[If you’re looking for information on the logistics of this year’s Draft – the timing, the coverage, the order, etc. – you can find it here in the first installation of the Draft Primer. This morning’s rash of hot rumors has already preempted this post twice.]
The 2013 MLB Draft has arrived, and, with the passage of the CBA before the 2012 season, everything you knew about draft strategy and protocol changed completely.
I wrote an in-depth piece about those changes, and I’d encourage you to read it here, because it informs so much of how the Draft will proceed. But, in case you don’t want the in-depth look and just want to know the gist, I’ll lay it out here, as well.
The Bonus Pool
Teams are assigned a โpoolโ of dollars that they can use to sign players selected within the first 10 rounds of the Draft. The pool is based on the โslotโ value of each of the teamโs picks (each pick in the Draft is given a certain value, and each of a teamโs picksโ values are added up to determine the pool amount).
The Cubs’ bonus pool this year is $10,556,500.
The Slot Values
The slot values for the first ten picks are as follows:
1. Astros – $7,790,400
2. Cubs – $6,708,400
3. Rockies – $5,626,400
4. Twins – $4,544,400
5. Indians – $3,787,000
6. Marlins – $3,516,500
7. Red Sox – $3,246,000
8. Royals – $3,137,800
9. Pirates – $3,029,600
10. Blue Jays – $2,921,400
As you can see, it’s a very swift decline after the top four picks, which could assist those teams at the top in leveraging some dollars they save “under slot” on their top pick to sign “over slot” types later in the Draft.
The slot value for the Cubs’ second round pick is $1,361,900, the third round pick is $736,200, and the fourth round pick is $477,300. By the 10th round, that figure has slid down to $139,000.
The Penalties
Those bonus pools and slot values matter because if a team exceeds its bonus pool, it is subject to penalties. And note, if a team fails to sign a player, the slot value from that pick is removed from the bonus pool. This is why you’ll see teams heavily taking college seniors in the 6 to 10 round range: the team can sign those players for $10,000, and “save” money to be applied elsewhere in the Draft.
Also note that picks after the 10th round have no slot value (and you don’t lose any bonus pool money for failing to sign them), but any amount given to them in excess of $100,000 counts against the bonus pool.
Any team that exceeds its pool by 0 to 5% must pay a 75% tax on the amount of the overage. Any team that exceeds its pool by more than 5% but less than 10% must pay a 75% tax on the amount of the overage AND loses a first round draft pick. Any team that exceeds its pool by more than 10% but less than 15% must pay a 100% tax on the amount of the overage AND loses a first round draft pick AND loses a second round draft pick. Any team that exceeds its pool by more than 15% must pay a 100% tax on the amount of the overage AND lose two first round draft picks.
Given that penalty structure, it was unsurprising to see the Cubs gladly exceed their pool last year, but by an amount less than 5% over the pool. Assuming they’re willing to pay the tax again this year (they will be), you can think of their bonus pool as closer to $11,084,00 rather than $10,556,500.