|
Plays like his critical Super Bowl drop make it hard to properly evaluate Wes Welker. |
Drew Brees is this year's poster child for contract disputes, but he was only one of 21 players who received the franchise tag this offseason. Seven of them have been rewarded by their teams with long-term contracts. Seven have signed their franchise tender and will report to training camp. The remaining seven, who have not signed, are candidates to hold out.
It's these latter two groups who are facing a big deadline on Monday. After then, teams can no longer negotiate long-term contracts with their franchise players, who will then have to play this season under their tag tenders.
This deadline, imposed by the new CBA, works out brilliantly for the owners. In the past, a player's holdout could push a GM to give him a long-term deal (see: Chris Johnson last year). But by establishing a rule that ties their own hands, teams have stolen away that power. These tagged players can boycott practices and games out of sheer frustration, but now they have nothing to gain from it.
So what will happen with these 14 players still facing the franchise tag? Will they get the long-term security they crave? Will they reluctantly play this year under the franchise tag? Or will they protest and hold out into August? Let's take a look at each player's situation and make some predictions.
Wes Welker, Patriots
Status: Signed $9.5 million tender
The
debate at the crux of the Wes Welker negotiations is whether his prolific
production is more due to talent or to New England's system. He has more receptions than any other player
since he joined the Patriots in 2007, but he's not the prototypical
elite receiver who can routinely outrun cornerbacks and outjump
safeties.
Nothing exemplified this conundrum more than
Welker's critical drop in the Super Bowl. Immediately after that play, announcer Chris
Collinsworth remarked that "Welker makes that catch 100 times out of 100."
But that's simply not true. As research guru Scott Kacsmar explains here, only eleven
of Welker's 554 receptions with the Patriots have been on passes that
traveled more than 20 yards. Welker doesn't routinely make those types
of catches, and that makes him seem more replaceable than a Calvin
Johnson or Larry Fitzgerald.
Prediction: Ultimately, the Patriots and Welker won't
find equal ground on the system vs. talent debate to reach an
extension. He'll play under the franchise tag.
Ray Rice, Ravens
Status: Hasn't signed $7.7 million tender
The Ravens have every reason to sign Ray Rice to a long-term deal. At 25 years old and with less than 1,000 carries on his resume, the dynamic back still has years of production ahead of him. Baltimore has no proven backup to replace him. And the Ravens don't want to worry about Rice when Joe Flacco's contract expires next year.
However, General Manager Ozzie Newsome has a history of playing hardball with his top players. He let Ray Lewis test the free agent market in 2009. Last year, Newsome tagged Haloti Ngata before signing him to an extension minutes before the deadline.
Prediction: In the eleventh hour, Baltimore shrewdly makes Rice a Raven for years to come.