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Despite very little (basically zero) anticipation, the 2020 MLB Draft kicked off yesterday, giving us the first real baseball-related content in months. The MLB draft has never received the same recognition or hype as the NBA and NFL drafts, understandably so, but I’m still one of the proud die-hard baseball fans that does get excited for it. However, the enthusiasm for this year’s draft did not match previous years’ for a couple of reasons:

  1. Society has been concerned with racial injustice the past couple of weeks, as it should’ve been. Social media has been absolutely dominated by posts about racial and class inequality lately, so everything not related to that was pretty much filtered out of everyone’s timeline.
  2. I’m sure MLB Network and ESPN have been reminding viewers about the draft for weeks now, but I, along with many people, have not been watching sports networks – what’s the point? ESPN talk shows are hardly bearable when there are actual sports on, so I can’t imagine how many topics they’ve recycled over the last few months. Probably just more debates about why MJ is the goat and how Tom Brady keeps his body in such great shape at his age – we’ve heard it all before.
  3. MLB’s social media team did a terrible job promoting it. Leading up to the draft, the @MLB Instagram account only posted three times, all of which were within the same 24-hour period. They should’ve been hyping this thing up for WEEKS! There is literally nothing else to talk about in the baseball world, so why wouldn’t they have been reminding us about the draft and promoting the top prospects as much as possible? Just another example of MLB fumbling the bag in regards to growing the game.

Even though MLB could have done a much better job of promotion leading up to the draft, now that it’s started, I think it’s what was needed to advance negotiations between the owners and players for the 2020 season. I’ve been pessimistic about there being a 2020 MLB season at all since it seems like the two sides are so far apart on the salary issue, but since the draft started, I have confidence that a deal will be met. Going online and seeing that there is actual baseball news along with player highlights and the reaction videos from guys getting drafted, things just feel right.

How could the video above not get you excited for baseball?? Even though most of these guys won’t reach the majors for a couple of years, it still gets me fired up for the future of the sport and makes me want the MLB back right now. I know that MLB players and owners share my passion for this game, but I hope they do the right thing and reach an agreement. As fucked up as this year has been so far, if the players and owners could just give a little bit and bring baseball back this year, it would help in establishing at least some sense of normalcy to the world.

At this point, I think this is the only way we get a 2019 MLB season. I was like most of you…I thought this would all blow over by the summer, but as things seem to only be getting worse, I’m growing less and less optimistic. President Trump held a call with most of the major American sports commissioners over the weekend in hopes of getting sports back on track, but things still look grim. In response to news of the call, California Governor Gavin Newsom basically said he doesn’t even expect the NFL starting on time.

The NFL season starts in September. Sep-fucking-tember. If Newsom doesn’t even think things will be safe by September, then how would we be able to play baseball in places like Minnesota, where it starts snowing in like October?? Unless…the league quarantined players at Spring Training facilities. I really think this is the only chance we have at a 2020 baseball season.

In theory, you quarantine all players in Arizona and/or Florida, only allow them minimal access to the outside world, and don’t allow fans to attend games. Yes, this sounds like a dystopian novel written by George Orwell, but it’s the only shot we have. Plus, there would be less risk of exposure if all 30 teams were headquartered in just one state (Arizona or Florida). There are ten Cactus League stadiums in Arizona (the preferred location in terms of weather), and if they were to double up on games in each stadium, it’s totally possible to get in a sufficient amount of games to be considered a legitimate season.

However, all it takes is for some idiot to break quarantine and expose himself to COVID-19 to put an end to this fantasy. I mean, how likely is it that you keep almost 900 players and staff from exposing themselves to the outside world? And then there’s the whole minor league situation, which would be even harder to contain. In a perfect world (under these circumstances) MLB executives would find a way to make the Cactus League home to the 2020 MLB season…but if we were living in a perfect world, COVID-19 wouldn’t exist either.

The NCAA finally released their statement regarding the the status of Spring athlete eligibility:

The Division I Council on Monday voted to allow schools to provide spring-sport student-athletes an additional season of competition and an extension of their period of eligibility.

Members also adjusted financial aid rules to allow teams to carry more members on scholarship to account for incoming recruits and student-athletes who had been in their last year of eligibility who decide to stay. In a nod to the financial uncertainty faced by higher education, the Council vote also provided schools with the flexibility to give students the opportunity to return for 2020-21 without requiring that athletics aid be provided at the same level awarded for 2019-20. This flexibility applies only to student-athletes who would have exhausted eligibility in 2019-20.

Schools also will have the ability to use the NCAA’s Student Assistance Fund to pay for scholarships for students who take advantage of the additional eligibility flexibility in 2020-21.

