Hawktawk wrote:This team is going nowhere without Russ . He’s a fixture . Everyone else that’s worth a damn gets paid . Start negotiating now. Allowing this elite athlete to play out his deal is a recipe for disaster .
NorthHawk wrote:There was talk on some sites that the word was Russ was going to not sign so he could
get franchised a couple of years in a row before signing a big contract, much like Cousins
did the last couple of years.
We’ll see how it shakes out in the next couple of years.
politicalfootball wrote:Not going to happen I believe. I Hope Russell will hammer out a fair contract beneficial to the Seahawks.
And Wilson is elite.
NorthHawk wrote:It makes some financial sense if you consider the tag for QBs might get close to 35 million so that would be
70 million guaranteed or thereabouts then a big contract might get him another big signing bonus along with some other
guarantees.
NorthHawk wrote:There was talk on some sites that the word was Russ was going to not sign so he could
get franchised a couple of years in a row before signing a big contract, much like Cousins
did the last couple of years.
We’ll see how it shakes out in the next couple of years.
NorthHawk wrote:There was talk on some sites that the word was Russ was going to not sign so he could
get franchised a couple of years in a row before signing a big contract, much like Cousins
did the last couple of years.
We’ll see how it shakes out in the next couple of years.
c_hawkbob wrote:I believe that originated from a piece by Florio a couple months ago. I listen to PFT on the way to work and he spent the whole drive to work explaining why if he were Russ he wouldn't sign until after a couple franchise tags because he's so durable that the injury risk with him doing so isn't what it is with other QBs. He even said during the show that he was going to write up a piece for his website on it later that day.
It's an interesting strategy but it's all speculative. I think if it does go that way it'll be because our front office mishandles negotiations.
c_hawkbob wrote:Yep, that's the article in question, or more accurately an article about the article in question, and while it says Russ expects to be tagged it also says "according to Florio" he expects to be tagged ... listening to him on his morning show however it was pretty clear this all originated in Florio's mind and not from anything Russ said to anyone.
I at least, am completely comfortable with that explanation of things. You're welcome to whatever grains of salt you're more comfortable with.
idhawkman wrote:I don't think either scenario happens. RW signing a cap/Seahawks friendly deal.
RW is a lot of things and you all know I have been very critical of RW. One thing he is not though is he is NOT STUPID!!!! This is a business and as a business, he is going to maximize his opportunities and limit his risks. Playing on franchise tags may be smart for a single year but get hurt and you can lose 5 times that amount. Additionally, you go for what you can get - he will only have 1 or 2 more bites at this apple if he's lucky so he needs to maximize what he can get.
I think he'll extend with big guarantees and let's the Seahawks figure out the rest.
c_hawkbob wrote:I think we make a hard push to extend him this offseason to avoid scenarios like Florio's.
https://www.thenewstribune.com/sports/n ... 40020.html
If that doesn't work things are gonna get real expensive.
politicalfootball wrote:Anyone got any articles on making a deal with Wilson this year ?
savvyman wrote:Based on the last time around and with the same Agent - Russell will hold then franchise by the balls and will squeeze them as tightly as possible.
savvyman wrote:After what Seahawks did to players like Sherman who can blame Russell this time for treating it "Like a Business"?
savvyman wrote:Based on the last time around and with the same Agent - Russell will hold then franchise by the balls and will squeeze them as tightly as possible.
After what Seahawks did to players like Sherman who can blame Russell this time for treating it "Like a Business"?
savvyman wrote:After what Seahawks did to players like Sherman who can blame Russell this time for treating it "Like a Business"?
mykc14 wrote:I don't know exactly how the Hawks treated Sherman poorly. They paid him a ton of money and he played at a high level. If that's doing somebody dirty then please do me dirty, Hawks! Going into the last year of his contract there was ZERO chance that they were going to keep him at 13 mil when they could save 11 million on the cap by releasing him. The reality is that even if he were healthy they would have likely tried to re-do his contract. Frankly I would have been pretty ticked as a Hawks fan if we would have kept a hurt player, like Sherm, on the last year of his contract when we could cut him and save that much!
RiverDog wrote:I'm not speaking or savvyman, but there's two seperate issues, the first being the business side of which you are referring to and the other being the loyalty issue of which savvy was eluding to. If it had not been for the business side, the decent thing to do, considering what he helped bring to our franchise, would have been to keep Sherman and see if he could recover from his Achilles injury and return to his All Pro form.
