Agreed. Reed is one of my favorite players but I don't really think getting a player who is on the decline is really going to help us much.
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CLICK HERE to Register for a free account and login for a smoother ad-free experience. It's easy, and only takes a few moments.Agreed. Reed is one of my favorite players but I don't really think getting a player who is on the decline is really going to help us much.
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That's an interesting starting point of what an extremely optimistic scenario would get us. I'm no capologist, but I think your numbers are very much rose-tinted, and even then it's going to be tight. You also left out Arrington, who could still be of interest at the right price, in the right role.
There are a number of other places that I think that some money may be freed up:
1. Gostkowski. $3.4M cap hit in 2013, $3.8M in 2014. Sorry, but he's just not worth it. Cutting him would save around $1.8M this year and $3M next. There are good rookie UDFA kickers to be found. The team may ask him to take a pay cut or be released.
2. Gregory. I'm not sure how this would be done, but he has a $3M cap hit both this year and next, and I don't see him being worth it. Cutting him only saves $0.5K this year, but $2.35M in 2014, for a net cap savings of almost $3M over 2 years. I'm not sure what the incentive would be for him to restructure, but it's something I could see the team exploring. He's only 29 and a solid role player - I have no problem with him, just with the size of his contract relative to his value.
3. Extending/restructuring Brady and Wilfork. Both should be playing at a high level beyond the end of their current contracts, and both are foundational players and team leaders.
It will be interesting to see how creative the Pats are in the offseason.
As for all the wonderful external FAs mentioned in this thread, I can't see how the Pats are going to possibly afford any of them, unless they do some major restructuring, or they lose some major pieces from the current team. Welker, Talib and Vollmer are the top priorities, followed by Woodhead, and Edelman and then Thomas, Fletcher, Arrington, Cole, White, Hoomanawanui and Ballard. I just can't see how a Percy Harvin, Ed Reed (he'll be overpriced and at 35 he's likely to hit a wall) or anyone else would be squeezed in.
Of course he could have helped. Claiming otherwise is just insane.
That's an interesting starting point of what an extremely optimistic scenario would get us. I'm no capologist, but I think your numbers are very much rose-tinted, and even then it's going to be tight. You also left out Arrington, who could still be of interest at the right price, in the right role.
There are a number of other places that I think that some money may be freed up:
1. Gostkowski. $3.4M cap hit in 2013, $3.8M in 2014. Sorry, but he's just not worth it. Cutting him would save around $1.8M this year and $3M next. There are good rookie UDFA kickers to be found. The team may ask him to take a pay cut or be released.
2. Gregory. I'm not sure how this would be done, but he has a $3M cap hit both this year and next, and I don't see him being worth it. Cutting him only saves $0.5K this year, but $2.35M in 2014, for a net cap savings of almost $3M over 2 years. I'm not sure what the incentive would be for him to restructure, but it's something I could see the team exploring. He's only 29 and a solid role player - I have no problem with him, just with the size of his contract relative to his value.
3. Extending/restructuring Brady and Wilfork. Both should be playing at a high level beyond the end of their current contracts, and both are foundational players and team leaders.
It will be interesting to see how creative the Pats are in the offseason.
As for all the wonderful external FAs mentioned in this thread, I can't see how the Pats are going to possibly afford any of them, unless they do some major restructuring, or they lose some major pieces from the current team. Welker, Talib and Vollmer are the top priorities, followed by Woodhead, and Edelman and then Thomas, Fletcher, Arrington, Cole, White, Hoomanawanui and Ballard. I just can't see how a Percy Harvin, Ed Reed (he'll be overpriced and at 35 he's likely to hit a wall) or anyone else would be squeezed in.
Agreed. If the Ravens let Reed walk, I fully expect Belichick to roll out the red carpet for him.
Without getting into some long winded argument.
He said "He couldn't have helped enough in 2009-10 to justify his cost given the issues and makeup of those teams".
You said the above in response. It is clear you often like to be the devils advocate on here but next time at least respond to the point he is making rather than just for the sake of argueing.
I think you know that or if not just go back and read his post before being argumentitive. The argument is could the help he would have provided as a player be less or greater than the amount of money he would have cost us and the corresponding consequences in loss of other personel.
Gostkowski's down year has resulted in the 6th highest point total for a kicker (149) and that's only through 15 games. He's 17 points shy of the record. He may be be asked to restructure. I doubt he gets cut but even if he does it wouldn't be until training camp. They'll likely bring in competition to camp and it's possible they actually find one of those UDFA that would be good enough to make a change but I don't think it's all that likely they will. I understand a lot of good kickers were undrafted, I just don't think you can count on finding one. Either way I wouldn't count on using his salary on free agents.
Jason has the Patriots currently able to carry forward $6.7m and 16m under the cap for next year without that, so factoring in 5m for rookies the Patriots have $19.7m.
Brady has a cap hit of £21.8m though which can be lowered with an extension or another restructure.
Next years cap numbers: New England Patriots Salary Cap 2013
Not a lot of money to play with once you add in Welker, Vollmer, Talib, Woodhead & Edelman needing new contracts.
