MLB International Draft? Big Papi says “No”

With the international draft proving a flashpoint in negotiations on a new collective-bargaining agreement, Hall of Fame inductee speaks up against it… yet

Jeffrey May

Jeffrey MayJeff_DiarioASUpdate: Mar 9th, 2022 20:42 EST

Mar 8, 2022; San Francisco, California, USA; Former baseball players Alex Rodriguez (left) and David Ortiz attend the game between the Golden State Warriors and the LA Clippers at Chase Center. Mandatory Credit: Darren Yamashita-USA TODAY Sports

Darren YamashitaUSA TODAY Sports

In the latest round of sparring between Major League Baseball’s owners and the MLBPA, the league wants to add an international draft in an attempt to create a more structured process by which teams can add young players hailing from outside of the United States.

Retired Boston Red Sox superstar David Ortiz, maybe the most prominent voice in Dominican baseball and formerly one of these foreign-sourced players, said in a telephone conversation with ESPN’s Jeff Passan that he is open to the idea of an international draft but that it should not be implemented without significant input from current and former players.

In a voice message sent to a group chat that has been widely shared in Dominican baseball circles, David Ortiz, perhaps the most influential baseball voice in the country, came out strongly against the international draft, according to a copy of the message obtained by ESPN.

— Jeff Passan (@JeffPassan) March 9, 2022

The draft proposed by Major League Baseball, which was completely unmentioned throughout the past three months, and has suddenly become the tinderbox that could scupper a deal to end the MLB’s player lockout of players, would need several years of consultation before rolling out. By contrast, MLB has proposed bringing it in in 2024, giving less than 24 months to hammer out the dents in its workings.

I was in FL. We never offered the Int’l Draft. We did discuss it, but MLB told us they were NOT going to offer anything for it. At that point, we informed all players & agreed to no draft.This is MLB muddying the waters & deflecting blame. Fans, pls hang in there with us.

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— Max Scherzer (@Max_Scherzer) March 10, 2022

“The Dominican is not the U.S. You can’t snap a finger and everything lines up to operate the right way. We’ve got a new president who’s trying to improve things. We need to do this slowly.

MLB has proposed a draft system that it says would guarantee more money for international talent than currently, where international amateurs are free agents with no restrictions on who they can sign with, but are limited by a hard cap of between $4 and $6 million per signing class.

One benefit of this type of draft, says MLB, is that the corruption that is endemic in the international market would have curbs put on it. Currently, it is not unusual to see kickbacks, early signings, and unscrupulous trainers plying teenage boys with PEDs.

“The Dominican is not the U.S. You can’t snap a finger and everything lines up to operate the right way. We’ve got a new president who’s trying to improve things. We need to do this slowly.”

David Ortiz

Overall, within the players union support for the international draft is mixed. But with 30% of the league’s players coming from Latin America, this is seen by MLB as a vital part of the structure that they long for.

In a voice message sent to a group chat, obtained by ESPN and widely distributed amongst Dominican baseball players, Big Papi can be heard encouraging others “to lead a strong campaign opposing the draft.”

David Ortiz Comes Out Against MLB's Proposal For International Draft https://t.co/zdvWxlMfVl

— WBZ Boston Sports (@wbzsports) March 9, 2022

“Taking time, that makes more sense,” Ortiz told Passan. “OK, guys, let’s keep up this pace to do it three, four years from now. We sit down with the big-time players. We listen to what they have to say. If we’re going to do it, let’s do it right. Rushing it like this is not right.

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“Baseball is such a big thing in the Dominican. Baseball keeps kids off the streets. We don’t want that to walk away from us. We want it to get better. That’s my focus. Nothing else.”