Baseball Scout in Latin America is Vindicated
Baseball scouting in the Dominican Republic is a well-documented problem these days, as a few high profile players have been caught misleading their teams about their age. Now, a Dominican Republic court has ordered the Washington Nationals to pay about $75,000 in damages to former scout Jose Baez who was fired after signing a Dominican prospect who lied about his age.
As usual, ESPN The Magazine’s Jorge Arangure Jr., is all over the story (he is one of the only top-level American journalists covering the inner workings of baseball in Latin America). Based on Arangure’s summary of the testimony, the reason Baez was fired was because he was believed to have participated in the player’s scheme to lie about his age.
Bottom line here: This is just another sordid chapter in MLB’s decades-long mismanagement of baseball in the Dominican Republic. Change is inevitable, but there is no agreement on the best way to reform the system. While some people call for a global draft as the panacea to solve these problems, there are numerous reasons not to have a worldwide draft, such as the inevitable destruction of local baseball (see Puerto Rico for an example). My proposed solution is for MLB teams to invent a new classification, which would be below the current “Rookie League” level, and play two or three teams in established leagues. Those who succeed would eventually be promoted to Rookie League or low Class-A teams in the U.S. As they would be taking kids as young as 16, the teams would be charged with educating the kids and keeping them until they age out of the system a couple of years later.