Jump to content

Felser on being miffed


Recommended Posts

  • Replies 146
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

I hear what he's saying. But he ignores the aspect that it's a two way relationship between the team and player.

 

Yes, as a team you cannot let being miffed interfere with your personnel decisions. On the other hand, if you're a GM you can't let players who are miffed at the team, have their way either.

 

Even if you are miffed, that doesn't mean you are wrong. You just have to be careful that you miff-ism doesn't cloud your decision process.

 

Also..

 

Common thread I see in Felser's examples of Bills being miffed at players: The Bills weren't miffed, they were UNCERTAIN. The players had uncertain futures. In the future: they may be good, or they may suck. These are all players entering the second phase (or maybe final) of their career and their future success is uncertain in relation to the high dollars they negotiate.

 

Jason Peters.. he "might" be successful in Philly, but given bucks he wanted, not sure he would have produced in Bflo

Angelo Crowell.. surprise surgery: was it disloyalty, or just poor mgmt of personal life. Either way = unreliable.

Pat Williams.. OK, maybe the Bills dropped this one

Antoine Winfield.. Reliable or mercenary? He's holding out in the final year of Vikes contract

Jim Leonhard.. his future success was hardly a slam dunk; but good for him that he was

Roscoe Parrish.. actually, I think RP is victim of roster excess in this position

 

The Bills were not miffed. They offered, or didn't offer, contracts that accounted for their confidence in the players future production.

 

 

 

You are so kidding yourself. Peters is going to be a huge success and if you think the Bills weren't miffed at him, I don't know what to say. It couldn't be more obvious. Crowell is another case of pure "miffedness."

 

And as Felser points out, if you get miffed at at a guy you keep him till you have someone better. How did that work out with Peters and Crowell? Not at all. This team will be weaker this year and on into the future till those two guys are adequately replaced.

 

It is widely known (don't have time to look up the link, but I will try later) that the Bills gave themselves a deadline in signing Peters, because Jauron wanted to either have him signed early enough to get him to OTAs, or get rid of him. In doing so, they have sacrificed their future and their leverage on Peters for the sake of success this year. It's not good strategy for teams that aren't close to Super Bowl contention to favor short-term success over long-term success. And that's what the Bills did.

 

Ralph Wilson has been a terrific owner in so many ways over the years. Particularly his willingness to give up higher profits in order to stay in Buffalo has been an absolutely terrific thing for the city. But there's always a downside, nobody's perfect. And this is Ralph's Achilles heel, he gets miffed and takes things personally.

 

Felser is absolutely dead on, though not all of his examples (Parrish - are they miffed?, they weren't miffed at Pat Williams, he offered them a hometown discount, that was just a truly horrible piece of judgment of future ability) fit the argument.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

You are so kidding yourself. Peters is going to be a huge success and if you think the Bills weren't miffed at him, I don't know what to say. It couldn't be more obvious. Crowell is another case of pure "miffedness."

 

And as Felser points out, if you get miffed at at a guy you keep him till you have someone better. How did that work out with Peters and Crowell? Not at all. This team will be weaker this year and on into the future till those two guys are adequately replaced.

 

It is widely known (don't have time to look up the link, but I will try later) that the Bills gave themselves a deadline in signing Peters, because Jauron wanted to either have him signed early enough to get him to OTAs, or get rid of him. In doing so, they have sacrificed their future and their leverage on Peters for the sake of success this year. It's not good strategy for teams that aren't close to Super Bowl contention to favor short-term success over long-term success. And that's what the Bills did.

 

Felser is absolutely dead on, though not all of his examples (Parrish - are they miffed?) fit the argument.

You are overrating Crowell. Even if both sides weren't miffed at each other, there's no way the Bills were going to approach the $3M he was sorely overpaid by the Bucs, considering he gambled too much and usually ended-up losing, and since he still isn't 100% yet, 9 months after having surgery.

 

BTW, I was looking at rototimes.com, and they have Crowell listed at 6'1" and 235#. With the Bills he was 246#.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

You are overrating Crowell. Even if both sides weren't miffed at each other, there's no way the Bills were going to approach the $3M he was sorely overpaid by the Bucs, considering he gambled too much and usually ended-up losing, and since he still isn't 100% yet, 9 months after having surgery.

 

BTW, I was looking at rototimes.com, and they have Crowell listed at 6'1" and 235#. With the Bills he was 246#.

