View Full Version : CM4 - Lincoln City, 2004-05
QuikSand
07-23-2003, 03:27 PM
Lincoln City, 2004-05
This thread continues my career as manager of Lincoln City, a Third Division English club in Championship Manager 4, started following the release of expansion pack #4. I’m playing with “lower league rules” – all fictional players, no fancy tactics. So far, the budget has been strained – but the on-field results have been pretty decent.
Thread History:
Lincoln City, 2002-03 (http://dynamic2.gamespy.com/~fof/forums/showthread.php?s=&threadid=11621)
Lincoln City, 2003-04 (http://dynamic2.gamespy.com/~fof/forums/showthread.php?s=&threadid=11722)
Team History:
SEASON League Pos W D L GF GA Pts
2002-03 Third Division 6th 23 11 12 71 45 80
2003-04 Third Division 2nd 28 9 9 82 41 93
From here, we will start up in July, and kick off preparations for the new season.
Here, as a refresher, is a recap of our player performance from the 03-04 season:
Keepers Age Wage Value Top Skills App Con AvgR
Darren Baines 27 £300 £16K Rushing Out,Eccentricity 24 15 7.33
Steve Howarth 18 £275 £16K Determ,Stamina,Bravery,Agility 21 22 7.28
Alan Ryan 24 £550 £18K Kicking,Comm,OneonOnes 5 9 7.00
Defenders Age Wage Value Top Skills App G A MoM AvgR
Martin Gibbons 23 £700 £140K Decisions,Determ,Stamina 40 0 1 5 7.52
Michael Kelly 21 £1.0K £16K Stamina,Finishing,Aggression 41 3 2 0 7.09
David Francis 21 £1.1K £18K WorkRate,Determ,Aggression 38 0 3 1 7.10
Andy Davies 21 £375 £16K Heading,Bravery,Marking,Jumping 35(1) 0 2 7 7.44
Andrew Cross 23 £160 £16K Heading,Jumping,Strength 23 0 2 4 7.52
Ryan Hughes 16 £ 75 Heading,Creativity,Positioning 10 0 0 0 7.40
Andy Hughes 20 £300 £16K Determ,Teamwork,WorkRate 2 0 0 0 6.00
Ian Hutchinson 26 £475 £16K Determ,Marking,Bravery,Jumping 0(10) 0 0 0 7.09
Midfielders Age Wage Value Top Skills App G A MoM AvgR
Gary Webb 24 £1.0K £16K Passing,Technique,Stamina,Flair 40 6 2 0 7.22
Richard Lewis 21 £1.0K £16K Dribbling,Acceleration,Pace 40 9 3 1 7.25
Lee Williamson 22 £400 £40K WashingUp,Jumping,Bravery,SetPieces 37 19 13 8 7.67
Jason Wilson 20 £950 £40K WorkRate,Determ,Aggression,Infl 31(6) 1 6 0 7.54
Andy Allen 19 £ 90 £16K Anticipation,Stamina,WorkRate 23(12) 0 5 0 6.80
Lee Harris 16 £ 85 WorkRate,Marking,Stamina,Balance 8(8) 1 1 0 6.75
Paul Warner 16 £ 80 Passing,Heading,Technique,Aggression 3(8) 0 1 0 7.09
Craig Russell 16 £ 90 Dribbing,Heading,Crossing,Teamwork 11(2) 0 0 0 7.07
Andy May 22 Loaned In OffTheBall,Teamwork,WorkRate,Bravery 13 2 2 0 6.76
Adam Newman 18 £ 80 £18K WorkRate,Determ,Aggression,OffBall 5(1) 0 0 0 6.83
Mark Oakes 26 £400 £16K Determination,LongThrows,Bravery 3 0 0 0 6.33
Jamie Mason 26 £800 £16K Determ,WorkRate,OffTheBall,Balance 1 0 0 0 ---
Forwards Age Wage Value Top Skills App G A MoM AvgR
Alan Jones 18 £ 80 £16K Creativity,Agility,Balance,Infl 29 8 5 3 7.68
Matthew Jackson 15 £ 70 Stamina,Aggression,Bravery,Finishing 21(3) 14 10 5 7.41
Chris Morgan 29 £500 £16K Determ,OffTheBall,Agility,WorkRate 21(4) 13 16 2 7.48
Jamie Barnes 21 £550 £28K Pace,Crossing,Positioning,Finishing 18(6) 9 8 0 7.29
John Garner 16 £110 Strength,Stamina,Bravery,Flair 5(1) 2 3 0 6.83
QuikSand
07-23-2003, 03:27 PM
June 2004
Technically, we are wrapping up the final stages of the 03/04 season now, but with competition concluded – it’s basically the “offseason” and we are focused on the coming year.
Our first big move is the follow through on our big Bosman transfer—we bring in Ukrainian Volodymir Fedorov, who is without a doubt our first impact transfer in. To put this into context, without getting bogged down in a bunch of numeric ratings, I’ll just say that his skills are generally a full range better than my guys’ are. Tough to say why he was willing to sign with us, but now that he has, we’ll try to get him worked in. His one real drawback seems to be pace – he is a bit stodgy, it would seem. But he’s a defensive-minded player, not a showboating striker… so that fits okay.
My initial thinking is that we’ll try to use Fedorov on our right side midfield, and then we will take Gary Webb (who has been pretty solid there) and use him as a sort of roving midfielder—giving him time in the mix with Richard Lewis (in the attacking middie spot) and perhaps even with Jason Wilson (in our defensive central midfield slot). I still plan to get Gary Webb into most of our matches, but he probably won’t be our official starter anywhere.
However – a big caveat is always needed when promoting, as it seems that certain players just cannot hack the added competition. Sometimes it comes as a total surprise, but it does seem to happen. So, having a starter-quality guy in the rotation is a good thing, no worries.
Incidentally, Leicester (from the EPL) is already expressing interest in Fedorov, who has a current price tag of £130,000 according to my screen. Oddly, Fedorov was graded at over £3 million before he moved here – so something’s going on, it would seem.
Two of our young players, keeper James Anderson and midfielder Paul Warner, both leave following the expiration of their youth contracts. I put in offers to retain both of them, as having playable young guys around seems to be a worthwhile investment—and I’m not exactly finding this kind of guy just sitting around. Anderson was slated to come up this past season, but an untimely injury gave Steve Howarth the chance instead, and Howarth impressed enough to keep the second keeper role all season. Both Warner and Anders accept my youth contracts, and rejoin the club under firmer terms.
16 y/o Steve Marsden is one of the numerous midfielders I have pursued in recent months, and now he is sitting without a contract. I make him an offer as a rotation player, in hopes that he can serve in a role similar to that held by loan-in Andy Ryan last season. Playing for York last year, he was pretty adequate – but not a star by any stretch.
However – it turns out we lack the funds to complete the transfer – as he is a youth player, and his required compensation if £40,000 – just beyond the reach of our current £35,000 transfer budget. Ouch.
Lincoln’s Alan Atkinson has retired from professional football.
Well, we tried to talk him out of it – I’ll check to see how we can fill in for him. All I can do is find a totally unproven former player, so we bring aboard Steve Walters, a 30y/o who doesn’t look too bad. He accepts our modest offering, and we have him locked up.
Hearing that we are shopping for a left side middie, Hereford offer up one of their guys, 23 y/o Ben King. They don’t want much, but it’s because he’s probably below replacement value. I pass.
Jamie Mason’s contract has expired, and we release him from the club. That frees up some much-needed wage space, as we were getting pretty tight in that regard. He earned £800/wk, and now we can plan to recycle that into more productive players.
We add another player via Bosman deal – Paul Harper. The 22 y/o Harper is a bit of an unknown but can play either center or right midfield. My best guess is that he ends up in the rotation along with our youngsters for time all along the midfield – and will get a chance to earn more time with his play.
Lee Williamson has been voted Lincoln’s Player of the Year by supporters.
I agree with this decision – he had an even better season this year than last, and now is our two-time winner.
Lincoln have received £300,000 for Second Division TV rights for the forthcoming season.
I don’t know how much our budget will change with the promotion, but this seems welcome.
The Lincoln board have announced that your transfer budget for this year will be in the region of £140K.
Now that’s more like it.
The Lincoln board are very pleased with your performance as manager this season.
The team is expected to battle bravely against relegation from the Second Division in the coming season.
The board indicate that they are investing in expanding the club’s training facilities.
Such is the response to my first board request.
As it stands, our total wage budget is £21,500 per week – up again from last season. With a total bill of around £17,400/wk, that means we have some room to move. £4,000/wk might mean two or three quality additions somewhere along the way, and that’s before we make any more moves to clear out space. The ripest targets there are probably keeper Alan Ryan (£675), forward Jamie Barnes (£600) and striker Matt Dixon (£575).
We have inked a new long-term deal with forward Alan Jones, getting him locked up through 2007. He was unhappy with his youth deal, and rightly so, as we have used him as a first teamer for two seasons. I expect Matthew Jackson will be next, and we’ll also go after him for a long term deal. This isn’t an awful way to use some of that wage room.
I’m now pretty well resigned to believing that we will start the season with our left midfield position still unsettled. We will probably start out using Lee Williamson there – just because he is solid, and the players we have at striker are better than those we have at left mid. When Williamson isn’t there, my best option is seemingly Andy Allen, though he doesn’t have anywhere near the same range of offensive skills that Williamson has.
Anrhydeddu
07-23-2003, 03:41 PM
Hearing that we are shopping for a left side middie, Hereford offer up one of their guys
Is this literary license or does the AI actually react in this manner?
I've seen this as well, and it does seem as the AI recognize when you are searching for a particular position. This happens more often with players you have shortlisted, however. Sadly, the players being offered are mostly such of such quality you'd like to unload from your own team...
QuikSand
07-23-2003, 04:01 PM
Originally posted by Anrhydeddu
Is this literary license or does the AI actually react in this manner?
Don't know yet, but among the offers I have received, most have been midfielders - where I've been looking. 3ric might be correct, this might be a function within the game, which would be cool. Alas- they do all seem to be garbage. (I'm getting many more offers after installing EP5 by the way)
Anrhydeddu
07-23-2003, 04:47 PM
It seems to be subtle yet profound design that makes immersion deeper; that is, giving some semblance that you - as the gamer - do not control the universe. It's what I call an "Event" (using Civ2 terminology) where based on an action you take, an event is triggered. It's just frustrating to see in games like FOF and OOTP - using two of the most popular US sports - where the AI does its own thing and where you totally dictate the events of the game. This is probably what makes CM special.
