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- Joined: Thu Aug 23, 2012 4:32 pm
supertyphoon wrote:History lesson.
Way back in the early days of SOM when we were collectively all trying to figure out how the draft process worked, 12 volunteers agreed to submit identical rosters with each of them ranked exactly the same. I assumed, as did many others, that after the draft order was randomized, that team A would get its top player, then in round two team B would get its 2nd player and team A would move to bottom of the list, and in round three team C would get the 3rd player with teams A and B moving to the back of the line, and so on.
It did not work that way. Team A got every player on its draft list, Team B got all the players with salaries just below those on Team B, Team C got all the players with salaries just below those drafted by team B, and so on. The 12th team in the randomization, Team L, drafted a team that bore little resemblance to the draft list we all submitted.
In other words, the way the draft process works is:
1) the 12 teams are randomized.
2) Team A gets the top player on his draft list. Team B gets his top player, but if he has already been taken, he gets the next player below his #1 pick salary at his primary position. Team C gets his top draft pick, but if he's already taken, he winds up with the next available player at the same position (as long as he's not on somebody's draft list somewhere). By the time we get to team L in the first round, his first player drafted is 11 spots below the one he wanted at the same position.
3) In round two, the process gets repeated all over again. Team A gets the second player on his draft list. In actual leagues, it's possible one of the other teams may have drafted him in the first round so he gets a replacement. But in our experimental draft, he is given to team A. Team B again gets the player right below him at the primary position. Team C through Team L continue to get the leftovers.
4) In the waivers process, the whole thing is identical, but reversed. Team L is first in line and Team A is last.
In our extreme example, Team A had a much better roster after the draft was over than Team L. Wasn't even close.
If someone wanted to try a similar experiment to see if it's still that way, be my guest. At least you can do it with 6 teams now instead of 12. But I strongly believe things have not changed, you would get exactly the same results today.
I'm pretty sure....If all teams listed Bonds 1st, the team that received him in the first round, would then "lose" the 2nd round tie breaker rule, and *not* get their 2nd round pick as listed...can anyone verify that?