 

 

Listed at 246# by NFL.com:

 

http://www.nfl.com/players/angelocrowell/p...le?id=CRO732110

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Larry Felser sure sounds like an un-informed hack with this article. Peters held out of the whole training camp last year not part of it. He was offered a contract similar to the one he signed in Philly but refused to accept it.

 

 

 

Peters was offered a contract similar to the one he signed in Philly but refused to accept it?????????????????? Really? Well, I'm excited to hear about that, and I EAGERLY AWAIT A LINK!!! Aware, of course, that there will never be a link, because we have absolutely no idea whether a similar contract was actually offered by Buffalo, none whatsoever. It would be nice if you would present guesses as guesses rather than pretend that you have unearthed a fact that has no actual base in reality.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Not overspending is a classic mode of operation for the Pats. The big difference is they are able to acquire more in trades due to their success. "Players that play for them must be very good for them to be so successful" is the logic of the trading partners. I still wish Crow were on the field on opening day and I don't want RP to go anywhere. That being said as for the rest of the departed, with the exception of PW I can't say I truly miss any of them. Although the jury is out on JP. This one may come back to haunt us for years to come I'm afraid.

 

 

 

No, the Pats overspend as much as anyone else. They just pick and choose their spots. Look at how much they gave Brady. Look at how much they gave Ty Law to stay for an extra year till they could better address their cornerback situation. Dollars to donuts they re-sign Wilfork for huge dollars.

 

They just don't do it with everybody. They pick the guys they feel are at the most important spots on the team, the guys who can't be easily replaced.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Interestingly, Felser picked the players in the current team who have had disputes with the team....This is a way too one-sided editorial. Sure the Bills could have re-signed Peters if they chose to. The question was if Peters wanted to really sign a contract and be aware of the small-market nature of buffalo.

 

Crowell showed a lack of respect for his team when he suddenly chose to opt for the surgery. Sure, everyone needs to do what is in their best interest, but football is the ultimate team game and requires everyone on the team to be aware of it. By doing what he did, he put the Bills suddenly in a huge hole in its LB corps. What do you expect the Bills to do ?

 

Larry is way off the target...Teams release players for different reasons...Even the big Belichek let go of Lawyer Milloy only to see him and the Bills beat up the Pats 31-0....However the Pats had their last laugh when they went on to win the SB.

 

Also including Pat Williams or Winfield in the equation is stupid....It had nothing to do with this regime.

 

 

Nothing to do with this regime. But the team had the same owner in both time periods, didn't they?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

You are so kidding yourself. Peters is going to be a huge success and if you think the Bills weren't miffed at him, I don't know what to say. It couldn't be more obvious. Crowell is another case of pure "miffedness."

 

And as Felser points out, if you get miffed at at a guy you keep him till you have someone better. How did that work out with Peters and Crowell? Not at all. This team will be weaker this year and on into the future till those two guys are adequately replaced.

 

It is widely known (don't have time to look up the link, but I will try later) that the Bills gave themselves a deadline in signing Peters, because Jauron wanted to either have him signed early enough to get him to OTAs, or get rid of him. In doing so, they have sacrificed their future and their leverage on Peters for the sake of success this year. It's not good strategy for teams that aren't close to Super Bowl contention to favor short-term success over long-term success. And that's what the Bills did.

 

Ralph Wilson has been a terrific owner in so many ways over the years. Particularly his willingness to give up higher profits in order to stay in Buffalo has been an absolutely terrific thing for the city. But there's always a downside, nobody's perfect. And this is Ralph's Achilles heel, he gets miffed and takes things personally.

 

Felser is absolutely dead on, though not all of his examples (Parrish - are they miffed?, they weren't miffed at Pat Williams, he offered them a hometown discount, that was just a truly horrible piece of judgment of future ability) fit the argument.

I was all for the Bills keeping Peters. The fact is the Bills offered him the same deal he signed with Philly & he REFUSED. If he has ANY success with Philly you can bet the house he will pull the same crap with them to renegotiate his contract.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Interestingly, Felser picked the players in the current team who have had disputes with the team....This is a way too one-sided editorial. Sure the Bills could have re-signed Peters if they chose to. The question was if Peters wanted to really sign a contract and be aware of the small-market nature of buffalo.

 

Crowell showed a lack of respect for his team when he suddenly chose to opt for the surgery. Sure, everyone needs to do what is in their best interest, but football is the ultimate team game and requires everyone on the team to be aware of it. By doing what he did, he put the Bills suddenly in a huge hole in its LB corps. What do you expect the Bills to do ?

