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Jacoby Brissett only drafted player without an agent...


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Honestly I am surprised that more of these guys don't do this. Since their contracts are pretty much cut and dry due to the CBA, why wouldn't these rookies take care of their own contracts, then hire an agent after signing?

 

The agents might be negotiating some small things in there, but there isn't really much to negotiate, and they are handing them a sizeable chunk of change for doing not much of anything really, when they could be keeping it for themselves...

 

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"Real players have agents". it is social stigma thing.

 

When he wants to say something but not say it himself he will not have a mouthpiece to say something like "How can XXX feed his children on salary they are offering" and then back up from statement when it is used in talk radio to prove what type of idiot made remark.

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Agents can only charge 3% of rookie contracts, and many are going as low as 1% to attract clients, so it's not a huge financial loss. There are a few perks such as extending lines of credit to players until the season begins, and some offer assistance in finding housing so that players can concentrate 100% on football. Also, it's a great way to get a behind the scenes look at how the agency operates before the players ask them to do any real heavy lifting.

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Agents help talk these guys up prior to the draft. They get them featured on TV and get them endorsements and basically get their name out there. Could you do it on your own? Maybe but shouldn't you be focused on training and interviewing? It seems to have worked out ok for Brisset as he got picked in the 3rd round but now he's trying to learn a super complex playbook and negotiate a contract. Seems like a lot to handle for a 23 yr old

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that's very interesting, but how long are the players into the agents, i would think they would sign them well past the length of the rookie contract.

 

 

Agents can only charge 3% of rookie contracts, and many are going as low as 1% to attract clients, so it's not a huge financial loss. There are a few perks such as extending lines of credit to players until the season begins, and some offer assistance in finding housing so that players can concentrate 100% on football. Also, it's a great way to get a behind the scenes look at how the agency operates before the players ask them to do any real heavy lifting.

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that's very interesting, but how long are the players into the agents, i would think they would sign them well past the length of the rookie contract.

 

Here's an article from 2012 about agents who represent NFL players. It's interesting and there's a lot of misconceptions about the industry:

 

http://espn.go.com/nfl/story/_/id/8681968/nfl-agent-life-all-glamour

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