Quote: Originally Posted By firemanrob on 2/16/2010Ok thats exactly where I thought you were going. You want scouting to be devalued.
There are 3 options:
#1 - Keep the current system
#2 - You see everyone, but with vastly different scouting results meaning the amateur draft becomes an absolute crap shoot and your Rnd 15 pick might turn out to be better than most people's Rnd 1. (Now this might happen with DitRs, but that is so random and rare)
#3 - Everyone sees all available prospects. Minor variation in projections based on scouting budget. This would effectively render scouting obsolete. A budget of 0 gives you the floor and 20 gives you ceiling. An experienced owner that pays attention to player improvement will be able to read a players ceiling (or somewhat close) based on current ratings, age, proposed "floor" rating, makeup, etc... This is the same option that produced overstocking of fielding coaches effectively meaning you can sign a 60 FI for the minimum market value may have dictated 2.5M before the fix
I'm fine with the current system, but there
is a 4th option. If option #2 is vast differences in scouting with all players seen (such that your 15th rounder might be a star), and option #3 is that we see everyone with small differences in projections (such that we all go to 0/0 scouting), then option #4 would be
medium sized differences in projections. Such that the "best" player in the draft wouldn't fall into the late rounds, but might fall past the top 5 into the deeper 1st round. Throw in a few "busts" (each team sees a couple of guys as high projection players when really they're not- and the lower your scouting the more of these you'll see) and the motivation is still there to scout hard. It's an option.
At the end of the day, the success of the draft program, to me, is not in a realistic system, however. It's in a realistic distributive outcome with regards to the talent pool, and I think that is more or less what we see. So I like the draft system as is.