 

Larry is way off the target...Teams release players for different reasons...Even the big Belichek let go of Lawyer Milloy only to see him and the Bills beat up the Pats 31-0....However the Pats had their last laugh when they went on to win the SB.

 

Also including Pat Williams or Winfield in the equation is stupid....It had nothing to do with this regime.

 

 

 

Of course he picked players who have had disputes with the team. If there hadn't been any disputes, why would they be miffed? That's the point of the article. It's not one-sided at all. Of course in a dispute both sides are angry. Felser's point is that the good teams find ways to hang onto guys, even during disputes, till they can be adequately replaced.

 

Belichick let Milloy go at just the right time. Milloy had one decent year after that, and never again played at the level he had played at for the Pats. They let him go because of age. The only player Felser mentioned that you could even argue was let go because of age would be Pat Williams. And the guy is still playing at all-star level four or five years later.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I was all for the Bills keeping Peters. The fact is the Bills offered him the same deal he signed with Philly & he REFUSED. If he has ANY success with Philly you can bet the house he will pull the same crap with them to renegotiate his contract.

 

 

Let me repeat myself. LINK? You get my meaning here? Just one more time ... LINK?

 

Where is your evidence that he was offered the same deal? YOU HAVE NO EVIDENCE, AND FOR GOOD REASON. THERE IS NO EVIDENCE - whatsoever - that he was offered the same contract. In fact, the evidence that is out there is that he simply was not offered the same contract, not even close.

 

And just in case you missed my point .... LINK LINK LINK LINK LINK?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

There was a time when Felser was indeed the most informed and best writer in town. Alas, since he more or less retired several years ago, he no long has the cred he did when he was a real practicing journalist. I like that he writes these columns for the Buffalo News for old times sake, but it is more about the nostalgia for those who grew up reading his columns that actually trying to get his take on the team's present situation. Unfortunately, this column reads too much like the ill-informed national bits we get from ESPN and their ilk.

 

In all honesty, I think the team has done a pretty good job over the years of keeping who they should and waving goodbye to those they shouldn't. Pat Williams is the most notable exception -- and maybe the absolute biggest mistake that Donahoe made in his tenure as GM. The problem with both Winfield and Clements is that they wanted ridiculous paydays -- and got them. I NEVER faulted the Bills for not signing them to the kind of lucrative contracts that they found in Minny and SF. The Parrish thing is something entirely different. My great fear with him is that he winds up in the hands of a team with a quality coaching staff (Like NE) that knows how to make the best use f his unique skills.

 

 

Felser is still terrific. Feel free to disagree with him on anything but the guy is still intelligent and still has a great viewpoint and great sources.

 

I totally disagree with you about Winfield and Clements. Why? Who were our best four CBs in the last ten years or so? I would argue that they were:

 

1) Clements

2) Winfield

3) McGee

4) Greer

 

and I would say that McKelvin is up and coming. What do they have in common? Well,

 

1) Two were first-rounders. And

2) the Bills got nothing in compensation for any of them. And

3) The Bills have spent three first-rounders on CBs and have not signed one of their best CBs to a second contract. Does anybody see that changing next year with McGee? I desperately wish that I did, but I don't.

 

We develop terrific CBs. We hold on to them so that when they either playing superbly or just beginning to play superbly, we lose them to our unwillingness to sign them to second contracts. Which means that we don't lose money, but we DO LOSE HIGH DRAFT CHOICES on replacing them. Who could we have drafted if we had managed to hold onto our better CBs?

 

I wish I didn't, but I see us developing Leodis into one of the top 5 CBs in the league and losing him to a team willing to pay him full value. And then I see us spending another high-value pick, probably another first-rounder, on a replacement for him and Youboty and Corner and ....

 

Which makes us less able to reload on the d-line, the o-line, our LBs, etc.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I wish I didn't, but I see us developing Leodis into one of the top 5 CBs in the league and losing him to a team willing to pay him full value. And then I see us spending another high-value pick, probably another first-rounder, on a replacement for him and Youboty and Corner and ....

 

Which makes us less able to reload on the d-line, the o-line, our LBs, etc.

 

I don't think it makes sense to pay CBs top money unless they are really the top 2-3 players in the league...Clements was a tremendous corner, but was he the top 2-3 at his position...The answer is no...The Pats never pay big for the CBs...

