Mlb Draft Salary Slots 2019



With the 2019 MLB Draft upon us, here’s a friendly reminder: The MLB Draft is something like the lottery – with a budget.

While you can walk into your local 7-11 or Wawa and pick up countless amounts of tickets to hit the jackpot, MLB teams operate with a certain allotment of signing-pool money. This year, the No. 1 overall selection held by Baltimore is worth $8,415,300 up from $8,096,300 in 2018.

In the amateur draft, there are draft slots reserved after the first round and second round for clubs with the smallest revenues and markets. MLB summarizes the rules on their website: “The 10 lowest-revenue clubs and the clubs from the 10 smallest markets are eligible to receive a Competitive Balance pick (fewer than 20 clubs are in the mix. 2019 MLB Draft Results — First Round By Jeff Todd June 3, 2019 at 7:44pm CDT The 2019 MLB Draft is underway, and we’ll track the first-round picks as they come in.

This year, with extra compensation picks received in free agency, the Paul Goldschmidt trade and not signing last year’s first-round pick (Matt Lauer), the Diamondbacks have seven picks in the first 75 selections and the most money in the bonus pool to spend in the first 10 rounds of the draft.

Each draft selection is given a certain value. Should there be leftover money from a signing, teams are allowed to use that money for other signings throughout the draft.

Should a team exceed its alloted slot money, it incurs a penalty. A team is taxed 75 percent on overages between 0 and 5 percent. No team has ever exceeded more than 5 percent on its draft allotment.

MLB Draft 2019 first-round slot values

Mlb Draft Money Slots 2019

All values courtesy of MLB.com.

Salary

1. Orioles: $8,415,300
2. Royals: $7,789,900
3. White Sox: $7,221,200
4. Marlins: $6,664,000
5. Tigers: $6,180,700
6. Padres: $5,742,900
7. Reds: $5,432,400
8. Rangers: $5,176,900
9. Braves: $4,949,100 (Compensation for unsigned 2018 pick Carter Stewart)
10. Giants: $4,739,900
11. Blue Jays: $4,547,500
12. Mets: $4,366,400
13. Twins: $4,197,300
14. Phillies: $4,036,800
15. Angels: $3,885,800
16. Diamondbacks: $3,745,500
17. Nationals: $3,609,700
18. Pirates: $3,481,300
19. Cardinals: $3,359,000
20. Mariners: $3,242,900
21. Braves: $3,132,300
22. Rays: $3,027,000
23. Rockies: $2,926,800
24. Indians: $2,831,300
25. Dodgers: $2,740,300
26. Diamondbacks: $2,653,400 (Compensation for unsigned 2018 pick Matt McLain)
27. Cubs: $2,570,100
28. Brewers: $2,493,900
29. A’s: $2,424,600
30. Yankees: $2,365,500
31. Dodgers: $2,312,000 (Compensation for unsigned 2018 pick J.T. Ginn)
32. Astros: $2,257,300

Average Player Salary Mlb 2019

Compensation picks
33. Diamondbacks: $2,202,200 (via Patrick Corbin signing with Nationals)
34. Diamondbacks: $2,148,100 (via A.J. Pollock signing with Dodgers)

Competitive Balance Round A
35. Marlins: $2,095,800
36. Rays: $2,045,400
37. Pirates: $1,999,300 (Compensation for unsigned 2018 pick Gunnar Hoglund)
38. Yankees: $1,952,300 (From Reds via trade)
39. Twins: $1,906,800
40. Rays: $1,856,700 (From A’s via trade)
41. Rangers: $1,813,500 (From Brewers via trade)

MLB Draft bonus pool money by team

All values courtesy of MLB.com.

Diamondbacks: $16,093,700
Orioles: $13,821,300
Royals: $13,108,000
Marlins: $13,045,000
White Sox: $11,565,500
Braves: $11,532,200
Rangers: $11,023,100
Padres: $10,758,900
Tigers: $10,402,500
Rays: $10,333,800
Pirates: $9,944,000
Twins: $9,905,800
Reds: $9,528,600
Giants: $8,714,500
Blue Jays: $8,463,300
Mets: $8,224,600
Dodgers: $8,069,100
Angels: $7,608,700
Mariners: $7,559,000
Yankees: $7,455,300
Rockies: $7,092,300
Cardinals: $6,903,500
Phillies: $6,475,800
Indians: $6,148,100
Nationals: $5,979,600
Cubs: $5,826,900
A’s: $5,605,900
Astros: $5,355,100
Brewers: $5,148,200
Red Sox: $4,788,100

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Somewhere out there is the next great star. Maybe it will be the first player taken in the MLB draft or another first-round pick. Maybe it will be somebody buried deeper in the draft, like second-rounder Nolan Arenado or fourth-rounder Cody Bellinger. It could be a college player or a 17-year-old kid. It's part scouting expertise and part luck.

