Those who invest into scouting have realized by now that the way to spend money and draft points is to invest $10.000 and get two points for $5.000 each, and to use them on scouting combine after the All-Star break. There they will get information about all draftees' height and age measures.
From this point, the manager will focus only on 18-year-old talents. And why is that? Because the skills of 19-year-old draftees can be just as those of 18-year-old ones, and with that fact, they have a season less to train and achieve higher levels, possible for 18-year-old draftees who get training for a whole season. Thus they draft a 18-year-old player, train him, and next season they have a player who is 19 years old and much better than the available 19-year-old draftees.
This is the most obvious reason for investing scouting points only on younger draftees. I, for example, rank younger talents on to the top, so the older ones end up at the bottom, with completely blank information (except age and height). I do it, and it's pretty obvious, because why the heck would I draft an older player if I can have a younger, and with it, more valuable and trainable, player. (The only possibility of me checking out those older guys is to find a possible 'dark horse' among them because I know already that I will be picking last in the league. That dark horse is still better than the totally untalented 18-year-old with dubious salary, but he can't compare with any average 18-year-old draftee, except in the case of a 10 or 10+ potential which could replace the starting age point.)
The point of this topic is to propose a solution and to discuss this question of 19-year-old picks. When an 18-year-old talent decides not to come out to the draft, he, in most cases, stays in school to train more. Therefore, a 19-year-old draftee that decided not to take out the draft when he was 18 years old, must have better skills than he had had a season ago. That's the case with most of the draftees who missed the draft when they were 18 - now they are better players. So, what I am proposing is higher skills for 19 year-old draftees.
When an 18-year-old starts his career and receives training for a whole season he develops better than he would in case he had stayed in school and trained by himself, in a lower division quality-wise. So, the 19-year-old draftees' skills should not reach the levels that 18-year-old draftees could receive through a year of professional training. (I am for rare exceptions.)
In what way would this affect us? The first thing that comes to my mind is the scouting routine. Older draftees would not be shunned, submitted last and in most cases fired right after the draft. They would be as potential as their younger counterparts, and managers could be investing maximum weekly numbers for a purpose. Currently, it's justified not to spend huge numbers to scout all the info of 19-year-old draftees. If this would be changed, the 19-year-old talents would be as respected as 18-year-old ones. This would eventually bring more balance, joy, unexpectedness, and meaning to the draft as a very important event at the start of the season.
All suggestions are welcome. This idea just occurred in my mind, I haven't thought it through completely yet. I hope you'd agree with the idea's basic point. Thank you for having read the post.