Played week one of my test CCM using the slow sliders. Here's the result.
Cincinnati Bengals at Baltimore Ravens
Sep 10, 2012
1ST
2ND
3RD
4TH
SCORE
Cincinnati Bengals (CPU)
0
10
7
10
27
Baltimore Ravens (HUM)
14
3
10
7
34
Team Stats Comparison
CIN
BAL
Total Offense
376
430
Rushing Yards
114
177
Passing Yards
262
253
First Downs
14
21
Punt Return Yards
0
0
Kick Return Yards
30
75
Total Yards
406
505
Turnovers
1
1
3rd Down Converstion
8-15
8-12
4th Down Conversion
1-1
0-0
2-Point Conversion
0-0
0-0
Red Zone Touchdowns/Field Goals
2/2
4/2
Penalties
1-15
5-55
Posession Time
26:06
33:54
Scoring Summary
FIRST QUARTER SCORING
CIN
BAL
9:34
(BAL) R. Rice, 16 Yd run (B. Cundiff kick)
0
7
6:11
(BAL) R. Rice, 6 Yd pass from J. Flacco (B. Cundiff kick)
0
14
SECOND QUARTER SCORING
CIN
BAL
8:43
(BAL) B. Cundiff, 30 Yd FG
0
17
4:44
(CIN) B. Scott, 10 Yd run (M. Nugent kick)
7
17
0:47
(CIN) M. Nugent, 30 Yd FG
10
17
THIRD QUARTER SCORING
CIN
BAL
9:56
(BAL) E. Dickson, 19 Yd pass from J. Flacco (B. Cundiff kick)
10
24
3:17
(BAL) B. Cundiff, 19 Yd FG
10
27
3:07
(CIN) J. Gresham, 80 Yd pass from A. Dalton (M. Nugent kick)
17
27
FOURTH QUARTER SCORING
CIN
BAL
13:42
(CIN) B. Green-Ellis, 2 Yd run (M. Nugent kick)
24
27
7:07
(BAL) D. Pitta, 2 Yd pass from J. Flacco (B. Cundiff kick)
24
34
1:50
(CIN) M. Nugent, 25 Yd FG
27
34
Cincinnati Bengals
PASSING
C/A
YDS
TD
INT
A. Dalton
16/23
280
1
1
RUSHING
ATT
YDS
AVG
TD
B. Green-Ellis
21
69
3.2
1
B. Scott
9
45
5.0
1
RECEIVING
REC
YDS
AVG
TD
M. Sanu
4
39
9.7
0
A.J. Green
3
24
8.0
0
J. Gresham
3
99
33.0
1
B. Tate
2
51
25.5
0
A. Binns
2
38
19.0
0
D. Lee
1
1
1.0
0
B. Green-Ellis
1
28
28.0
0
BLOCKING
PANCAKE
SACK
A. Whitworth
2
0
A. Collins
1
0
C. Boling
0
1
B. Green-Ellis
0
1
DEFENSE
TACK
SACK
INT
TD
R. Nelson
7
0
0
0
T. Howard
6
0
0
0
M. Lawson
6
0
0
0
E. Henderson
5
0
0
0
R. Geathers
5
1
0
0
G. Atkins
3
1
0
0
J. Allen
1
0
1
0
B. Thompson
1
1
0
0
KICKING
FG
XP
PTS
LONG
M. Nugent
2/3
3/3
9
30
KICK RETURN
RET
YDS
AVG
TD
B. Scott
1
30
30.0
0
Baltimore Ravens
PASSING
C/A
YDS
TD
INT
J. Flacco
21/27
263
3
1
RUSHING
ATT
YDS
AVG
TD
R. Rice
23
125
5.4
1
A. Allen
8
58
7.2
0
J. Flacco
3
-6
-2.0
0
RECEIVING
REC
YDS
AVG
TD
E. Dickson
6
99
16.5
1
A. Boldin
4
42
10.5
0
T. Smith
4
62
15.5
0
R. Rice
3
19
6.3
1
D. Pitta
2
5
2.5
1
J. Jones
2
36
18.0
0
BLOCKING
PANCAKE
SACK
V. Leach
1
0
M. Oher
1
0
T. Wragge
1
0
J. Reid
0
1
M. Yanda
0
2
DEFENSE
TACK
SACK
INT
TD
J. McClain
5
0
0
0
L. Webb
5
0
0
0
R. Lewis
5
0
0
0
H. Ngata
4
0
0
0
J. Smith
4
0
1
0
B. Pollard
3
0
0
0
P. McPhee
2
1
0
0
C. Upshaw
2
1
0
0
KICKING
FG
XP
PTS
LONG
B. Cundiff
2/2
4/4
10
30
PUNTING
NO
YDS
AVG
IN20
S. Koch
1
54
54.0
0
KICK RETURN
RET
YDS
AVG
TD
J. Jones
3
58
19.3
0
T. Smith
1
17
17.0
0
Cincinnati stayed fairly competitive, which I liked. The CPU was able to gain some yard on the ground, the stats for Green-Ellis looked pretty good. I still found my running game to be a bit easy, every outside run was good for 8 or so yards each time.
