Post
by allenciox » Thu Dec 17, 2020 5:38 pm
Really interesting stuff... So, yes, Bucharest did learn from last season (the first year of outstanding UMEBA draft) as far as offering more to post-draft free agents this year. But also, I just had a lot more money to spend. Last year, after the contraction of UMEBA, all the finances got wiped for the teams. As a result, Recte manually set the budgets to 75 million for all the teams, and my team was closer to the salary cap, so I had a lot less money to spend than this year. But I still offered hundreds of K for a lot of the top players left after the draft, and, although I got outbid on a bunch, I did pick up about a dozen of the "lower tier" ones . I learned from how much BBA was offering last year (generally between $1 million and $2 million apiece) that I needed to offer a little bit more to get the players I want. So this year, I calculated, well how many players could I offer a bit more than $2 million for, based on my budget and money available. I think it came out to an even dozen that I offered $2,211,111 for. Plus there were a bunch of lower caliber players that I offered a few hundred thousand for, and there were also players that would not even entertain an offer from me. I didn't expect to get all the players I bid on, but it looks like I pretty much did (total of 42 players). Of course, that means I have to throw some of them back into the pot --- so other teams will still get a shot at them. But I still have about 19m (including 9 million in budget, 10 million in cash) in case I do see one or more free agents that I need to buy the rest of the year.
Interesting what you all were saying about Des Moines. Personally, I think that as long as Des Moines can suck up the revenue shortfall, the most important thing to build up loyalty would be to keep their ticket prices fairly low until they get bigger attendance figures, which should help their team loyalty. This would make sense in the "real" world. But, I don't really know how well the "in-game" world is modelled on that.