 

The model of picking the top CBs in the draft will be gone, if Jauron is not successful here and is booted out. Unless we get another cover 2 coach, who knows what they would be interested in.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I don't think it makes sense to pay CBs top money unless they are really the top 2-3 players in the league...Clements was a tremendous corner, but was he the top 2-3 at his position...The answer is no...The Pats never pay big for the CBs...

 

The model of picking the top CBs in the draft will be gone, if Jauron is not successful here and is booted out. Unless we get another cover 2 coach, who knows what they would be interested in.

 

 

I might agree with you here about how much you should pay CBs. Though the facts are simply that CBs are now one of the four or so highest paid positions on the team. That's just the way it is. Still, if you don't want to give your guys big money, I can respect that.

 

But we have selected corners in three out of our last 11 first round picks. You have to do one or the other, pay your best corners so you don't have to spend yet more first-rounders on CBs, or start to get lower-round picks to give starter-worthy performance at the corners. Or else you're going to end up spending 33% of your first-rounders on CBs forever. And we do (and always will) have too many other needs.

 

And two out of those three first-round CBs came before the Jauron era.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Let me repeat myself. LINK? You get my meaning here? Just one more time ... LINK?

Russ Brandon said that the Bills offered Peters the largest contract in Bills' history. Lee Evan got a deal averaging over $9M/year. Reportedly he was looking for $11.5M/year. Do the math.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Felser lost me when he referred to Peters "assent" into stardom. I think he was loaded when he wrote that thing. That's a high school error.

 

They showed foresight by drafting replacements for Clements and Winfield. They erred on Pat Williams. Remember when they signed Bryce Paup? They've stepped up when they deemed it necessary.

 

I don't care what Felser says, really. I'm tired of mediocrity, but dwelling on the past doesn't help. Let's hope they start playing excellent football.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Nothing to do with this regime. But the team had the same owner in both time periods, didn't they?

 

You give RW too much credit here. The Pat Williams fiasco rests entirely on Greg "we don't like fat guys" Williams and TD wasn't in a position NOT to back his new coach. Ralph gave TD unprecedented power within the organization. That worked out real well didn't it.

 

Crowell is an average "at best" LB who thoroughly screwed the Bills FO and, more importantly, his teammates at the 11th hour last season. Unprofessional doesn't begin to describe what he did. The Bills were correct in sitting his sorry ass last year. And even if he has an ALL Pro season with the Bucs every year from now to the end of his playing career, that STILL won't change that simple fact.

 

GO BILLS!!!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Please explain to me how things would be better if we weren't "miffed" at Crowell? From the reports he's still not recovered from his knee surgery. So he would have missed all of last season whether we put him on IR or not. So did putting him on IR change anything?

 

PTR

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Please explain to me how things would be better if we weren't "miffed" at Crowell? From the reports he's still not recovered from his knee surgery. So he would have missed all of last season whether we put him on IR or not. So did putting him on IR change anything?

The belief by some is that the Bills "screwed" Crowell last season by putting him on IR instead of letting him have the minor surgery and keeping him on the roster. Because he was obviously going to come back in 2 weeks, have a Pro Bowl season, not need the major surgery over the off-season, and then cash-in with a 5-year $35M contract. :rolleyes:

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The salient point in the article is that the Bills have not had an answer when they have let players go. It has been a revolving door that has led to nothing but stagnation at OBD since the days of Kelly et al. There are likely eight key positions on every team where you have to have sound, even better elite talent to succeed:

 

  • QB
    Pass Rushing DE
    Left Tackle
    Stout interior DL (nose or DT - depending on system)
    Center
    Shutdown corner
    #1 Receiver
    #2 offensive threat (could be second receiver - including TE or rb depending on offensive philosophy)

 

They are listed in order of importance - beyond this - you require depth.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The salient point in the article is that the Bills have not had an answer when they have let players go. It has been a revolving door that has led to nothing but stagnation at OBD since the days of Kelly et al. There are likely eight key positions on every team where you have to have sound, even better elite talent to succeed:

 

  • QB
    Pass Rushing DE
    Left Tackle
    Stout interior DL (nose or DT - depending on system)
    Center
    Shutdown corner
    #1 Receiver
    #2 offensive threat (could be second receiver - including TE or rb depending on offensive philosophy)

 

They are listed in order of importance - beyond this - you require depth.

