And guess what? His website is still around. Except instead of selling DOS games, his website has multiplayer leagues for every major sport. And the games still play true to the sport. Ratings matter. Strategy matters.
I decided to revisit one of my favorites: college basketball and am having a lot of fun with both. The college basketball league has around 50 active owners.
Here are some of the pros of the games:
College basketball:
1. Recruiting is a quick and transparent process. There are only three rounds and most of the recruiting gets taken care of the first round. Teams with high prestige have more points. Teams with low prestige have less points. How can teams with less prestige still recruit well? By prioritizing midlevel talent. High prestige teams will give higher priority to better players and will only give a certain amount of points and attention to lower ranked players. If you are able to get the right midrange talent and can mold that midrange talent into a winning group year after year, your team's prestige goes up which gives you more recruiting points and a better chance to compete against the big boys.
2. Game to game adjustments are encouraged, easy to make and effective. Notice your opponent is post centric? Run a 2-3 zone. Is your next opponent running a three guard offense? Go to a 3-2 to try to neutralize them. Facing a team with one superstar? Go to the box and one.
The same adjustments are there for offense as well. Is your hot shot point guard going up against a lead foot defender? Tell ,him to drive more and he will. If you notice the team you are facing is low on stamina, quicken the pace on offense and wear them down. Minor and major adjustments on both offense and defense are allowed and encouraged for true coaching aficionados.
Everything from pace, to motion, to who shoots from where can be adjusted on a game to game basis. On defense, everything from basic defensive philosophy (including individual man-to man matchups) to pressure and trapping can be adjusted on a game to game basis.
3. Multiple viable winning strategies- Purdue (led by 40 season veteran Coach Hitch) is leading the league in 3 point attempts with 997 attempts in 32 games. That is over 30 attempts a game. They are 23-9 and the 4 seed in the NCAA tournament. On the end of the spectrum is Iowa, also run by a human coach. They are near the bottom of the league at 3 point attempts with just 375 attempts in 30 games (12/g). Yet they are still 18-12 and are the 12th seed in the tournament. The game has incredible flexibility when it comes to coaching strategy. There is no one way to win. It is a matter of matching strategy to talent.
4. As a quad four school, in just my second year, I improved my team from 15-15 to 22-7 and qualified for the NIT. Quick turnarounds can happen!
5. Everything is automated! Games are played at 11:30 every day on the dot! Gives me something to look forward to each day. In fact here is the schedule for the upcoming weeks.
Date/Time Event
Mon Mar 22 11:30 (tier I finals) played
Mon Mar 22 11:30 coach moves announced
Mon Mar 22 11:30 coaches poll ballots mailed
Mon Mar 22 11:30 all-star ballots mailed
Tue Mar 23 11:30 tournament bracket announced
Fri Mar 26 11:30 coaches poll calculated
Fri Mar 26 11:30 tournament day 1 played
Mon Mar 29 11:30 tournament day 2 played
Tue Mar 30 11:30 tournament day 3 played
Wed Mar 31 11:30 tournament day 4 played
Thu Apr 1 11:30 tournament day 5 played
Fri Apr 2 11:30 tournament day 6 played
Sat Apr 3 11:30 tournament day 7 played
Sat Apr 3 11:30 coaches poll ballots mailed
Sat Apr 3 11:30 season ends
Mon Apr 5 11:30 coaches poll calculated
Fri Apr 9 11:30 season initialization
Thu Apr 15 11:30 inviting round round 1 run
The website can be intimidating to navigate so if people have questions, let me know in here. It is definitely a worthwhile to play and fun to compete against others online.
There is a demo season and then after that it is 5.95 a season. A season takes about three months to get through so it is a pretty good deal.

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