Division I rules limit student-athletes to four seasons of competition in a five-year period. The Council’s decision allows schools to self-apply waivers to restore one of those seasons of competition for student-athletes who had competed while eligible in the COVID-19-shortened 2020 spring season.

The Council also will allow schools to self-apply a one-year extension of eligibility for spring-sport student-athletes, effectively extending each student’s five-year “clock” by a year. This decision was especially important for student-athletes who had reached the end of their five-year clock in 2020 and saw their seasons end abruptly.

Winter sports were not included in the decision. Council members declined to extend eligibility for student-athletes in sports where all or much of their regular seasons were completed.

The Council also increased the roster limit in baseball for student-athletes impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic, the only spring sport with such a limit.

In summary, they extended eligibility for all athletes impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic, schools will be able to expand their rosters, and ONLY seniors will be given financial aid flexibility. It’s great to see the NCAA finally make a decision that actually puts the student-athletes first, since they’re usually branded as the villain. As beneficial as this decision will be for a lot of NCAA athletes, sadly, it opens the flood gates to more speculation. How will smaller schools structure their financial aid to accommodate for more players? Will coaches even want to increase their roster size? How will it impact graduate programs?

Of course it sucks that so many players had their season cut short, but as tough as it is to hear, shit happens. A lot of players don’t go out on their own terms. Some get hurt, some get cut, but most don’t have a storybook ending to their career like Peyton Manning. And even though a global pandemic is the last thing anyone ever expected to happen, that’s just the way the cookie crumbled.

Don’t get me wrong – some players will definitely get fifth-year opportunities. However, it also puts coaches in a tough position because they could be forced to cut players or take away an incoming freshman’s scholarship. Ultimately, that’ll be a joint decision between college officials and coaches, who will have to determine what they think is the right decision for their programs. Sadly, many schools won’t be able to afford to give out more scholarship money, meaning players will have to pay the entire sum, which most can’t financially afford.

We’ll see how everything plays out, but the NCAA’s decision created more problems than it solved. While the harsher decision would’ve been to just chop this season up as a loss and not lengthen eligibility, it might’ve been the right one. Still – more power to the players that do find opportunities to continue playing…keep grinding.

As most sports fans know, stud pitcher Jose Fernandez tragically died in 2016 in a boating accident at the age of 24. Clearly drugs and alcohol are to blame for the crash, but I can prove there was another cause. The 2011 MLB Draft.

The 2011 draft class was STACKED.

2011 is one of the best draft classes in recent history, and this is only the first 14 picks of round 1!

Back to my theory… If you ever watched Fernandez pitch, it was clear that he was a generational type talent. At the age of just 24 he already had 4 seasons under his belt, all of which he had under a 2.92 or lower ERA, 2 All-Star selections, CY Young votes and his 2013 NL Rookie of the year. So how did 13 teams pass up on this guy?

Well, not all 13 got it wrong. Gerrit Cole, Trever Bauer, Anthony Rendon, Frankie Lindor, Javier Baez, and George Springer all panned out. Multiple rings, WS MVPs, Billions in contracts, silver sluggers, you name it, these 6 guys have it. You can even argue Archie Bradley as a competent pick, FINE. But the other 6 on the other hand, yikes.

WHO THE FUCK ARE THESE GUYS!?!? Danny Hultzan?!?? Bubba Starling?? BEFORE JOSE FERNANDEZ?? Those scouts should never be able to work in talent evaluation again.

The six teams that missed were:

  1. Seattle Mariners
  2. Baltimore Orioles
  3. Kansas City Royals
  4. San Diego Padres
  5. Milwaukee Brewers
  6. New York Mets (Nimmo stinks stfu)

If any of these teams pick Hernandez, he is still in this league today playing the game he loves, smiling, and dominating hitters? Why? Here’s why

  • Seattle: not driving a boat in September.
  • Baltimore: not driving a boat in September.
  • Kansas City: not driving a boat in September.
  • San Diego: maybe, but less jetty’s.
  • Milwaukee: not driving a boat in September.
  • New York: not driving a boat in September.

Listen, obviously there’s a million things that could have happened between the day he was born and the day he died that would have changed the outcome. But it’s hard not to say that the scouts who passed up for such a superstar talent for such duds is not a huge impact.

It’s an absolute shame that professional talent evaluators missed so badly here. In any other city, in any other situation, we are sitting here at the edge of our seats waiting to see if Fernandez will sign for more than Cole & Strasburg. If Fernandez was not in Miami that night, he may have developed into one of the greatest pitchers of all time.

Crazy how things work out. Stay woke.

Pecks