![]() Overloading the frontline with super strikers and neglecting the backline is whimsical nonsense in PES 2016 because you may have the goalscoring power, but if your defensive line can’t handle a simple set piece or through ball without panic then it counts for naught. It’s here that a little research pays off. A solid, experienced centre back, a hungry young talent in midfield and a reliable striker who is being neglected by his current club are key players to get in through loans. By taking in young talent not getting game time at their parent club, or old hands that are being phased out, you can greatly improve your squad for the season. If they turn out to be awful then you can ship them out and look for better backup.Īs mentioned earlier, money isn’t exactly flowing out of your pockets at the start so in order to improve the squad you have the Youth setup to call upon, and just as vitally, the loan system. More importantly, by using more of your squad you not only find out where it needs work, but also give yourself a stronger bench to call upon. You may discover you had a better player for a position that you never played because the first teamer had better stats. The best way to experiment for any length of time early on is to rotate the squad heavily for friendlies, cup matches and dead rubber matches. It’s easy to get stuck using the same set of players for every game as you fear what will happen if you don’t, but you will need to call on the fringe players at some point, be it to allow a rest for an overworked midfielder, or to cover a bad injury. Use cup competitions and friendlies to try out fringe players At the very least you should find a better goalkeeper there than those you start with. The joy of nurturing a promising starlet into a world class player is also a factor, as is the money you save by not going out and blowing your budget on a couple of established players you may not need long term. If you aren’t happy with the cover for certain positions or an injury crisis has left you short on centre backs then you could do a lot worse than bringing through some Youth Team players to bolster the squad. He tackles well and wins so many midfield battles that start goalscoring opportunities. Hettich (DMF) The defenders you start with are prone to many gaffes so it pays to protect them as they learn, nobody does that better than Hettich. Doesn’t develop all that quick, but he should provide goals from the start. Yankov (CF) This young Bulgarian striker has an eye for goal and though he isn’t the highest-rated player in your forward line, he is very prolific at scoring from tight angles and finds space extremely well. Creates and scores goals so a vital part of your team’s first spine. It’s always the same squad so we can tell you who to use and cultivate in those early seasons as you go on that run to managerial superstardom.Į.Castledine (AMF) Develops quickly and despite being registered as an attacking midfielder he works better as a second striker (SS). It throws you in with a bunch of nobodies to make do with until you can afford better players. ![]() ![]() To truly get the best experience of how special Master League can be you should opt for the default no-name squad list instead of the regular club lineup. ![]()
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