I've been in several 1986 drafts, never with a top 2 pick unfortunately, so I have never personally faced this decision. But I have faced Mays/Mantle in 1951 (spoiler: I took Mays). For what it's worth, my assessment is the following:
-- Both Maddux and Bonds are great picks, and it is not clear to me that 1 is definitely better than the other. You're talking about two all-time great players. Either one is going to win you a lot of games. Whatever you decide, do not look back with regret, just enjoy what you get from that player.
-- You can try trading the pick, but depending on your prog's rules, it may be very difficult to get anything close to equivalent value. Most progs only let you trade draft picks 1 or 2 seasons into the future, and even if someone offers you 2 firsts (1987 and 1988), can you accurately assess where those picks will end up? If you end up drafting, say, 16th and 18th in those two drafts, then it's not even close to an even exchange in my opinion. It's worth floating, but I would not hold your hopes up for a crazy "can't refuse" offer. One thing to consider, would you trade Maddux for Clemens, straight up? I might, depending on what seasons I am forecasting to be in contention. To me, Clemens is the clear choice overall for 1986-92, Maddux for 1993-96, and Clemens pretty much across the board thereafter. Might be off by a season or two in there, but I think those three periods are pretty accurate.
-- I do not agree with the SLB consensus that seems to overwhelmingly favor pitching over position players in progressive drafting. For example, in the same forum that crazystengel mentions above, the SLB consensus in 1975 is Eckersley over Carter, which I think is completely wrong. In my analysis, it's Carter by a mile over Eck. You can win a progressive with good (but not great) pitching and a strong lineup. It's been done many times.
-- Have you considered a coinflip? I'm not kidding, I do this all the time in life when faced with tossup decisions. But maybe not in the way you think. Try the following. Assign Maddux = heads and Bonds = tails. Flip the coin, with the assumption that the result will determine your pick. Now this is important - pay attention to your mind's IMMEDIATE reaction to the outcome. Not after 30 seconds, after 1/10th of a second. Were you excited or disappointed? That immediate reaction before you have really had a chance to think about it will tell you a lot about your actual preference.
Good luck, and again, don't look back. The only mistake in my opinion would be trading the pick without being absolutely sure you are getting great value in return.
9/10/2022 12:30 PM (edited)