QuikSand
07-23-2003, 06:32 PM
Originally posted by Anrhydeddu
This is probably what makes CM special.
I'm down with that.
I think if a sim game that represented a sport that I really, really liked in real life tried to introduce the elements of role playing and so forth that this game does, it would be a bit or a problem for me -- I think I'd be a little upset that the role-playing stuff might be "getting in the way" of my sports sim. But when I play CM, I don't have any reall attachments to the sport it's trying to emulate - and my "suspension of disbelief" (with apologies to Coleridge) is a little bit easier to reach.
In addition, the fact that futbol is really a never-ending enterprise (or much closer to it than any American sport) helps this out. The notion that I'm practically always thinking about contracts, transfers, and so forth helps-- unlike (for instance) the NFL, where most of thst stuff happens in the summertime, and once the season starts you don't get a whole lot of it involved. Not right or wrong, just different - and I think it works for futbol pretty well.
Godzilla Blitz
07-23-2003, 07:03 PM
Originally posted by Anrhydeddu
It seems to be subtle yet profound design that makes immersion deeper; that is, giving some semblance that you - as the gamer - do not control the universe. It's what I call an "Event" (using Civ2 terminology) where based on an action you take, an event is triggered. It's just frustrating to see in games like FOF and OOTP - using two of the most popular US sports - where the AI does its own thing and where you totally dictate the events of the game. This is probably what makes CM special.
Not to hijack, but...
I came back from Japan a few weeks ago, and while I was there I bought a dozen or so console games, and read up on the current state of gaming overseas. It's interesting to see that a much greater percentage of Japanese games incorporate "event" scripting into them. As an example, I got two elaborate horse racing sims, both of which have "rival" characters that appear at different points in the game, and provide different choices, opportunities, and challenges. Also, there are random events, random characters, etc., that crop up in both of these games.
It would be like playing FOF and getting an email from a coach that says, "Was on vacation in San Antonio, and saw an Arena League game. They had a wide receiver that was phenomenal. I'm thinking that we should check him out." Then the game would give you a choice of either spending resources to check the guy out (scouting report, training camp effectiveness drops 1-2 percent), or ignoring him and continue working on next year's game plans (no change).
I have mixed thoughts about such additions. First, even playing a short time, they get repetitive, as many of them seem to play out the same way every time. After the second time, they become more of an annoyance than anything else. However, done well and sparingly, they add quite a bit of immersion to the games.
Back on track, looking forward to the upcoming year!
Anrhydeddu
07-23-2003, 08:28 PM
QS, I think GB is on the right track. I am not talking about "role-playing" events but events that directly relates to what you already are doing. I know we've gone round and round on that but your prose reminded me of it again. In either game of baseball or football, you and I still have to draft, acquire free agents, make trades and manage our rosters. In each of these four areas, events can be triggered of a more in-depth message to an the would cause you to make a critical decision. I agree that a soccer universe is probably more conducive to the constant flow of decisions but I would like to think you agree that in other similar games, we can get some evidence that the AI is playing along with us.
QuikSand
07-24-2003, 09:27 AM
July 2004
I do some fishing in the conference, and find a pretty decent midfielder who played with Yeovil Town last season. Jamie Boyce, 23, was a select player last season, and a prodigious assist man. I’m hoping he is the right kind of player for us – as I put in a transfer offer. For £22,000 Yeovil agree terms – and we get to sit down and talk with a potential addition at my top need slot.
Boyce, however, seems cool to the idea – he apparently enjoys being a big fish down in the conference. I make a good offer - £1,100/wkplus incentives – but he spurns us. Once again, we are left wanting for a new addition at that spot.
We have our first friendly, hosting Ipswich. Left defender David Francis gets injured – that’s the biggest news. Volodomry Fedorov strikes from his midfield spot for our first goal – that’s a nice sign (especially as he is supposedly a defensive-minded player). We get a decent 2-0 win at home, and please the already deliriously happy fans.
At Rochdale in our next friendly, we edge out a 1-0 win without much incident, and no injuries.
I forgot how uneventful July can be in this game – that wraps us up, as we continue to train up to the regular season.
As I see it, for the season ahead, here are the big three questions for our squad:
#1 – Competition in Second Division. How much better are these clubs? The fact that two of my fellow promotees this year were relegated from Second Division the season before suggests to me that we’ll be in for a much tougher ride this season. If that’s so – then we may have to re-evaluate much of our squad, even places (like our defense) where I feel that we have a good group already.
#2 – Filling the midfield slot. I’m not happy to still be unsettled at a spot on the roster, but left midfield remains a mystery. We’re getting thinner at striker (by design) and the pressure to use Lee Williamson there will be significant. If we can fill that hole with a quality player– by transfer, loan in, or just performance from within the current roster- that will help settle my big concern.
#3 – Fedorov settling in. Fedorov is a big deal player, from what I can see so far – definitely the type that usually turns my offers down right away. If he can become an impact player for us, that might be the catalyst we need to remain competitive and successful, even if the year overall is challenging. Alternatively, if he becomes a transfer target – we might get a windfall out of that.
We’ll see how all this progresses.
condors
07-24-2003, 09:40 AM
quiksand-
not sure if you given it any thought but if you have a left sided defender(where you seem to have depth) you may consider training him into a midfielder i have had success with this in the past, espcially if your unable to transfer in a winger also don't discount a player because he is right footed some can excel playing on the left side
good luck and its been a great read
QuikSand
07-24-2003, 11:15 AM
August 2004
We take on Northwich Vics in our next friendly, and we end up in a 1-1 draw. Volodymyr Fedorov set up our goal with a nice centering pass, but he missed a PK later on that would have won it. I do get the sense that he will be a significant part of our offense, though – even though defense is his stronger suit.
Our final friendly is against Leyton Orient. We get a 2-1 win, spread out our playing time, and should have everyone pretty well tuned up for our debut in a week.
We get news that Gary Webb will miss about 2 months with a torn calf muscle. That seems to settle our worries about being too deep in the right midfield – but we will still hope to get him back in good stead for use later. (And it reaffirms the obvious argument that depth is not a bad thing)
Milwall and Wigan have been made 7-4 join favourites to gain promotion from the English Second Division this season. The rest of the main contenders are priced at: 2-1 Sheff Wed, 5-2 Peterborough, 10-1 Hull and 10-1 Rotherham.
You have been rated at 50-1. The bookmakers think that promotion for your team is unlikely and that you should be far more concerned about the possibility of getting relegated.
Comforting – but at least we know who are the likely contenders in this new territory. And, just to renew an old habit:
We hate Wigan.
I am getting frustrated with the players on the transfer market, and decide to forage around for a possible loan in. I put in offers to two pretty good fits, and hope that we might come away with another player with potential to really help us. Nottm Forest immediately moves in to try to loan one of the same players we targeted, followed by West Ham – making m think that James Anderson from Leeds (our top choice) is unlikely to arrive with us. I’ll hope instead to secure Kyung-Tae Park, a South Korean midfielder from German club Leverkusen.
Our first match in Second Division is home for Cambridge. Ten minutes in, Lee Williamson sails a crossing pass to Andy Allen, who sends it home for the first score. Cambridge, though, are a fleet team, and they even it up after 22 minutes. After feeling outplayed early, we manage to do well down the stretch, but the score stays knotted. Lincoln 1, Cambridge 1.
Andy Davies, our breakthrough player of the year last season, is hurt pretty badly – he will miss a couple of months. We are deep – but still lousy news.
Leverkusen’s Kyung-Tae Park has agreed to join Lincoln on loan.
Leverkusen’s Kyung-Tae Park has been granted a conditional British work permit for his new move to Lincoln.
Our deal runs until the end of the season, and this ought to be great. The 23 y/o midfielder/forward can play on either side, but my obvious interest is to use him as a left winger. He has great physical skills, and his arsenal of abilities is strong all around. With high determination and work rate, we expect that he can deliver on his immense promise –and really help us this season. His market value is tagged at £3.5 million, for what that’s worth.
We head to Tranmere, where Park will immediately debut as our left winger. Things look pretty even through a scoreless first half – both imports Fedorov and Park have earned their 7 ratings in the early going. After 77, it’s a Williamson corner kick that gets in off Alan Jones for the lead – back to the combo that works for us already. At 90 minutes, Park takes a ball from midfield, penetrates between two defenders, and sneaks it right past the keeper for the icing goal. Lincoln 2, Tranmere 0. Good effort all around, and park gets the MOM in his first appearance.
Rather that committing huge resources to a big transfer – we might have made the right move to upgrade the midfield via loan in – as Park might be just what we needed back there. Now, we will have to make sure that our other players don’t get upset by his presence.
We have a quick turnaround to our next match, and need to rotate many players. We host Cheltenham, and get out to a quick lead off the foot of Matthew Jackson. Lee Williamson threads in for another goal, and is in again after 30 minutes – for a strong 3-0 lead in the first half. The flurry continues with Richard Lewis getting on the board, and then Williamson finishing his hat trick just before the halftime break. This one gets and stays out of hand, but a great triumph for our men. Lincoln 7, Cheltenham 1.
Our latest injury is striker Matthew Jackson, whose ankle will keep him sidelined for three weeks or so. We’re having our worst rash of injuries ever.
Lincoln City chairman Martin Knowles cold not hide his delight following his team’s 7-1 win over Cheltenham Town.
The Red Imps’ performances so far this season warrant the top half position they currently occupy, but at this early stage of the season they must be aware that a few defeats would see them head rapidly towards the foot of the table.
They might still be favourites to go down but the start they have made to the season certainly has been encouraging.
We play at Blackpool, where we will need a good showing to extend our modest winning streak. Even at 40 minutes, Blackpool has a goal disallowed, and we get to the half scoreless, though I feel we are being outplayed. We make a great play on defense to cut off a big chance, and this keeps the score flat. Park and Williamson attempt a give-and-go at 84, but their defender blocks the crossing pass to Wiliamson. However, at 86, Blackpool finally strike and take the 1-0 lead. Blackpool 1, Lincoln 0. Several of our players are tallied with embarrassing match scores – and perhaps this is more of a sign of the real Second Division competition lying ahead.
