Warning, this is a half-baked reaction but it's been building for a while and it's boiling up...
Is it just me or does anyone else have a problem with this?
Players having more control is one thing but what's the point of signing contracts if players can just refuse to show up and 'demand a trade'?
Dude, no one forced you to sign any contracts. Honour your word. If you're good you'll get paid regardless.
Even rookie contacts where it seems players are 'forced' to sign aren't that way. You don't want to sign you don't sign. You're a rookie. Teams are taking a risk on you. Making an investment. Giving you your shot. Show up. Play hard. Get paid. And when that contract is up, reap the rewards.
-
-
Dol-Fan Dupree likes this.
-
Obviously I'm not suggesting that's the right way to operate. Nevertheless, if a franchise wants to keep things quiet, unless the contract specifies that they need to agree things with the player, that's a different question. There are 'no trade' clauses that can be built into contracts, although it's the top dogs who usually get those. Regardless, signing a contract and then basically ignoring it, demanding more, is wrong in my opinion. It's dishonourable, and it sucks - whether that be the franchise or the player.
It's just that right now there seems to be a lot of this going wrong and it makes me wonder how a franchise is supposed to be able to build if they can't even count on their best players to honour their contracts? -
It's the difference between Xavien Howard showing up for camp, knowing that the Dolphins were working with his agents, for better or worse, on his foreseeable future. It could have not worked out, but there was a dialogue there, there was action. This Gordon situation sounds like the Chargers haven't even reached out to feel out where his representation stands for when next season is over. That's going to lead to a very rapid and tumultuous offseason for Gordon, who I'm sure feels like he deserves better after already out-performing his rookie contract.
Know what I mean? Am I off my gourd? -
I don't have an issue with it. Let's say you sign a 4 year contract. The team doesn't have to "honor" that time frame. I don't see it as any different on the players' side.
Dol-Fan Dupree likes this. -
All he is doing is trying to maximize his earning potential. -
It's not exactly the same in my eyes. If you sign a contract without a no trade clause you understand you could be traded. What you're guaranteed is that you're going to be paid a certain amount of money for those years of playing. If a team trades a player they know they're still going to get paid that amount. Obviously, treating a player well is important, but the team has multiple things to focus on in maintaining and building the franchise, the players, essentially, sells their own ability to the team. Obviously, being moved to a different part of the country includes some upheaval for the players and any family they have. However, moving is part of life in the NBA.
For the team, they're trying to build something, and having players, particularly the centrepiece players, bail part way through can wreak havoc on those plans. For fans of franchises that are hoping to see their teams come together and succeed it sucks to see those efforts derailed.
You want flexibility build it into the contract, but if you give your word, then honour it. Let the team know you'll be there for them, for your teammates, the franchise and the fans, as you agreed to be. That's the right way to operate in my mind. -
Dol-Fan Dupree likes this.
-
Two things:
1 - If the contract states guaranteed vs. not, then that IS part of the contract and remains a possibility. But a player simply refusing to engage is not the same thing.
2 - The players demanding trades or refusing to do whatever aren't typically the low end players, it's the top-end stars. It's not as though the fear is that the teams aren't going to pay them, it's that they've decided that they now want more money than was agreed and they want to hold the team hostage to some extent.
Maybe the PA(s) and League(s) need to rework things so that it better facilitates these questions. I get the business side, but there's also the fundamental team side of this, the fans, and I think it's that end that's getting the bad end of things.
I feel I've actually seen more of this in the NBA than the NFL, at least recently, but I suspect it's only going to become more of an issue everywhere. -
2. There's a greater in-balance of power with the low end players. They can't demand anything or walk away b/c they're easily replaced. When the team decides to not honor their word, those players are just screwed. And that's what happens far more often than any other scenario. It's just that since they're low end players nobody cares.Dol-Fan Dupree likes this. -
His contract is going to pay him $5.6 million. His market value is between $10 to $15 million. He is being paid half his value on a contract he did not have a choice to sign, other than, "if you want to play in the NFL you have to sign it."
Who on this board would want to honor a contract when you are in high demand that is half to one-third their value? -
2 - It's not low-end players who are demanding trades. It sounds rough, but if they're not that great, well that's just life. Lots of people have less opportunity because they're not as good at what they do as others. Doesn't stop anyone from working hard and doing a good job. But my beef isn't with those guys, it's with the stars who make these demands.