the number of players involved in a trade so that it's harder to get the better players. While this challenge starts off a little easier than others because of our starting fantasy roster, we're losing a lot of that talent year by year and we aren't allowed to trade those players that we're set to lose.
Obviously these posts touched some nerve with you but in all honesty, the sky isn't falling.
I don't think getting Kopitar would make the game boring at all. If somebody manages to get Kopitar or any other talented player then good for them. I have been trying all game to get a legit 1st line player but it is tough because of the rules. If I somehow find a deal that is within the rules, makes atleast a bit of sense for the other team and gives me a star player then I will be more than happy.selne wrote: Well, I'm not taking part in the challenge and don't really have the right to comment here. But reading the last posts, especially those from Bruins72, i got a bit disappointed.
All the experienced guys here, you start a challenge and talk about "challenge". But then you trade for the kind of players that make life very easy on EHM. What's the sense of trading for Kopitar? He's the Marleau, Thornton, Jokinen, Sundin type of player. You know that he will garantee goals for you (don't say it's not true, because you know those guys on EHM[-X ).
Remember my "No more heavyweights" post? You always win with those centers. Why do you want to trade for him? Because you see Tkachuk getting older and he was the reason why Toews played well? These big players make EHM boring. I don't see any challenge, if you always trade for those players!
IRL you don't see young first line centers being traded that often. Teams prefer centers to wingers at the draft because they know how important that position is. And EHM knows that.grits207 wrote:I don't think getting Kopitar would make the game boring at all. If somebody manages to get Kopitar or any other talented player then good for them. I have been trying all game to get a legit 1st line player but it is tough because of the rules. If I somehow find a deal that is within the rules, makes atleast a bit of sense for the other team and gives me a star player then I will be more than happy.