OK. I found it in Raisin's post. Now my question, How come the Red Sox, Yankees, and Twins have such good drafts and have good records. Maybe the question is dumb, but what are the Red Sox, Yankees, and Twins know that the Cubs don't? As UK touched on, the grading of a draft 4 months later is going to be mostly based on how those same players were graded 4 months ago. In the case of the Red Sox and Yankees, highly rated players with signability concerns fell to them in later rounds and were signed above slot money (Red Sox: Daniel Bard, Lars Anderson, Ty Weeden and Ryan Kalish; Yankees: Ian Kennedy, Joba Chamberlain, Dellin Betances, Mark Melancon and Colin Curtis). The Cubs do this too (see: Samardzija, Huseby, Rundle) but not to the extent of the Red Sox and Yankees. The real judge of the draft will be a few years down the road. Ultimately, I think the Cubs did more in this draft, then what some pundits believe they did. The teams that "graded well" in this draft, their prospects have the same chances of making it to the pros as the Cubs prospects. Ultimately Colvin/Shark/Rundle/Anderson will rivalred any teams Top prospects of the draft of 2006.