We’re through August – and we have to be pleased with the start, which has us in 5th position through the early going. I am somewhat surprised (but pleased) to see Tranmere struggling, with only 1 league point after four matches.
QuikSand
07-25-2003, 08:35 AM
September 2004
We host Barnsley, and have a seemingly endless series of corner kicks in the first half – yielding nothing but a few shots and saves. Richard Lewis gets us ahead in the early second half with a simple nutmeg move, rather than all this complicated centering stuff. Jones and Williamson execute a breakaway to get ahead 2-0. Martin Gibbons gets sent off at 59, and we will have to defend the lead a man down. We commit a penalty, but Baines makes the save to keep his clean sheet though 82 minutes. At 91, Barnsley get on the board, but we hold on for the win. Lincoln 2, Barnsley 1.
Now, it’s Andrew Cross who is hurt – he was moved in as a starter in central defense after Andy Davies went down. Now, I don’t know who will be playing for us – we’ve suddenly gotten very thin. I’ll use Ryan Hughes and Ian Cook in the middle for our next match (as Martin Gibbons serves his very untimely suspension). After that, we’ll see – might be open auditions.
We suit up at Stockport, and have a nearly-terrible mistake early, saved only by a quick kick-away from David Francis. We slip behind 1-0 by the half, and Stockport seem totally in control. They go up 2-0 after 75, and we are lost. Stockport 2, Lincoln 0. Tough match – we seemed to be fully outclassed there.
And to compound the bad news – Volodymyr Fedorov has pulled up lame, and he is now listed as out for a couple of months. This has just gone from bad to worse – we’re dwindling quickly. Suddenly Paul Harper, an offseason addition without a place to play, is our main player at right-side midfield – the position that seemed overloaded up until now.
We have a mixed-up lineup as we take on Q.P.R. in the first League Cup match. Park is on international call for the South Korean U23 team, so Lee Williamson is drawn back to play the left wing. All seems lost as we trail 1-0 through most of the match, but Chris Morgan manages to get a long outlet pass and connect to even it up at 1-1 in the 90th minute. So late in the game! In extra time, through 109 it’s still even, but we get a good chance – but Morgan is denied. At 111, Q.P.R. puts one past Baines, and take the match with that edge. Q.P.R. 2, Lincoln 1.
On the road at a First Division club – that’s not too bad. Defender Chris Richards looked positively lost out there, and gained the first match rating of 4 this side has seen. Our defense has been riddled with injuries –and he’s pretty clearly not the guy to use as a fill-in.
And now, just to add injury to injury, our central defender Neil Barnes is injured, and out for about two months. What’s in the water around here – this is crazy!
We play host to Brentford, who are in 9th on the league table right now – right behind us. Scoreless through 77 minutes, we finally break through when Martin Gibbons heads in a score off Lee Williamson’s corner kick. We battle to protect the lead, and eventually at 91 Matthew Jackson finishes the insurance goal. Lincoln 2, Brentford 0.
I feel like at the very least, we are probably demonstrating that we are not a relegation target. We ought to rack up enough league points to keep us out of that morass – even should we suffer a bad run down the road. The big question is: are we just a mid-table squad who happen to be doing fairly well now? Or are we possibly better than that?
At Wigan (we hate Wigan) we play to a tight scoreless draw at the half. It’s still scoreless after 89 minutes, when we get a breakaway chance on a counter attack. Park, in his first game back after playing internationally, pushes forward, dishes to Matthew Jackson, and we lead 1-0. As Wigan try to rally, we get them again, this time Jackson setting up Williamson, and that wraps it. Lincoln 2, Wigan 0.
We get another note of encouragement from our delighted chairman, Martin Knowles.
Martin Gibbons, our stalwart defenseman, is the next to be injure – he will miss a couple of weeks. In the past, this has meant that the whole team fell apart – we’ll try to avoid that this go-round.
Well, that wraps up September – and what’s not tot like. We are riddled with an unseemly list of injuries, but overall our play has still been up to par. My best guess is that we won’t be able to gain a serious position, but might be good enough to be mid-table, and perhaps in the running for a while.
QuikSand
07-25-2003, 10:49 AM
October 2004
Through a couple months of the season, it’s time to check the status of our squad. We’ve been beset by injuries all over the place – and so we have an interesting mix of players getting playing time.
Keepers Age Wage Value Top Skills App Con AvgR
Darren Baines 28 £300 £24K Rushing Out,Eccentricity 5 6 7.19
Steve Howarth 19 £325 £24K Determ,Stamina,Bravery,Agility 4 2 7.75
Alan Ryan 24 £550 £24K Kicking,Comm,OneonOnes 0 0 ---
Defenders Age Wage Value Top Skills App G A MoM AvgR
Martin Gibbons 24 £900 £130K Decisions,Determ,Stamina 8 1 0 2 7.62
Michael Kelly 21 £1.0K £24K Stamina,Finishing,Aggression 9 0 1 0 7.00
David Francis 22 £1.1K £24K WorkRate,Determ,Aggression 8 0 0 0 7.12
Andy Davies 22 £375 £24K Heading,Bravery,Marking,Jumping 1 0 0 0 7.00
Andrew Cross 24 £160 £24K Heading,Jumping,Strength 2 0 0 0 7.50
Ryan Hughes 17 £ 75 Heading,Creativity,Positioning 2 0 0 0 7.00
Andy Hughes 21 £300 £24K Determ,Teamwork,WorkRate 0 0 0 0 ---
Ian Cook 19 £ 80 £24K Workrate,Determ,LongThrows,Strength 4(2) 0 2 0 6.83
Chris Richards 21 £375 £24K Stamina,Teamwork,Flair,Strength 2(1) 0 0 0 5.33
Midfielders Age Wage Value Top Skills App G A MoM AvgR
Richard Lewis 22 £1.0K £30K Dribbling,Acceleration,Pace 8 2 0 0 7.25
Jason Wilson 21 £950 £40K WorkRate,Determ,Aggression,Infl 8 0 1 0 7.00
Kyung-Tae Park 23 Loaned In Aggression,Acceleration,WorkRate 6 2 2 1 7.16
Volodymyr Fedorov 20 £1.7K £130K Bravery,Crossing,WorkRate,Creativity 6 0 1 0 6.50
Andy Allen 19 £ 90 £24K Anticipation,Stamina,WorkRate 2(2) 1 1 0 7.00
Craig Russell 17 £ 90 Dribbing,Heading,Crossing,Teamwork 2(2) 0 0 0 6.25
Gary Webb 25 £1.0K £24K Passing,Technique,Stamina,Flair 0 0 0 0 ---
Lee Harris 17 £ 85 WorkRate,Marking,Stamina,Balance 0 0 0 0 ---
Paul Warner 17 £ 80 £24K Passing,Heading,Technique,Aggression 0 0 0 0 ---
Adam Newman 19 £ 80 £24K WorkRate,Determ,Aggression,OffBall 0 0 0 0 ---
Mark Oakes 27 £400 £24K Determination,LongThrows,Bravery 0 0 0 0 ---
Forwards Age Wage Value Top Skills App G A MoM AvgR
Lee Williamson 24 £475 £40K WashingUp,Jumping,Bravery,SetPieces 9 5 6 2 7.55
Alan Jones 19 £750 £16K Creativity,Agility,Balance,Infl 7 1 1 0 7.42
Matthew Jackson 16 £350 Stamina,Aggression,Bravery,Finishing 3 4 1 0 8.00
Chris Morgan 29 £500 £16K Determ,OffTheBall,Agility,WorkRate 1 1 0 0 7.00
Jamie Barnes 22 £600 MtM Pace,Crossing,Positioning,Finishing 0(1) 0 0 0 ---
John Garner 17 £110 £24K Strength,Stamina,Bravery,Flair 0 0 0 0 ---
It’s still early in the season, so it’s tough to reach any real conclusions. Over time, once we settle in, we’ll spread around the playing time more. Right now, I’m mostly playing my best healthy players every match.
At the moment, we are in 7th place on the league table – but are a match short of our rivals. So, we might be a threat for a playoff spot were the season to end now. Millwall look to be the team to beat – as predicted early on, I believe. They have only conceded one goal in their first 9 matches. Ouch!
At Rushden, Park lets go an early long shot that has a real banana arc on it – he’s the first guy in our uniform who can do that. It misses wide – but looked cool. We gain an early led, but Rushden strike for two before the half to get ahead, then run away with it. When Lewis and Jackson strike in the early second half, we are back alive, down only 4-3. But that’s as close as we can get. Rushden 4, Lincoln 3.
We get Gary Webb back from injury – and we will use him as a sub a few times to get him up to speed. My thinking is that we’ll try to use him in the attacking midfield spot, cycling with Richard Lewis. He may also get time in with Vlod on the right midfield spot. I’m pleased with Vlod overall, though he may not turn out to be a huge impact player. (He is a little bit stodgy)
We are at Plymouth, and are hoping to recover from our defensive failure last match. After Richard Lewis misses on an easy chance, Park sets up Matthew Jackson for the 17th minute lead. We hold that lead until 73, when Plymouth strike to even it up. Richard Lewis again misses on an easy chance, and after 82 minutes, they score again to go up 2-1. We let this one get away, with another disappointing effort on defense. Plymouth 2, Lincoln 1.
We need to get our defending squad back healthy, as we are just disorganized and vulnerable out there right now. Fortunately, Andy Davies is back in training – that should help, definitely. He needs training and fitness, but should be playable fairly soon.
And more importantly, it looks like Martin gibbons can return for our next match – he’s our captain and defensive centerpiece, and we need him badly.
I also am putting Gary Webb into the starting lineup t the right side – we need him. Young Craig Russell has been trying his best, but is really not ready to start at this level – I need more experience. Webb will just have to struggle to get back into game shape.
We are at home for Oldham, and really hope that Martin Gibbons’ return will help us regain our defensive form. Lee Williamson gets one in after only 9 minutes, and we have a lead to protect now. Matthew Jackson tacks on another goal, then park sends in a rocket-- and we are up 3-0 at the break. Back in good form, it seems. Michael Kelly surprises everyone with a deep shot, his first of the season. Lincoln 4, Oldham 0.