The sliders all-around felt pretty good. The running on both sides needs slight tweaks is all. I might use these when I start up CCM for real when the week 1 rosters come out.
Those are pretty solid stat's. Except for the human rushing. Which wasn't terrible. I don't want to make it to were you can't have big rushing days. They do happen. LOL. I am pretty pleased with the result since you used the slow speed set.
Adrian Peterson had 84 yards today
Marshawn lunch had 90
Frank gore had 100 or more today
Not 50 yards a game
LOL. I said 50 to about 80. I also said Elite backs would gain more. I just don't want every player with every back easily gaining 1000 a season. Plus I said average. This means you could have 100 one game and have 55 he next. That's 155 yards. 77 yard average. 1240 yards for a season. Even elite back don't normally gain 100 every single game against every team. I want it to be possible to have a 200 yard game and be held to 30 yards. Those are what really happens in the NFL. Take Demarco Murray for example. He set the all time rushing record for Dallas and had games were he got shut down.
I'm not sure what either side is trying to prove. If the CPU can't run the ball, as in you never have to call plays designed around stopping the run at any point during a game, you will never lose.
What point is trying to be made with thes last few posts?
My point is I want it to be different from game to game. For me personally I am having to easy a time running the ball with my starter. Like 90 to 150 yards every game. I just said I wanted the challenge to go up a little so you could have a game were the CPU could shut you down and only gain 30 or 50 yards with your starter. Then if you have big game it is more like the real NFL. I don't want to touch the CPU rushing. It needs to be difficult.
I'm just saying If you want the user running to be so hard so you can't have big gains of yards ap having 60 every game isn't realistic
Agree completely. that is balance I want. i even want the possibility of an average back to have good game. Who ever heard of Timmy Smith before the had a Super Bowl record for rushing yards for the Redskins. I just don't want the Timmy Smiths getting 1500 yards a season. He never had a game like that again. I want the elite back to be able to be an elite back though. For both sides. I think these slider are pretty close and that is why I'm leaving them as a base set.
Just made two small changes to the OP. I lowered CPU Fumble slider( yes the lower it is the more fumbles they will have) I lowered it to 9. Try it out and if its too low go to 10. The fumble slider needs to be lower or equal with the tackling slider. I think that is why we don't see the CPU fumble much if at all. SECElit3 told me this. I also added an option to the kicking game. Try doing all kicking by not lining up the kicks. Don't use the left stick to line up your kicks. Just use the right stick to aim and kick. It's pretty cool and challenging. It makes it a little more realistic if you ask me.
1,000 yards a season is 62.5 yards per game. An average back (ie: BGE, Reggie Bush, Ingram) should easily be able to get 62.5 a game.
If you really want to tone down the RB's numbers, increase the substitution slider to say in at 93, out at 88. In theory the backup would then get 12-15 carries a game in a run heavy offense.
1,000 yards a season is 62.5 yards per game. An average back (ie: BGE, Reggie Bush, Ingram) should easily be able to get 62.5 a game.
If you really want to tone down the RB's numbers, increase the substitution slider to say in at 93, out at 88. In theory the backup would then get 12-15 carries a game in a run heavy offense.
Man that is so funny! That is exactly the numbers I have for my CCM right now for RB sub in and out. I am testing it still. But, it seems to be giving me what I need. Funny that we were on the same page with with that.