With the new collective bargaining agreement, teams are much
more creative in the MLB Draft than ever before. But since new CBA’s inception
a couple years ago, no team has ever had to forfeit a draft pick due to
overspending.
The Dodgers are dangerously close to doing so. The team
inked seventh-rounder Brandon Trinkwon (pictured) this morning for slot, which prompted
this post.
Here’s a breakdown of the signing bonuses the Dodgers have
given out to the 2013 draft class thus far.
Round
|
Player
|
Slot
|
Bonus
|
Savings
|
1
|
Chris Anderson
|
$2,109,900
|
$2,109,900
|
$0
|
2
|
Tom Windle
|
$986,500
|
$986,500
|
$0
|
3
|
Brandon Dixon
|
$566,500
|
$566,500
|
$0
|
4
|
Cody Bellinger
|
$409,000
|
$700,000
|
($291,000)
|
5
|
J.D. Underwood
|
$306,200
|
$306,200
|
$0
|
6
|
Jacob Rhame
|
$229,300
|
$300,000
|
($70,700)
|
7
|
Brandon Trinkwon
|
$171,900
|
$171,900
|
$0
|
8
|
Kyle Farmer
|
$153,600
|
unsigned
|
$0
|
9
|
Henry Yates
|
$143,500
|
$5,000
|
$138,500
|
10
|
Nick Keener
|
$135,300
|
unsigned
|
$0
|
11
|
Spencer Navin
|
$0
|
$200,000
|
($200,000)
|
Total
|
$5,211,700
|
$5,634,900
|
($423,200)
|
Notes:
- Farmer has signed, but there’s been no announcement of his bonus just yet.
- Keneer should be a relatively easy sign. I’d be surprised if he got more than the $5,000 Yates received. Last year’s 10th-rounder Zach Babitt got a $2,500 bonus.
- Underwood has reportedly signed and will get more than the $306,200 recommended for his selection.
-----
Normally, the 11th-rounder’s bonus wouldn’t count toward the
spending cap, but since the team spent $300,000 on Navin, $200,000 worth of it counts
toward the cap as all picks from the 10th round and on can get up to a $100,000
without it counting toward the cap.
As you can see, the Dodgers went way over slot with
Bellinger. As their only high school draftee on this list, that makes a little
sense.
The Dodgers can spend 5 percent more than the $5,211,700
allotted to them -- which works out to $260,585 -- without losing a draft pick. The
Dodgers need to save a combined $162,615 on Farmer and Keener for them to avoid
the penalty.
Photo credit: Courtesy of Perfect Game
Of course it was going to be like this. In a weak draft the Dodgers played a shit hand to affect their chances in a better draft.
ReplyDeleteSo basically the Dodgers need to shave about $200K from Farmer and Keener? With their respective slot money at $153K and $135K, I really don't see them signing for ~34% of that. Ugh.
What's pitiful is that this is some basic maths too. It ain't rocket science to do a sum(e2:e12)
Since when do 8th and tenth rounders get more than 10 grand and 5 grand? Thanks for showing how close they had to go to get the important guys signed Dustin. I doubt Farmer ever pans out any ways hes a shortstop they are switching to catcher. I'll bet dollars to donuts that don't work. Hell they can't even manage to develop Ogle they got him at first base
ReplyDelete@capnsparrow - $53K and $35k respectively, not 10k/5k. (If the assumption is that the Dodgers need $200K from those two slots.) Dustin, which is the more questionable move? Going way over slot with Bellinger (I guess the reports of a pre-draft deal is legit but was he so highly rated that they had to do that?) or $200K for Navin?
DeleteI think the $200,000 for Navin. At least there was a real reason to go that far over slot for Bellinger (HS, strong college commit, big power potential). Navin seems like another run-of-the-mill catcher.
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ReplyDeleteKeener throws 85, he stunk at a bad D2 school, he will just be happy to be there and sign for whatever they put in front of him.
ReplyDelete