Here's what I think about the move deroches proposes, a move I've never tried because to me it's a very possible waste.
Every draft I've ever been with 0$ scouting on one side, I've always seen one or two super prospects on the 0$ side. Usually like deroches showed, it's a too-good-to-be-true set of projections, like a pitcher who would be the best that ever existed in that world.
Looking back, surprisingly, about half the time one of the super prospects is actually a good player, and ends up drafted fairly highly. But the projections are nowhere near what they really end up being. And yes some of the others are real duds. This immediate season I'm playing, I saw two of these let's call them wild cards, the first was drafted sixth overall. The second went in the third round and the owner did not bother to sign him.
IMO if you're going to try to draft a player on who you've spend 0$ scouting, you're going to see otherworldly projections, you're going to basically take the leap of faith that he's actually worth whatever draft slot you have or better, and you're going to have to rank him highly. You could try hoping, as deroches suggested, that he drops to the second round, but if he's actually good, as my real life example above showed, he won't get out of the first.
Like, I'd probably only try it if I had very little invested in any draft scouting in the first place. If I have a good amount of cash - say 16 million or over on one side - I'm probably seeing good enough prospects on that one side that I prefer them over a wild card. And the only reason I'd have less than that in draft scouting is if I had a really low draft slot, in which case a good player likely isn't sliding that far.
3/17/2022 8:36 AM (edited)