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Breaking Balls: Free Agent Draft Pick Compensation
by Derek Zumsteg
"The chance of getting a good player with a high draft pick
is substantial enough that it is clearly a disastrous strategy to give up a
first-round draft choice to sign a mediocre free agent."
—Bill James, The Bill James Baseball Abstract 1988
I've been doing a lot of work on draft compensation lately. It was supposed to
die in the last labor agreement, but it didn't, and it provides a great insight
into a team's approach and overall intelligence. James' basic tenet remains
true, but I've come to believe the issue is much more complicated.
For instance, say you've just inherited a team that drafts horribly, doesn't
scout well, doesn't develop well, and can't resist drafting high school tools
goofs... we'll call you the Tampa Bay Devil Rays. The draft looms.
The likelihood of your team getting a good player with a high draft pick is very
small. You're likely going to waste a million dollars signing that first-round
pick, and that player will amount to nothing. Your team would be better served
on-field by signing a decent veteran free agent to fill in at one of your many
gaping holes and drag your team a little closer to playing .500 ball. However,
that pick will then go to a team that competes with you, directly or not, and
since they make better use of that pick than you would, you're in fact best
served by picking a Boras client and offering them a ham sandwich. The pick goes
unsigned and you get a sandwich pick (presently) or another future first-round pick
(with the proposed but not yet enacted draft changes), by which time you've
hopefully revamped your organization enough that your picks are more like
well-researched investments than blind rolls of the dice.
On the other end is the rich, contending franchise. If you're given the choice
between signing a decent free agent to fill a gap (say, you've got no second
baseman, and the only one available is a good-but-not-great guy... we'll call him
"Todd
Walker"), giving up a first-round choice may be worth it for the
increased chance at the playoffs and making it to the World Series.
Then, it's important to know how good your drafting is. If your team does a
great job of drafting, there are few free agents who will be worth losing the
chance to pick up a good player for very little money. If your team has a great
international scouting program, the loss of a draft pick isn't so bad, because
you can funnel that money into signing players out of the Dominican, for
instance.
With that being said, for this week's edition of Breaking Balls, I'm going to
look at the 2000 draft, which is far enough back that we can make some
conclusions about how the acquisitions turned out, and how the teams dealt with
draft compensation.
- Anaheim Angels
The Angels let Mike
Magnante, a decent enough reliever, go and picked up a nice pick, No. 20
overall, and used it on a college pitcher, Chris Bootcheck, rated by
Baseball America as their 10th-best prospect.
- Arizona Diamondbacks
The Diamondbacks signed reliever Russ
Springer and gave up their No. 29 overall pick to the Braves. It's not
as if the Diamondbacks would have drafted, developed and eventually played
whoever they drafted anyway--he'd almost have certainly have been traded for a
reasonable facsimile of Russ Springer at some point in the future.
- Atlanta Braves
The Braves let Russ Springer, bullpen filler, coming off an uncharacteristically
good season at age 30, head off to greener pastures, and in return they took the
Diamondbacks' first-round pick at No. 29 and drafted another one of their
patented high school pitchers. And like all the others, Adam Wainwright
today is one of the best pitching prospects (caveat: there is no such thing as a
pitching prospect) in baseball. I don't know what the Braves feed these kids,
but I know it must be tasty. Jose Hernandez left after a short time with Atlanta
where he was unimpressive, and the Braves got a supplemental first rounder (No.
38 overall).
Both were good moves: Springer more obviously, but the Braves had options at
shortstop and took a gamble on high school shortstop Kelly Johnson that
to date hasn't panned out. They used compensation picks to improve their team.
- Baltimore Orioles
The Orioles got a supplemental first (No. 32) for letting Arthur
Rhodes go, and then for no reason signed Mike
Trombley, coming off a 4.33 ERA, 75-appearance season in relief in
Minnesota at the age of 32, and gave up their second round pick, No. 54 overall.
The Orioles used their gained pick on high school 3B Tripper Johnson,
who's been, ah, erratic in his minor league career to date.
- Chicago Cubs
Steve
Trachsel had a decent 1998 and then an awful 1999, and the Cubs got a
third-round pick out of him. No big deal.
- Cincinnati Reds
Boy, did the Reds make out like bandits this year. They trade for Juan
Guzman in the 1999 drive for a playoff spot, Guzman does well by them -
6-3, 3.03 ERA - and then when Guzman leaves, the Reds get a supplemental first
(No. 34 overall) and a second-rounder from the Devil Rays (No. 46 overall).
Nice.
- Cleveland Indians
In the midst of their long run of contending seasons, the Indians let Mike
Jackson go and pick up a supplemental first-rounder (No. 37) and a
second-rounder (No. 55) from the Phillies. That second-round pick is Brian
Tallet, who is tasty.
