Jump to content

SI: MLBPA rejects 2020 draft proposal - UPDATE 5 round implemented


weams

Recommended Posts

Just now, dbmillertime said:

5 round draft puts a lot more pressure on hitting on our picks and being active in the international market.  

I wouldn't say a lot more.  If you are banking on your picks in the 6th round and later getting the job done you might want to rethink your plan.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 hours ago, Frobby said:

It will be interesting to see if the teams take a drastically different approach to the number of <$20 k guys they will sign.   

Yankees and Red Sox sign 60 each and the Orioles and Rays sign none?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

14 hours ago, Can_of_corn said:

I wouldn't say a lot more.  If you are banking on your picks in the 6th round and later getting the job done you might want to rethink your plan.

You should be expecting all your picks to be successful or why would you even participate in the draft?  I understand the later the round, the less likely the player is to make an impact, but there is still a lot of value to be had.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

10 minutes ago, dbmillertime said:

You should be expecting all your picks to be successful or why would you even participate in the draft?  I understand the later the round, the less likely the player is to make an impact, but there is still a lot of value to be had.

Because you have rosters to fill.  

  • Thanks 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 hours ago, Can_of_corn said:

Because you have rosters to fill.  

Contraction.  There aren't seven levels of minors because that's been mathematically proven to best develop baseball players.  It's the level that teams are comfortable paying for and hoping for the odd 500-to-1 19th rounder making an impact.  I think we're seeing that teams would probably be okay with 2-3 levels of minors with real prospects if it wasn't for the negative political ramifications of cutting loose a few hundred teams in a few hundred congressional districts.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

10 minutes ago, DrungoHazewood said:

Contraction.  There aren't seven levels of minors because that's been mathematically proven to best develop baseball players.  It's the level that teams are comfortable paying for and hoping for the odd 500-to-1 19th rounder making an impact.  I think we're seeing that teams would probably be okay with 2-3 levels of minors with real prospects if it wasn't for the negative political ramifications of cutting loose a few hundred teams in a few hundred congressional districts.

They are working on that.  I would not be surprised to see the draft shortened once they are done.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

On 5/10/2020 at 10:09 AM, DrungoHazewood said:

Contraction.  There aren't seven levels of minors because that's been mathematically proven to best develop baseball players.  It's the level that teams are comfortable paying for and hoping for the odd 500-to-1 19th rounder making an impact.  I think we're seeing that teams would probably be okay with 2-3 levels of minors with real prospects if it wasn't for the negative political ramifications of cutting loose a few hundred teams in a few hundred congressional districts.

 

On 5/10/2020 at 10:20 AM, Can_of_corn said:

They are working on that.  I would not be surprised to see the draft shortened once they are done.

Contraction.

Is it because the teams are tired of supporting the minor league system the way we know it, and cut down on expenses, so they can have a higher profit line. Because we all know, none of the MLB are losing money.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

5 minutes ago, Redskins Rick said:

 

Contraction.

Is it because the teams are tired of supporting the minor league system the way we know it, and cut down on expenses, so they can have a higher profit line. Because we all know, none of the MLB are losing money.

Ultimately it is about money of course but I do think that they think the current minor league system is outmoded.  From a development standpoint do you think teams need as many teams as they currently have?  Are the younger kids better off playing in rookie league ball or working in camps the year they are drafted?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 minutes ago, Can_of_corn said:

Ultimately it is about money of course but I do think that they think the current minor league system is outmoded.  From a development standpoint do you think teams need as many teams as they currently have?  Are the younger kids better off playing in rookie league ball or working in camps the year they are drafted?

IMO.

I will leave the actual numbers to the ones that do it better.

But, just say, these the numbers.

70% of all the prospects will fail to have a legitimate pro career and that doesnt count a few games in the expanded season rosters.

So you reduce the number of teams, from what 240 to 160? (Again not sure what the actual contractual numbers are)

I dont think the percent of the prospect chances increase.

But, you just lost 30% of 80 teams worth of players in the major leagues

Which will at some point, impact the quality of the players on the 26 man roster.

Maybe I am all wet, wont be the first time, but this is how I perceive things to be.

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 minutes ago, Redskins Rick said:

IMO.

I will leave the actual numbers to the ones that do it better.

But, just say, these the numbers.

70% of all the prospects will fail to have a legitimate pro career and that doesnt count a few games in the expanded season rosters.

So you reduce the number of teams, from what 240 to 160? (Again not sure what the actual contractual numbers are)

I dont think the percent of the prospect chances increase.

But, you just lost 30% of 80 teams worth of players in the major leagues

Which will at some point, impact the quality of the players on the 26 man roster.

Maybe I am all wet, wont be the first time, but this is how I perceive things to be.

 

 

I think you will lose the occasional player that would have had a nice ML career otherwise but we won't know so no one will miss them.

For the most part you will just be removing chaff. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

13 minutes ago, Can_of_corn said:

Ultimately it is about money of course but I do think that they think the current minor league system is outmoded.  From a development standpoint do you think teams need as many teams as they currently have?  Are the younger kids better off playing in rookie league ball or working in camps the year they are drafted?

Think of Little League.  In a typical game the kids stand around for 90 minutes and bat three times, usually striking out.  Most of them find it so much fun they quit by the time they're in middle school.

