Braves acquire No. 35 pick in MLB Draft for Drew Waters and more

I think it's just really difficult to gauge our minor league system top-to-bottom these days; a situation that has been exacerbated by the international sanctions and the loss of a minor league season to COVID restrictions. Harris II and Strider are unicorns to the extent that they advanced as rapidly as they did. When lesser-known draft picks advance as fast as these two did, fans seem to think they came out of nowhere, but both were highly-regarded high school prospects. Harris II was viewed as a solid two-way player with a Texas Tech commitment (likely as a pitcher). Strider was throwing 96 in high school and was drafted late in 2017 by the Guardians (maybe as a courtesy pick) and the Braves may have gotten lucky that the NCAA season was cancelled in 2020 because if he has a larger showcase coming off his arm surgery, he may have been drafted much higher. All that said, I don't think their graduation, along with Contreras', really changes the organization's rankings that much in the larger schema. If they stay in the minor league system, we probably move from the mid-20s to the upper-20s. As others have pointed out, there's simply no depth in the system (especially with position players) and some of our higher-round picks have either been traded (which is a legitimate use of player capital) or have not performed to expectations. As thethe said, it almost reminds me of the late-Wren era right after we'd graduated a wave and before Albies and Acuna hit the scene in a big way.

Grissom is now the likely #1 prospect and he's probably where he needs to be at this juncture. He's not Harris II and that's alright. Both Harris II and Grissom spent some time on the 60-man roster during the 2020 season, so they got to work with the big league instructors, but you could see then that Harris II was already a "grown-a$$ man" while Grissom was still filling out physically.

I have no idea what they are going to do starting Sunday night. They obviously have a lot of picks and a good-sized pool, so I expect they will be able to go "through the front door" to a greater extent than they have in recent times (although it wouldn't be a Braves' draft without the choice of a college senior pitcher in the first five rounds who will sign for a season pass to Six Flags along with a couple of squatty-body RHPs) and not use the post-Round 10 strategy they employed in 2019. Braves bet on a lot of ceiling in that draft (both before and after Round 10), but of the high school guys in that category, only Grissom (and Harris II, of course) has emerged. Position players Paolini, Backstrom, and Morton have not done well and have astronomical K-rates and pitchers Owens and Johnson haven't found their footing yet.

They were more traditional in their approach last year and it's just too early to tell how that will play out. I was a little surprised at Conley's promotion to Rome and his LHH splits are so much worse than his RHH splits, that I wouldn't be surprised if the Braves tell him to junk the switch-hitting. It's too bad Waddell is banged up. Conley projects higher, but Waddell could be one of those guys whose production matches his projection to a greater extent.

But to the overall quality of the system, the lack of position prospects really is astounding. Almost everyone in full-season ball projects as a utility player or bench bat at best. No catching prospects of note. Mezquita has tools, but his K-rate (like most of the rest of the team in Augusta) is pretty bad, especially because there is no trade-off in terms of power. The guy who has been surprising in Augusta is Brandon Parker, who is repeating that level.

The international penalties have just decimated the lower minors, especially the FCL team. About the only guy who has shown much since the penalties were levied is Geraldo Quintero in Augusta. He was just joined in Augusta by Francisco Floyd, who is a physical specimen that hasn't done much with the bat or in the field to this point. The first big signing post-penalties--SS Ambioris Taverez--has yet to log a professional AB. The higher profile signees from the last signing period haven't gotten off to good starts in the DSL, but I put so little stock in what happens down there that I've always thought it better to wait (unless a guy is absolutely lost).

Haven't been around too much. Glad to see the place is still hopping. If people want to know what I'm thinking, just assume I agree with Enscheff about 90% of the time on major league stuff and a lot of guys on the murkier minor league stuff. I'll probably chime in on the draft stuff.
 
Last edited:
Wonder if any other teams are looking to trade Comp A or B picks.

