This was my point - the Mets knew this going in and still decided to draft him, i.e. they should have suspected something and demanded to know if there were health issues. It just seems their DD was lacking.In fairness; Rocker refused to participate in the pre-draft MRI process. This is why the Mets get a comp pick despite pulling their offer from Rocker (you have to make an offer of a certain percentage of the slot to receive a comp pick unless an injury arises in physical and the player did not participate in pre-draft medicals).
Then, the Mets negotiated in good faith. In fact, I believe he was the first agreement announced in the 1st round or maybe the entire draft.
They perform the physical and find an issue. This issue was apparently known by the Rocker camp and not disclosed.
To me, I think the Mets made two mistakes: 1. They should've been willing to take/sign Rocker even with some wear/tear on the arm since he was pitching two weeks prior and throwing well. 2. Taken a guy in the teens who would need a big money deal to sign as a fallback. Someone like Gage Jump etc.
Now, the Mets get pick 11 in a better draft next year, but they have to sign that player since the pick is no longer protected, so it'll be a straight-forward pick most likely rather than BPA. They look bad here and left money to spend in a process that provides clear return on investment.
Also, the perception is similar to the one quoted here which is just bad for a team in a market like New York.
But ya, shame on the Rocker camp for not being honest about an elbow issue if they tried to hide it. Other kids have been drafted high in the past knowing there was impending TJ surgery on the horizon.