I believe the Patriots had 25 days after cutting him to file an injury grievance over Fanene. Never heard a word. And surely we would have if they did. He may have time to file against them yet if they fail to pay the deferred portion of his signing bonus when it comes due. The Colts filed a similar grievance over a FA signing in 2006. Signed Corey Simon after the Eagles rescinded his tag over concerns with his weight and motivation. I think Simon played in 3 games in two seasons and Polian lost $13M in the process which they never recovered. Claimed his 2007 diagnosis of an immume mediated arthritis during training camp was pre existing...
I think his signing was one of many mistakes made last season that were the result of the FO and medical staff not doing their jobs particularly well. I think the bluster about the disclosure forms was just ownership covering up for an embarassing failure of the organization to perform due diligence in their haste to plug some gaps. The Kraft's don't like it when something backfires and makes them look foolish.
I've asked a couple of mediots about the situation and gotten no response. I'm going to try Brandt as he would be all over an issue like this if there was anything going on.
Yes, but it's even worse after the transition to a 4-3 defense in '11. This defense has regressed very quickly in the past 2 years. Look at the defensive ranks in the Belichick era:
Code:[B]Season Pts TotYds PassYds RushYds[/B] 2001 6 24 24 19 2002 17 23 11 31 2003 1 7 15 4 2004 2 9 17 6 2005 17 26 31 8 2006 2 6 12 5 2007 4 4 6 10 2008 8 10 11 15 2009 5 11 12 13 2010 8 25 30 11 2011 15 31 31 17 2012 17 27 29 12
I'm not sure if the reason is the DC or lack of talent, but this defense looks very poor to what we had with Pees and Crennel.
But is that the result of Gostkowski being a particularly good kicker, or Gostkowski kicking for a particularly prolific offense that creates lots of opportunities for him?
Gost is a decent kicker, but he's being paid as an absolute top end kicker in the NFL. He has a cap hit of $3.4M in 2013, and the franchise tag for kickers is projected to be around $2.9M next year. I agree that he's not likely to get cut before camp, and I'm certainly not counting on it, but stranger things have happened, and if the Pats need to make some hard choices regarding cap room it's a option, especially if they decide that they can probably do as well on the open market at much less cost. They've already looked at some other options (including taking a look at Billy Cundiff during the season).
Sorry, Mayo, but your evaluation of Gost leave a lot to be desired. Like way too many people you only look at his FG stats and you ignore his kick-offs. The Pats have 50 TBs (a 46.7%, the highest of Gost Career) and the average return is only 20.8 yards. That is 4th best in the league. That is an extremely valuable kicker right there, particularly in the game of field position. And it's well known that Belichick prefers the returns over the TB because he has faith in the guys making more stops inside the 20 than past the 30.
The only reason the Pats "looked" at other kickers was to evaluate them for the emergency call list.
BTW, Cundiff is 7-12 on FGs. He's missed 2 form under 40, 1 from 40-49 and 2 from 50+...
Compared to Gost's being 29/35. He missed 2 from 30-39, 4 from 40-49 and 0 from 50+.... And I'm fairly certain most everyone has agreed that 1 of those misses should have counted.... And there were 3 or 4 others that had no bearing on the outcome of the game.
I understand that Gost is a very good kickoff kicker. I'm not bashing Gostkowski. I think he's a good kicker overall. I've never criticized him all season, though many have. I'm not making any predictions, and certainly not counting on anything. I'm merely suggesting that, given that we may have to make some decisions about who to keep and who to let go, the Pats will have to decide whether Gostkowski is worth a $3.4M cap hit, and that if push comes to shove, he could potentially be a casualty. I certainly won't cheer if it happens, but I wouldn't be shocked.
2013 New England Patriots Salary Cap Space = $18.865 million
Hoomanawanui (RFA) = $1.323 million
Fletcher (RFA) = $1.323 million
White = $940,000 + $165,000 = $1.105 million
Koutouvides = $840,000 + $65,000 = $905,000
Thomas = $715,000 + $50,000 = $765,000
Cole = $715,000 + $40,000 = $755,000
Subtotal = $6.176 million
2013 NFL Draft Picks = $3.5 million
Wes Welker = $6 million (3 years, $24 million total, $12 million guaranteed)
Remaining salary cap space = $3.289 million (Woodhead, Edelman, Ballard, Pryor)
Richard Seymour was NOT coming back to the Pats after the 2009 season. Not only because of his money demands, but because Seymour didn't want to come back (for a lot of reasons that aren't worth discussing, because they've been rehashed many times before).Of course he could have helped. Claiming otherwise is just insane.
No offense, but posting that doesn't mean a damn thing. You have to post the actual stats. Those are what matter because you can make an actual comparison.
[B]Season Pts TotYds PassYds RushYds[/B]
2001 17.00 334.50 218.56 115.94
2002 21.63 336.06 198.69 137.38
2003 14.88 291.63 202.00 89.63
2004 16.25 310.75 212.50 98.25
2005 21.13 330.19 231.44 98.75
2006 14.81 294.38 200.19 94.19
2007 17.13 288.31 190.06 98.25
2008 19.31 309.00 201.38 107.63
2009 17.81 320.19 209.69 110.50
2010 19.56 366.50 258.50 108.00
2011 21.38 411.06 293.94 117.13
2012 22.07 381.07 275.53 105.53
| 118 | 6K |
| 17 | 474 |
| 26 | 3K |
| 12 | 2K |
| 6 | 1K |
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