Where Talent Comes From

Saturday, October 21 2006 @ 03:05 AM EDT

Contributed by: Magpie

I was writing about the Tigers the other day, puzzling out how this year's AL champs were assembled. Some of the players were drafted, some were signed as free agents, some were obtained in trade - just like everybody else.

Back in the early days of the Baseball Abstract, Bill James carried out this very same exercise - assembling information on what share of a team's talent was acquired by trade, through the system, via free agency. Back then, James was using something he called the Value Approximation Method (VAM). The VAM used a number of simple cut-off points to arrive at a single integer that could be assigned to any player's season.

The VAM was extremely crude, as James himself would be the first to acknowledge, and the notion of using a single integer to stand in for a player's season is... well, not appealing. Except, of course, when it's useful. Like when you want a way to do rough comparisons between great numbers of seasons. In that instance, the fine distinctions that make Carlos Guillen more valuable than Ivan Rodriguez are not as important as the broader distinctions that makes both of them more valuable than Brandon Inge or Justin Verlander. (Although James' Win Shares method operates on a scale fine enough to make those distinctions as well.)

And so, with no further ado: where do major league teams get their talent?

There are three major sources: the Amateur Draft, Trades, and the signing of professional Free Agents. These are by far the most important. Roughly 90% of the talent in the major leagues got onto a roster by one of these methods; every team has players obtained in each of these ways.

There are other ways for teams to obtain talent - the signing of amateur free agents (mostly Latin players from countries not covered by the amateur draft, as well as some undrafted North American players) has been quite important for some teams. On the other hand, quite a few other teams have no talent at all obtained this way.

In addition, there are several miscellaneous methods of obtaining talent: the Rule V draft, waiver claims, simple cash purchases. I have grouped these last few methods into a catchall category, and given it the original label of "Other." And, as with the amateur free agents, this has been helpful to a few teams, but many others have no talent obtained this way.

A couple of points on classifying certain types of players. The Japanese leagues are regarded as professional leagues. (Duh.) Ichiro Suzuki was an undrafted free agent, but he was certainly playing professional baseball before he joined the Mariners. Like Hideki Matsui, he was already a star. It's not at all like the Yankees signing Mariano Rivera out of Panama back in the day...

When a team re-signs one of its own free agents, I am generally regarding the acquisition of that player with respect to how he joined the team in the first place. For example, Paul Konerko goes into the Obtained by Trade column, even though he was on the free agent market last winter.

Here are the figures for the major leagues as a whole:

                                          Amateur         Pro            Amateur            
Total WS Trade Draft Free Agent Free Agent Other
MLB TOTAL 7081 2355 33.3% 2100 29.7% 1964 27.7% 413 5.8% 249 3.5%

Here are figures for the two leagues. Overall, you can see that NL teams have a little more talent remaining from their draft picks than they've picked up on the free agent market. It's not a big difference, but it's there. As we'll see, while some NL teams are built almost entirely from free agents, some others have almost ignored this means of acquiring talent.


Amateur Pro Amateur
Total WS Trade Draft Free Agent Free Agent Other
AL TOTAL 3492 1154 33.0% 999 28.6% 1006 28.8% 223 6.4% 110 3.2%
NL TOTAL 3589 1201 33.5% 1101 30.7% 958 26.7% 190 5.3% 139 3.9%

And, finally, here are the 30 teams:
                                          Amateur          Pro         Amateur            
Total WS Trade Draft Free Agent Free Agent Other
NY YANKEES 291 60 20.6% 64 22.0% 93 32.0% 70 24.1% 4 1.4%
MINNESOTA 288 127 44.1% 119 41.3% 29 10.1% 8 2.8% 5 1.7%
DETROIT 285 74 26.0% 81 28.4% 87 30.5% 11 3.9% 32 11.2%
OAKLAND 279 138 49.5% 99 35.5% 30 10.8% 0 0.0% 12 4.3%
CHICAGO WS 270 156 57.8% 42 15.6% 63 23.3% 0 0.0% 9 3.3%
LA ANGELS 267 61 22.8% 95 35.6% 82 30.7% 29 10.9% 0 0.0%
BOSTON 261 100 38.3% 60 23.0% 98 37.5% 0 0.0% 3 1.1%
TORONTO 261 73 28.0% 117 44.8% 65 24.9% 6 2.3% 0 0.0%
TEXAS 240 98 40.8% 68 28.3% 70 29.2% 4 1.7% 0 0.0%
CLEVELAND 234 111 47.4% 53 22.6% 47 20.1% 23 9.8% 0 0.0%
SEATTLE 234 9 3.8% 31 13.2% 129 55.1% 55 23.5% 10 4.3%
BALTIMORE 210 43 20.5% 65 31.0% 76 36.2% 11 5.2% 15 7.1%
KANSAS CITY 189 65 34.4% 32 16.9% 71 37.6% 5 2.6% 16 8.5%
TAMPA BAY 183 39 21.3% 73 39.9% 66 36.1% 1 0.5% 4 2.2%

