A lot to unpack here.
First, the countless studs helped quite a bit. For example, I remember drafting Daniel Pepper at #40; he would have gone top five in any draft we had in the last five years. But the year he was drafted #40 was one of the best draft classes ever, and there was a chicken in every pot. BTW, I'm personally happy those players are starting to die out - we might not want identical robots, but parity is good.
Secondly, some drafts are better than others, but if you look back, most drafts start to peter out around draft pick #20, and it goes from sure things to points of view. I know I've written countless pieces on the "typical" late-round 1 starting pitcher. There are exceptions. For example, 2057 was a pretty darn good draft, and that's not that long ago. That year you drafted O'Reily, who's a 60 right now. I got like nine usable players from that draft.
Hard cap would be fine. Randomly assigned is better than the current system (and a stratified lottery would be better), but that already happens in the game engine; we don't need a whole other pool for that. My vote is still no IFA bidding war. Personally, from me, fuck the rich getting richer. I could expound, but I think "fuck the rich getting richer" about sums it up - that's not the league I want at all. That's why I objected in the first place.
JimSlade wrote: ↑Mon Jul 22, 2024 10:45 pm
I bit my tongue when this first came up, but I'll say it now: Why can't we play with the hand we're dealt?
It must have been about 10-12 seasons before I joined the league that you guys had draft classes that produced countless studs who are just beginning to die off and stop being dominating forces in their late 30s. Were oldtimers complaining about draft classes being too strong?
Draft pools have sucked since I've been in the league. Few guys turn me on past the first 8 picks, and I take drafting seriously (and seem to be doing all right with my annual picks around #12). Drafting is never a surefire thing - and why should it be?
By the game's luck of the draw, we finally have a ridiculously appealing IFA class. I actually have some money to take fliers on IFAs rather than 34-year-old fragile pitchers in free agency, and now we've got to reshuffle the deck and deal again? I don't get it.
Sure, the rich often get richer. That's life. Sometimes the lower middle class organizations have the opportunity to spend stupid money, too, even if some of those IFA guys come down to earth in 2 years. The next IFA pool could suck. Why not make hay while the opportunity presents itself?
If managing IFAs is a concern, why not have them get randomly assigned to us, for no cost or for a fixed fee? Or why not have a hard cap on IFAs? "OK kid, you don't want to sign within what we're budgeted to spend? Fine, enjoy playing in your native land!"
Paying money to adjust guys' ratings is one way we allow ourselves to get around playing with the hand we're dealt. The IFA market is never real stable. We all have moments when we kick ourselves because another GM outbid us 4 times over, but I don't see IFAs being surefire deals. There are so many factors that affect our ability to improve our teams. Why not let the random parts of the game play out and stay focused on what we can affect?