The other chemistry thread seems to be focused on changing the entire system.
I just wanted to suggest that if a player's contract expires but gets resigned in the off-season, the team shouldn't lose the chemistry points accrued from signing the same players on the previous-season's roster.
It doesn't make sense that the team takes a hit on chemistry while the player is going through "contract negotiations" and resigns with the team. Perhaps you can roll in a time-factor with Chemistry degradation such that if a player takes 10 days to re-sign vs. 20 days to re-sign, then the Chemistry slowly reduces until the player is re-signed. But for players who's contracts ended on Day 40, but re-signed on Day 41. Why would the team take a Chemistry hit? Especially since the roster is entire the same from one season to the next?
As new players are added, a Chemistry drop makes sense. Existing players from the previous season re-signing immediately after the season ending not so much.
I just wanted to suggest that if a player's contract expires but gets resigned in the off-season, the team shouldn't lose the chemistry points accrued from signing the same players on the previous-season's roster.
It doesn't make sense that the team takes a hit on chemistry while the player is going through "contract negotiations" and resigns with the team. Perhaps you can roll in a time-factor with Chemistry degradation such that if a player takes 10 days to re-sign vs. 20 days to re-sign, then the Chemistry slowly reduces until the player is re-signed. But for players who's contracts ended on Day 40, but re-signed on Day 41. Why would the team take a Chemistry hit? Especially since the roster is entire the same from one season to the next?
As new players are added, a Chemistry drop makes sense. Existing players from the previous season re-signing immediately after the season ending not so much.
Edited by geeze79 on Feb 8, 2012 09:12:36
Edited by geeze79 on Feb 8, 2012 09:12:11






