We host Peterborough, looking to stay in as god form as our last home match. We get ahead in the first half after a crowded corner kick leads to a bounced-in ball off a Boro player. At 67, Lee Williamson send up a perfect assist for Jackson, who nails it home. Jackson tacks on another, and narrowly misses his hat trick in the mighty win. Lincoln 3, Peterorough 0.
Our next match is in the Vans Trophy – at Boston United. Our chairman hates Boston, so this is a bigger deal than we might have imagined originally. Boston Utd gets ahead right away, getting a weak shot past Alan Ryan in the first minute. They net another after 6 minutes – and are rolling right away. We completely fall apart defensively, and Ryan is dreadfully bad in goal. We’re down 4—after 25 minutes, and they coast home from there. Boston Utd 4, Lincoln 0.
Keeper Alan Ryan is immediately on the transfer list, and I place him up for offer – I’m ready to let him go right now. Howarth has stepped up to rival for the starting job, and Ryan has definitely slipped to #3 at best.
We are back in league play, and face Hull at The Circle. Richard Lewis gets a chance, but again fails to convert – that’s getting troublesome. He gets redemption on a feed from Park, and we lead 1-0 at the half. Our defense plays well, and we hold on to win with that margin. Lincoln 1, Hull 0.
Defender David Francis is the latest injury case – he will miss a couple of months with a thigh strain. I’m wondering – did we do something wrong to bring on all these injuries?
Midfielder Andy Allen is apparently unhappy with his contract, and wants to talk about a new deal. Well, he has nothing else to do while he nurses his injuries, I guess. I think he has played well enough to merit a real contract – so I offer him a rotation deal. He signs the deal – and he have him locked up through 2007.
Anrhydeddu
07-25-2003, 11:10 AM
Park lets go an early long shot that has a real banana arc on it – he’s the first guy in our uniform who can do that. It misses wide – but looked cool.
How can you tell with a top-down, 2D view?
QuikSand
07-25-2003, 12:05 PM
Originally posted by Anrhydeddu
How can you tell with a top-down, 2D view?
The banana arc is "side to side" - his trajectory of the shot probably veered about 15 degrees over the course of 30 yards... or over the course of an inch and a half on my monitor, take your pick.
There was a defender between the shooter and the goal, so he shot to the left of the defender, with a curve toward the goal - it missed by about a ball width or so, I'd hazard.
The banana shots do look pretty cool on screen. :D
QuikSand
07-25-2003, 12:59 PM
November 2004
The Lincoln board are delighted with your performance as manager.
Kyeugn-Tae Park will be out for about two weeks with a damaged shoulder.
Ouch – the injury bug continues to bite hard. We will reluctantly drop Lee Williamson to play the left wing, and will get Alan Jones back into the lineup at forward.
We host Wimbledon, another top club, currently just ahead of us in 3rd place. They score right away to gain the 1-0 advantage – in the first minute. Matthew Jackson does a lot of work to get us back even after 13 minutes – might this be another shootout? Both sides cool off, and it remains 1-1 through the first half. Matthew Jackson takes a long forward pass from defenseman Ryan Hughes, and at 64 we take the lead. A minute later, Jackson seals his hat trick with another dandy – and we seem in control. In add-on time, Jackson taps in another with a header, and seals the impressive win and MOM award. Lincoln 4, Wimbledon 1. Matthew Jackson’s 4 goals are a club record.
Only a few days later, we are home to Wycombe, and will need to reshuffle some of our lineup to remain fresh. Chris Morgan, off the bench for a rare start, gets up ahead after 25 minutes finishing off a feed from Lee Williamson. But Wycombe pull even shortly afterwards. Morgan sets up Alan Jones for a nice goal, and we lead 2-1 at the half – but Lee Williamson ha come off injured. Paul Harper makes a great forward play from the right side to set up another goal for Jones, and we pull ahead 3-1. A late tally from Lewis gives us our final margin. Lincoln 4, Wycombe 1. Martin Gibbons, back into his best form is awarded the MOM for centering a tough defensive effort.
We face Sheffield Wednesday – who are in 5th place to our 3rd. A pretty big league match this early in the season. Jason Wilson is injured right away – and our midfield looks a mess already. After a failed pass from our defenders, a Sheff attacker steals and strikes for the early lead – demerit to Andy Davies. Our offense is anemic all game, and we never are in contention – they put it away easily, as that early advantage let them lock it up. Sheff Wed 2, Lincoln 0.
The good news is that it looks like both Park and Fedorov will be ready to go for our next match – meaning our first team offense ought to be close to intact.
Our first FA Cup match is slated against Northwich Vics – a conference club whom we faced in a friendly earlier in the season. I have not quite our first team in there – we’ll use this to get some play for a few reserves, and to get a few guys back into game shape. Gary Webb delivers to Alan Jones for a nice goal to give us a lead early on. They draw even at 58, and we need to make an adjustment or two. We get ahead at 67, as Richard Lewis subs in and finishes a corner kick. Lincoln 2, Northwich Vics 1 – Lincoln advances.
We now have a three-match stretch over only five days – playing league matches on Saturday, Monday, and Wednesday. With so many injuries, we are bound to be exhausted for the final match at Colchester. Then, we have another match only three days after that. This will be a real test of our depth – which I fear we will not pass.
I decide to call up 19 y/o keeper James Anderson, and we’ll use this trying stretch to get him some playing time. I also call up young defender Martin Hill – as my defensive squad is still riddled with injuries, and we will need somebody to play a few spots.
We first face Chesterfield, playing at home at Sincil Bank. Chesterfield notch a nice counter attack goal to lead early, and put us onto our heels right away. Alan Jones is wide with a penalty kick, and we go into the half down a goal. We yield an embarassing breakaway in the closing minutes, and fumble this match away to start the rough spot. Chestertown 2, Lincoln 0.
Next up, unfortunately, is Millwall – the dominant club in Second Division, it seems. Their defense is seemingly impenetrable, and we will have a sketchy group in to face them. We do get Volodymyr Fedorov back, though – and we’ll need him to try to help out the offense a bit against the stingy Millwall defense. We are under pressure early, but it takes until 38 minutes before they get a great long shot by us, to take the lead. True to their usual form, Millwall takes their lead, and east the rest of the clock with tough defense. Millwall 1, Lincoln 0.
That ends November, but we’re just in the middle of a tough run of matches – and so far, tough results.
GoldenEagle
07-25-2003, 01:02 PM
QS, are you using the mind compression tool to do your printing? If so, how are you copying and pasting? If not, can you tell me what tool you do use.
QuikSand
07-25-2003, 01:17 PM
I am typing all my stuff up by hand. The MC utility is not suited to the things that I want to do, so I'm doing it all manually - taking a lot more time than in the previous versions of this very game. Thus, some of the data is bound to be dated - like age and salary stuff, which I only update sporadically. It's just too much of a hassle to attend to - but I feel the dynasty thread needs that kind of data to keep cohesive. *sigh*
GoldenEagle
07-25-2003, 01:27 PM
Is there a type of program that you use to keep everything aligned neatly?
QuikSand
07-25-2003, 03:04 PM
Originally posted by GoldenEagle
Is there a type of program that you use to keep everything aligned neatly?
I just use MS Word, employing an even-spaced font (Courier), and then use the code-in-brackets tag so it displays evenly on the forum. Nothing fancy, really.
Celeval
07-25-2003, 03:42 PM
QS -
I'd suggest taking a look at MCM4R - not the greatest thing in the world, but it does help with roster printing (if not standings, etc.).
Name Club Wage AppearanceGoal Assist Clean sheEnd dateSquad status
Jaime Moreno MetroStars £ 3200 480 194 109 0 12/31/20Indispensible
Marco Vélez MetroStars £ 298 0 0 0 0 12/4/200First team
Joseph Addo MetroStars £ 1500 225 0 0 0 12/20/20Backup
Mark Lisi MetroStars £ 600 90 0 30 0 12/15/20Squad rotation
Craig Ziadie MetroStars £ 550 250 0 0 0 12/21/20Backup
Kenny Arena MetroStars £ 242 100 0 10 0 12/6/200Squad rotation
Jeff Moore MetroStars £ 275 125 0 12 0 12/10/20First team
Ricardo Clark MetroStars £ 726 300 0 30 0 12/8/200Indispensible
Eddie Gaven MetroStars £ 320 102 20 10 0 1/2/1900Backup
Mike Magee MetroStars £ 390 125 25 12 0 12/11/20First team
Tim Glowienka MetroStars £ 222 92 0 0 0 12/8/200Backup
Jacob LeBlanc MetroStars £ 242 100 0 10 0 12/20/20Backup
Tim Regan MetroStars £ 242 100 0 0 0 12/22/20Backup
Paul Grafer MetroStars £ 350 52 0 0 17 2/1/2004Backup
Steve Jolley MetroStars £ 1400 210 0 0 0 12/31/20First team
Eddie Pope MetroStars £ 3200 480 0 0 0 12/31/20Indispensible
Richie Williams MetroStars £ 1000 150 0 50 0 12/31/20Backup
Clint Mathis MetroStars £ 2400 360 228 120 0 12/31/20Squad rotation
Tim Howard MetroStars £ 3680 1600 0 0 160 12/31/20Indispensible
Edited to avoid dola:
Check out http://www.mindcompression.com/ for the utility. It'll export to html, text, csv; although it does give more information than I'd like to see on some reports (ability, hidden attributes, etc).
Karim
07-25-2003, 04:31 PM
You're definitely a better manager than me in getting playing time to everyone. I follow the Mike Keenan philosophy and play my "favourites" until they drop (barring injuries of course).
A couple questions:
1) Do you take morale into consideration when choosing your starting 11?
2) What is Millwall doing on defense? Is it the formation, the defenders themselves, superior goalkeeping, is the entire team committed to defense or all of the above? Once again, defense wins...
QuikSand
07-26-2003, 12:01 AM
Thanks, Celeval - but I think that's the utility that I already have - perhas I don't have the mosr recelty updated version? I don't think mine will make a printout that looks like yours from above.
I'll try to check it out a little more. Thanks for the tip - that isn't too bad.
