I think 50% of the IFAs should appear during the "sign free agent phase." They could be anywhere from age 18 to 25. The IFAs wouldn't be seen until this stage begins, so you don't know when setting budgets if the best IFAs will be "regular free agents". Let everybody see them, no matter if you have a $0 international budget or a $20 million, let the international scouting budget determine the projected ratings, but NOT whether or not you see the player. Any signing bonus comes out of current player salary, NOT prospect.
Once spring training begins teams will begin seeing the rest of the IFAs and the process would be as it is right now... ie if you have $0 international scouting, you won't see the other 50%, signing bonus comes out of prospect, etc...
What this accomplishes:
1) Less liklihood and maybe less incentive for the $35 million prospect budget to sign the biggest IFA stud, so maybe he puts more money in players than he otherwise would have.
2) Spreads the talent around.
3) Say a serious tanker nabs the biggest stud IFA during the free agent phase. It's gonna cost him probably $10 bonus and 5-year ML contract at $10-12 million per season. The extra $10 million salary the next season is going to impede the liklihood and hopefully the incentive to tank again and go for a huge IFA. These types of contracts are not necessarily realistic but it adds some fun and strategy to the game and might give less incentive to tank (I personally believe that someone who wants to tank is going to tank no matter what the rule is on prospect budget and I've seen people tank with $12million in prospect and I've seen NOT tank with $40 million in prospect).
6/16/2011 3:13 PM (edited)