I think it's just really difficult to gauge our minor league system top-to-bottom these days; a situation that has been exacerbated by the international sanctions and the loss of a minor league season to COVID restrictions. Harris II and Strider are unicorns to the extent that they advanced as rapidly as they did. I when lesser-known draft picks advance as fast as these two did, fans seem to think they came out of nowhere, but both were highly-regarded high school prospects. Harris II was viewed as a solid two-way player with a Texas Tech commitment (likely as a pitcher). Strider was throwing 96 in high school and was drafted late in 2017 by the Guardians (maybe as a courtesy pick) and the Braves may have gotten lucky that the NCAA season was cancelled in 2020 because if he has a larger showcase coming off his arm surgery, he may have been drafted much higher. All that said, I don't think their graduation, along with Contreras', really changes the organization's rankings that much in the larger schema. If they stay in the minor league system, we probably move from the mid-20s to the upper-20s. As others have pointed out, there's simply no depth in the system (especially with position players) and some of our higher-round picks have either been traded (which is a legitimate use of player capital) or have not performed to expectations. As thethe said, it almost reminds me of the late-Wren era right after we'd graduated a wave and before Albies and Acuna hit the scene in a big way.

Grissom is now the likely #1 prospect and he's probably where he needs to be at this juncture. He's not Harris II and that's alright. Both Harris II and Grissom spent some time on the 60-man roster during the 2020 season, so they got to work with the big league instructors, but you could see then that Harris II was already a "grown-a$$ man" while Grissom was still filling out physically.

I have no idea what they are going to do starting Sunday night. They obviously have a lot of picks and a good-sized pool, so I expect they will be able to go "through the front door" to a greater extent than they have in recent times (although it wouldn't be a Braves' draft without the choice of a college senior pitcher in the first five rounds who will sign for a season pass to Six Flags along with a couple of squatty-body RHPs) and not use the post-Round 10 strategy they employed in 2019. Braves bet on a lot of ceiling in that draft (both before and after Round 10), but of the high school guys in that category, only Grissom has emerged. Position players Paolini, Backstrom, and Morton have not done well and have astronomical K-rates and pitchers Owens and Johnson haven't found their footing yet.

They were more traditional in their approach last year and it's just too early to tell how that will play out. I was a little surprised at Conley's promotion to Rome and his LHH splits are so much worse than his RHH splits, that I wouldn't be surprised if the Braves tell him to junk the switch-hitting. It's too bad Waddell is banged up. Conley projects higher, but Waddell could be one of those guys whose production matches his projection to a greater extent.

But to the overall quality of the system, the lack of position prospects really is astounding. Almost everyone in full-season ball projects as a utility player or bench bat. No catching prospects of note. Mezquita has tools, but his K-rate (like most of the rest of the team in Augusta) is pretty bad, especially because there is no trade-off in terms of power. The guy who has been surprising in Augusta is Brandon Parker, who is repeating that level.

The international penalties have just decimated the lower minors, especially the FCL team. About the only guy who has shown much since the penalties were levied is Geraldo Quintero in Augusta. He was just joined in Augusta by Francisco Floyd, who is a physical specimen who hasn't done much with the bat or in the field to this point. The first big signing post-penalties--SS Ambioris Taverez--has yet to log a professional AB. The higher profile signees from the last signing period haven't gotten off to good starts in the DSL, but I put so little stock in what happens down there that I've always thought it better to wait (unless a guy is absolutely lost).

Haven't been around too much. Glad to see the place is still hopping. If people want to know what I'm thinking, just assume I agree with Enscheff about 90% of the time on major league stuff and a lot of guys on the murkier minor league stuff. I'll probably chime in on the draft stuff.

I was about to do a well-being check on you.
 
it’s funny that the “2nd worst farm in the league” has just this year produced two guys who are likely to eclipse 3 fWAR in their rookie seasons.

It is funny. But Harris and Strider were our top 2 prospects this year (via Fangraphs) and sometimes these guys just play well right out of the gate.

That said the system is pretty bare atm. Grissom, a 21 year old 45 FV prospect just hitting AA, being your top prospect doesn't scream "great farm system" no matter how high you may be on him. There really is no other way to look at it. Hopefully AA can get it to a better place within a couple of years. And with that being said, I'm not too concerned if they don't. It's hard to have a mid-market team with a great on the field product and stacked farm system. The Braves did it in the 90's due to Turner pouring money into the team among other things. The Braves had a great system and have turned it into a great on the field product. Lots of young guys and players signed here for a while. The team has won a title and still has a pretty healthy window of contention as is. Regardless of how the farm shapes up from here on out and how soon or far this window lasts. It's been a resounding success. We're in the middle of a golden age.
 
It is funny. But Harris and Strider were our top 2 prospects this year (via Fangraphs) and sometimes these guys just play well right out of the gate.

