nsacpi
Expects Yuge Games
His optimism is infectious and I appreciate thethe for that. He should never wavier.
I want to know who radicalized him.
His optimism is infectious and I appreciate thethe for that. He should never wavier.
His dad made $70MM. Money probably isn’t any issue.
1.2 million can buy you good value. That also equates to 10% of you slot money lost.
Even if you kept the pick (which was obviously the choice), it'd be interesting to see how many guys taken at #60 that signed for slot value have turned out to be such "good value" since the slotting system started.
Players in the current Fangraphs top 132 prospects drafted in rounds 2 or 3 at or after pick 60, drafted from 2014-2017:
#9 Bo Bichette (drafted 2nd rd, pick 66)
#21 Dustin May (drafted 3rd rd, pick 101)
#25 Brent Honeywell rd 2, 72
#27 Jesus Luzardo rd 3 94th
35 Sean Murphy rd 3 83rd
37 Mitch Keller rd 2, 64th
46 Brandon Lowe rd 3, 87th
48 Peter Alonso rd 2, 64th
77 Daulton Varsho rd 2, 68th
87 Jon Duplantier rd 3, 89th
91 Brandon Marsh rd 2, 60th
104 Isan Diaz rd 2, 70th
111 Nick Solak rd 2, 62
112 Garrett Hampson rd 3, 81
117 Alex Verdugo rd 2, 62
128 Jahmai Jones rd 2, 70
So a little over 10% of the top 130 prospects come from picks 60-100 during that time frame.
Then you have guys like Harrison Bader (3rd, 100), AJ Minter (2nd, 75th), Austin Hays (3rd, 91st) who have already made the majors and were drafted during that stretch. I'm sure I've missed a few current MLB players with my quick search, but you can see it's well worth having those 2nd and 3rd round picks if you draft well.
Which certainly shows that there's plenty of talent to be had in that range (as you point out) if you draft well. The part that list leaves off is that many of those guys DIDN'T come cheaply - below the SLOT range we're talking about (if they were to spend big on the first two picks).
Verdugo - $914,600 (slot - HS)
Diaz - $750,000 (under slot - HS)
Keller - $1,000,000 ($113,200 over slot - HS)
Honeywell - $800,000 ($16,000 over slot - college player)
Jones - $1,100,000 ($220,500 over slot - HS)
Lowe - $676,900 (under slot - college player)
Marsh - $1,073,300 (slot - HS)
Alonso - $909,200 (under slot - college player)
Bichette - $1,100,000 ($121,400 over slot - HS)
Murphy - $753,100 (slot - college player)
Duplantier - $686,600 (slot - college player)
Hays - $665,800 (slot - college player)
Luzardo - $1,400,000 ($764,200 over slot - HS)
May - $997,500 ($406,700 over slot - HS)
Varsho - $880,100 (slot - college player)
While there is talent there, many of those guys you mention weren't exactly "steals" - they were either college players lacking tons of leverage or HS kids that required pretty substantial over slot bonuses to get them to sign.
While there is talent there, many of those guys you mention weren't exactly "steals" - they were either college players lacking tons of leverage or HS kids that required pretty substantial over slot bonuses to get them to sign.
His optimism is infectious and I appreciate thethe for that. He should never wavier.
Not sure why it matters if they are steals, we are keeping the 2nd pick because we want the player most likely, not because of some financial flexibility. Teams generally sign seniors in the 4th-10th rounds to have extra money for their 1st and 2nd round picks, they don't really underslot 2nd round picks to save money for 1st round picks.
And literally every player on my list except for Luzardo was signed for less than our 2nd round slot money, so I'm not sure what your point is as far as the money angle goes, we can easily sign that caliber of player without impacting our signing of our first round picks.
The slot values change every year, so comparing the 60th pick's slot value in 2014 vs. what that number will be in 2019 is a bit useless. Slot value for the 60th pick in 2014 was $943,200, in 2019 it's $1,157,400 - $214,200 higher. In 2014, the money we've got for this year would've been slot value for #50.
Matt mentioned the thought of punting at #60 as a way to spend big on the first two picks. I don't disagree that in this particular draft that would be a bad idea since it looks pretty thin. The point was that if you're going to punt at #60 and draft two over slot HS kids at #9 and #21 and get the best player you can get on the cheap at #60, it might've made as much sense to give up that pick to sign Kimbrel (given the state of our pen)
i'm not sure why this is so hard to understand. they likely need $1.157M if they want to employ the strategy of going over-slot on one of the first two picks. signing kimbrel eliminates that money.
From yesterday - "With all picks - $11,532,200. Take away the slot value at 60 and you'd still have $10,374,800. That would only drop them from having the sixth-most to spend to having the eighth-most to spend. Pretty sure it wouldn't have hurt terribly - IF the plan was to go with HS kids with the first two picks."
If you gave up the slot value for #60 and only had $10,374,800, that would still be plenty enough to sign picks 4-10 for $300,000 each ($2,100,000) while leaving you enough to spend $4,000,000 each on #9 and #21. Why is that so hard to understand?
Baseball America guy on Twitter says he doesn’t think Bishop falls to 9, and his current Braves pick would be one of Rutledge, Langeliers or Carroll.