Mess
Global Moderator
The bolded is how I view drafted overagers as well. If we drafted them at that spot in their first draft eligible year, would we be very satisfied with how they developed so far? If the answer is yes, it's a good pick.
Very true, but it feels like cheating.
The goal is to draft BPA at time of draft and that usually means taking 18 year olds and projecting them into the future including 2 years later and beyond as that is what separates scouts from the rest. If you draft that 20 year old (overager) then the guess work has been removed when they are now a productive player and you see what you get.
The opportunity loss comes into play here because you essentially drafted wrong/poorly 2 years previous, and now looking to compensate your prospect pool via back-filling previous draft eligible years by drafting players passed over in the past. The cost however comes at the current draft expense where instead of grabbing 18 year olds with potential you're fixing the past and creating new holes in the future.
If you get an NHLer in the process its good as that is the goal, but if you have good scouting and reputation to find talent then drafting 18 year old Brooks you will be praised when 2 years later he leads his league in scoring with 120 points. If you're drafting when he is already a 120 point player and 20 years old then anyone can do that essentially because your not forecasting potential and draft eligible BPA but rather looking at the scoring leaders in the present and using that as your draft rankings.