Jump to content
  • Welcome!

    Register and log in easily with Twitter or Google accounts!

    Or simply create a new Huddle account. 

    Members receive fewer ads , access our dark theme, and the ability to join the discussion!

     

Are there clues in free agency and trades to a lockout next year?


pstall

Recommended Posts

There are some really bad teams right now. Some may be just skimming salaries and sandbagging for costs.

I'm curious peoples take on teams signing or NOT signing and the amounts that are going around if that gives any clues to next year being a lockout.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Teams don't need to pay the players in a lockout, so the only clues for a 2011 stoppage would be a build-up of tension leading up to and throughout the 2010 season (uncapped year, other poison pills taking effect, etc).

If there is an uncapped 2010, the probability of a work stoppage will go way up.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The key will be to see if there is a crapload of offseason moves this year. Stars, midliners and scrubs. If it is larger than normal, you can imagine that it might be moves by ownership to hamper the union by keeping people moving.

That's a bit conspiracy-theory in its nature, but it could be a sign. The lack of big name trades by the recent trade deadline, though, I haven't got any idea if there are clues there.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The key will be to see if there is a crapload of offseason moves this year. Stars, midliners and scrubs. If it is larger than normal, you can imagine that it might be moves by ownership to hamper the union by keeping people moving.

That's a bit conspiracy-theory in its nature, but it could be a sign. The lack of big name trades by the recent trade deadline, though, I haven't got any idea if there are clues there.

Actually, the sign will be a lot LESS moves this coming offseason.

Here is why: One of the poison pills in the CBA stipulates that the "age" for free agency moves from four seasons of experience to six seasons, so that automatically cuts down on the amount of players available. Second, it stipulates that the top 12 teams in football (i.e. playoff teams) are forbidden to sign any players until they LOSE players to free agency. That, too, cuts down on the amount of movement. Third, with a lockout looming, owners will be really, really averse to handing out new contracts going into 2011/2012 and beyond, since they don't know how the payroll/salary landscape might change moving forward, whether cap cap vanishes, goes down, stays stationary, guarantees and bonus structure differ, etc etc. They won't want to hand out long-term deals and then get stuck with them in the future.

So, yeah, less movement = more likely lockout. The more unrest caused by these poison pills taking effect, the more likely a lockout would be in 2011.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Actually, the sign will be a lot LESS moves this coming offseason.

Here is why: One of the poison pills in the CBA stipulates that the "age" for free agency moves from four seasons of experience to six seasons, so that automatically cuts down on the amount of players available. Second, it stipulates that the top 12 teams in football (i.e. playoff teams) are forbidden to sign any players until they LOSE players to free agency. That, too, cuts down on the amount of movement. Third, with a lockout looming, owners will be really, really averse to handing out new contracts going into 2011/2012 and beyond, since they don't know how the payroll/salary landscape might change moving forward, whether cap cap vanishes, goes down, stays stationary, guarantees and bonus structure differ, etc etc. They won't want to hand out long-term deals and then get stuck with them in the future.

So, yeah, less movement = more likely lockout. The more unrest caused by these poison pills taking effect, the more likely a lockout would be in 2011.

exactly, free agency will be alot slower and smaller then normal. You also have to consider that each team will have 2 franchise tags next year instead of just one.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.


  • PMH4OWPW7JD2TDGWZKTOYL2T3E.jpg

  • Topics

  • Posts

    • If Cam is done, he just needs to retire.  Even on that episode of the podcast, he said he would never play again, but he's not going to "retire."  OK.   I think it's stupid.  Cam Newton is the best player in Panthers history.  He made us relevant.  He was polarizing, but you can't deny that Cam changed the course for the Panthers.  He needs to have a sit down with Tepper, clear the air, and Cam needs to sign his retirement.  Then the Panthers make it one for the ages and make it a city wide celebration of everything Cam has done on and off the field.
    • The retirement thing is just a convenient excuse from Tepper. I'm sure if the team was trying to bring him on officially he would do it in a heartbeat and the league wouldn't bat an eye at it. He's not getting any other calls and we know there's a direct line of communication. You telling me no other team has put up a photo of an active player who left? I have a hard time believing the league would flag a MVP display, literal team history, as tampering. Moving on from JR is clearly bull too when we're parading Luke and Smitty around. It's Cam. Tepper knows that if Cam is brought on in any capacity, as long as he looks athletic to the average fan there's going to pressure to put him in when we're struggling at QB. They've decided he's not worth that but I think is a huge mistake. The organization stands to lose more burning this bridge than he does.
    • I've been here through it all my friend. So when I say I've seen how this turns out folks really should listen. But they won't. So I continue to be entertained by fair weather fans that talk down to me as if I don't know squat. That's fine. Their in for some painful reality checks.
×
×
  • Create New...