I think college players start their pro careers too raw defensively. I see a lot of shortstops that are drafted at 21 or 22 years old, and start out within 10-15 points of their hitting potential, but 25 points away from their glove and range potential. It's just not realistic in baseball. A player is not going increase their range THAT much from age 21 to 25. They may gain a few steps because of positioning and footwork but their range is just never going to dramatically improve. I feel like a polished 4 year college shortstop should start their pro careers with a 65-70 range and glove and be farther away from their hitting potential. But I get these 22 year olds that come in with a 55-60 glove but have potential to get into the mid 80's. Typically you have to wait for a young players bat to be ML ready before they get to the show. But I get first round picks where their glove is 2-3 years behind their bats. They wouldn't have been projected as shortstops if they came into a draft with a the equivalent of a 55 glove in real life.So I draft players with their potential to be good defenders/good hitters at shortstop, but it's going to be exhausting to get them up to their potential defensively. They'll just end up being third basemen.