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Ok I understand, could I propose a small add-on to this rule? Any contract of a higher length has to be worth more than 50 percent the per annum value of the shorter contract. This will not influence a jump on years from 1 to 2, 2 to 3, 3 to 4 or 4 to 5. But it will limit the damage when increasing 3 or 4 years length at once.Example x team proposes a 2 year at 20mil per year. y team proposes a 5 year at 8.5 mil per year. The first bid would prevail over the second one even when total dollar value of the second is slightly over the first offer. y team would have to bid at least a 4 year 10.5 mil to get the best bargain.I know this only takes us a tad closer to reality and I would prefer to set the bar a bit higher maybe 70 percent instead of 50 percent, but for simplicity's sake 50 should do the trick.
I have to say I don't like the total dollars reasoning. This way short term offers are almost impossible to pass and it becomes a bit unrealistic. A player will always go for a 1 year 21 million offer over a 5 year offer at 4.5mil per year. It's 4 years more of work and only 1.5 mil more guaranteed. Total dollars only makes sense when offers are of a similar value, but sometimes someone is willing to overpay big in the present to avoid burdening the team in the future. I would prefer to keep it as it is than to do this change, but what would be even better is the valuation scale. Maybe 90% against 130% was too steep when going up and down but 90% against 120% should fix that.
Count my vote as official. I think this is a reasonable approach that is simple and should not result in any major loopholes. That said, it would be worth revisiting this after we've gone through free agency for consideration in future years (having a real experience under our belts).
Ben, you know as I know that this league is designed to be a simple representation of MLB as it stands today. I think we are very close to getting to a point in which the base set of rules can be established for years to come.With Ben un-offically voting for Roy's proposal, I will do the same in hopes of getting something passed. That is 3 out of 6 so far...
My personal preference is discounting using a time-value of money formula. If we've decided not to go in that direction because we want to keep it simple, which I understand, then I'd personally prefer to keep it really simple and go with something like this (total value, no discounting schema).