THE WORLD'S LARGEST AND MOST COMPREHENSIVE SCOUTING ORGANIZATION
| 2,494 MLB PLAYERS | 15,806 MLB DRAFT SELECTIONS
2,494 MLB PLAYERS | 15,806 MLB DRAFT SELECTIONS
General  | Crack The Bat | 12/19/2005

Comp Picks Taking Shape

Rumors come, and rumors go, as the activity this off-season with the Winter Meetings behind us was a lot slower than the number of big rumors that were swirling would have led you to believe (which of course is nothing new).

As it pertains to the draft, some of the bigger free agents signed will bring the teams that lost them compensation picks. I have talked about the revised draft structure in previous columns based on the collective bargaining agreement that was ratified a year ago.

I have previously guessed that the length of the sandwich round would decrease by roughly 20 percent from 2007 to 2008 due to the change in how Type A and B free agents are classified. Previously Type A free agents represented the top 30 percent of their group, with Type B free agents representing the top 31-50 percent of their groupings. Now those percentages are the top 20 and top 21-40 percents respectively.

It turns out the sandwich round will decrease by nearly 50 percent, with no more than 18 free agents effecting the supplemental first round, down from the 34 supplemental first-round picks from a year ago.

As of right now, there are 10 free agents that have already garnered compensation picks for their 2007 ball-clubs by signing with other teams (Type A free agents Francisco Cordero, Tom Glavine, Torii Hunter, Scott Linebrink and Aaron Rowand; Type B free agents Doug Brocail, Eric Gagne, Jason Kendall, Troy Percival and David Riske), with only eight more that have not yet been signed that have been offered and declined arbitration (Type B free agents Mike Cameron, Pedro Feliz, Livan Hernandez, Ron Mahay, Trever Miller, Mike Piazza, Shannon Stewart and Luis Vizcaino).

Big Draft On Tap
The Milwaukee Brewers stand to enjoy the most compensation picks next June, with a pair of Type A free agents lost (Francisco Cordero and Scott Linebrink). Since both Cordero and Linebrink signed with teams that finished among the worst 15 teams in the big-leagues a year ago, they receive two additional second round picks from those teams (the Cincinnati Reds and Chicago White Sox), but they do receive two early sandwich picks, which will be the 32nd and 35th overall picks.

The Padres stand to gain two sandwich picks should Mike Cameron change teams, as they have already lost Doug Brocail to the Houston Astros.

The Twins get the first pick in the sandwich round by being the worst team to lose a Type A free agent, Torii Hunter, and they also will receive the Angels first-round selection, the 27th overall pick.

Tom Glavine will allow the Mets to steal the Braves first-round pick, the 18th overall selection, as well as picking up the third pick in the sandwich round, the 33rd pick overall.

The Phillies will get the fourth pick in the sandwich round, the 34th overall pick, and the Giants second-round pick for the loss of Aaron Rowand.

The Oakland Athletics are the only other team that stand to have multiple compensation picks should both Mike Piazza and Shannon Stewart sign elsewhere. It has been reported that Piazza may play in Japan next year or possibly even retire.

With two comp picks and two additional second round picks, the Brewers stand to own three picks in the top 35, seven selections within the top 64 and eight picks in the top 100. What makes that haul especially impressive is that they had only one selection in the top 100 picks a year ago (the seventh overall pick), and that they boast one of the youngest, most talented lineups in all of baseball assembled almost entirely via the draft courtesy of scouting director Jack Zduriencik.

You don’t have to go back very far to get an idea of what kind of haul that would look like. Last year the Padres held eight picks in the first two rounds, the Blue Jays had seven, the Giants and Rangers had six while the Nationals had five. Of those 32 picks, 10 were former Aflac All-Americans, while many of the college picks were either preseason or postseason All-Americans (or both) at their respective positions.

It’s not a surprise that more extra, early picks has the potential to garner a tremendous amount of talent, as long as the team that owns those extra, early picks are prepared to spend the money necessary to get all of that talent in the fold. Since the Brewers haven’t skimped on player development ever since Jack Zduriencik took over in 1999, I think it’s safe to say that they will be in a great position next June.