But how often do the other 31 teams have a perfect line of succession in place? I think while the Bills have made mistakes, they have not made any more than most teams.

 

Anyone read the Philly papers? Now Donavan McNabb wants a new deal with 2 years left on his current one. Does this make Philly "stupid" for letting things get to this point?

 

PTR

Link to comment
Share on other sites

But how often do the other 31 teams have a perfect line of succession in place? I think while the Bills have made mistakes, they have not made any more than most teams.

 

Anyone read the Philly papers? Now Donavan McNabb wants a new deal with 2 years left on his current one. Does this make Philly "stupid" for letting things get to this point?

 

PTR

No

 

Philly still has McNabb

 

Philly enters the Bills arena of stupidity if they did a knee jerk trade of McNabb next week so they avoid the distraction of a possible holdout in 2009 with the stated intention of converting Brain Westbrook to QB because Kevin Kolb is not ready.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

No

 

Philly still has McNabb

 

Philly enters the Bills arena of stupidity if they did a knee jerk trade of McNabb next week so they avoid the distraction of a possible holdout in 2009 with the stated intention of converting Brain Westbrook to QB because Kevin Kolb is not ready.

Right. And when they empty a dump truck of money at McNabb's feet, then the next guy wants a new deal...and the next. By then Peters will be feeling a little underpaid too. And the smart answer is always "just pay the man!"

 

PTR

Link to comment
Share on other sites

But how often do the other 31 teams have a perfect line of succession in place? I think while the Bills have made mistakes, they have not made any more than most teams.

 

Anyone read the Philly papers? Now Donavan McNabb wants a new deal with 2 years left on his current one. Does this make Philly "stupid" for letting things get to this point?

 

PTR

The playoff drought would tend to dispute that, at least in my judgment.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I was all for the Bills keeping Peters. The fact is the Bills offered him the same deal he signed with Philly & he REFUSED. If he has ANY success with Philly you can bet the house he will pull the same crap with them to renegotiate his contract.

 

 

VOR, here is what I was responding to. The guy says that the Bills offered him the same deal he signed with Philly. And then refuses to link to it, because there is no link, because it's not true.

 

 

 

Russ Brandon said that the Bills offered Peters the largest contract in Bills' history. Lee Evan got a deal averaging over $9M/year. Reportedly he was looking for $11.5M/year. Do the math.

 

 

Do the math? OK, here's the math.

 

In most negotiations, the player says he wants too much, and the team says we will give you too little. Then they meet in the middle. And that is exactly what appeared to be happening here.

 

The Bills offered $9 mill a year or over. Peters said it wasn't enough and lowered it to $11. The Bills refused to do any further negotiating. Russ has said that he offered the contract and Peters turned it down and that was that. The Bills stopped moving up. Because of that, Peters stopped moving down.

 

Unsurprisingly, when Peters was traded he found a team that was, extremely quickly, willing to make a deal right in the middle between the two figures, the Bills figure and the Peters figure.

 

That is the math. Peters knew his market value. The Bills refused to pay it. The Bills also wimped out at holding onto the guy for the year and pressuring him with the thought of another $3.5 million year. They did the worst thing and traded him. The Eagles paid him exactly what every neutral observer thought would be the price, about halfway between the Bills figure and the Peters figure.

 

In other words, the Bills NEVER OFFERED WHAT THE EAGLES OFFERED. There has been no evidence of that, none whatsoever.

 

Two more points. First, when Russ said he offered the biggest contract in Bills history, how much of it was guaranteed? How much of it was back-loaded in one of those Nate Clements / Bruce Smith deals? You know, the ones with the low salaries at the front and the super-high ones at the end so that the player can point to the unrealistically high total figure and the GM can go to the owner and say "Obviously we're not paying him those last two years at $15 mill each." We have only heard Russ say that it was the largest Bills contract ever, but the devil is in the details, and we have no idea what the details were.

 

Second, why doesn't Russ make the exact offer public? If he really did make an offer that was larger than or equal to the Philly offer, he takes a huge amount of pressure off himself by telling everyone the size of his offer. Bills fans all say "Ah, so the guy simply wanted to leave town," and potential FAs say "Hey, the Bills stepped up and gave the guy a tremendous offer after he played at a high level. The Bills might be worth a look." There is NO DOWNSIDE to releasing the figures of the exact offer. Except ...

 

...if the Bills final offer was still well below the Eagles final offer. Then releasing the exact terms makes the Bills look stupid and cheap.

