bonesman wrote:We've already done this once. RB #5 used to be 5 million
Gotta go with BTP on this one..."Don't Draft Busts"
RB5 used to be $5m? That's madness!!!
To say "Don't draft busts" is easier said than done. Look at the top of the drafts beginning 2008 (there is no rookie draft link in the 2007 or 2006 sites)
2014: Watkins, Sankey, Evans, Ebron
2013: Austin, Gio, Bell, Eifert
2012: TRich, RG3, Luck, Martin
2011: Ingram, AJG, Julio, Daniel Thomas
2010: Mathews, Dez, Best, Spiller
2009: Moreno, Wells, Crabtree, Donald Brown
2008: McFadden, Mendy, Stewart, Forte
6 of the last 7 1.01s can be classified as busts. 5 of the 7 were dropped before their contract expired. And time will tell if LVE drops Austin if he puts up another sub-par season. The verdict is still out on Watkins, but he appears to be OK after his rookie season.. But Richardson appeared to be pretty good as well?
All I'm trying to get at is that the idea behind owning the first rookie pick is to be beneficial to it's owner. If they want to go RB, should they be hampered by such a large cost? How is that beneficial to them turning their team around, carrying a $5m salary for an unproven player? By lowering the cost of the rookie picks at the top, it will not only make owning the top rookie easier to manage financially, but also make that pick more valuable to the rest of the league for wanting to trade up for it. Right now, the cost difference between the 1.01 RB and the 1.10 RB is nearly $4m. Trading up isn't just costly to acquire the pick, it's costly to have the pick on your roster!
I liked some of the ideas in MWC's post. The only thing different that I'd suggest is to see the 1.01 cap out at ~5% of a team's salary... So about the same as the WR 1.03 and work down from there. This would then see the 2.01 start at 450k and all the rest of the positions at 425k