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Draft Economics - Bloomberg

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I ran across this article today and thought it was a little different twist on evaluating the draft picks. Thought I would share.

 

Who Won the NFL Draft? Economics Says Green Bay: Kevin Hassett

(Bloomberg Business)

 

 

(Commentary. Kevin Hassett is director of economic policy

studies at the American Enterprise Institute. He was chief

economic adviser to Republican Senator John McCain of Arizona

during the 2000 primaries. The opinions expressed are his own.)

 

By Kevin Hassett

May 1 (Bloomberg) -- The National Football League draft was

held this weekend in New York. The sports pages have been filled

with analyses by seasoned football scouts of the winners and

losers. The consensus among sportswriters is that the New Orleans

Saints, who were able to draft the cosmically gifted running back

Reggie Bush with their first pick, were the big winners.

Economics suggests something else. The Saints actually were

among the bigger losers this weekend, and the draft had one

obvious big winner: the Green Bay Packers.

I arrive at these conclusions using recent research by Yale

University economist Cade Massey, and University of Chicago

economist Richard Thaler. They studied years of draft history,

and used economics to evaluate the regular practices of NFL

teams.

They found that teams make systematic errors that reflect a

kind of economic illiteracy. Coaches and general managers place

too high a value on the top few picks, and too low a value on

picks a bit further down.

Here is how the economics works. NFL teams each face a

salary cap each year. Every team has to fill its roster for about

the same amount of money. The trick is to get maximum value for

your salary expenditures. To do that, a team has to have a number

of players on its roster who play a lot better than their

salaries would indicate.

 

Draft Importance

 

A key way to do that is to be good at drafting. The rookie

wage structure is held low by the collective bargaining agreement

between the league and players. If you can select a competent

starter in a late round, you may have him for five or six years

at a salary far below what he could negotiate on the free market.

If, for example, the going rate for a star running back is

$9 million a year, and you find one in a later round for $750,000

a year, that frees up lots of money to spend on veteran players

at other positions. In this example, your rookie running back

provides you with what economists call a ``surplus'' of more than

$8 million dollars a year.

The problem with the draft is that salaries of the top picks

are very high. Defensive end Mario Williams, the top overall

pick, has already negotiated a salary package worth $54 million

over the next six years. That pay is so high that even if he is

the best player at his position for years, he will provide the

Texans with very little surplus. The trick in the draft is to

find bargains, and there are not many at the top of the draft.

 

Surplus Value

 

Massey and Thaler combed through years of data, and

estimated the surplus value available historically to teams

picking at different positions in the draft. They did this by

using statistics to compare performance to salaries.

They found that the surplus value was actually highest for

picks in the second round, and declines rather slowly thereafter.

Second-round picks tend to perform well, but they don't get paid

nearly as much as first-rounders. That frees up money to spend

elsewhere, which can be the difference between winning and losing

once the season starts.

Massey and Thaler estimate the expected surplus for each

position in the NFL draft. They find, for example, that a player

chosen with the 43rd pick can be expected to provide a

performance worth $750,000 more than his salary, while the top

pick will outperform his salary by far less.

Using my own back-of-the-envelope version of their

estimates, it's easy to provide an economist's perspective on the

winners and losers in the draft that doesn't depend at all on

which players were chosen.

 

Pack Wins

 

To do this, I allocated each draft slot an expected surplus

value based on the Massey and Thaler work. Then I tallied the

expected gains for each team given the draft picks they ended up

with. A team that only had the 43rd pick, for example, would have

a surplus estimate of $750,000.

And the winner? The Green Bay Packers. They pulled off a

number of clever trades, shrewdly stockpiling the enormously

valuable second- and third-round picks. In the end, they drafted

one player in the first round, two in the second, and two in the

third.

Given the history of picks in the second and third rounds,

Green Bay should have a number of players locking down valuable

slots on their roster for years, freeing up resources to buy

veteran stars when they need them. Other teams that pursued

similar strategies included the St. Louis Rams, the New York

Jets, and the Minnesota Vikings.

 

Redskins Lose

 

There was a clear loser as well: the Washington Redskins.

They foolishly gave up draft picks for established veteran

players, leaving them (after an especially silly trade that gave

the Jets a second-round pick this year, a second-round pick next

year, and a sixth-round pick this year, for the Jets second-round

pick this year) with only one pick in the first three rounds.

They used it on University of Miami linebacker Rocky

Macintosh. While ``Rocky'' is admittedly a promising football

name, this is a very unimpressive harvest compared with the Green

Bay five-player bonanza.

The problem with the Redskins' approach is that veteran

players often have their salaries set in the free market, making

their pay appropriate for their level of performance.

But with everyone playing under the same salary cap, it

takes players with big surpluses for a team to outshine the

others. The draft is the only place to find those in large

numbers. The Redskins need some remedial economics classes.

Other losers in the draft include Miami, Denver, Atlanta,

Tennessee and New Orleans. While they may have selected good

players, they didn't load up on those likely to outperform their

salaries.

The best way to test any economic theory is to use it to

make predictions, and then evaluate those predictions after the

fact. So here goes. The economics of the draft suggests that

Green Bay, St. Louis, Minnesota and the New York Jets will

improve the most in the coming seasons. Washington, Miami,

Denver, Atlanta, Tennessee and New Orleans, the losers in this

draft, are headed south.

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And the winner? The Green Bay Packers. They pulled off a

number of clever trades, shrewdly stockpiling the enormously

valuable second- and third-round picks. In the end, they drafted

one player in the first round, two in the second, and two in the

third.

Given the history of picks in the second and third rounds,

Green Bay should have a number of players locking down valuable

slots on their roster for years, freeing up resources to buy

veteran stars when they need them.

 

 

:thumbsdown:

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