by Outta Leftfield » Fri Mar 03, 2006 5:26 pm
Draft strategy is definitely a fascinating part of the game. I've had some absolutely terrible drafts and some great drafts. You never know for sure how it will turn out, though experience helps, since you begin to see patterns as to who gets picked at which level. Drafting in a vet league is a whole different ballgame. After a couple of nightmare drafts I had to revise my whole approach.
On the other hand, you can have an awful draft and still recover and create a good team. Having one of the top three waiver picks usually means that you can get dibs on an outstanding player and often pick up another real stud at the top of round two. I've gotten monster years out of Rice, Keith Hernandez, Schmidt and Strawberry--for example-- with high waiver picks. On the other hand, if you have a great draft, it can make waivers and post-waivers a little bit boring while you keep a pat hand and wait for the season to start.
I've had pretty good luck drafting Clemens, getting him three or four times, if I remember right. On the other hand, I've had drafts where I only got two or three starting players (pitchers and hitters) that I'd tried to pick, and then you're really building the team from scratch. And I have
had the getting-stuck-with-Ryan experience. On the other hand, I just got Yount in my most recent draft, and that was really SWEET....