Game situations are important, but there has to be a better way for a 19-year-old prospect to get reps than getting four PAs a day all summer against mostly non-prospects.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

9 minutes ago, Redskins Rick said:

IMO.

I will leave the actual numbers to the ones that do it better.

But, just say, these the numbers.

70% of all the prospects will fail to have a legitimate pro career and that doesnt count a few games in the expanded season rosters.

So you reduce the number of teams, from what 240 to 160? (Again not sure what the actual contractual numbers are)

I dont think the percent of the prospect chances increase.

But, you just lost 30% of 80 teams worth of players in the major leagues

Which will at some point, impact the quality of the players on the 26 man roster.

Maybe I am all wet, wont be the first time, but this is how I perceive things to be.

Talent in baseball is distributed exponentially or logarithmically.  For every star there are five guys in the next tier.  For every Ryan Flaherty there are five or 10 guys who wash out in AA.  For every of those AA journeymen there are five or 10 guys who play three years in the low minors and get released.  

Corn is right, each MLB has about one full minor league roster of guys who'll have even a short, forgettable MLB career.  Spread across seven levels.  Cutting org guys or players who look like org guys will suck for org guys, but decrease the level of play in the majors by an imperceptible amount.  And perhaps increase the level of play in foreign and non-affiliated leagues by a small amount, which I think is a good thing.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

5 minutes ago, DrungoHazewood said:

Think of Little League.  In a typical game the kids stand around for 90 minutes and bat three times, usually striking out.  Most of them find it so much fun they quit by the time they're in middle school.

Game situations are important, but there has to be a better way for a 19-year-old prospect to get reps than getting four PAs a day all summer against mostly non-prospects.

If you want to implement a swing change, or pitching delivery tweak it has to be a lot more difficult in game situations.  In a controlled environment they are getting instant feedback.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

14 minutes ago, Can_of_corn said:

I think you will lose the occasional player that would have had a nice ML career otherwise but we won't know so no one will miss them.

For the most part you will just be removing chaff. 

 

7 minutes ago, DrungoHazewood said:

Talent in baseball is distributed exponentially or logarithmically.  For every star there are five guys in the next tier.  For every Ryan Flaherty there are five or 10 guys who wash out in AA.  For every of those AA journeymen there are five or 10 guys who play three years in the low minors and get released.  

Corn is right, each MLB has about one full minor league roster of guys who'll have even a short, forgettable MLB career.  Spread across seven levels.  Cutting org guys or players who look like org guys will suck for org guys, but decrease the level of play in the majors by an imperceptible amount.  And perhaps increase the level of play in foreign and non-affiliated leagues by a small amount, which I think is a good thing.

Ok, fair enough, so my thought process was wrong.

But, the end result of this, town lose teams and jobs, and the owner get richer.

Im not saying the current MIL model doesnt need revamping or tweaking, to improve things.

But what is the prime motivation here for change?

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.




  • Posts

    • That Jimmy Fallon movie was Fever Pitch.  Came out in late 2004 I think, because they had enough time to have the last scene being him and Drew Barrymore on the field in St. Louis celebrating the World Series win.  It actually was a really good movie at the time. But because the Red Sox and their fanbase became completely insufferable beginning with that comeback against the Yankees and carrying all the way through their 4 championships without so much as a loss in the World Series, it is hard for me to still enjoy it. But the underlying premise and that question of what has your favorite team ever done for you definitely resonated and certainly does even more so now with the Orioles.  And for Os fans the answer to that question is over the last 40 years, they haven't done much at all.   
    • I have 13 game plan. Last year I was refunded. I hope I am this year.    The Ravens used to keep your money for playoff games not played and people complained. They stopped doing it. It’s pretty unethical in my opinion they keep the money towards next year. You can use that money for something else and make payments when they are due. Instead a business getting handouts from the state keeps your money.    The fact that you didn’t get playoff tickets due to this is alarming. They should wake up and be called out on this. It’s not acceptable. 
    • I didn't watch the Astros or Os press conferences, mainly because I didn't want to look at or hear anything Elias or Hyde said. But I imagine that Houston fans are going to be far more accepting of how things ended than our fans are (or should be). The Astros fan has had a pretty charmed life (cheating stigma aside) since the last time we won a playoff game.  
    • According to park factors, OPaCy was friendlier overall to righties compared to lefties. This is the second time in three season that has been the case. But it’s way friendlier to lefties in terms of hitting homers. 
    • Trade Mullins & Mountcastle. Let O’Hearn go.  Sign Juan Soto
    • As someone who attended 15 games this year in section 80, and watched numerous games on TV, I might have had the chance at 3 home runs.   RHB are trying to work the ball towards the bullpen versus dead pulls.   OPACY, due to the summer humidity, is still the homer dome in the summer time.  But this was supposed to be our benefit to stack the lineup with LHB, and it was also proved that a team could stack their playoff roster with LHP to neutralize it.   I think the dimensions are going to be the way they are for a while, and I think the pitchers are going to be fine with it overall.  There were far too many ‘cheap’ home runs from RHB on high pop ups, but also off the end of the bat from LHB.  
    • The Diamondbacks have 125 million in 10 players. Would they really want to have at $155-$165 million in 11 players of a $199 million payroll (their 2023 amount)?   https://www.spotrac.com/mlb/arizona-diamondbacks/payroll/_/year/2025/sort/cap_total2
  • Popular Contributors

×
×
  • Create New...