Fogbuster
Pro Bowl Player
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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.They should have a pay scale for all rookies coming in. I'm not sure of the details, but it's not fair for a rookie to get paid the same amount as the best players in the game their first year.
It does make a difference to me..and it SHOULD to all football fans. That BIG money goes to unproven prima donna players who have done NOTHING in the NFL is absurd. It is WRONG for the game..and teh sooner they really institute a scale, the better. I agree that it is NOT helping weaker teams at all having top picks. They pay out exorbitant anounts of money and may or may not ever see any value in their play. Top picks will vecome worth even less in coming years if this continues to happen. 35mill?? Let him sit...I hate the greed and hate the agents that promote this.The money is monopoly money, so whether it's given to rookies or veterans makes no difference to me.
.... Did I mention the current rookie compensation scale is......NUTS!!!!!!!
Seriously its getting to the point were the draft is no longer a real benefit to the weaker teams, when that are being forced to make these very large investments in players who will likely NEVER meet the value of their contacts.
It simply doesn't make sense to pick in the top 5 any more. AND if this continues then the value of these high picks will diminish.
Maybe..but the NFL is NOT going to be happy with that if teams FAIL to make picks..I think and hope they will do something so that does not happen. Could u imagine Goodell up there with teh Raiders on teh clock and they..pass???Can't a team like the Raiders simply sit on their pick until and wait for one or two other teams to pick before they turn in their draft card? If they're confident that the next two teams aren't going to grab Russel, then they could have sat back and allow the Lions to pick first and then save themselves several million by picking their guy with a lower pick.
I wonder if the NFLPA would trade getting rid of the franchise player system for a rookie pay schedule (kind of like the NBA)?
It helps the owners with ridiculous pay for unproven players and helps the veteran players that would be assigned the franchise tag.
Thoughts?
I wonder if the way it is now keeps the bad teams from improving?? If year after year poor and paying large anounts for unproven talent..does that NOT make keep them from flattening out their teams pay scale? For teams like the Patriots..it will NOT help them a bit..they would RATHER have the Franchise Tags and I think MOST teams would wish for that.I wonder if the NFLPA would trade getting rid of the franchise player system for a rookie pay schedule (kind of like the NBA)?
It helps the owners with ridiculous pay for unproven players and helps the veteran players that would be assigned the franchise tag.
Thoughts?
It does make a difference to me..and it SHOULD to all football fans. That BIG money goes to unproven prima donna players who have done NOTHING in the NFL is absurd. It is WRONG for the game..and teh sooner they really institute a scale, the better. I agree that it is NOT helping weaker teams at all having top picks. They pay out exorbitant anounts of money and may or may not ever see any value in their play. Top picks will vecome worth even less in coming years if this continues to happen. 35mill?? Let him sit...I hate the greed and hate the agents that promote this.
Perfect. Soon to be rookies won't be able to complain because they aren't in the NFL yetI wonder if the NFLPA would trade getting rid of the franchise player system for a rookie pay schedule (kind of like the NBA)?
It helps the owners with ridiculous pay for unproven players and helps the veteran players that would be assigned the franchise tag.
Thoughts?
I wonder if the way it is now keeps the bad teams from improving?? If year after year poor and paying large anounts for unproven talent..does that NOT make keep them from flattening out their teams pay scale? \.
Perpetual bad teams are bad because their front office does not know how to spend thier cap dollars. It may be "monopoly money" but even in that classic board game there are winners and losers.
It's a proportional thing. An NFL team has to diversify their cap now and plan for future FA from their team and the rest of the league. Having a top draft choice is not bad for a team that is bad temporarily because they won't have consecutive years picking in the top ten. Look at the 49ers a well run team. 2005 Alex Smith 1st overall, 2006 Vernon Davis 6th overall, 2007 Patrick Willis 11th overall. They have been down but now they are out of the top ten. But the Lions have drafted in the top ten for the past six drafts. Even NE only picked once in the top ten since BB got here. Staying in the top ten of the draft for years reenforces the suckitude.
The Falcans were not going to win the SB with Mike Vick not because he wasn't a good passer but because he was the highest paid player in the league. Dwight Freeney's contract hurts the Colts.
NE gets a lot of talent at a bargain. A Madden analogy: NE has a few players in the 90s overall but the whole team is better then 75 overall. Actually if you ranked the players in real life the Patriots would have the better average and median score per player.
If you suck, you can choose between Peyton Manning and Ryan Leaf. If you make the right choice, you win a Super Bowl. If you make the wrong choice, you end up drafting Michael Vick and trading him for Drew Brees and then Drafting Ely Manning and trading him for Phillip Rivers and still not getting to the AFC championship game.
It's not the money that's the problem. Bad management tends to yield bad teams no matter where the draft picks come from.
I think it is QUITE wrong..simply to pay zillion of dollars for someone who hasn't played a down in the NFL...silly!! And if the vets in the league HAD any leadership, that would certainly change. No doubt that high draft picks should get paid well, but many will flop, get big bicks and basically be more a trvia question. With your logic..a player like Russell who is demanding 32 million who hasn't played a down of football in the NFL is worth as much as a proven QB? Makes plenty of sense..right? LOL..It's not "wrong for the game" by any means. It's been going on seemingly forever and the game's been fine.
I agree...parity is important..and one way to help this is to really slot the rookie pay scale..and I am talking about the HIGH choices..so it's less out of whack. With these rookie contracts taking up a LARGE degree of salary cap money, I think it's hard for teams to improve. Granted there always will be bad management and bad choices, but a team that has high picks 3-4 years risks a large gamble on those players turning the ship around.I think the league is more interested parity than keeping losing teams down.
Except for a few (Al Davis) I think the owners recognize the need for a healthy league not just healthy teams. TV contracts are the primary financial driver behind the league and being able to get decent ratings for a Green Bay versus Kansas City game is as important to the long term health of the league as the ratings for a New England and Indy game. Other wise football risks becoming irrelevant in 2/3 of the country.
Baseball and Basketball both suffer from the meaningless game syndrome for most of their seasons. Football because of the leagues goal of parity doesn't.
If you suck, you can choose between Peyton Manning and Ryan Leaf. If you make the right choice, you win a Super Bowl. If you make the wrong choice, you end up drafting Michael Vick and trading him for Drew Brees and then Drafting Ely Manning and trading him for Phillip Rivers and still not getting to the AFC championship game.
It's not the money that's the problem. Bad management tends to yield bad teams no matter where the draft picks come from.
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