Draft Order
Sandwich picks are awarded to teams losing Type A free agents before compensatory selections are handed out for Type B free agents. The worst team from the 2007 season that loses a Type A free agent gets the first pick in the sandwich round, cycling through all of the teams one time from worst to first before additional picks for Type A free agents lost are distributed.

Then the Type B compensatory picks are handed out, with the same order, cycling through all of the teams once, worst to first, before picks are given out to teams that lose more than one Type B free agent.

Type A free agents also garner the team that loses them a pick from the team that signs them. If the signing team finished among the best 15 teams from the 2007 season, they relinquish their first-round pick. Teams that finish among the worst 15 teams from 2007 do not lose their first-round pick.

Teams that sign multiple Type A free agents lose their picks in order of the Elias Sports Bureau rankings. The free agent with the higher ranking garners the team that lost them the higher pick, but that won’t apply to next year’s draft order since no team signed multiple Type A free agents.

Here is how the order stands right now:

First-round changes:
18. New York Mets (from Braves for Glavine)
27. Minnesota Twins (from Angels for Hunter)

Supplemental first-round:
31. Minnesota Twins (Hunter)
32. Milwaukee Brewers (Cordero)
33. Atlanta Braves (Glavine)
34. Philadelphia Phillies (Rowand)
35. Milwaukee Brewers (Linebrink)
36. Kansas City Royals (Riske)
37. St. Louis Cardinals (Percival)
38. Chicago Cubs (Kendall)
39. San Diego Padres (Brocail)
40. Boston Red Sox (Eric Gagne)

Second-round changes:
45. Philadelphia Phillies (Rowand)
47. Milwaukee Brewers (Cordero)
48. Milwaukee Brewers (Linebrink)

Here is what the order of the sandwich round would look like if all of the remaining free agents sign with different ball-clubs for the 2008 season:

31. Minnesota Twins (Hunter)
32. Milwaukee Brewers (Cordero)
33. Atlanta Braves (Glavine)
34. Philadelphia Phillies (Rowand)
35. Milwaukee Brewers (Linebrink)
36. Kansas City Royals (Riske)
37. San Francisco Giants (Feliz)
38. Houston Astros (Miller)
39. Oakland Athletics (Piazza)
40. St. Louis Cardinals (Percival)
41. Atlanta Braves (Mahay)
42. Chicago Cubs (Kendall)
43. San Diego Padres (Cameron)
44. Arizona Diamondbacks (Hernandez)
45. New York Yankees (Vizcaino)
46. Boston Red Sox (Eric Gagne)
47. Oakland Athletics (Stewart)
48. San Diego Padres (Brocail)

These changes would bump back the Phillies second-round compensation pick to the 53rd overall selection and the Brewers second-round compensation picks to the 55th and 56th overall picks.

One more wrinkle
One new change to draft pick compensation per the new collective bargaining agreement is how unsigned early draft picks are handed out. Previously only unsigned first-round picks garnered compensation, in the form of a sandwich pick. Now unsigned first through third round picks garner compensation.

Teams with unsigned first, first-round supplemental and second round picks will now receive a selection in the draft the next year right after the overall selection of that unsigned pick. Unsigned third round picks will draw a pick in a compensatory round after the third round is completed.

Here is a list of the unsigned draft picks from last year and the picks their drafting team stand to gain:

Unsigned second-round picks:
69A (the 70th overall pick): Atlanta Braves (Joshua Fields)
84A (the 85th overall pick): Boston Red Sox (Hunter Morris)

Supplemental third round (overall picks to be determined):
1. Philadelphia Phillies (Brandon Workman)
2. Houston Astros (Derek Dietrich)
3. San Diego Padres (Tommy Toledo)
4. Los Angeles Angels (Matt Harvey)

The compensation system is far from perfect, and for the most part the structure doesn’t make a whole lot of sense, which compelled me to break it down as I did. Each sport seems to have it’s own character as far as the draft is concerned, with the NFL handing out compensation picks in a much more subjective manner while the NBA institutes a lottery system.

However these changes were made to help give teams more negotiating power, along with the mandatory August 15 signing deadline, when it comes to dealing with amateur players with lofty signing demands. As we found out last August, I’m not sure if MLB accomplished what they were hoping to, but we’ll get a better feel for those changes as the years progress.