 

Myself, I'm guessing that the terms of that offer never become public. For obvious reasons.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

No

 

Philly still has McNabb

 

Philly enters the Bills arena of stupidity if they did a knee jerk trade of McNabb next week so they avoid the distraction of a possible holdout in 2009 with the stated intention of converting Brain Westbrook to QB because Kevin Kolb is not ready.

 

 

 

Hah! Hilarious.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Right. And when they empty a dump truck of money at McNabb's feet, then the next guy wants a new deal...and the next. By then Peters will be feeling a little underpaid too. And the smart answer is always "just pay the man!"

 

PTR

 

 

 

The other option is to never pay any of the best players, and they leave. How does that work out?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

VOR, here is what I was responding to. The guy says that the Bills offered him the same deal he signed with Philly. And then refuses to link to it, because there is no link, because it's not true.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Do the math? OK, here's the math.

 

In most negotiations, the player says he wants too much, and the team says we will give you too little. Then they meet in the middle. And that is exactly what appeared to be happening here.

 

The Bills offered $9 mill a year or over. Peters said it wasn't enough and lowered it to $11. The Bills refused to do any further negotiating. Russ has said that he offered the contract and Peters turned it down and that was that. The Bills stopped moving up. Because of that, Peters stopped moving down.

 

Unsurprisingly, when Peters was traded he found a team that was, extremely quickly, willing to make a deal right in the middle between the two figures, the Bills figure and the Peters figure.

 

That is the math. Peters knew his market value. The Bills refused to pay it. The Bills also wimped out at holding onto the guy for the year and pressuring him with the thought of another $3.5 million year. They did the worst thing and traded him. The Eagles paid him exactly what every neutral observer thought would be the price, about halfway between the Bills figure and the Peters figure.

 

In other words, the Bills NEVER OFFERED WHAT THE EAGLES OFFERED. There has been no evidence of that, none whatsoever.

 

Two more points. First, when Russ said he offered the biggest contract in Bills history, how much of it was guaranteed? How much of it was back-loaded in one of those Nate Clements / Bruce Smith deals? You know, the ones with the low salaries at the front and the super-high ones at the end so that the player can point to the unrealistically high total figure and the GM can go to the owner and say "Obviously we're not paying him those last two years at $15 mill each." We have only heard Russ say that it was the largest Bills contract ever, but the devil is in the details, and we have no idea what the details were.

 

Second, why doesn't Russ make the exact offer public? If he really did make an offer that was larger than or equal to the Philly offer, he takes a huge amount of pressure off himself by telling everyone the size of his offer. Bills fans all say "Ah, so the guy simply wanted to leave town," and potential FAs say "Hey, the Bills stepped up and gave the guy a tremendous offer after he played at a high level. The Bills might be worth a look." There is NO DOWNSIDE to releasing the figures of the exact offer. Except ...

 

...if the Bills final offer was still well below the Eagles final offer. Then releasing the exact terms makes the Bills look stupid and cheap.

 

Myself, I'm guessing that the terms of that offer never become public. For obvious reasons.

The Bills never make contract numbers of signed players public. They're definitely not going to make them public for unsigned players.

 

As for what was offered, if it was over $9M (as it seems it was) but under $10M (which is the maximum the Eagles were willing to give), Peters could have sucked-it-up and accepted it. The Bills did give him a huge raise after his 2nd season in the NFL, and before he became a legend. The Eagles OTOH gave him nothing the past 5 years.

 

Speaking of which, the Eagles were the ONLY team interested in a) trading a high pick for him and b) giving him what he wanted. Considering at least 3, and probably 4 (the Ravens are reportedly disenchanted with Jared Gaither) teams were looking for starting LT's and used picks before #28 overall, that's pretty odd. Are the Eagles the only smart ones? Time will tell, but Peters has a lofty contract and some lofty expectations to live-up-to, and if he doesn't, he'll be crucified in Philly.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Felser is still terrific. Feel free to disagree with him on anything but the guy is still intelligent and still has a great viewpoint and great sources.

 

I totally disagree with you about Winfield and Clements. Why? Who were our best four CBs in the last ten years or so? I would argue that they were:

 

1) Clements

2) Winfield

3) McGee

4) Greer

 

and I would say that McKelvin is up and coming. What do they have in common? Well,

 

1) Two were first-rounders. And

2) the Bills got nothing in compensation for any of them. And

3) The Bills have spent three first-rounders on CBs and have not signed one of their best CBs to a second contract. Does anybody see that changing next year with McGee? I desperately wish that I did, but I don't.