QuikSand
07-28-2003, 10:31 AM
December 2004
Hopefully, this current tough run will come to a close – as our one-impressive league position has taken quite a blow of late. Here’s the top of the league table as of now:
W D L GF GA Pts
Millwall 14 2 2 51 8 44
Rushden 12 0 6 38 28 36
- - - (auto promotion line) - - -
Sheff Wed 11 2 4 30 14 35
Barnsley 10 3 5 35 26 33
Rotherham 10 2 7 27 29 32
Lincoln 10 1 7 36 19 31
- - - (promotion playoff line) - - -
Brentford 9 4 5 33 16 31
Wimbledon 10 1 6 36 20 31
Chesterfield 9 4 4 26 14 31
As you can see, it’s very tight near the top. We’ve lost three league matches in a row to drop down into the tier competing for the playoff spots – until then, we had been right in the mix with Rushden for the second position. Millwall looks unstoppable, though.
We’re at Colchester, filing a mixed lineup, trying to stay healthy but solid. It’s scoreless through the first half, but Matthew Jacson gets us ahead with a nice strike early in the second half. When Chris Morgain sails in a crossing kick for Matthew to finish off, we lead 2-0 and feel like we’re going to get our much-needed win here. Colchester end up seeing two men sent off, and we are able to protect our lead against their narrowed squad. Lincoln 2, Colchester 0. Martin Hill, our young defender, earns MOM honors in his debut with a solid all-around effort. That’s awfully encouraging.
Now, with both Park and Williamson dinged up, we have literally nobody who technically plays the left side midfield. Well, nobody save Simon Williams, who has pretty well worked his way totally out of our plans.
With Lee Harris slotted on the left side, we head home to face Northampton. After this we get a much-needed week’s rest. We get goal after a complicated setup series, finished off by our red-hot striker Matthew Jackson. We drop back to play defensively, and to conserve energy. Jackson comes off injured (ack!) and our defense needs to keep this one up. We manage to fend them off, with young Martin Hill lending another MOM performance. Lincoln 1, Northampton 0.
Matthew Jackson suffered a leg injury – but will only miss about a week.
Well, it’s December – and that means time to think about Bosman transfers, seeking players who could come over after this season ends. I trawl around, looking for some potential additions – and also need to pursue new deals with some of our own players.
Our first re-signing is with Lee Williamson (can’t you tell he is my favorite player) – who inks a new deal through 2007. Defender Michael Kelly also takes a new deal, keeping him settled on the right side of our defense – he is solid, but hasn’t been the star I had hoped for there. And keeper Steve Howarth accepts a pretty modest offer, to my surprise. Regardless, those were probably the most important extensions of current players for us.
We’re back on the pitch, hosting Scunthorpe in the FA Cup. We are drawn at 1-1 into the second half, when Martin Gibbons – recognizing that the Scunthorpe keeper had ventured forward a bit, lofts a 70-yard shot from behind the middle line, which goes sailing right into the goal. Amazing! We have this one well in hand during the second half, and sail to a nice win. Lincoln 3, Scunthorpe 1 – Lincoln advances.
Back in league action, we face Rotherham at home. Fedorov scores on a OK in the first half, and that lead holds up through the late stages. We face some pressure from the Rotherham attack, but eventually nail down the narrow win. Lincoln 1, Rotherham 0.
We’re at Notts County next, visiting lovely Meadow Lane. Their winger makes a great move to set up the first goal, and give them the lead. But park returns the favor, pitching in to Jones for the evening tally, and just before the half he throws one forward for Morgan to send home. We end up with a solid win, and Park predictably gets the MOM honors. Lincoln 3, Notts Co 1.
Park’s success this season is certainly a little bittersweet. It would be very nice to have him on the actual roster, so we could plan around him. However, even knowing he won’t be here long term, it is nice to have some high quality performance from that position, and I certainly feel that’s playing a role in our league success thus far.
Park’s contract is up in June, and I put in a Bosman offer for him. My assistant manager says he’s not a realistic target for us, but it’s worth the effort.
We have a big match at Port Vale, and Park is brought off with an early injury – terrible news. Fedorov is next off the pitch with an injury, and we are reshuffled and reeling. We do get to the half, though, without breaking the scoreless tie. John Garner sends home the go-ahead goal after 47, and Alan Jones nails a PK at 63 to give us an improbable 2-0 lead. Lincoln 2, Port Vale 0. Huge road victory, but we lose Fedorov for two weeks.
We conclude our first Bosman deal, but it’s a minor one. Danny Douglas is a 34 year old veteran midfielder, who has done well in the conference with Farnborough. I offer him a rotation deal, looking to lend some leadership to the squad full of youngsters. His enthusiasm to accept suggests to me that he may be washed up already.
Kyung-Tae Park’s agent tells us to get bent – there’s no way he’ll be playing for us down the road. Looks like this is a one and out deal.
We head home to Sincil Bank, to host Tranmere Rovers. They beat us out for the league title last year in Third Division, but have not fared so well this season, sitting in 16th position on the table (but they have played better of late). Williamsosn, back in at forward, sets up Alan Jones for a nice goal. We take firm control, and run off to a solid win without much problem. Lincoln 3, Tranmere 0. This gives us a new record – seven wins in a row.
It’s the end of December, and we have yet to make a potential impact signing of any player for next season. It looks like once again our main need will be in the midfield, especially at the left side. But so far, I have had some 20 offers spurned, with little hope to get anywhere.
QuikSand
07-28-2003, 10:33 AM
Originally posted by Karim
A couple questions:
1) Do you take morale into consideration when choosing your starting 11?
2) What is Millwall doing on defense? Is it the formation, the defenders themselves, superior goalkeeping, is the entire team committed to defense or all of the above? Once again, defense wins...
Morale is my second consideration after talent in picking my starters. If my regular starter is off, I look for a reserve with high morale.
I can't explain Millwall's rock solid defense - they seem to have good players, but not really standouts. They all have high ratings - but they are winning nearly all theiur matches, so that's kinda cyclical. I can't find teh root cause of it all - but it is pretty cool to see a team that really stands out in form.
Godzilla Blitz
07-28-2003, 10:39 AM
All these inuries remind me of the first release of TCY.
Great job this month!
After reeling off all those victories, how do you stand in the table now?
Anrhydeddu
07-28-2003, 11:15 AM
Question about Cup matches. Why would there be non-league games that does not mean anything in the standings and add the risk of more injuries or slow down healings?
Originally posted by Anrhydeddu
Question about Cup matches. Why would there be non-league games that does not mean anything in the standings and add the risk of more injuries or slow down healings?
Money and prestige. From my understanding, in real life many fans would rather their club win some of the more prestigious cups than win the league. In the game, many of the cups have cash payouts every time you advance a round. Early in the game this can really help out if you get on a run and go several rounds into one of the cups.
Anrhydeddu
07-28-2003, 11:45 AM
QS wrote very little about finances (except the limitations of transfer money) so I wonder if the extra revenues make a difference? Also, in the game, can you decline to participate if you want to reduce the risk of more injuries?
would rather their club win some of the more prestigious cups than win the league
That's silly. Why bother with leagues then?
condors
07-28-2003, 11:54 AM
millwall- may use a 5-4-1 when they have a lead and maintain possesion without bringing men forward its a tactic the computer tends to use when it gets a lead brings a midfielder to the backline and pulls a striker to the midfield could lead to better ratings for the defenders, may be something to check out if they get a lead next time you play them (look for millwall is changing tactics message)
I think QS mentions somewhere along the lines of getting 20-30K pounds for a Cup victory early on. That kind of money can make a big difference for a small club. I don't think you can decline to participate, but you can play backups and basically lose in round 1 without risking any starters.
I had a cousin (from England so I consider him an expert :D) tell me once that the leagues were only slightly more important than a "slotting system". The higher the league you're in, the more important the Cup you will be invited to. While that's very important, the Cups are what it's all centered around. At least, that's the way I understood what he was saying. He speaks with a heavy accent and uses all the "English terms" that I seldom understand exactly what he's saying. ;)
QuikSand
07-28-2003, 12:04 PM
I think I have received 20K for a first round win in the FA Cup, and 30K for a second round win. I'm sure it goes up from there, but I haven;t goten that far. Plus, there is good attendance in cup matches - so they bring in good gate receipts if you play at home.
I basically try to play my starters in the cup matches- but I'm sure you cvan argue it either way. Anhrydeddu, it's just different - it doesn't make it wrong. I actually like the idea of multiple overlapping competitions, where each participant might have its own priorities abouut what matters most.
QuikSand
07-28-2003, 12:06 PM
Originally posted by Bee
After reeling off all those victories, how do you stand in the table now?
As of the end of December, we stood in 2nd place, just behind mighty Millwall (but down by 10 points). We were 2 points ahead of the third place club.
One more thing about the Cups in CM. I think doing well in the Cups will help you keep your job if you don't do as well in the league as expected.
Anrhydeddu
07-28-2003, 12:10 PM
QS, it's just that I perceive you viewing Cup matches as simply exhibition games while focusing on league play. I understand now how in real life, it can be a big deal (even though I have a bias in that league play offers a truer test of comparative ability as oppose to lucky out in a tournament draw).
QuikSand
07-28-2003, 12:32 PM
Not an unfair perspective... I'm basically taking the cops seriously once we start to do well. If a mixed batch of players can get a couple of wins, then I start to use better squads and try to keep going.
QuikSand
07-29-2003, 09:04 AM
January 2005
Lincoln City’s Matthew Jackson has won the English Second Division Young Player of the Month award.
He’s a wintertime player – his three awards so far came in December, January, and December.
