Thompson: "We value draft and development, we value free agency"

gp((
As you said, #2 depends on the guy, but #1 is definitely an organizational strategic choice.

If look at the contracts of GB's top paid guys (except for a special case in Arod), you'll notice a clear trend: Guarantees are around 30% of contract's total worth. That is super important!

That is very low compared with the norm given to highest paid UFAs, and even re-signings elsewhere (40-60% guaranteed is very common). For example, Shields has THE lowest guarantees of top 25 CB contracts, Daniels 3rd lowest among top 25 DEs.

Why is that super important? And why do I always say guarantees are everything in contracts?

1) Low guarantees protect the team long term - If a player fails due to skill or injury, even our top paid ones become easily "cuttable" after 2 years, meaning the dead cap hit is low due to the low signing bonus acceleration. It also means players have to keep performing well to see last, usually most lucrative, years of the deal - nice for motivation.

2) Players can be kept to the end of the contract - There are no big cap spikes forcing us to choose between swallowing a nasty cap pill, forced restructure/extension or cut. If the player performs, we can afford the last years on the same contract, and they'll usually look cheap in comparison with rest of the league at that point.

3) Players, especially UFAs, usually want the max guarantees possible - They wanna be protected in case of injury, if they fail in a new scheme or for whatever reason. The best case for a player: As much guaranteed, as early in the contract as possible. With the Packers and their low guarantee -policy, the team holds most of the cards to the player's future. For example, Pep got pretty high avg/year, but only 29% guaranteed. GB could've cut him after year one for 6.5M cap savings, if his transition to OLB hadn't panned out.

----> It's must be very hard to get top UFAs to agree to our preferred contract structure.

4) As added result (or reason) of this strategy, the actual cash paid each year is relatively even. In a contract's 1st year, GB pays the signing bonus, but a low base salary. Rest of the years they pay a higher base salary, maybe roster bonuses, but the signing bonus has already been paid (though it counts against the cap). It's a predictable structure for a team without a billionaire owner.
 
Prepare to explode. Da Bears double dip in forum favorite UFA ILBs, both on affordable contracts:

Rotoworld:
Bears signed ILB Jerrell Freeman to a three-year, $12 million contract.

At least we'll get to make him and Trev look like busts twice this season. ;)
 
Prepare to explode. Da Bears double dip in forum favorite UFA ILBs, both on affordable contracts:

Rotoworld:


At least we'll get to make him and Trev look like busts twice this season. ;)

They are rebuilding... almost have no choice but to use FA and Draft choices as a mix. Very nice off season for Chicago.
 
And one thing on Teavathon and other early signings. These were esentially done 2-3 weeks ago players know where they want to play for the most part. Agents know the price. If they match, team and $$$ it's done end of story. The tampering rule is a joke. Are specific contracts terms discussed no but parameters yes. Call it a grey area or fine line so be it but it exists. You really think a $40m deal is put together in 2 days please. It takes longer than that to draft the language. Yes there is a standard player contract but it's a bit more detailed on specific language.
Teavathon wanted to play in Chicago

iscputb
 
This organization will never overpay for a FA.

i disagree. we overpaid for perry just last week. we overpaid for cobb last year. there are others, but i think you get my point. we overpay for many of our own free agents. we don't overpay for other teams' free agents.
 
i disagree. we overpaid for perry just last week. we overpaid for cobb last year. there are others, but i think you get my point. we overpay for many of our own free agents. we don't overpay for other teams' free agents.
Agree I said before TT overvalues thus overpays his own guys more then the rest of the league see's TT's players. Part of TT's problem he gets tunnel vision on his own guys that he can't see sometimes they are not as good as he precives them to be.
 
I think we've all arrived at a very special place. Spiritually, ecumenically, grammatically.
So we must be of one accord. Give TT a chance to prove that he will/has improved the team or not.
After which, we have him walk the plank...arrgggg
-Capt Jack Sparrow
 
I personally believe somehow that TT is simply waiting to see how much lack of interest from other teams that his own FA get. Thus he'll be able to sign them up to bargain prices. In turn with saved cash he can go tiptoeing thru the leftover FAs and see which cheap dude(s) he can drag in and justify what he can deem as upgrading the team. tc(
 
Folks this is not fantasy football. Not every FA wants to play in GB.
 
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