Re: per mlbtraderumors.com, Bronson Arroyo wants a 3 year deal.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
malcontent
Aren't we expecting Chapman to the rotation if Price becomes the manager?
That makes seven starters. Someone would still have to go even if Arroyo left.
I came around to agree with the view of not offering a QO.
But I did make the point that the Reds had zero depth at MLB-capable starting pitching in the minors, particularly AAA. With season-ending health issues with Latos' bag-o-chips elbow, Cueto's chronic oblique, and somewhat Cingrani achey back, I bite my nails.
Re: per mlbtraderumors.com, Bronson Arroyo wants a 3 year deal.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
PuffyPig
If a supplemental pick making it to the majors saves a team about $10M, and his chances of making it is 20%, the value of that draft pick is $2M, not $10M.
My apologies, I wasn't clear about my numbers. The $10M was what each player drafted in the supplemental rounds was worth on average, whether they got to the bigs or not.
Here was the raw data:
During a five year stretch, there were 55 players drafted. 11 of them made the bigs. Those 11 earned 119 WAR over what they were paid during their pre-free agency years. That is a bit over 2 WAR per all players drafted or 10 WAR per players that made it to the bigs. I figure each WAR is worth around $5M these days.
That means that the players who made it, were worth around $50M to each team (Some big names like David Wright, Adam Jones, Gio Gonzalez). A true crap shoot. Low chance, but very high return.
Re: per mlbtraderumors.com, Bronson Arroyo wants a 3 year deal.
http://www.rotoworld.com/headlines/mlb/414088/qualifying-offers-will-be-worth-$141-million
Qualifying offers will be worth $14.1 million
Joel Sherman of the New York Post hears that the value of this year's one-year qualifying offer for impending free agents will be $14.1 million.
Qualifying offers were worth $13.3 million last offseason, so this is a jump of $800,000. The figure is determined by the average of the 125 highest-paid players in MLB. Teams must make a qualifying offer in order to secure draft pick compensation if a player signs elsewhere in free agency. For what it's worth, nine players received qualifying offers last winter (the first year of the new system) and none of them accepted.
Source: Joel Sherman on Twitter