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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.And why would the browns do this? It would take like 4 firsts if not more
Micah Parsons was 26 on an expiring contract.He should be worth a lot more than Micah Parsons. If I'm the browns I keep him until the draft and I know what the first rounder is and who I'm going to get. I'd only trade him now if he's a malcontent. The browns need a QB. You don't need to get rid of your best player right now. Look at what the colts are doing
It's still less than Watson's dead money hit.Multiple sources (CBS, PFT, BSPN) have the Browns cap hit of a Garrett trade at $68M in dead money.
Browns were angling for public funding on a new stadium. perhaps they thought trading him would have brought negative press?Micah Parsons was 26 on an expiring contract.
Myles Garrett is 29 and in the first year of a 4-year contract.
It's not the same.
They have to pay Deshaun Watson for another year before they can even consider trading him. Getting Garrett off their books gives them a ton of flexibility.
They should have traded him in the offseason, but they're the Browns.
I tend to doubt that a DE, even a future HOFer like Garrett, puts people in the seats. And with revenue sharing, ticket sales and concessions aren't remotely close to the biggest share of revenue each team makes. Revenue generation is the biggest reason for keeping Garrett.
But they could get two firsts and maybe a second for Garrett. Along with the Jags' first from the trade they made to trade up to get Hunter, the Browns could generate far more fan interest with drafting three first round picks next year and two first round picks in 2027. That would most likely generate more fan interest than Myles Garrett could do alone.
People seem fixated on multiple first round picks because that's what Micah Parsons got.This kinda makes my point, but, regardless of the reason for his high cost, my point still stands: we shouldn't fork over so much draft capital for him. That's all I'm getting at. Most posts were just looking at his contract and what a team would take on in trading for him, but what we'd also have to trade picks in the process would be toooo much I imagine.
Although wtf do I know, he could be traded for a 7th or some ******** for all I know lmao.
"We've got 5 plans at QB so you should stay."Can only imagine they sold him on a plan.
“We have a plan for QB”….etc.
Obv the money is a big part of it, but one would imagine they gave him a good sales job.
I could live with that, but I think it would take a lot more. Fantastic player, but we are in a re-build and selling your soul at this time for one player, is not what a re-build is about.People seem fixated on multiple first round picks because that's what Micah Parsons got.
I think it's more like, one first round pick. Or maybe a package of a bunch of lower picks.
That's the trade-off.I could live with that, but I think it would take a lot more. Fantastic player, but we are in a re-build and selling your soul at this time for one player, is not what a re-build is about.
Haha."We've got 5 plans at QB so you should stay."
It's still less than Watson's dead money hit.
Two things:
Why am I reading consistently that NE is already OVER the cap for 2026?
So, actually, digging into it, it's actually a very tradeable contract.
Almost all of the big money, while mostly guaranteed, is tied up into option bonuses, which are unique because unlike signing bonuses, they can be traded to other teams. So it looks like this:
Option A - traditional:
- $100M signing bonus on a 5 year deal
- $20M signing bonus pro-ration on each year's cap
- Player is traded after 2 years
- Remaining $60M in signing bonus pro-rations accelerates and hits the cap in the 3rd year as dead money - that's bad!
Option B - option bonuses (what Garrett mostly has):
- $100M "guaranteed" but it's separated into annual $20M option bonuses
- $20M option bonuses is paid out at start of each league year
- Player is traded after 2 years
- Instead of having any dead money, the future option bonuses that need to be paid become the responsibility of the new team to pay - wow! No dead money!
Garrett has option bonuses of:
2026: $29M
2027: $39M
2028: $21M
These would all be transferred to NE and Cleveland would get out of paying them completely.
Garrett has a vet minimum salary through end of 2028 as well. If anything, if Garrett wants out, they are incentivized to trade him now and get out of these bonuses while they can. BTW, the same sort of situation applies to AJ Brown.
FWIW, Myles Garrett also has a full no-trade clause, so he would need to sign off on any destination first.
They already have a ton of flexibility with Garrett. They lose flexibility by trading him because the cap hit all comes due right now.They have to pay Deshaun Watson for another year before they can even consider trading him. Getting Garrett off their books gives them a ton of flexibility.
The Browns could offer Watson for free and no one would take him. They would have to do the move where they throw in extra (probably in the form of draft picks) to a team with a lot of cap space to get him off their hands.Okay... but no one is trading anything for Wat$on.
The Browns could offer Watson for free and no one would take him.
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