 

We develop terrific CBs. We hold on to them so that when they either playing superbly or just beginning to play superbly, we lose them to our unwillingness to sign them to second contracts. Which means that we don't lose money, but we DO LOSE HIGH DRAFT CHOICES on replacing them. Who could we have drafted if we had managed to hold onto our better CBs?

 

I wish I didn't, but I see us developing Leodis into one of the top 5 CBs in the league and losing him to a team willing to pay him full value. And then I see us spending another high-value pick, probably another first-rounder, on a replacement for him and Youboty and Corner and ....

 

Which makes us less able to reload on the d-line, the o-line, our LBs, etc.

That's a rock-solid post. :lol: As I've written here, the Bills (from 1990 - 2005) experienced about nine success stories with their first round picks. The five non-CBs among those success stories were John Fina, Ruben Brown, Eric Moulds, Lee Evans, and Henry Jones. Each of those players was retained for the bulk of his useful career. The four CB success stories were Thomas Smith, Jeff Burris, Antoine Winfield, and Nate Clements. Other than Smith (who stayed seven years, and was the least successful of the four), none of those guys stayed more than six years. The average for the group was to stick around for 5.5 years before leaving for greener pastures.

 

And, as you point out, that's a terrible waste of our first round draft picks. Good teams don't act that way. Take the Colts, for example, during the Bill Polian era. Not every first round pick they've had has been a success story. But, when they have been successful, they've retained that player for the bulk of his useful career. The one exception was Marshall Faulk. But even in his case, they at least got something (a second and a fifth) for trading him away. Compare Polian's discipline--using first round picks as long-term building blocks--with the short-sightedness of the Bills' front office (using first round picks on quick fix CBs, who consistently go first contract and out).

Link to comment
Share on other sites

That's a rock-solid post. :lol: As I've written here, the Bills (from 1990 - 2005) experienced about nine success stories with their first round picks. The five non-CBs among those success stories were John Fina, Ruben Brown, Eric Moulds, Lee Evans, and Henry Jones. Each of those players was retained for the bulk of his useful career. The four CB success stories were Thomas Smith, Jeff Burris, Antoine Winfield, and Nate Clements. Other than Smith (who stayed seven years, and was the least successful of the four), none of those guys stayed more than six years. The average for the group was to stick around for 5.5 years before leaving for greener pastures.

 

And, as you point out, that's a terrible waste of our first round draft picks. Good teams don't act that way. Take the Colts, for example, during the Bill Polian era. Not every first round pick they've had has been a success story. But, when they have been successful, they've retained that player for the bulk of his useful career. The one exception was Marshall Faulk. But even in his case, they at least got something (a second and a fifth) for trading him away. Compare Polian's discipline--using first round picks as long-term building blocks--with the short-sightedness of the Bills' front office (using first round picks on quick fix CBs, who consistently go first contract and out).

Jeff Burris wasn't the same player after his knee injury, which is why they let him go, and he went onto a non-descript career. Thomas Smith was actually better than Burris, despite his stone hands. Winfield is a decent player but was overpaid by the Vikes. Clements is a good player, but is too inconsistent, and not worth what the 49'ers paid him. I'd hardly call it a "terrible waste" of the 1st round draft picks.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Jeff Burris wasn't the same player after his knee injury, which is why they let him go, and he went onto a non-descript career. Thomas Smith was actually better than Burris, despite his stone hands. Winfield is a decent player but was overpaid by the Vikes. Clements is a good player, but is too inconsistent, and not worth what the 49'ers paid him. I'd hardly call it a "terrible waste" of the 1st round draft picks.

Winfield is far more than the "decent' player you described him as. He's top-notch in coverage, and one of the best tackling CBs you'll ever see. He has stone hands, but you can't have everything.

 

As for Winfield and Clements not being worth what they were paid--you may or may not be right. But, either way, the fact remains that the Bills do not extend their CB success stories to second contracts. Such players are allowed to hit free agency, and then they leave. Knowing that that's what will happen when a Bills CB turns out to be very successful, it's a mistake to use first round picks on the position. Rather than expending still more first round picks on that hamster wheel, the Bills should use their early picks to build a core of very good players, whom they hope to retain for the bulk of their useful careers. Without that core, the odds of winning a Super Bowl are practically nil.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Winfield is far more than the "decent' player you described him as. He's top-notch in coverage, and one of the best tackling CBs you'll ever see. He has stone hands, but you can't have everything.