- Milwaukee Brewers
The Brewers stunk and weren't getting any better, but they gave up their
second-rounder (No. 51) to get a veteran infielder in Jose
Hernandez who could cash their paychecks for a couple years. I don't get
it.
- Minnesota Twins
The Twins get No. 31 and No. 54 by letting a middle reliever go to the Orioles,
who were weirdly hot for Mike Trombley. They pick two quality pitching prospects
(TINSTAPP) in J.D. Durbin and Aaron Heilman.
- Montreal Expos
Gave their second round pick, No. 45, to the Blue Jays for picking up reliever
Graeme
Lloyd. Loria: The early years. Those were the days, when Lloyd was
supposed to bring hope to the hardy fans of Les Expos.
- New York Mets
A mixed bag--John
Olerud's move to the Pacific Northwest netted them a great pick at No.
16 (Billy Traber, now a top Indians prospect), and a No. 36. Todd
Zeile cost them the No. 25. Win some, lose some.
- Oakland Athletics
The A's made a big mistake. The draft pick rules are complicated and no one
realized that signing Mike Magnante, if they didn't sign anyone else, would cost
them their first-round pick. The A's lost the No. 20 overall pick in the draft.
- Philadelphia Phillies
The Phillies lost a second-round pick (No. 55) for a setup man who never threw a
pitch in a game for them.
- St. Louis Cardinals
Darren
Oliver returned to Texas whence he came, Cardinals pick up the No. 24
pick. No strategy here.
- Seattle Mariners
They didn't draft until the fourth round, giving up their first to the Mets for
Olerud, their second to the Rangers for Aaron
Sele, and their third to the Orioles for Arthur Rhodes.
The Mariners didn't have anyone to play second base and they got a quality FA
who has served the team well (and just re-upped). Sele did well in his two years
before leaving for Anaheim, and Rhodes has been outstanding in his time with the
Mariners. Still, it's strange that the Mariners, who traditionally had done a
good job drafting and developing, would put themselves in such a bad situation.
They continued to do a good job internationally, which made the hurt less acute,
but you looking at who was drafted around the picks they gave up--Billy Traber
by the Mets with the Olerud pick, for instance--and wonder. The Mariners used
free agency to fill gaps and ate the expense of losing picks.
- Tampa Bay Devil Rays
The Devil Rays lose a second-round pick, Juan Guzman flames out, and they get
nothing. They lose a third signing Steve Trachsel, and that didn't turn out so
well for them either. Ah well, they wouldn't have gotten anything with those
picks anyway.
- Texas Rangers
The Rangers did a lot of pick-swapping: No. 24 went to the Cards when Texas
brought Darren Oliver back, they gained No. 25 and No. 39 from the Mets for Todd
Zeile, and No. 35 and No. 56 for Aaron Sele.
- Toronto Blue Jays
Ah, another random reliever, this time Graeme Lloyd, turned into picks--No. 33
in a supplemental first-rounder, and No. 45 in the second round. They turned the
No. 33 into Baseball America's No. 1 ranked pitching prospect (TINSTAPP)
Dustin McGowan, and the second didn't turn out.
There are some obvious lessons here.
Some teams look at free agency and are reluctant to make a signing for fear of
losing a pick. Others figure as long as they're rebuilding, they might as well
go hog wild and wipe out their first four rounds and look for depth later or
international prospecting. And then there are teams like the Rangers and Mets,
who let players go, acquire others and seem to figure that it'll all even out
over time. The difference in the long-term in building strong farm systems will
be explored in the future, as I look at the A's success in converting
compensation picks in the last few years.
If you're a team that's good at assembling a bullpen out of scrap parts and
willing to take a long-term view, you can take great advantage of the draft and
draft compensation rules. You can trade relievers in mid-season to teams that
need them in exchange for prospects, or hold onto them and let them leave as
free agents, getting draft picks in return. Those draft picks turn into starters
a couple years down the road if you've got the right combination of picking
skill, strong player development and luck.
The way to acquire stop-gap solutions is by trading for them, rather than
sacrificing first-round picks to sign them in free agency. The A's have made
these types of deals repeatedly in the last few years,
trading for players like
Johnny Damon
and Ray Durham
before or during the season, then letting them leave
through free agency. The pickups cost them prospects, but the resulting draft
pick(s) fill that void and replenish the farm system. That last bullpen arm you
can always pick up in Spring Training for a cash fee, if you watch the
transaction wire. Buddy Hernandez and Mike Neu are Rule 5 examples
of that tack that could pay off for Oakland this season.
Derek Zumsteg is an author of Baseball Prospectus. You can contact him by
clicking here.
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