The thoughts and opinions listed here do not necessarily reflect those of Perfect Game USA. Patrick Ebert is affiliated with both Perfect Game USA and Brewerfan.net, and can be contacted via email at pebert@brewerfan.net.


General | Blog | 6/16/2026

Wolforth Throwing Mentorship: Article 66

Ron Wolforth
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  The Number That Just Killed MLB Expansion: 1,217   USA Today's Bob Nightengale dropped a bomb shell recently that the baseball world is still digesting. Major League Baseball wants to expand to 32 teams. Team executives are quietly opposing it and the reason has nothing to do with cities or money.   They cannot find enough healthy pitchers.   Between 2020 and 2024, professional baseball performed 1,026 Tommy John surgeries at the minor-league level alone. Another 191 at the Major League level. More than twelve hundred elbow reconstructions in five years on the best young pitchers in the world.   That is not bad luck. That is a system reporting a verdict on itself.   For fifteen years, the youth-baseball industry has chased one number: velocity significantly more than projectability and arm care.    Recruiters scout by it.    Social...
College | Story | 7/7/2026

Coppy's Corner: July 7 Summer Edition

John Coppolella
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It’s an exciting time for College Baseball. Not only do potential and proposed changes to the Collective Bargaining Agreement (CBA) elevate the game, but we are coming off a thrilling College World Series and less than a week away from Major League Baseball’s 2026 Amateur Draft. In the middle of it all is the Cape Cod Baseball League.  The amateur players on the Cape are the future stars of the 2027 MLB Draft. The league runs from June 13th  through August 2nd. Games are played at historic stadiums in Old New England towns. It’s beautiful and charming. Hollywood even made a movie about the Cape Cod League ~25 years ago called Summer Catch. It scored an 8% (!) on Rotten Tomatoes, but, on the plus side, it featured 2001 Jessica Biel in a starring role.  It was so much fun writing Coppy’s Column this spring. My hope is to highlight a pitcher and...
Tournaments | Story | 7/6/2026

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Will Dembo
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More than 300 of the nation’s top 16u teams will meet in East Cobb, Georgia this week as the 16u WWBA Championship gets underway. Over 50 ranked teams from across the country will compete for one of the most prestigious titles in travel baseball, drawing scouts and fans from all over. Pool play will commence on Monday, July 6th with the championship game set for July 13th at the storied East Cobb Baseball Complex. Canes National 16u will hold honors of being the top ranked team entering the event as they have earned a No. 2 national ranking following a dominant 17-2-1 start to their season. The highly touted program is home to many of the top ranked prospects from the 2028 class including talented two-way athlete, Grant Arnold (No. 12 overall) who lives in the 90’s from the mound as well as middle infielder, Bryan Mesa (No. 14 overall) who will draw lots of attention this...
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USA Collegiate National Team: Stars

Craig Cozart
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Quick Hits  Each year at the end of June and beginning of July, top collegiate baseball talent from around the nation arrives in Cary, NC at the USA Baseball National Training Complex.  Typically, the rosters are filled with top underclass, non-draft-eligible talent but this year, we will see a sprinkling of upper-classmen as the coaches evaluate just under 60 players to get to their final 28 roster spots.  For a total of two weeks, the Stars Squad and the Stripes Squad will compete against outside competition in North Carolina as well as Virginia before finishing their slate with 5-games against each other at the NTC Complex.  Once the final roster has been announced the team will depart for Taiwan to compete in the 2026 World Baseball Championships, July 11-15.    CNT Stars Position Players  Anthony Pack Jr.  FR / OF / University of Texas ...
Draft | Mock Draft | 7/6/2026

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Tyler Henninger
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MLB Draft: Top 500 Update Pick Team Name Pos. School 1 Chicago White Sox Roch Cholowsky SS UCLA 2 Tampa Bay Rays Grady Emerson SS Fort Worth Christian 3 Minnesota Twins Vahn Lackey C Georgia Tech 4 San Francisco Giants Jacob Lombard SS Gulliver Schools 5 Pittsburgh Pirates Jackson Flora RHP UC Santa Barbara 6 Kansas City Royals Drew Burress OF Georgia Tech 7 Baltimore Orioles Eric Booth Jr. OF Oak Grove 8 Athletics Chris Hacopian SS Texas A&M 9 Atlanta Braves Ryder Helfrick C Arkansas 10 Colorado Rockies Tyler Bell* SS Kentucky 11 Washington Nationals Jared Grindlinger LHP/OF Huntington Beach 12 Los Angeles Angels Cameron Flukey RHP Coastal Carolina 13 St. Louis Cardinals AJ Gracia OF Virginia 14 Miami Marlins Derek Curiel OF LSU 15 Arizona Diamondbacks Gio Rojas LHP Marjory Stoneman Douglas 16 Texas Rangers Liam Peterson RHP Florida 17 Houston Astros Justin Lebron SS Alabama 18...
Tournaments | Story | 7/5/2026

