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Most Valuable Agent with Matt Hannaford

Most Valuable Agent with Matt Hannaford

Von: Matt Hannaford
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Welcome to Most Valuable Agent – the podcast that gives baseball players, prospects, and fans an exclusive behind-the-scenes look at what it takes to succeed in professional baseball. Hosted by Matt Hannaford, a Major League Baseball agent with years of experience in contract negotiations and player representation, this channel is a must-watch for: • Athletes looking to advance their careers • Parents supporting young players • Baseball fans who want a deeper understanding of the game beyond the field What You'll Learn: • MLB Contracts & Draft Insights – How players get signed, negotiate contracts, and maximize opportunities • The Business of Baseball – Arbitration, free agency, and how teams evaluate talent • Expert Interviews & Analysis – Conversations with players, scouts, and insiders • MLB News & Market Trends – Breaking down trades, signings, and player negotiations 👉 Subscribe now for exclusive insights from one of baseball's top agents! New episodes weekly. You can watch the full episodes on The Most Valuable Agent Youtube Channel https://www.youtube.com/@mostvaluableagentAlignd© Baseball & Softball Ökonomie
  • Your Signing Bonus Means NOTHING to MLB Teams — Here's What Actually Matters
    Feb 25 2026

    MLB draft or college baseball? If your son is a high school player facing this decision, don't wait until draft day to figure it out. Subscribe for weekly baseball career advice.

    In this episode, 25-year MLB agent Matt Hannaford breaks down exactly how families should navigate the NIL, college baseball, and MLB Draft decision — and why money alone should never drive it.

    ✅ Why your signing bonus size determines how much opportunity your son actually gets

    ✅ How college NIL offers work (revenue share vs. NIL deals) and what's negotiable

    ✅ What a first-year professional contract actually includes — bonus splits, tax strategy, scholarship plans, clawback clauses

    ✅ The pre-draft mental exercise that prevents families from making emotional, last-minute decisions

    ✅ How to evaluate your son's emotional maturity for pro ball — and why getting it wrong can end a career

    The MLB Draft decision is one of the most consequential moments in a young baseball player's life, and most families go into it without the information they need. Matt walks through the full landscape: how scouts evaluate high school players using player comps and projectability, why college programs adjust their offers as draft stock rises, and what the money actually represents from the organization's perspective — not yours.

    One of the biggest misconceptions is that a signing bonus is just a paycheck. Matt explains how bonus size directly correlates with organizational commitment. A player who signs for $100,000 may find himself playing twice a week at the lowest level, stuck in a Catch-22 where the team won't invest playing time in a low-cost asset. Meanwhile, a player signed for $2 million gets every opportunity to develop. Understanding this dynamic changes how families should evaluate any draft offer.

    Matt also breaks down the college side: how revenue share agreements differ from NIL marketing deals, why both are negotiable, and what leverage looks like for a player projected to go high in the draft. He covers professional contract specifics most families never learn about until it's too late — the seven-season control period, the college scholarship plan (and how teams try to undercut it), incentive bonus structures that deduct from your scholarship, and clawback provisions that can reclaim your signing bonus if you retire early.

    Whether your son is a projected first-rounder or a late-round possibility, this episode gives you the framework to make the decision with clarity, not panic. Scroll down to the timestamps to jump straight to the contract breakdown.

    Matt Hannaford is a Major League Baseball agent with over 25 years of experience representing players from first-round picks to Hall of Famers. He created The Most Valuable Agent Podcast to give baseball families the insider knowledge they need to navigate the business side of the game.

    #MostValuableAgent #MLBDraft #BaseballNIL

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    29 Min.
  • The Arm Injury Crisis: How to Counter Rising Arm Injuries with Proven Mechanics
    Feb 20 2026

    75% of top-drafted pitchers never make it to the big leagues. If your son is a pitcher, this episode could change everything about how you approach his development. Subscribe for weekly baseball career insights.

    Former first-round pick Justin Orenduff had the GM of the Dodgers watching him pitch in Double-A. Then his shoulder gave out. That injury sent him on a decade-long quest to understand why some pitchers stay healthy and others break down. His answer is backed by data from 1,100 drafted pitchers and published with Duke University.

    ✅ Why 75% of top-drafted pitchers never reach the big leagues — and only 2–3% become everyday starters

    ✅ How college innings count against a pitcher's professional career before it even starts

    ✅ What the DVS score is and how it quantifies injury risk on a 0–24 scale

    ✅ The free training tool every youth pitcher already has access to that nobody talks about

    ✅ Why velocity and longevity don't have to be mutually exclusive

    Justin Orenduff was a first-round draft pick of the Los Angeles Dodgers who had his career derailed by a shoulder injury. After surgery, his surgeon told him something that changed his entire mindset: the way he threw the baseball caused the injury. That single phrase launched Justin into years of research, eventually partnering with Duke University to publish a formal study on pitching mechanics and injury risk.