Here are some questions and issues heading into Monday's first round, the first of three days of drafting:

Click here for Keith Law's latest mock draft

Will the Orioles draft Oregon State catcher Adley Rutschman No. 1?

Some have called Rutschman the best top overall prospect since Bryce Harper in 2010. He's a switch-hitting catcher with defensive skills, power potential and huge numbers with the Beavers: .427/.584/.772 with 16 home runs in 171 at-bats and nearly twice as many walks as strikeouts. The stat line backs up the scouting reports that he's an elite-level talent, and as Keith Law wrote on his big board of the top 100 prospects, Rutschman's floor is that he'll be a longtime big league catcher because of his defense, and the ceiling is an All-Star catcher because of his power.

If the Orioles take him first, Rutschman will be the fifth catcher taken first overall:

1966: Steve Chilcott, Mets
1970: Mike Ivie, Padres
1971: Danny Goodwin, White Sox (did not sign)
1975: Danny Goodwin, Angels
2001: Joe Mauer, Twins

Goodwin is a great trivia question, the only player to be drafted first overall twice (he ended up playing just 252 games in the majors, none of them at catcher). Chilcott and Ivie were high school catchers. Chilcott, famously drafted one spot ahead of Reggie Jackson, never made the majors, and Ivie had to move to first base. Mauer has the second-most career WAR of any catcher drafted in the first round, behind only that of Craig Biggio, who moved to second base after four seasons behind the plate with the Astros.

The Giants took Georgia Tech backstop Joey Bart second overall last year, the first catcher selected that high since Mauer. In comparing Rutschman with Bart, the obvious difference is control of the strike zone during their junior seasons:

Rutschman: 69 walks, 36 strikeouts
Bart: 41 walks, 56 strikeouts

Even factoring in that the ACC might be a tougher league than the Pac-12, that's a big edge for Rutschman. Bart struck out a lot for an elite college hitter -- similar to Mike Zunino, the third overall pick in 2012, who has struggled to hit for average in the majors -- adding some risk to his profile. I see no such risk with Rutschman.

So why wouldn't the Orioles draft him? They could draft Cal first baseman Andrew Vaughn or high school shortstop Bobby Witt Jr. to save money in their bonus pool allotment that they could then use later in the draft to give an over-slot bonus to a high school player.

Will Witt go second overall to the Royals?

In a year in which Fernando Tatis Jr., Vladimir Guerrero Jr. and Cavan Biggio have made their big league debuts, it's fitting that one of the top prospects is the son of a former major leaguer. Bobby Witt Sr. won 142 games in a 16-year career and was the third overall pick in 1985, so if Witt Jr. goes this high, it would make them the highest-drafted father-son duo, surpassing Tom Grieve (the sixth pick in 1966) and Ben Grieve (second in 1994).

While Witt is a five-tool talent, there is one potential red flag: He turns 19 in June, making him one of the older high school prospects in the draft. Third baseman Brett Baty, like Witt a Texas high schooler, is 17th on Keith's big board, but he's already 19½. Rany Jazeryerli first studied the impact of draft age for high school hitters in a series of articles years ago at Baseball Prospectus, writing that 'a team that drafted one of the five youngest high school hitters selected among the top 100 picks could expect more than twice as much value from him as a team that selected one of the five oldest high school hitters.'

Two of the most famous No. 1 overall picks were 17 on draft day: Ken Griffey Jr. and Alex Rodriguez. Carlos Correa was 17 when the Astros drafted him first overall in 2012. Mike Trout didn't turn 18 until August of his draft year. Rany presented a list of examples, concluding that 'young draft picks are a MASSIVE market inefficiency.'

This doesn't mean that Witt and Baty aren't worthwhile first-round picks or that Witt doesn't deserve to go second overall. It's just another data point that teams will throw into their evaluations, and their statistical models won't like that these players are older.