That said the system is pretty bare atm. Grissom, a 21 year old 45 FV prospect just hitting AA, being your top prospect doesn't scream "great farm system" no matter how high you may be on him. There really is no other way to look at it. Hopefully AA can get it to a better place within a couple of years. And with that being said, I'm not too concerned if they don't. It's hard to have a mid-market team with a great on the field product and stacked farm system. The Braves did it in the 90's due to Turner pouring money into the team among other things. The Braves had a great system and have turned it into a great on the field product. Lots of young guys and players signed here for a while. The team has won a title and still has a pretty healthy window of contention as is. Regardless of how the farm shapes up from here on out and how soon or far this window lasts. It's been a resounding success. We're in the middle of a golden age.

sure. i guess my point is, if that farm system immediately produced two guys who are ~3+ war guys, was it really the second worst in the league? notoriety is not always synonymous with success. clearly Harris and Strider were undervalued by FV. Grissom might be too, as well as some others.

the phillies had more guys ranked higher but they weren’t a better system. Stott is 3 years older than Harris and is floundering in the majors. their top prospect is a 20 year old pitcher who’s just been ok in A+. that’s just one farm system example, i’m sure there are others. farm system rankings don’t mean a ton, and i don’t think the Braves had the second worst farm when it contained two guys already making a big impact at the major league level.
 
sure. i guess my point is, if that farm system immediately produced two guys who are ~3+ war guys, was it really the second worst in the league? notoriety is not always synonymous with success. clearly Harris and Strider were undervalued by FV. Grissom might be too, as well as some others.

the phillies had more guys ranked higher but they weren’t a better system. Stott is 3 years older than Harris and is floundering in the majors. their top prospect is a 20 year old pitcher who’s just been ok in A+. that’s just one farm system example, i’m sure there are others. farm system rankings don’t mean a ton, and i don’t think the Braves had the second worst farm when it contained two guys already making a big impact at the major league level.

Sometimes player development at the major league level can help unlock a player's ability better than another team. Would Harris be hitting this way if he played for the Phillies? I have to think this plays a large part in how the Braves have consistently hit on position player prospects recently. People talk about this regarding the Astros and Rays pretty consistently around the league. And the Phillies are likely at the other end of the spectrum. Their player development has been horrible. Maybe that should be factored in when discussing a teams farm system as well but that seems quite a bit harder to do.
 
sure. i guess my point is, if that farm system immediately produced two guys who are ~3+ war guys, was it really the second worst in the league? notoriety is not always synonymous with success. clearly Harris and Strider were undervalued by FV. Grissom might be too, as well as some others.

the phillies had more guys ranked higher but they weren’t a better system. Stott is 3 years older than Harris and is floundering in the majors. their top prospect is a 20 year old pitcher who’s just been ok in A+. that’s just one farm system example, i’m sure there are others. farm system rankings don’t mean a ton, and i don’t think the Braves had the second worst farm when it contained two guys already making a big impact at the major league level.

Always have to be careful with this kind of statement when looking at the STILL SSS for Harris and Strider - there's tons to be excited about, but they haven't even seen every team in the league once yet. The league is still developing "the book" on them.
 
Always have to be careful with this kind of statement when looking at the STILL SSS for Harris and Strider - there's tons to be excited about, but they haven't even seen every team in the league once yet. The league is still developing "the book" on them.

definitely. nothing is certain. but the tools and underlying data are there, and they are essentially sure bets to finish above 2. unless Harris really tanks offensively, but his defense will keep him afloat.

the Braves farm is not great but i’d bet on some solid players coming out of it, similar to the “”second worst farm”” producing two legit players.

if FG did their list today i’d have to think Grissom would be higher than a 45. Shuster maybe too. this time next year those guys could be 50s or higher. i realize the farm is by no means great but we shouldn’t be calling their farm entering the year the 2nd worst when it pretty clearly was not.
 
I guess I am confused on the whole farm being bad debate.. yeah it is bad, but look what it has produced in the last 5-6 years.. Starters (some stars) at 3, ss, 2, RF, CF, C.. Traded for 1st, have 4 of our 5 starters, One in the pen.. How could any farm system handle that production and still be good.

We have had our fair share of busts, but we have done an ok job of sending them off for something of use.. Newk for Chavez and Waters for comp pick this year and our new outfield last year that got us the WS trophy.
 
