I guess you and box agree that because Meriweather is outplaying his rookie contract of OVER 2.1M a year, Sanders should be cut after the season. The fact that the contract also includes another $1.1M of easily achieved incentives (per Miguel) and another couple of million of potential bonus shouldn't affect your analysis any.
As for McGowan, I guess he shouldn't have signed his contract with so ferw incentives. Perhaps he should have negotiated for much less in salary and much more in incentives.
Sanders signed a contract THIS YEAR. belichick also spent the #35 pick on a safety and picked up a free agent. Your argument and that of box seems to be that Belichick did so well with choosing Chung and McGowan that he should cut Sanders and reduce our depth at safety. We can then have Lockett as the #4 and you all can feel much better about the fairness of how we pay players.
I obviously strongly disagree with this approach.
I think that you might just be more upfront with your real position that you have never liked the play of Sanders and wer shocked when Bleichick disagreed and paid him so much to play this year ($3.7M).
I challenge you to find one post where I have ever denigrated Sanders, or suggested that re-signing him was not a good move.
When the Sanders extension was initially reported, I wrote this:
"Great move. I'm really pleased with this. I think it says a lot that Sanders could have gotten more money elsewhere, but chose to stay with the Pats. Whatever his shortcomings, he is a team player. He also offers good versatility at both FS and SS. What Sanders gives us is an adequate starter next to Meriweather, and a really strong 3rd safety in a 3-man rotation. I believe the 'upgrade' that many people want will come in the first 47 picks of the draft, in the form of Sean Smith, Louis Delmas, Patrick Chung or William Moore. Any of those would be an upgrade over Sanders at starting S, and would make a great rotation along with Meriweather and Sanders.
I also think that the ultimate goal is to build the best team possible, not the best rotation at each position. The fact is there is only so much cap room to go around, and at $3M/year Sanders is reasonably priced. Meriweather's contract is very reasonable, and a 2nd round rookie contract will not be too exorbitant, so we should be able to have a solid 3 man rotation for not much more than Denver could end up paying to 35 year old Brian Dawkins (5 years at $27M if he meets all the escalators, though this isn't too likely)."
http://www.patsfans.com/new-england...10/220275-reiss-james-sanders-re-signed.html (See post #52.)
I've never seen Sanders as an ideal starter, but I've always valued him as a role player and a valuable team player. A few weeks after his resigning I wrote: "Sanders is a nice team player and a leader. I don't see him as an ideal starting safety, but as a rotational guy who can play both SS and FS he has terrific value. He seems to have nice leadership qualities, too."
http://www.patsfans.com/new-england-patriots/messageboard/10/226724-bb-james-sanders.html (See post #7.)
I thought when we re-signed Sanders that he would be our likely starter for 2009, that we would draft a day 1 safety, and that at some point Sanders would become the #3 guy. I thought he was a quality re-signing in those roles, and that the money was extremely reasonable for the roles he would be expected to play.
But things have changed. McGowan has emerged as a force, Chung has come on quickly, and Sanders is now the #4 guy on the rotation, and that is not likely to change barring injury. Also we've picked up a guy very cheaply in Lockett who could become a decent #4 safety. Would I prefer Sanders to Lockett? Absolutely. But there are other issues than just positional preference. Lockett has more value on special teams, and is much cheaper than Sanders.
And we have lots of needs elsewhere. As I wrote when we resigned Sanders,
"I also think that the ultimate goal is to build the best team possible, not the best rotation at each position." What was cost-effective when Sanders was a #2/3 safety is no longer cost-effective when Sanders is a #4 safety.
I like Sanders. I'd be thrilled to keep Sanders as a #4 safety. The depth is terrific, and the NFL season is one of attrition. The issues as I see it are 3:
1. Is the money current allotted to Sanders' salary too much to be spent on a #4 safety given our other needs, and can it be better used elsewhere? I would guess the answer to this is yes, but the FO needs to decide for itself.
2. Is that money disproportionate to what the safeties ahead of Sanders on the depth chart are making, and is that an issue? It is disproportionate. I'm not sure if that's an issue, or whether it is likely to become one.
3. Would Sanders prefer to go elsewhere if he is likely to be the #4 player on the depth chart, and should BB try to accomodate him given his loyalty as a team player in the past? I don't know the answer to this, but I wouldn't be surprised if it is yes. BB has been vocal in his support of Sanders, and if he can't give him a role with significant playing time I think that he would consider trading Sanders to accomodate his wishes if the Pats could get reasonable value. But that's just my guess.
I think that the Pats' FO needs to assess these questions and come up with answers, which will determine their offseason strategy with Sanders. I also readily admit that the answers to those questions could change quickly with an injury to any of the 3 guys currently ahead of Sanders on the depth chart.
Again, I have nothing against Sanders and never have been a critic of his. He is what he is, a solid role player. This team above all others knows how valuable those kind of guys can be.