    His study tracked the top three pitchers drafted and signed by every MLB organization since 2013 — over 1,100 pitchers total. The findings were staggering: nearly half arrived in professional baseball already carrying arm injuries from their amateur careers. College pitchers who needed surgery had accumulated only around 320 total innings, and that number includes their college workload. The professional runway before a major injury was shockingly short.

    From that research, Justin built DVS — the Delivery Value System — a biomechanics scoring model that rates a pitcher's delivery from 0 to 24 based on injury risk and mechanical efficiency. Pitchers like Justin Verlander, Clayton Kershaw, and Mariano Rivera all scored above 16. Justin himself scored a 7 before his surgery and climbed to 17–20 after learning how to move differently — throwing harder at 35 years old than at any point in his professional career.

    The conversation also dives into the USPBL, a four-team developmental league where Justin runs pitcher development. Unlike traditional independent baseball, the USPBL prioritizes skill development days, individualized plans, and a culture where committing to growth matters more than winning that night's game. So far, 52 players have signed with MLB organizations and 7 have reached the big leagues.

    Matt and Justin also tackle the uncomfortable reality behind youth pitching culture: training programs that chase velocity to validate their own business models, not the pitcher's long-term career. And they explore a simple thought experiment that every baseball family should consider: if you had to choose between a coach who promises 100 mph and a coach who promises health, which would you pick? Scroll down to the timestamps to hear why that's the wrong question.

    If this episode changed how you think about pitcher development, share it with a baseball family who needs to hear it.

    RESOURCES

    → DVS Baseball: https://dvsbaseball.com

    → Justin on X/Twitter: @JustinOrenduff

    Matt Hannaford is a Major League Baseball agent with 25+ years of experience advising families on baseball career decisions. Justin Orenduff is a former first-round MLB Draft pick, pitching biomechanics researcher, and head of pitcher development for the USPBL.

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    51 Min.
  • Raising a Ballplayer in a Big-League Home
    Feb 4 2026

    Most baseball families believe the path to success is more reps, more pressure, more seriousness — but former World Series champion and MLB manager Kurt Suzuki sees it differently.

    In this special episode of The Most Valuable Agent, MLB agent Matt Hannaford sits down with Kurt Suzuki and his 12-year-old son Kai for an honest, refreshing conversation about youth baseball, parenting, pressure, and what actually builds confident, resilient players.

    This isn't a highlight-reel interview — it's a real look inside how a big leaguer thinks about development before the stats, rankings, and expectations take over. Kurt opens up about the mistakes he made as a player, the lessons he wishes he learned earlier, and why his number-one rule as a dad and coach is never telling a kid to "do more" after a bad game.

    Together, they talk through the emotional side of baseball: handling failure, separating identity from performance, why fun matters more than trophies at 12 years old, and how parents can support growth without accidentally creating burnout. Kai shares what it's actually like growing up around the big leagues — from clubhouse prank stories to what helps him stay loose when games get tense.

    If you're a parent, coach, or player navigating travel ball, pressure-filled weekends, and the constant feeling that your kid should be doing more — this episode brings clarity, perspective, and a much-needed exhale.

    Subscribe for weekly insight on player development, mindset, recruiting, and the business of baseball — with conversations families rarely get to hear this honestly.

    WHAT YOU'LL LEARN

    • Why "having fun" isn't soft — it's a competitive advantage
    • How Kurt separates being a dad from being a coach
    • The one phrase Kurt refuses to say after bad games
    • Why practice should be intense — but games should be free
    • How kids absorb pressure even when adults think they're hiding it
    • Why winning at 12 doesn't matter as much as learning how to win
    • How to teach confidence without tying identity to performance
    • What youth players actually need after failure
    • How clubhouse culture translates directly to youth baseball teams
    • Why burnout often starts with good intentions from parents

    ABOUT KURT SUZUKI

    Kurt Suzuki is a former MLB catcher, World Series champion, and current Major League manager. Over a 16-year big league career, he became known as a leader, game-caller, and teammate-first professional. Today, Kurt brings those same principles to coaching, player development, and parenting — emphasizing preparation, mindset, and respect for the game.

    ABOUT MATT HANNAFORD

    Matt Hannaford is a 25-year MLB agent and founder of Aligned Sports. He has represented MVPs, All-Stars, and World Series champions, and now shares weekly insight on youth development, recruiting, mindset, and the business of baseball through The Most Valuable Agent podcast.

    CONNECT WITH MATT HANNAFORD

    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/mfhannaford/
    Website: https://www.aligndsports.com/
    YouTube (subscribe for weekly insight): https://www.youtube.com/@mostvaluableagent

    #YouthBaseball #TravelBaseball #BaseballParents #PlayerDevelopment #MentalGame #BaseballMindset #MostValuableAgent #ParentCoaching #BaseballCulture

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    59 Min.
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