Here’s an update of our players’ status thus far this season:
Keepers Age Wage Value Top Skills App Con AvgR
Darren Baines 28 £300 £24K Rushing Out,Eccentricity 11 11 7.09
Steve Howarth 19 £325 £24K Determ,Stamina,Bravery,Agility 14(1) 10 7.33
Alan Ryan 24 £550 £24K Kicking,Comm,OneonOnes 1 4 6.00
Defenders Age Wage Value Top Skills App G A MoM AvgR
Martin Gibbons 24 £900 £130K Decisions,Determ,Stamina 25 2 0 4 7.48
Michael Kelly 21 £1.0K £24K Stamina,Finishing,Aggression 28 1 2 0 7.03
David Francis 22 £1.1K £24K WorkRate,Determ,Aggression 13 0 1 0 7.00
Andy Davies 22 £375 £24K Heading,Bravery,Marking,Jumping 8(3) 0 0 1 7.27
Andrew Cross 24 £160 £24K Heading,Jumping,Strength 11(3) 0 0 0 7.21
Ryan Hughes 17 £ 75 Heading,Creativity,Positioning 16 0 1 0 7.00
Ian Cook 19 £ 80 £24K Workrate,Determ,LongThrows,Strength 6(2) 0 2 0 6.75
Martin Hill 17 £ 80 £24K Strength,Pace,Jumping,Acceleration 2 0 0 2 8.00
Chris Richards 21 £375 £24K Stamina,Teamwork,Flair,Strength 0(1) 0 0 0 ---
Andy Hughes 21 £300 £24K Determ,Teamwork,WorkRate 0 0 0 0 ---
Midfielders Age Wage Value Top Skills App G A MoM AvgR
Richard Lewis 22 £1.0K £30K Dribbling,Acceleration,Pace 22(2) 9 3 0 7.54
Jason Wilson 21 £950 £40K WorkRate,Determ,Aggression,Infl 25 0 3 1 7.48
Kyung-Tae Park 23 Loaned In Aggression,Acceleration,WorkRate 19 4 8 2 7.36
Volodymyr Fedorov 20 £1.7K £130K Bravery,Crossing,WorkRate,Creativity 13 1 1 0 6.53
Andy Allen 19 £ 90 £24K Anticipation,Stamina,WorkRate 2(2) 1 1 0 7.00
Craig Russell 17 £ 90 Dribbing,Heading,Crossing,Teamwork 4(3) 0 0 0 6.14
Gary Webb 25 £1.0K £24K Passing,Technique,Stamina,Flair 9(3) 0 3 0 6.91
Lee Harris 17 £ 85 WorkRate,Marking,Stamina,Balance 1(1) 0 0 0 7.00
Paul Warner 17 £ 80 £24K Passing,Heading,Technique,Aggression 1(2) 0 0 0 6.66
Adam Newman 19 £ 80 £24K WorkRate,Determ,Aggression,OffBall 0(1) 0 0 0 ---
Mark Oakes 27 £400 £24K Determination,LongThrows,Bravery 0 0 0 0 ---
Forwards Age Wage Value Top Skills App G A MoM AvgR
Lee Williamson 24 £475 £140K WashingUp,Jumping,Bravery,SetPieces 20 6 12 4 7.50
Alan Jones 19 £750 £55K Creativity,Agility,Balance,Infl 19 8 4 2 7.36
Matthew Jackson 16 £350 Stamina,Aggression,Bravery,Finishing 14 17 1 3 7.92
Chris Morgan 29 £500 £24K Determ,OffTheBall,Agility,WorkRate 8 3 3 0 7.12
John Garner 17 £110 £24K Strength,Stamina,Bravery,Flair 0(7) 1 1 0 6.85
Jamie Barnes 22 £600 MtM Pace,Crossing,Positioning,Finishing 1(1) 0 0 0 6.00
Martin Gibbons is missing this game due to yellow cards, which always makes me nervous. But we have the exciting Martin Hill in – and that lends some intrigue. We’re at Cheltenham, who get ahead 1-0 after 23 minutes of good play. We are in trouble here, with our team looking its usual discombobulated self without Martin Gibbons. Park sets up Morgan for a leveling goal, though, and we are getting it together. However, they get ahead 3-1 by the half, and we look to be on our heels. Our run of wins comes to an ugly end here, as we get it handed to us pretty well. Cheltenham 5, Lincoln 1.
At Cambridge, we don our reds again and hope to recover from that disgrace. It’s very even through the first half, but I fee we’re letting this one slip away, too. At 68, Cambridge finally finishes off a chance and nets the lead. They shut down, drop back, and preserve the win. Cambridge 1, Lincoln 0.
For the FA Cup, we have mostly our first team in to face Charlton, a top first division side. We do well to keep it scoreless through the half, even as they got one open chance that sailed just wide. They get in a curved shot after 65 minutes, and this one seems to be getting away from us. They handle us for the slight score, but the win was pretty solid. Charlton 1, Lincoln 0 – Lincoln eliminated. We set records for attendance and handle for the match, though.
We have a real injury problem at forward/striker, where currently was have Matthew Jackson, Alan Jones, and now Chris Morgan out with injuries. We’ll use Lee Williamson, Jamie Barnes, and young John Garner as our rotation – but are perilously thin now.
We are at Barnsley, and need a win to stave off a real slide in team spirit. This looks like trouble, as we are outplayed badly early – and it’s just a matter of time until this translates to points. Barnsley get ahead at 31, and that’s all they need for the win. Barnsley 1, Lincoln 0. We are in some trouble, as we have now dropped to 7th place – out of the playoff realm, even. That was quick – we were just in 2nd place a couple of weeks ago.
We are home to Strockport, desperately needing a win. We get the lead with a great effort by Lee Williamson, hustling up to send one in while in traffic. We drop back, aim to protect the lead, and our defense comes through. Lincoln 1, Stockport 0. Needed that.
We host Blackpool, who are working their way up, but only in 17th place right now. Blackpol gain a 2-0 lead by 31 minutes, and we look terrible again. We stop the bleeding, and Garner’s goal at 82 gives us some hope. However, that’s all we get – back within one. Blackpool 2, Lincoln 1.
We travel to Brentford, and I sub out a few starters to try to go with a higher morale squad. It takes until 70 minutes, but they get ahead of us, and we just look so sluggish that I think it’s over. But the goal is waved off, and we have hope. With basically no offensive threat, we are very lucky to get a draw here, Lincoln 0, Brentford 0.
Well, it’s about time I laid this out. What’s the deal with Fedorov? His skills seem to be better than those of just about anyone on the team, but his on-field performance is downright weak. I can see that he is stodgy and slow – in this game is that something so powerful that it potentially overrides everything else? (He has “pace” of 1, FWIW) Seems that if you’re playing with a realistic model, you can have all the dribbling, passing, and physical skills in the world – but if you can’t get to the ball before the other guy does, it doesn’t matter. I wonder—but now it’s starting to make sense why a supposedly £3M player might be willing to sign with a Third Division side.
Bristol Rovers have responded to one of my offers – their 30 y/o versatile midfielder Dave Walker is available, but for a price of £75,000. I’m looking for midfield help for sure – and Walker can play anywhere – very valuable. I agree to their demands, and will hope to work out a new deal with him immediately. The negotiatiosn start off poorly, as he wants a good deal more than I start out with. I suspect we’re 50/50 to get something done here.
A very talented young striker George Fox is let go by Newcastle, and we decide to move quickly to make him an offer. We have been thin at striker, and the 19 y/o Fox could make a huge addition, I think. We quickly have company from many other clubs, though – I don’t know if our offer will be best. After a few days, George Fox agrees terms with Walsall – we apparently didn’t offer quite enough.
At Oldham, we’d love to get some offensive flash restored. John Garner botches two good first half chances, and when Oldham finally break through at 67, it’s for a 1-0 lead. They top it off right at the end, and our attack is barely noticed. Oldham 2, Lincoln 0.
Dave Walker gets back to us – forget about it. Our last offer wasn’t good enough, and he walks away from our transfer. It was pushing the limits of affordability for us anyway, but he would have made a pretty good addition, I think.
Anrhydeddu
07-29-2003, 09:17 AM
Do you mean that you have been typing out each of the player's status code block by hand?
RPI-Fan
07-29-2003, 09:20 AM
Damn, was so proud of myself for figuring out what was wrong with your team.
15 minutes after you did.;) (Federov, FTR)
(and I know he's not the only problem, but he isn't helping)
~rpi-fan
From my experience, Pace is important for everyone with the possible exception of the keeper. Watching the games, you can just see some guys move faster than others. As you have said if the guy can't get to the ball it doesn't matter how much skill he has. Pace isn't the only thing that matters, but if your guy has a Pace of 1 he moves like a pregnant yak.
condors
07-29-2003, 10:20 AM
with a pace of 1 you may want to try him wide and up with the forwards since he has good crossing and creativity so he should at least get some assists and create something, with older fading players if you have an arrow on him take that off as it requires more running on their part
QuikSand
07-29-2003, 02:43 PM
Originally posted by Anrhydeddu
Do you mean that you have been typing out each of the player's status code block by hand?
Actually, I paste the previous update, then go in and edit in the new data. Saves a bit of time, but it is still a pain.
Anrhydeddu
07-29-2003, 02:48 PM
Did anyone ever come up with a good reason why we lost the ability to export formatted text in CM4 and OOTP5?
QuikSand
07-29-2003, 03:05 PM
February 2005
Well, after a very difficult month of January, the league table is very different for us:
W D L GF GA Pts
Millwall 24 2 3 79 12 74
Wimbledon 20 2 9 71 33 62
- - - (auto promotion line) - - -
Sheff Wed 19 4 8 57 27 61
Chesterfield 17 7 7 48 24 58
Rushden 18 3 10 60 47 57
Brentford 16 6 8 61 30 54
- - - (promotion playoff line) - - -
Cheltenham 17 3 11 73 50 54
Lincoln 17 2 12 51 31 53
Cambridge 15 6 10 50 36 51
So, we are now on the outside looking in – but still in the hunt for a playoff spot, with two-thirds of the season concluded. The most striking thing on the table to me remains the Millwall goals allowed – only 12 in 29 matches!
And a home matchup against Rushden is pretty big right now. Our team morale is awful – most guys are poor or very poor, and I don’t know how to combat this. In the early stages, we are playing fairly well, and controlling the ball a lot. However, after the half – we have five yellows and no goals. Jones finally tops off a chance with a header, and we get the lead at 68 minutes, and Park gets a long shot to follow that up. Our constant pressure finally pays off, as we withstand a late PK to take the important win. Lincoln 2, Rushden 1.
With that boost in overall morale, we try to go on with a battle against Wigan. We hate Wigan. After Williamson gets flipped on a breakaway, Gary Webb misses the OK, and we remain scoreless. But Williamson finishes off our next chance himself, and we lead after 34 minutes. Park adds two more in the early second half as we pull away from our hated rivals. Late in the match, we suffer some pressure, but handle it well, and preserve Baines’s clean sheet. Lincoln 4, Wigan 0. Maybe we are coming out of this funk.
We’re home to Plymouth, and get ahead early off a good effort by Richard Lewis. However, we slide, and let them gain the lead in the early second half. This one gets away from us, along with (I fear) our morale boost. Plymouth 3, Lincoln 1.