 

As for Winfield and Clements not being worth what they were paid--you may or may not be right. But, either way, the fact remains that the Bills do not extend their CB success stories to second contracts. Such players are allowed to hit free agency, and then they leave. Knowing that that's what will happen when a Bills CB turns out to be very successful, it's a mistake to use first round picks on the position. Rather than expending still more first round picks on that hamster wheel, the Bills should use their early picks to build a core of very good players, whom they hope to retain for the bulk of their useful careers. Without that core, the odds of winning a Super Bowl are practically nil.

The Bills have shown that they'll invest money in guys they think are worth it. I think most people would have a hard time saying that Clements was worth what he got from the 49'ers. So merely keeping him just for the sake of keeping him, and spending close to 10% of the cap on him, wouldn't have been wise. And from what I recall about Winfield, his wife hated it in Buffalo and wanted out.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

As for Winfield and Clements not being worth what they were paid--you may or may not be right. But, either way, the fact remains that the Bills do not extend their CB success stories to second contracts. Such players are allowed to hit free agency, and then they leave. Knowing that that's what will happen when a Bills CB turns out to be very successful, it's a mistake to use first round picks on the position. Rather than expending still more first round picks on that hamster wheel, the Bills should use their early picks to build a core of very good players, whom they hope to retain for the bulk of their useful careers. Without that core, the odds of winning a Super Bowl are practically nil.

 

This paragraph serves as a textbook illustration of the Bills futility imo. Time and again people will defend the idiocy that you describe, but when doing so they omit the fact that we lose football games.

 

I love what they did wrt the selections of Wood, Levitre and too a lesser degree Maybin. The thing is, a team who picked after us in the 2nd round got a first rounder in 2010 for that pick. Jauron took yet another defensive back.

In summary, they might be turning the corner with the dumb strategy that you describe so well, but Jauron has got to go.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The Bills have shown that they'll invest money in guys they think are worth it. I think most people would have a hard time saying that Clements was worth what he got from the 49'ers. So merely keeping him just for the sake of keeping him, and spending close to 10% of the cap on him, wouldn't have been wise. And from what I recall about Winfield, his wife hated it in Buffalo and wanted out.

 

 

In the cases of Winfield and Clements, the Bills had little choice to let them go, once they became UFA's and received those huge offers. The key is to identify the players you want to keep and re-sign them BEFORE they become free agents.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

In the cases of Winfield and Clements, the Bills had little choice to let them go, once they became UFA's and received those huge offers. The key is to identify the players you want to keep and re-sign them BEFORE they become free agents.

I know for a fact that the Bills approached Clements several years before he became an UFA, but he wanted Champ Bailey money. And Winfield's wife wanted out.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I know for a fact that the Bills approached Clements several years before he became an UFA, but he wanted Champ Bailey money. And Winfield's wife wanted out.

 

I have no quarrel with this. I've posted before that I heard Clements on Sirius say that he wanted out of Buffalo. This still doesn't make it a winning strategy to chase defensive backs with first round picks, many of them early ones. Our losing record indicates this, which is the point I am trying to make.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I have no quarrel with this. I've posted before that I heard Clements on Sirius say that he wanted out of Buffalo. This still doesn't make it a winning strategy to chase defensive backs with first round picks, many of them early ones. Our losing record indicates this, which is the point I am trying to make.

 

 

The problem with your logic is, had the Bills pursued mostly linemen, in the early rounds of the draft, they would likely be chasing linemen early in the draft, as there is no reason to believe they would be able to keep them, either. They couldn't/didn't even keep an undrafted UFA lineman, once he became a top level player.

 

Truth is, the Bills are caught in a cycle, mostly because their judgment/luck with DBs has been extraordinary, while they have done a relatively poor job at identifying/developing the big boys. Had they done a poorer job with the DBs, they wouldn't have been so valuable in FA and they might have been able to keep them.

 

It's bad to "chase" any position, of course. Now that the team looks to be pretty well set at DB, you notice they targeted the big guys in this draft, coming away with a DL and two OL in the first two rounds. If Maybin becomes a star, I wouldn't bet on him being in Buffalo when the next contract gets signed.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

×
×
  • Create New...