I guess I am confused on the whole farm being bad debate.. yeah it is bad, but look what it has produced in the last 5-6 years.. Starters (some stars) at 3, ss, 2, RF, CF, C.. Traded for 1st, have 4 of our 5 starters, One in the pen.. How could any farm system handle that production and still be good.

We have had our fair share of busts, but we have done an ok job of sending them off for something of use.. Newk for Chavez and Waters for comp pick this year and our new outfield last year that got us the WS trophy.

I guess because comparatively speaking, teams like the Dodgers and Yankees have been just as competitive and maintained highly ranked farm systems. Obviously we had the sanctions though.
 
I guess I am confused on the whole farm being bad debate.. yeah it is bad, but look what it has produced in the last 5-6 years.. Starters (some stars) at 3, ss, 2, RF, CF, C.. Traded for 1st, have 4 of our 5 starters, One in the pen.. How could any farm system handle that production and still be good.

We have had our fair share of busts, but we have done an ok job of sending them off for something of use.. Newk for Chavez and Waters for comp pick this year and our new outfield last year that got us the WS trophy.

True and we can't discount the unexpected arrivals of Strider and Harris. But let's remember that the Braves thought so much of Contreras that they signed Manny Pina to be the back-up catcher and if he doesn't get hurt, Contreras may be in Gwinnett. Can't prove the negative and with the DH and the underperformance of Dickerson, Duvall, and Ozuna, maybe Contreras sticks around. But like I said above, Braves are ranked somewhere in the range of the upper 20s right now and if the three aforementioned are all in Gwinnett, that likely gets us into the lower 20s or maybe even the upper teens as the season wears on.

The problem that most are pointing out--and with which Anthopoulos concurs--is that there is zero depth in the system right now. There simply isn't much in terms of position prospects outside of Grissom. That is largely attributable to the defensible trading of prospects (and we have to remember that at the end of the day it still is all about the health--both short and long term--of the major league club), some misses in the draft department (most notably Shewmake at least at this point in time), and the international penalties that have negatively impacted both the number and quality of Latin American prospects we have been able to sign. The lack of position prospects does put more pressure to succeed in the free agent market and while we may be in a position to compete effectively for free agents, it can be an iffy proposition to rely on that avenue too heavily.

This isn't going to get fixed overnight. Lack of minor league depth isn't a death knell for franchises. You can only put eight position players on the major league field at a time and minor league win/loss records don't count for anything. That said, you'd like to have a stream (and it doesn't have to be a raging current) of guys you can plug in or at least envision as growing into major league players. If Shewmake were hitting, he would have likely been plugged in when Albies went down instead of Gosselin and now Cano. Spit-balling on my part and maybe the Braves want to keep him exclusively at SS. I think there are some guys in full-season ball beyond Grissom who may someday contribute. It's just the odds on most of these guys--at least in view of the scouting press--are fairly long. We just have to wait. All this said, it should be a very interesting draft.
 
Last edited:
I guess because comparatively speaking, teams like the Dodgers and Yankees have been just as competitive and maintained highly ranked farm systems. Obviously we had the sanctions though.

Have they produced that much talent? I generally don't know, because I don't have time to follow a lot of different teams. But I would think the Braves have hit and produced way more from the farm than most clubs. But maybe I am changing the narative here. Maybe the system is bad because it is feast or famine with our prospects. We seem to have MH2 running around or Gooses running around.
 
True and we can't discount the unexpected arrivals of Strider and Harris. But let's remember that the Braves thought so much of Contreras that they signed Manny Pina to be the back-up catcher and if he doesn't get hurt, Contreras may be in Gwinnett. Can't prove the negative and with the DH and the underperformance of Dickerson, Duvall, and Ozuna, maybe Contreras sticks around. But like I said above, Braves are ranked somewhere in the range of the upper 20s right now and if the three aforementioned are all in Gwinnett, that likely gets us into the lower 20s or maybe even the upper teens as the season wears on.

The problem that most are pointing out--and with which Anthopoulos concurs--is that there is zero depth in the system right now. There simply isn't much in terms of position prospects outside of Grissom. That is largely attributable to the defensible trading of prospects (and we have to remember that at the end of the day it still is all about the health--both short and long term--of the major league club), some misses in the draft department (most notably Shewmake at least at this point in time), and the international penalties that have negatively impacted both the number and quality of Latin American prospects we have been able to sign. The lack of position prospects does put more pressure to succeed in the free agent market and while we may be in a position to compete effectively for free agents, it can be an iffy proposition to rely on that avenue too heavily.

