I posted these numbers in the game day thread, but they belong here. I'm continuing to argue that the "go cheap in the first round and save money for later overslots" approach is a really, really bad way to draft. The analogy I use is the NFL draft. People think baseball talent is distributed that way: First-round picks are awesome, but there's a slow and steady dropoff as you go down through the rounds, and mid-round picks are still quite the important value. In baseball, the drop is much steeper in the first part of the first round, and then you enter a very large pool of undifferentiated mediocrity. I'm not at all convinced that the "first-round talents" you can get overslotting in the second round are really all that much more better than the ordinary second-round talents, and so forth. Anyway: I posted this over in the gameday thread, but it really goes here in case people want to 1975 to 2000 Overall pick, percentage who posted at least 10 bWAR in MLB, average bWAR per pick. 1, 72%, 31.4 2, 44%, 12.0 3, 36%, 10.2 4, 28%, 9.9 5, 20%, 6.3 27-30, 12%, 3.1 47-50, 10%, 4.7 The dropoff in expected value in the early picks is significant. Even dropping from the 2nd-best player to the 5th-best player cuts your odds of getting an established major-leaguer in half and costs you 6 WAR in expected value. Meanwhile, the mid-second round picks were outperforming the late first-rounders. Obviously, this information could change with time, and it takes awhile to see because of the nature of the draft, but I don't think the talent distribution has changed much.