In the other direction, shortstops Gunnar Henderson (No. 41 on Keith's board) and Kyren Paris (No. 49) are two players who could outperform their draft slots, as they don't turn 18 until later in the year.

When will the first pitcher go?

Keith Law has said this is the weakest draft class in his 18 years of scouting the draft for the Blue Jays and ESPN, and is especially weak in college pitching.

Keith's top eight players are position players, and he projects the first pitcher to go to the Reds at No. 7. The mock drafts at MLB.com, The Athletic and FanGraphs predict the same scenario (Keith, The Athletic and MLB.com have the Reds going with TCU lefty Nick Lodolo, while FanGraphs predicts West Virginia righty Alek Manoah). If the first six picks end up being position players, it would be a draft first. The first five picks in 2005 were all hitters: Justin Upton, Alex Gordon, Jeff Clement, Ryan Zimmerman and Ryan Braun. (That was a legendary first round that also included Troy Tulowitzki, Andrew McCutchen, Jay Bruce and Jacoby Ellsbury.)

High school pitchers versus college pitchers

This is one of the longest-standing draft debates. Eno Sarris recently reported at The Athletic that the average age of first-round pitchers has dropped in recent seasons. Indeed, when I checked the number of high school and four-year college players selected in the first 30 picks, the trend is away from college pitchers (though the trend is toward a few more position players in the first round, not necessarily toward high school pitchers):

2006-2010: 43 college pitchers, 30 high school pitchers
2014-2018: 35 college pitchers, 31 high school pitchers

Those numbers don't answer the question, however, of whether high school or college pitchers are the better bet. I recently wrote an article asking 'Where do the best starting pitchers come from?' I created a list of the 75 best starters, 60 of which came via the draft. The breakdown:

College: 34
Junior college: 2
High school: 24

That would seem to point to favoring college pitchers, but of the 35 first-round picks out of those 60 pitchers, 18 were college guys, and 17 were high school players. It doesn't seem like there is any obvious trend here or reason to focus on one group.

Who is the most interesting pitcher in the draft?

Elon right-hander George Kirby is fascinating because of his 107-to-6 strikeout-to-walk ratio, and Keith Law has him No. 24 on his board, and two of the mock drafts have Kirby going at No. 14 to the Phillies. He has size (6-foot-4) and hits 95 mph, but Keith writes that he wouldn't be a first-rounder in a typical year. He's also from a small college -- Elon plays in the Colonial Athletic Association -- and you don't see many first-round pitchers from non-power conferences. (The Mariners took Stetson righty Logan Gilbert last year, hoping he follows in the path of late-round picks Jacob deGrom and Corey Kluber.)

Who is the most interesting hitter in the draft?

Vanderbilt outfielder JJ Bleday had six home runs his first season but broke out with 25 home runs this year and will be one of those hitters to go in the top six. His 45-to-45 strikeout-to-walk ratio is good, but it pales in comparison to that of Rutschman, and elite college hitters usually have more walks than K's, so Bleday might have swing-and-miss issues as a pro.

Arizona State outfielder Hunter Bishop, a potential top-10 pick, is the younger brother of Mariners outfielder Braden Bishop and broke out with 22 home runs. He has some swing-and-miss concerns as well, however, with a 22 percent strikeout rate.

Baylor catcher Shea Langeliers is a first-rounder based on his stud defense and leadership, and while there are questions about his bat, he suffered a broken hamate bone early in the season (returning after missing just three weeks), and on Saturday, he had a record-setting three-homer, 11-RBI game in the NCAA tournament.

Which team has the most to gain from this draft?

Obviously, the teams at the top of the draft have to hit their picks -- young, good players are more important than ever, and if you're going to tank, you better take advantage -- but this could be an important day for the future of the Diamondbacks. The Diamondbacks don't pick until 16th, but after losing Patrick Corbin and A.J. Pollock as free agents, they have the most bonus pool money and also pick 26th, 33rd, 34th, 56th, 74th and 75th -- that's seven of the first 75 picks. This is somewhat reminiscent of 2011, when the Rays had 10 of the first 60 picks. The Rays almost flubbed that entirely, though they did end up with Blake Snell. The Diamondbacks hope to find their own Snell -- and two or three other future major leaguers.