As we all know, some owners choose to run bare-bones minor league teams in order to save every cent possible for budget transfers.
A team I co-manage recently played a four game AAA series against such an owner's team. He is using only three pitchers, in every game. Our team scored 98 runs in four games.
Why encourage healthy minor leagues when the owner only sees them as being a drag on his personal major league success? Well, as we also know, a world goes to crap when all its minor league players are being recycled, eaten up, and destroyed by misuse. Eventually the world runs out of players to sign, and these guys aren't signing their draftees because they cost too many nickels and dimes. Plus, game scores like 34-5 are worthless.
Sure, some owners are going to say "hey, I don't have time to manage six rosters." Fine. Don't penalize them.
Why can't we do something to reward healthy minor leagues?
My co-manager suggested something like this:
1/ You have to sign a minimum number of prospects (draft plus IFA, not tryout players) to be eligible for DiTRs.
2/ Establish tighter roster requirements at each minor league level, ie minimum number of pitchers / position players.
3/ Bump up one or two DiTRs so that teams who do maintain minors are rewarded by adding true potential major league talent. This adds a new talent stream which is not dependent on early first round draft choices or high dollar IFAs... a new talent stream independent of tanking strategy.
This also has the real life imagery that a DiTR player would come from a system that invests in its minors. Hey, imagine, you 'd get something for investing your money.
Just an idea. But anything to fix minor league play.