This isn't going to get fixed overnight. Lack of minor league depth isn't a death knell for franchises. You can only put eight position players on the major league field at a time and minor league win/loss records don't count for anything. That said, you'd like to have a stream (and it doesn't have to be a raging current) of guys you can plug in or at least envision as growing into major league players. If Shewmake were hitting, he would have likely been plugged in when Albies went down instead of Gosselin and now Cano. Spit-balling on my part and maybe the Braves want to keep him exclusively at SS. I think there are some guys in full-season ball beyond Grissom who may someday contribute. It's just the odds on most of these guys--at least in view of the scouting press--are fairly long. We just have to wait. All this said, it should be a very interesting draft.

Simply guessing here as well, but it sure looks like that's the case for now - at least until they have a better feel for whether Grissom can stick there defensively.

I shy away from calling Shewmake a "miss" just yet - but mainly because I feel like there's a reasonable Dansby extension on the horizon. It's probably fair to consider him a reasonable "success" if he turns into a usable utility guy considering where he was drafted - mainly because finding those types of guys that hit from the left side (AND can handle SS defensively) typically presents more of a challenge.
 
This isn't going to get fixed overnight. Lack of minor league depth isn't a death knell for franchises. You can only put eight position players on the major league field at a time and minor league win/loss records don't count for anything. That said, you'd like to have a stream (and it doesn't have to be a raging current) of guys you can plug in or at least envision as growing into major league players. If Shewmake were hitting, he would have likely been plugged in when Albies went down instead of Gosselin and now Cano. Spit-balling on my part and maybe the Braves want to keep him exclusively at SS. I think there are some guys in full-season ball beyond Grissom who may someday contribute. It's just the odds on most of these guys--at least in view of the scouting press--are fairly long. We just have to wait. All this said, it should be a very interesting draft.

Malloy is looking more and more like he is going to contribute—with the big detractors being his age (though if he keeps hitting at AA as a 22-year-old that mostly goes away) and the lack of the clear defensive home (though it looks like the Braves have decided he's a LF, which puts more pressure on the bat). But—not unlike Grissom—he's shown a sophisticated feel for the strike zone and has started to evince more in-game power.

Getting a decent, useful MLB corner flex guy out of Malloy would be good value for the sixth-round in 2021, though doesn't quite make up for some of the other college-level position players it looks like they missed on in last year's draft. Really need to see Schwellenbach be legit, and to get some value out of the high-schoolers (Smith-Shawver, Collins, Shoemaker).

Also still think there is reason to hope on Jesse Franklin V, but he's sort of been sidelined from recent prospect conversations after going out for the year with injury. Big left-handed power, might stick in CF, good speed—really hurts that he's losing his age-23 season of development to TJ. Still, I'm really hoping we'll achieve the fun asterisk of seeing the entire 2020 draft make the MLB.

It's likewise too bad that, outside of Grissom and maybe Estes, it's looking like the high-school pool from 2019 isn't going to add much. I'm especially sad Backstrom looks like a whiff, but Morton has been pretty disappointing, and Paolini (the big reach from the cold-weather state) pretty abysmal.
 
It's likewise too bad that, outside of Grissom and maybe Estes, it's looking like the high-school pool from 2019 isn't going to add much. I'm especially sad Backstrom looks like a whiff, but Morton has been pretty disappointing, and Paolini (the big reach from the cold-weather state) pretty abysmal.

Bridges was let go in Jan of 2019. Coincidence?
 
Sometimes player development at the major league level can help unlock a player's ability better than another team. Would Harris be hitting this way if he played for the Phillies? I have to think this plays a large part in how the Braves have consistently hit on position player prospects recently. People talk about this regarding the Astros and Rays pretty consistently around the league. And the Phillies are likely at the other end of the spectrum. Their player development has been horrible. Maybe that should be factored in when discussing a teams farm system as well but that seems quite a bit harder to do.

I am curious what AA’s guys have done to develop Strider and Wright. And then we’ll see what happens with Muller. And if Anderson regresses more.
 