13u World Series Notes: Days 1-2

Perfect Game Staff
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Michael Wedgeworth (2030, Flomaton, AL) had put the two way ability on full display so far this week, dominating from both sides. On the mound Wedgeworth ran the fastball up to 84 (81-83) with ease to the delivery. Broke off a couple nasty curveballs that induced swing and miss, as well as freezing hitters for punch outs. Collected six in his four inning complete game. He also would not be denied at the plate going 3-5 in the first two days with two doubles. Very intriguing young player as the body continues to grow.  Tyler Bellush (2031, Summerville, SC) is a sure handed shortstop for the Canes Nation squad. Swings it from the left side of the plate and the barrel accuracy has really stuck out thus far. 3-4 through the first couple days with a double and two triples, Bellush has also walked twice and collected 3 RBI along the way. Yesterday against USA Prime with the bases loaded,...
Tournaments | Story | 7/4/2026

16u WWBA North Scout Notes

Perfect Game Staff
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Oliver Lindstrom (2028, Green Bay, WI) created some of the loudest offensive moments of the weekend while producing across the board, finishing with six hits, eight RBI, and a home run. The right-handed hitter showed the ability to stay through the baseball and drive it with authority. Creates quality leverage through the lower half while arriving in strong hitting positions early, allowing the barrel to work with intent through the zone. The blend of power, athleticism, and all-fields impact stood out throughout the event.  Dominic Haigh (2028, South Bend, IN) was one of the most productive hitters at the event, collecting 10 hits while consistently creating pressure on opposing defenses. Made life difficult on pitchers with a relentless approach, routinely extending at-bats and forcing them to work deep into counts. The operation remains simple and efficient, featuring an early...
Tournaments | Story | 7/4/2026

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Joey Cohen
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All American Game | Story | 7/3/2026

Initial 2026 All Star Game Roster Reveal

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Tournaments | Story | 7/3/2026

13u WWBA Scout Note Recap

Jheremy Brown
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Walter Izquierdo Jr. (2031, Miami, Fla.) showed off the upside on the mound for Beast Baseball 13u. The right-handed pitcher went four innings and collected three strikeouts while spreading two hits and two walks for one run. The fastball topped out at 80 and was consistently in the upper- 70s. Showed feel for a curveball with 12-6 shape and some looser vertical depth that was able to get weak contact. Competes in the zone well and showed some feel to work on the arm-side half of the plate. Intriguing upside on the young arm.   Brett Hamlin (2031, Jupiter, Fla.) showed off the barrel feel for FTB American 13u. The left-handed hitter collected nine hits, including two doubles and a triple, to drive in seven RBI. Strong hands and flips the hips well to create good bat speed. Simple operation that gets on time consistently and impacts the ball well. Worked the pull-side well and...
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Freedom Classic Opens Holiday Weekend

Alyssa Golden
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More than 30 teams from the 14U-18U age divisions will head to Fort Myers, Florida this Fourth of July weekend for the seventh annual Perfect Game Freedom Classic. The tournament, running July 3-6, features several nationally ranked prospects from across the country as teams look to compete for a championship. Headlining the field are twin brothers Derek and Ryan Yormark of Merrick, New York. Right-handed pitcher Derek Yormack is the No. 51-ranked player in the class of 2027, the No. 1 player in New York and the No. 5-ranked right-handed pitcher in the country. First baseman Ryan Yormark comes in just behind his twin brother as the No. 3 overall player in New York, the No. 5 first baseman in the nation and the No. 90-ranked player nationally. Both brothers are committed to Vanderbilt. Derek Yormark has established himself as one of the top two-way prospects in the 2027 class. He has run...
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