Yes, but eventually their trade value becomes more valuable than the 40th pick.
As soon as Desmond doesn't have the pick attached to him.
What's the rule on that? When is a draft pick no longer attached to Desmond?
I'm pretty sure it always is, or at least until the season starts.
Austin Riley (later pick) > Ian Desmond. No way I give up a pick for anybody left on the market.
something tells me it won't expire until after the draft. Once the Draft takes place then the QO attachment is voided. I don't have references on this, but I believe I read that somewhere.
I am as high on Riley as anyone... but come on... you can't make that conclusion after a half season in rookie ball. Desmond disappointed last year but before then he was a perennial 20/20 guy with decent average. Granted, I still don't want him here because I don't want him to block looks at our young guys since we won't be competing anyways.
I am as high on Riley as anyone... but come on... you can't make that conclusion after a half season in rookie ball. Desmond disappointed last year but before then he was a perennial 20/20 guy with decent average. Granted, I still don't want him here because I don't want him to block looks at our young guys since we won't be competing anyways.
Yes, but eventually their trade value becomes more valuable than the 40th pick.
Austin Riley (later pick) > Ian Desmond. No way I give up a pick for anybody left on the market.
How so? How do you know?
That's far from a guarantee. Who's going to give us Austin Riley for Desmond at the deadline?
How so? How do you know?
That's far from a guarantee. Who's going to give us Austin Riley for Desmond at the deadline?
The Problem with that logic is that it prescribes an inflated value to a pick because someone bucking the norm.
Yes Mike Trout was found outside of the top of the draft, it's not common that you find that value that late in the first round though. In fact if you look at the players 3 picks above him (Randall Grichuk, Kyle Gibson, Jared Mitchell) and 3 picks below him (Eric Arnett, Nick Franklin, and Raymond Fuentes) you'd realize that finding the high value player outside of the top 10 picks isn't common. While it happens every year, it fails more often every year.
By your logic I could argue why sign anyone and ever lose a pick? Why sign Clayton Kershaw or Jason heyward or Zack Greinke or any other top FA, because Mike Piazza was taken 1390th overall, or Keith Hernandez was taken 785th overall or Mark Buerhle was taken 1139th overall, or John Smoltz was taken 574th overall. It's dumb to look at people who buck trends and assume the norm. Riley looks like a fantastic 40 range pick. Want to know some other kind of recent names the Braves have taken around pick 40? Matt Lipka, Brett Devall, Cory Rasmus, Steve Evarts, Beau Jones.
That's kind of the point.
What do you mean?
I don't think Desmond would fetch a guy like Riley at the deadline.
probably not. But it's more likely Riley never plays an inning in MLB than he is as good as Desmond. Riley has value b/c he is cheap, controlled, and has a lot of upside. That always interests teams. Desmond is expensive and you know all of his warts.
You would be wrong on that. Not that i am advocating signing Desmond, but if we needed a SS and had the money to spend, then we should definitely sign him. And if Desmond rebounds to his previous form, then he would be an outstanding value, commanding multiple Riley-esque players in a trade.