RiverDog wrote:I'm not speaking or savvyman, but there's two seperate issues, the first being the business side of which you are referring to and the other being the loyalty issue of which savvy was eluding to. If it had not been for the business side, the decent thing to do, considering what he helped bring to our franchise, would have been to keep Sherman and see if he could recover from his Achilles injury and return to his All Pro form.
mykc14 wrote:My point is that I doubt they would have kept him at 13 mil if he would have stayed healthy. I would argue that there is virtually no way they were going to pay him that much on the last year of his contract when they could save 11 mil by releasing or trading him. They were moving away from guys that were done buying into what PC was doing and Sherm definitely falls into that category, in fact there was a lot of discussion about them parting ways with him before last season even started. The 'Loyalty' aspect wasn't broken by the Hawks but instead by Sherm. They didn't see him as somebody who was fully invested and 'loyal' to the process...
idhawkman wrote:Yep, its going to be YUGE!!!! Wilson not only invoked the "its a business" but he also said it was above his head meaning he is going to leave it up to his agent as he should. That's what his agent is paid for.
"IF" it becomes too big of a contract, I'd rather see us let him play out the last year of his contract, then franchise him a year or two and then let him walk away. Here's why:
1. Russel's game is in extending plays. We've seen him get slower and less elusive of the pass rush the last year or two. He's running less and therefore the read option is not as big a factor as it once was.
2. We need to sign Sweezy, Fluker, Clark and KJ this off season and I'm not sure who we have next year. (Maybe Brown is in the mix this year too but I can't remember.) That's going to cost us a lot of $$$ benjamins...
3. After 2-3 years, RW may not be effective anymore because of his lack of ability to extend plays.
4. There may be other QBs coming out of college that can take over the mantle.
Idahawkman wrote:That all said, I would prefer to resign him but I'm also a realist and don't want to resign him if it guts the rest of our team.
RiverDog wrote:I wouldn't make the assumption that our team "goes nowhere" without Russell, not when a team like the Eagles can win a Lombardi with their journeyman backup. As a matter of fact, of the top 6 paid quarterbacks, not a single one of them made the playoffs. Teams are getting there w/o an overpaid veteran QB, such as the Chiefs, Bears, Rams, Cowboys, Ravens, Texans, and Eagles, while teams like the Packers, Vikings, Steelers, Falcons, and Lions, all with highly paid veteran QB's, are on the outside looking in.
I'm going to refrain from venturing an opinion on resigning Russell until we know a little more specifics about his contract demands, but I'm not going to be sucked into this mentality that my team starts and ends with him. The team is always greater than any one individual.
RiverDog wrote:I wouldn't make the assumption that our team "goes nowhere" without Russell, not when a team like the Eagles can win a Lombardi with their journeyman backup. As a matter of fact, of the top 6 paid quarterbacks, not a single one of them made the playoffs. Teams are getting there w/o an overpaid veteran QB, such as the Chiefs, Bears, Rams, Cowboys, Ravens, Texans, and Eagles, while teams like the Packers, Vikings, Steelers, Falcons, and Lions, all with highly paid veteran QB's, are on the outside looking in.
I'm going to refrain from venturing an opinion on resigning Russell until we know a little more specifics about his contract demands, but I'm not going to be sucked into this mentality that my team starts and ends with him. The team is always greater than any one individual.
Anthony wrote:Actually, untrue Cousins was #3 and to be fair Brees is #7. Now the premise I don't agree with you, but we can agree to disagree.
RiverDog wrote:
Bottom line is that Sherman was treated like yesterday's newspaper and tossed in the trash bin when his usefulness had expired. My opinion is that he probably deserved it.
idhawkman wrote:
I was with you right up until this part Riv. He was tossed away like yesterday's newspaper when he became a locker room problem. His usefulness IMO still has not expired.
RiverDog wrote:Absent the analogies, we're basically saying the same thing about our moving on from Sherman: That it was a combination of financial reasons and personal issues.
RiverDog wrote:Absent the analogies, we're basically saying the same thing about our moving on from Sherman: That it was a combination of financial reasons and personal issues.
mykc14 wrote:Yeah, we agree on the reasons but disagree on whether or not they treated him poorly in the process.
RiverDog wrote:
I never said that they treated Sherman "poorly". They treated him like a business asset, an inanimate object, like "yesterday's newspaper". It's exactly how players have been asked to be treated, so I do not feel that they treated him poorly.
NorthHawk wrote:Here's an article that lays out how much we might end up paying as well as the FT scenario.
It's a lot of money.
https://www.cbssports.com/nfl/news/agen ... ar-player/
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