While my initial offer to midfielder Andy Harris didn’t get him to sign, the 19 y/o player doesn’t completely reject it out of hand, either. He wants a minimum release clause and a bit more money – but we might have a shot. He projects as a serious addition to our midfield, if we can land him away from Middlesbrough. However, he accepts a bid from Preston, and sets aside our increased offer. I have made advances to seemingly countless midfielders, with no luck so far.
Finally, though, we get a breakthrough, albeit probably a minor one. Paul Price will join us on a transfer from Wrexham, where he has been pretty effective as a left side midfielder. He accepts a modest contract as a youngster (he’s 19) and will join the rotation in our midfield immediately. If he pans out, this will have been a very worthwhile deal, for the £14,000 transfer fee.
And it seems the dam has broken, as we finally break through with another player I have been seeking for some time. Bulgarian forward Aleksandar Nikolov has agreed terms with us, after my third attempt. He’s a natural forward, and I think the best slot for him might be as our attacking central midfielder – but he could certainly rotate in the forward/striker slots as well. He’s very fast and very good off the ball – not a bad addition, I think. At 28, he’s not a developing player, but we will hope he can provide some additional offensive punch when he joins us. That is assuming he gets a work permit – which we have applied for. We’ll hear back in early march about that – and will have our fingers crossed.
With Park getting a needed rest, I slot Paul Price in on our left side, and we’ll give him a trial by fire. We are at Peterborough, who gain an early edge with a weird header. Our defense plays well, but we again lack any offensive punch, and fail to draw even. Peterborough 1, Lincoln 0.
After some real strain, we have inked a new deal with young striker Matthew Jackson. He has been out injured for a while, but we recognize his importance to the squad, and have now secured him through 2008. He has 17 goals in 14 appearances this season – very impressive. He should resume training in another week or so, and be ready to play by the first of March, I’d guess. We need him, clearly.
We are home to Hull, and look sharp early – but then fall behind on a nicely set up goal by Hull’s two forwards. To our relief, it’s called back – and we go to the half scoreless. At 55, Williamson sets up Lewis for a great score, and we finally lead. We make this one hold up throughout, with a solid defensive effort. Lincoln 1, Hull 0.
In our next match, we are at Wycombe, and I have pressed midfielder Volodymyr Fedorov forward a bit – trying to send him down into the wing. It might weaken our defense a bit, but we need to do something with him. Chris Morgan scores off a nice counter attack, and we lead 1-0 at the half. Wycombe strikes right after the break to even it up. Abdy Allen gets us ahead off a free kick, and we try to hold that lead. I have pulled Fedorov for Gary Webb, who drives for a shot, but misses just wide. However, we manage to hold on for the win, with defender Andrew Cross gaining MOM for the second straight time. Lincoln 2, Wycombe 1.
In the FA Cup finals, Millwall take Man Utd all the way down to the wire, with mighty U winning only 1-0. The headlines blare about the resolute Second Division club – what a showing!
I approach a young Irish midfielder Alan Ryan, currently playing for Swansea, on loan from Tottenham. There seems to be a lot to like (though he is stodgy, a la Fedorov) – I put in an offer to bring him aboard starting next season after his Spurs contract ends.
Anrhydeddu
07-29-2003, 03:40 PM
Are the games against Hull, Wycombe and Wigan considered league games? I don't see them in the standings or are just printing part of it?
QuikSand
07-29-2003, 03:52 PM
Originally posted by Anrhydeddu
Are the games against Hull, Wycombe and Wigan considered league games? I don't see them in the standings or are just printing part of it?
I'm only printing the top handful of teams in the league - there are 24 in total. My fingers thank me for the abbreviation... and I hope you can forgive the abridgement. (If you look closely, you'll see there aren't anough losses to match up to the wins among the teams I'm showing - this is just the upper tier)
Anrhydeddu
07-29-2003, 04:11 PM
Thanks, that makes sense. I've wondered that which led me to believe that there are other games counting in the standings (knowing now the role of Cup matches).
Karim
07-29-2003, 04:53 PM
When you said Fedorov was slow, I figured a pace of 6 or 8. His technical skills must be really high for you to consider him.
In my CM4 careers thus far, every outfield player regardless of position has to have a rating of 10 in each of the following categories:
Strength, Stamina, Pace, Bravery, Determination, Team Work, Work Rate
I might make an exception for a youngster at 16 or 17 if he's a 9 in Stamina or Strength, because that can improve with training.
It's great how there are literally infinite strategies to achieve success...
QuikSand
07-29-2003, 07:21 PM
I haven't had the opportuniity to be very selective with my player acquisitions. I think I made some poor choices when setting up my game universe, and now am stuck with them. (Running only England, and running a "small" database - I think these setting carried over from my initial play with the demo *sigh*) So, if I restrained myself to players of the quality you decribe - well, I doubt I'd have any players.
I guess I'm back to my usual self - playing with somme tough house rules, eh?
Anyway - your battery of skills as a standard is useful for me, as I have not done much reading at all about what things to value in this game or its predecessors. I'm starting to think that Pace in particular might be more important than ever.
QuikSand
07-29-2003, 07:30 PM
March 2005
The board remain delighted with my performance, which is good.
We get bad news – Aleksandar Nikolov’s initial work permit application was denied. That could crush our potentially one big landing of the offseason. Looks bad – we appeal.
Alan Lynch, however, agrees to our terms – and he will join us in June. I’m not certain that he’ll be a great fit (with his low pace rating) but we’ll give him a shot – probably to join Jason Wilson in the defensive midfielder position.
We are gearing up for a big trial – we are home to Millwall, the mighty defenders. I have put back in some guys who were tired (Wilson, Park) – this is too big a match to have players sitting out. We also will send out Matthew Jackson for the first time in over two months.
We look pretty good early on, and then Park drives down the edge, shakes free for a centering pass, and Jackson heads it in for the lead. We drop back to play defensively, but then give up a goal at 52 and it’s all even. They get ahead at 68, and it looks like we’re cooked after all. The momentum completely shifts to them, as they dominate the later match. Millwall 4, Lincoln 1.
Craig Austin, an 18 y/o keeper, is our newest signing, following a youth scouting search. He’ll go to our reserves, but will put even more pressure onto Alan Ryan, who remains on the club but not in our plans.
We have another pretty big match – home to Sheffield Wednesday. They are just ahead of us in 5th place. We are in 6th, but six points behind. A win here would certainly help us get back into the fight for a strong position. We hold it scoreless through halftime, but fall back at 50, as Sheff Wed gets through on a counter attack play. We cannot get even, and let this one get away. Sheff Wed 1, Lincoln 0. Andy Allen was hurt mid-match, and will miss a few weeks.
It’s March 15, and Millwall have officially earned promotion to First Division. Wow.
Aleksandar Nikolov’s work permit application is officially denied – so his transfer to Lincoln has been cancelled. Awful news.
We extend a new offer to scout Darren Smith, and he is locked up through 2008.
We now sit in 7th place, needing to get back into the good form that got us up here in the first place. At Chesterfield, I am again resting some top players, but hope to stay with them. After 75 minutes scoreless, Chesterfield get a big breakaway, and nail the go-ahead score. Once again, our attack is nonexistent, and that’s all it takes too beat us. Chesterfield 1, Lincoln 0. This loss slides all the way to 10th position – we are in trouble of falling completely out of range to make the playoffs at this rate.
We’ve got new acquisition Craig Austin in goal for our match at Wimbledon, who stand in 2nd place on the league table. Our form is awful, and we’re hoping for any kind of spark. Halfway through, we’re scoreless, but the Dons are getting lots of pressure and dominating play so far. In the closing minutes, they get several chances – but our defense and keeper Austin hold up, and preserve the score draw. Lincoln 0, Wimbledon 0. Pretty big effort, considering our lack of attack right now.
Millwall have officially locked up the Second Division, on March 26.
We wrap up March by extending our deal with young defenseman Martin Hill. He got off to a superb start with two MOM honors, and now looks to be a promising young defender for us, at a very affordable price.
As we hit April, we stand in 10th place on the table – last among those clubs with any mathematical hope of getting into the playoffs. We’re now 9 points out of 6th place, as Rushden and Brentford are in 5th and 6th with 75 points each. With only five matches yet to play, we’d need a miracle to end up in that tier, I fear. Looks like a decent mid-table finish is in the works for us, as we predicted a few months ago.
Fonzie
07-29-2003, 08:27 PM
Originally posted by QuikSand
I'm starting to think that Pace in particular might be more important than ever.
That's been my impression as well, especially in the lower divisions where skill variability is much greater. I'm playing in the Conference (Southport) and I've seen a very prominent positive correlation between pace and player ratings, which seems to be doubly true for forwards. I suspect the other skills play a greater role when you get to the higher leagues, where everyone is pretty pacey.
Just out of curiosity, what is Jackson's pace rating?
Also out of curiosity, have you set any specific player instructions or toyed with the tactics screen much? I suspect pace's importance may also depend on how players are used. I haven't played around with individual instructions a lot, but it seems possible to utilize a slow guy as a "hang around the goal and wait for crosses" type of player. So, in my case at least, it might be that pace is particularly important for the "default" type of instruction setup that I've been using. I'd be curious as to what others think about this.
QuikSand
07-29-2003, 10:04 PM
Interestingly, Matthew Jackson's pace is a 12 - the lowest of my main attackers (but Jackson's role is usually that of pure striker - hang near the goal and finish off the play). But Park (my loaned in midfielder) has a 19 and it makes a visible difference as I routinely see him blow past defenders to make his own play. My standout defenseman Martin Gibbons has a 15 pace rating, which I suspect is important.
QuikSand
07-30-2003, 08:24 AM
April 2005
Defensive midfielder Graham Shaw has agreed terms to a Bosman deal, to come aboard in June. He’s 19 y/o, and has seen limited action wit Gillingham, in the first division. Now, we’ll get him some time playing in our midfield – probably in the rotation on the right and center spots. He’s very quick – but will need some more refinements to his overall game.
We are home to Colchester, as our matches start to have less and less importance. A crazy late rally would give us an outside chance at a playoff spot, but that chance will probably disappear in the next week or so. Matthew Jackson scores, and it’s announced as his 50th goal for Lincoln – which I suspect is the team record. That’s the only score in a dreary match effort. Lincoln 1, Colchester 0.
