You're both exaggerating things that make minor differences.
Sorry, but it's not so cut and dry. As long as you're consistently raising attributes that matter you'll end up basically the same at the levels you're talking about.
Like I said before, wide receivers gain virtually nothing from automatic level gains. You also have to consider the fact that basically every important stat gains them, so if you cap one, cap another, cap another, etc, it's the same SP value as if you'd capped one three times.
The only important thing is that you work toward soft caps, because without that, instead of meaning little the automatic gains mean nothing.
Speed works, agility works, catching works, vision works, jumping works, first step works, quick cut works, even strength and carrying work sometimes.
I've seen it all work.
I'd personally raise speed one cap for this WR and then catching, to stay competitive on both fronts. Your WR looks nice for his level.
Sorry, but it's not so cut and dry. As long as you're consistently raising attributes that matter you'll end up basically the same at the levels you're talking about.
Like I said before, wide receivers gain virtually nothing from automatic level gains. You also have to consider the fact that basically every important stat gains them, so if you cap one, cap another, cap another, etc, it's the same SP value as if you'd capped one three times.
The only important thing is that you work toward soft caps, because without that, instead of meaning little the automatic gains mean nothing.
Speed works, agility works, catching works, vision works, jumping works, first step works, quick cut works, even strength and carrying work sometimes.
I've seen it all work.
I'd personally raise speed one cap for this WR and then catching, to stay competitive on both fronts. Your WR looks nice for his level.






