NY METS 291 72 24.7% 47 16.2% 143 49.1% 29 10.0% 0 0.0%
LA DODGERS 264 48 18.2% 43 16.3% 161 61.0% 7 2.7% 5 1.9%
SAN DIEGO 264 162 61.4% 46 17.4% 46 17.4% 0 0.0% 10 3.8%
PHILADELPHIA 255 51 20.0% 143 56.1% 38 14.9% 2 0.8% 21 8.2%
ST LOUIS 249 66 26.5% 67 26.9% 107 43.0% 0 0.0% 9 3.6%
HOUSTON 246 59 24.0% 121 49.2% 47 19.1% 6 2.4% 13 5.3%
CINCINNATI 241 125 51.9% 45 18.7% 71 29.5% 0 0.0% 0 0.0%
ATLANTA 237 67 28.3% 115 48.5% 18 7.6% 37 15.6% 0 0.0%
FLORIDA 234 74 31.6% 49 20.9% 40 17.1% 35 15.0% 36 15.4%
ARIZONA 228 108 47.4% 76 33.3% 28 12.3% 9 3.9% 7 3.1%
COLORADO 228 34 14.9% 151 66.2% 24 10.5% 3 1.3% 16 7.0%
SAN FRANCISCO 228 48 21.1% 37 16.2% 118 51.8% 15 6.6% 10 4.4%
MILWAUKEE 225 106 47.1% 76 33.8% 35 15.6% 0 0.0% 8 3.6%
PITTSBURGH 201 93 46.3% 62 30.8% 23 11.4% 23 11.4% 0 0.0%
CHICAGO CUBS 198 88 44.4% 23 11.6% 59 29.8% 24 12.1% 4 2.0%
There are all kinds of stories behind these numbers, and I encourage you to peer over them and find some. Having done this much of the Heavy Lifting, I am tired and want to go to sleep. I am an old guy, after all.

Let me just draw your attention to some of the broad strokes...

Seattle has obtained fewer talent by trade than any team in the majors. And the Mariners lead the AL in talent acquired through free agency. The Mariners? The Mariners?

The Yankees have done very well with amateur free agents, much better than anyone else, From Mariano Rivera and Bernie Williams to Robinson Cano and Chien-Ming Wang, it's almost as important to their team as the big expensive pro free agents. Whereas more than half the teams in the majors received 10 WS or less from amateur free agents.

The Los Angeles Dodgers have obtained more production from free agent signings than any team in baseball. They were followed by the Mets, and the runaway AL leader, the Seattle Mariners. (I still can't quite get over that.) The Atlanta Braves have received the least, which in their case is a Philosophical Statement ("We really don't like guys from other organizations, they have weird habits.") In the case of the Twins and A's, who have received just a little more than Atlanta, it's a Financial Statement ( "We got no damn money.")

The Colorado Rockies and Philadelphia Phillies have more talent from their own draft picks than any team in the majors, by quite a bit. Houston is a little behind those two teams, and then come the two AL leaders, Minnesota and Toronto. At the bottom of this list? Why, the Cubs. Thank you, Mr Prior. Thank you, Mr Wood.

Finally, here's some Weird Lists of individual players.

The 10 most valuable players acquired by their current teams through:

Free Agent (Pro)     Amateur Draft       Trade              Free Agent (Amateur)  
Beltran, NYM 38 Pujols, St.L. 39 Soriano, Was. 30 Cabrera, Fla. 34
Ortiz, Bos. 29 Berkmann, Hst. 34 Cameron, SD 28 Reyes, NYM 29
Ramirez, Bos. 29 Jeter, NYY 33 Guillen, Det. 26 A.Jones, Atl. 25
Furcal, La 27 Wright, NYM 32 Thome, CWS 26 Zambrano, Chi. 19
Ibanez, Sea. 27 Mauer, Min. 31 Young, Tex. 26 Martinez, Cle. 19
Bonds, SF 27 Howard, Pha. 31 Johnson, Was. 26 Cano, NYY 18
Dye, Chi. 26 Utley, Pha. 28 Sizemore, Cle. 25 Wang, NYY 17
Rodriguez, Det. 25 Morneau, Min. 27 Hafner, Cle. 25 Paulino, Pgh. 16
Guerrero, LA 25 Atkins, Col. 26 Ramirez, Fla. 25 Lopez, Sea. 16
Suzuki, Sea. 24 Rollins, Pha. 26 Rodriguez, NYY 25 Rodriguez, LAA 15
Santana, Min. 25
Oh, let's see what there would be in the "Other" column as well. Bound to be at least ten pretty useful guys.
Other
Uggla, Fla. (Rule V) 22
Monroe, Det. (Waivers) 14
Carroll, Col. (Cash Purchase) 13
Taveras, Hou. (Rule V) 13
Victorino, Pha. (Rule V) 12
Scutaro, Oak. (Waivers) 10
Alfonzo, SF (Cash Purchase) 10
Jenks, CWS (Waivers) 9
Shelton, Det. (Rule V) 9
Gibbons, Bal. (Rule V) 9

Finally (didn't I say that already?), today is the birthday of both Whitey Ford and George Bell. Two of my all-time favourites.

Who have a lot more in common that you might think. For example, they're both Scorpios. Or Libras. Or whatever the hell they are, don't expect me to know...

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