Midfielder Adam Newman is out of contract, and I decide to let him go. I will need that space in our wage budget, and he is hardly seeing any time as it is.
I’m playing a bit of a gambit with Richard Lewis, incidentally – he’s demanding a new contract much better than his existing deal, and I am balking. My goal is to let him slide to month-to-month, and then see if his demands drop for a long term deal. But I don’t feel he merits becoming the highest-paid player in the team’s history, so I’m rolling the dice that he won’t get picked up by someone else. So far, so good – his current contract ends in June.
We are at Northampton, and our first two chances yield very near misses from Jackson and Williamson, and no goals. We eventually fall behind 1-0, and our dispirited team lets that be it. Northampton 1, Lincoln 0. Punchless.
Simon Williams, one of our little-used reserve midfielders, has transferred to Halesowen Town on a free. He was also very little-used, and we’re fine with his leaving.
We pick up another young player, 21 y/o defender Adrian Francis, who will come in to back up Michael Kelly on our right side. Kelly has been okay, but Francis is a fairly young and talented player who’s willing to play for a reserve-level contract. He will arrive in June.
We are still seeking that impact player – and from the looks of our offense, he’d better be on the attacking side.
We are home to Port Vale, as our remaining matches have no real consequence. I’m still looking for signs of life from some of our team. Matthew Jackson tops off some mice first half pressure with our first goal, and I’m hoping we can keep the pressure on. At 68, Park tosses one in and sets up Jackson again, and we seem to be in control, at least. A good effort for our men – probably the last for most of the first team this season. Lincoln 3, Port Vale 0.
We field a B team at Rotherham, sitting in 8th place but basically slotted just outside the playoffs (almost certainly 8th or 9th). I’ve got too many reserves out of shape, and we get throttled pretty badly here. Rotherham 2, Lincoln 0.
As we end April, the season is all but set. We have one more transfer out – we offered Mark Oakes on a free, and Barnsley has picked him up.
QuikSand
07-30-2003, 12:22 PM
May 2005
We have on final match on our schedule, and then can wrap up the 04-05 season. We host Notts County, again with our B team on the pitch, mostly. We get a sensational effort by young keeper Craig Austin, and a late goal from Alan Jones puts us ahead, 1-0. With this group, that’s all the offense we can hope for, but Matthew Jackson dots another one in, and gets MOM in the final match. Lincoln 2, Notts Co 0.
So, our season is over: here are the top finishers in the Second Division:
W D L GF GA Pts
Millwall 38 4 4 132 22 118
Wimbledon 32 4 10 107 43 100
- - - (auto promotion line) - - -
Sheff Wed 27 9 10 80 40 90
Chesterfield 27 9 10 74 35 90
Brentford 26 6 14 97 48 84
Rushden 25 7 14 88 65 82
- - - (promotion playoff line) - - -
Cheltenham 25 5 16 106 72 80
Hull 23 8 15 71 51 77
Lincoln 24 3 19 68 46 75
Cambridge 20 11 15 71 54 71
There were 11 points between Cambridge in 10th and Stockport in 11th, so this really represents the contenders for the season. Among the relegated are Wigan – we hate Wigan.
While a 9th place finish is better than most thought we could do, it is somewhat disappointing after finding ourselves up around 2nd-4th place for a good period mid-season. Perhaps next season we’ll be more healthy, and ready to put forth an even stronger effort. We might need to bring in a player or two to do so, but we’ll certainly be trying.
Keepers Age Wage Value Top Skills App Con AvgR
Darren Baines 28 £300 £24K Rushing Out,Eccentricity 22 22 7.00
Steve Howarth 19 £325 £24K Determ,Stamina,Bravery,Agility 21(1) 24 7.18
Craig Austin 18 £200 £24K OneonOnes,Command,Anticipation 5 2 7.59
Alan Ryan 24 £550 £24K Kicking,Comm,OneonOnes 3 4 6.66
Defenders Age Wage Value Top Skills App G A MoM AvgR
Martin Gibbons 24 £900 £130K Decisions,Determ,Stamina 44 2 0 5 7.52
Michael Kelly 21 £1.0K £24K Stamina,Finishing,Aggression 45 1 2 0 6.84
David Francis 22 £1.1K £24K WorkRate,Determ,Aggression 31 0 1 0 7.00
Andy Davies 22 £375 £24K Heading,Bravery,Marking,Jumping 23(4) 0 1 3 7.44
Andrew Cross 24 £160 £24K Heading,Jumping,Strength 14(7) 0 1 2 7.14
Ryan Hughes 17 £ 75 Heading,Creativity,Positioning 19 0 1 0 7.00
Ian Cook 19 £ 80 £24K Workrate,Determ,LongThrows,Strength 6(3) 0 2 0 6.66
Martin Hill 17 £ 80 £24K Strength,Pace,Jumping,Acceleration 9 0 0 2 7.22
Andy Hughes 21 £300 £24K Determ,Teamwork,WorkRate 2 0 0 0 7.50
Chris Richards 21 £375 £24K Stamina,Teamwork,Flair,Strength 0(1) 0 0 0 ---
Midfielders Age Wage Value Top Skills App G A MoM AvgR
Richard Lewis 22 £1.1K £30K Dribbling,Acceleration,Pace 39(2) 12 3 0 7.31
Jason Wilson 21 £950 £40K WorkRate,Determ,Aggression,Infl 34 0 3 1 7.50
Kyung-Tae Park 23 Loaned In Aggression,Acceleration,WorkRate 33 7 11 2 7.24
Gary Webb 25 £1.0K £24K Passing,Technique,Stamina,Flair 25(5) 0 5 0 6.76
Volodymyr Fedorov 20 £1.7K £130K Bravery,Crossing,WorkRate,Creativity 23(2) 2 1 0 6.63
Andy Allen 19 £ 90 £24K Anticipation,Stamina,WorkRate 6(3) 2 1 0 6.88
Craig Russell 17 £ 90 Dribbing,Heading,Crossing,Teamwork 4(3) 0 0 0 6.14
Lee Harris 17 £ 85 WorkRate,Marking,Stamina,Balance 3 0 1 0 6.66
Paul Warner 17 £ 80 £24K Passing,Heading,Technique,Aggression 8(5) 0 2 0 7.30
Forwards Age Wage Value Top Skills App G A MoM AvgR
Lee Williamson 24 £475 £140K WashingUp,Jumping,Bravery,SetPieces 39 8 14 9 7.69
Alan Jones 19 £750 £55K Creativity,Agility,Balance,Infl 30 10 7 2 7.23
Matthew Jackson 16 £350 Stamina,Aggression,Bravery,Finishing 23 22 2 4 7.78
Chris Morgan 29 £500 £24K Determ,OffTheBall,Agility,WorkRate 17(1) 5 4 0 6.88
John Garner 17 £110 £24K Strength,Stamina,Bravery,Flair 3(8) 2 1 1 6.81
Jamie Barnes 22 £600 MtM Pace,Crossing,Positioning,Finishing 2(1) 0 0 0 5.66
Lee Wiliamson played most of his matches as a forward, but shifted his game to be more of a playmaker than finisher. Park was clearly a force from the wing, but his overall play didn’t make him a standout for this club. Matthew Jackson suffered a two month injury – and that helpd him back from perhaps a 30+ goal season? He was 7th in the division as is – imagine with 10 more starts.
Defensively, Martin Gibbons remains our anchor player, for certain, with Andy Davies doing well beside him. Our wingbacks were okay – but both Kelly and Francis dropped in their ratings after the promotion to face tougher foes. Our defense remained strong, but not without concerns.
In goal, Craig Austin made his case for playing time, and we’ll have a real mess back there in the season ahead, I suspect. Alan Ryan is on his way out, one way or another.
As Kyung-Tae Park prepares to depart following his loan, we’ll be looking for a replacement for our left wing. I really don’t have anyone to play there except Lee Williamson – so our backup plan might be to add a quality striker and drop Williamson back.
And Volodymyr Fedorov, of course, has turned out to be much less of an impact player than we had hoped. In fact, it’s now open debate whether he’s a liability to the first team. Trouble is that Gary Webb has failed to replicate his good season from last year – so we’re currently without an obvious solution at either wing position, really.
I decide to cut loose malcontented forward Jamie Barnes. I don’t rule out re-acquiring him, but he’s demanding a £1,600/wk wage, and that’s well beyond what we are willing to do. If he sits for a while, he might accept something for a backup contract, which might be about right.
I next pick up another young player, Lee Burns. The 20 y/o can play the left side either defense of midfield, and will probably end up in a role similar to that of Andy Allen for us. My scout has partially viewed him, and likes what he sees – I know he’s got some physical skills (ha came up with Arsenal) but we’ll see how he performs on the pitch. He’s also wise enough to say he’s particularly excited to be playing for QuikSand.
My coach Alan Atkinson has been offered the manager’s job at Torquay, and he has agreed terms with them. Lincoln will be due £50,000 in compensation for the loss – that isn’t so bad. Of course, Atkinson was probably the best guy on my staff – but we’ll take the cash.
Lincoln have been given £325,000 for their final position in the Second Division.
This season, it appears we will turn a pretty significant profit – over £1M on the year. So, with about £2.4M in the bank, I feel free to start making transfer pursuits – if we can land a player for £100K or so, that would be very reasonable, I suspect.
That wraps up the 2004-05 season – we will continue in a new thread with our offseason travails, and preparations for the next season.
Godzilla Blitz
07-30-2003, 01:57 PM
Quik: Tough finish but overall a job well done!
I was wondering, are you playing with attributes masked?
RPI-Fan
07-30-2003, 02:07 PM
Also - you left out Jackson's value from the above chart? Mind sharing what it is?
SirFozzie
07-30-2003, 07:34 PM
Players under the age of 17 are on "youth contracts", therefore they don't have an official transfer value, as they can't be sold.
(The player however, can sign with other teams after an initial period for a signing fee to be determined by a triburnal)(
QuikSand
07-30-2003, 07:45 PM
Originally posted by RPI-Fan
Also - you left out Jackson's value from the above chart? Mind sharing what it is?
Actually, now that Jackson has a new contract (not reflected above either, but 1800/wk), he does have a listed value of 110,000.
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