8. Which players get skill training?
A player gets some training if he has played a match during the week preceding the training update. It does matter where the player played (it must have been on a position relevant for the training type), the number of minutes does matter as well. The full training effect is granted to the player if he has absolved 90 minutes on a relevant position.
9. My player received a red card/My player had to leave the pitch after receiving the second yellow card. Will he get trained nevertheless?
Yes, but only for the minutes he stood on the pitch, and naturally he must have played on a position relevant for the training type.
10. A player needed to be substituted due to an injury. Will he get his share of the training?
Yes, but only for the minutes he stood on the pitch, and naturally he must have played on a position relevant for the training type.
11. A player needed to be substituted due to an injury. Will the substitute get his share of the training?
Yes, but only for the minutes he stood on the pitch, and naturally he must have played on a position relevant for the training type.
12. My player had to leave the pitch due to a second yellow/a red card during the last league match. He played on a position relevant for the training. Does it make sense to make him play again on the same position during the upcoming friendly?
Yes, the minutes are added up. A total of 90 minutes can be accumulated. Example: you are training playmaking. The player had played 50 minutes as a central midfielder in the league match when he received a red card. Make him play at 40 minutes on the same position in the friendly right after this match and he'll be granted playmaking training for these 90 minutes, the maximum he could get that week.
13. General (Form). Does it make sense?
No, it doesn't improve your players' skills at all, except for the goalkeeper who gets a very tiny amount of goalkeeping training. It even likely it doesn't work wonders for the form (on the long run respectively when changing to another training type).
But, and there is always a but, general training can make sense when you are facing a really crucial match (don't worry yet, you won't have one very soon).
A player gets some training if he has played a match during the week preceding the training update. It does matter where the player played (it must have been on a position relevant for the training type), the number of minutes does matter as well. The full training effect is granted to the player if he has absolved 90 minutes on a relevant position.
9. My player received a red card/My player had to leave the pitch after receiving the second yellow card. Will he get trained nevertheless?
Yes, but only for the minutes he stood on the pitch, and naturally he must have played on a position relevant for the training type.
10. A player needed to be substituted due to an injury. Will he get his share of the training?
Yes, but only for the minutes he stood on the pitch, and naturally he must have played on a position relevant for the training type.
11. A player needed to be substituted due to an injury. Will the substitute get his share of the training?
Yes, but only for the minutes he stood on the pitch, and naturally he must have played on a position relevant for the training type.
12. My player had to leave the pitch due to a second yellow/a red card during the last league match. He played on a position relevant for the training. Does it make sense to make him play again on the same position during the upcoming friendly?
Yes, the minutes are added up. A total of 90 minutes can be accumulated. Example: you are training playmaking. The player had played 50 minutes as a central midfielder in the league match when he received a red card. Make him play at 40 minutes on the same position in the friendly right after this match and he'll be granted playmaking training for these 90 minutes, the maximum he could get that week.
13. General (Form). Does it make sense?
No, it doesn't improve your players' skills at all, except for the goalkeeper who gets a very tiny amount of goalkeeping training. It even likely it doesn't work wonders for the form (on the long run respectively when changing to another training type).
But, and there is always a but, general training can make sense when you are facing a really crucial match (don't worry yet, you won't have one very soon).
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