It's also nice that it hasn't been a bunch of platoon, middle relief, and 2 WAR guys graduating. Basically everyone the Braves have promoted has turned into an impact player. You can mostly afford a lack of depth when you only have to pay market rate for role players and an occasional stud.
 
Malloy is looking more and more like he is going to contribute—with the big detractors being his age (though if he keeps hitting at AA as a 22-year-old that mostly goes away) and the lack of the clear defensive home (though it looks like the Braves have decided he's a LF, which puts more pressure on the bat). But—not unlike Grissom—he's shown a sophisticated feel for the strike zone and has started to evince more in-game power.

Getting a decent, useful MLB corner flex guy out of Malloy would be good value for the sixth-round in 2021, though doesn't quite make up for some of the other college-level position players it looks like they missed on in last year's draft. Really need to see Schwellenbach be legit, and to get some value out of the high-schoolers (Smith-Shawver, Collins, Shoemaker).

Also still think there is reason to hope on Jesse Franklin V, but he's sort of been sidelined from recent prospect conversations after going out for the year with injury. Big left-handed power, might stick in CF, good speed—really hurts that he's losing his age-23 season of development to TJ. Still, I'm really hoping we'll achieve the fun asterisk of seeing the entire 2020 draft make the MLB.

It's likewise too bad that, outside of Grissom and maybe Estes, it's looking like the high-school pool from 2019 isn't going to add much. I'm especially sad Backstrom looks like a whiff, but Morton has been pretty disappointing, and Paolini (the big reach from the cold-weather state) pretty abysmal.

Malloy is a 2021 draftee who was a college guy, so being in AA almost a year to the date after he was drafted probably puts him at the appropriate level. I don't think a lot of folks have truly grasped what a truncated college season and no minor league season in 2020 meant for prospect placement and development. It's going to take a couple of years for that to work through completely.

There are some interesting guys in the system. I think the guys you mention (Malloy, Franklin V) and Quintero down in Augusta will merit watching. And one can never tell about some of the high-ceiling guys from 2019 that haven't really performed yet. Sometimes (rarely) the bulb goes on suddenly and they move fast.
 
Malloy is a 2021 draftee who was a college guy, so being in AA almost a year to the date after he was drafted probably puts him at the appropriate level. I don't think a lot of folks have truly grasped what a truncated college season and no minor league season in 2020 meant for prospect placement and development. It's going to take a couple of years for that to work through completely.

There are some interesting guys in the system. I think the guys you mention (Malloy, Franklin V) and Quintero down in Augusta will merit watching. And one can never tell about some of the high-ceiling guys from 2019 that haven't really performed yet. Sometimes (rarely) the bulb goes on suddenly and they move fast.

Mezquita seems to have cooled off and his power has pretty much stopped. But I think he's got some loud tools and he may be tired during his first full season. Holding out hope some of the recent international signings work out.
 
True on Mezquita. I hear he's got the tool box. The thing that gives me pause is that he's two levels behind most of the guys the Braves lost due to the penalties (Mezquita is the only one who remained with the Braves) and three levels behind Ji-Hwan Bae. Those guys haven't been tearing up the minors, but it says something to me (although I could easily be wrong).

A couple of things I've neglected to mention that I think have to be taken into account when discussing player development. First off, there is no more Short-Season A Ball (Braves' team was in Danville). That was usually the first stop for college draftees in any given year and they would move up from there if they performed. Not having that level of franchise is going to put a lot of college guys in full-season ball from the get-go. Not to say they can't handle that, but Short-Season A was also the half-step that a lot of GCL grads took either in their draft year or after their year in the GCL.

The Brave-centric item is that they didn't field a Dominican Summer League team in 2021. Part of that was they spent almost all of their bonus pool on Tavarez and they didn't have enough guys to truly field a squad given that they placed most of their 2019 Dominican League squad in the GCL. That's left them with a bit of a mishmash in the GCL with a few Latin players making their first stop in the GCL rather than getting a season in the Dominican League. I honestly don't know if that will have a deleterious effect on their development as players, but it might explain some of the difficulties these guys are experiencing.

Some major league franchises have multiple Dominican Summer League entries. There's a bonus pool cap, so it's my guess that a lot of these teams are comprised of low-bonus signees. That said, when you realize that the more guys you have, the greater your odds (athough they may remain small) of finding a decent player from the bunch.
 
Back
Top