Major League Baseball (MLB) presented a proposal to transform the recruiting system for young talents. The initiative seeks to prohibit high school players from signing directly with Major League teams, raise the minimum signing age to 20 years old and reduce the money allocated to signing bonuses.
Draft changes and ages
The amateur draft for the United States, Canada and Puerto Rico would go from 20 rounds to 12 starting in 2027. An identical international draft would be created, a point that the players union has rejected in the past. By 2028, a prospect would need to be at least 20 years old as of September 1 and two years past high school graduation.
The MLB justified the measure by pointing out that 75% of high school players signed between 2012 and 2019 never reached the Major Leagues. He also highlighted the growth of university baseball as a means of development.
“Expanded scholarships, NIL opportunities, revenue sharing and significant investments in facilities have made college baseball an increasingly important avenue,” the league said in a statement.
Financing and rules
Each draft would have $200 million in signing funds, with hard caps. Teams could exchange picks, but with restrictions to avoid accumulation in the early rounds. The proposal would eliminate competitive balance round picks and reduce the draft lottery from six to four picks.
Currently, teams can exceed their funds by up to 5%. For example, Pittsburgh has just over 19 million this year, while the champion Dodgers have less than 4 million. The proposal would equalize the amount for all clubs.
Negotiations began on May 13. The leadership had already proposed a salary cap, which generated historic tensions between both parties.




