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!

     

Panthers give Teddy permission to seek a trade


Zod
 Share

Recommended Posts

Fitterer said he talked to Bridgewater and his representatives but was careful not to rule out the possibility of last year's starter staying here in some role. This is where you have to point out that everything is always on the table — "In on every deal" means "In on every deal" — but Fitterer alluded to the possibility of a contract adjustment or a trade, as well.

"I think there's things we have to work through, obviously," Fitterer said. "And I've already talked to Teddy's agents. We're going to find the right place, whether it's here or wherever it may be, we'll figure things out, contract-wise as well."

  • Beer 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Teddy is not a starting quarterback but the way our trio of head coach gm and owner have handled the public relations aspect with our last two quarterbacks leaves a lot to be desired in my eyes. You can certainly see they are learning on the fly with this.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, jayboogieman said:

Why would another team give Teddy a chance to start when the Panthers, who were a bad team last season, are saying he wasn't good enough for them?

Because some teams don't mind a game manager. I actually think Rivera would be happy with a QB like Teddy but not sure if he'll want to do us any favors and he seems enamored with Heinicke. I think he'd also fit well with what the Patriots have traditionally done but seems like they may be trying to evolve their offense. Also, he may be better than anything the Broncos have not really sure if he fits their scheme though.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

17 minutes ago, stbugs said:

If we trade him we don’t pay his salary. We’d save $10M extra which is his guaranteed salary that we pay if we release him. There is $10M in signing bonus dead cap that hits our cap no matter what (half can be spread into 2022 with post 6/1 cut). If we trade him then the pre/post June 1st doesn’t really matter. We’d save a minimum of $13M cap this year and $21M in cap this year or $18M this year and $16M next year. We aren’t hurting for cap this year so it’s a wash with rollover. The key is getting a trade done. That’s what really helps.

56 minutes ago, shaqattaq said:

FWIW:

image.png.c09b0397c37f73569d24ade7207c852f.png

if we trade him effort 6/1 it looks like we have a dead cap hit of 10 million. 

Honestly, whatever. Get some cap back either way and off to the next cheaper mistake. I will be shocked if someone wants him at 12 million this year. Looking like a cut is the likely hand here. Go Texans!

  • Pie 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 minute ago, stbugs said:

There’s $10M from his signing bonus, that’s locked in. Basically, paid him $15M in signing bonus (what an effin waste) and it was going to hit $5M cap each year. What we “save” is his $18M in 2021 salary, $10M of which is guaranteed and $21M in 2022. If we can’t trade him then we get stuck with $10M in salary for 2021 and the $10M in dead cap from the signing bonus. If we trade him all we have is that dead cap and nothing more. We’d save $39M in cap over 2021 and 2022 if we can trade him even with the signing bonus dead cap. We still save $29M if we have to release him. It would just be nice to have less of a mistake.

At this point, it’ll be hard to trade him because we’ve already laid out our plan. We should have been in trade Teddy mode from the start. Unfortunately, somehow Teddy was still a backup plan. We should have just pulled the bandaid off. Worst case if we didn’t get a QB is Grier/Walker/later round rookie and top pick in 2022.

I'm not debating his salary or cost. I honestly don't really care, we burnt all that money when we gave him this deal.

I do agree with all rest. I fear a Seatle-esk draft incoming and that is going to be a bigger issue. There are some real reasons to question this crews ability to judge talent on the O, like Teddy being a backup plan when it was evident that bridge was burnt. Combine that with the beginner level skills of our GM this offseason and Teddy's cost just goes up in smoke for me. I fear at this point the Teddy debacle was just a new normal for us. 

  • Pie 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

10 hours ago, chknwing said:

obviously the team wants Teddy to see what his real value is and then ultimately restructure and release.

I think the renegotiation is to keep him at a reasonable rate if he can't find another team  That sets the price. I wonder if new Orleans is interested now that Teddy knows our whole system. Not sure we should be ushering him out so quickly. We could use a cheap vet to mentor these guys. Just not 22 million for a timid starter.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

 Share


  • PMH4OWPW7JD2TDGWZKTOYL2T3E.jpg

  • Topics

  • Posts

    • Sounds like #37 gonna miss the whole road trip.  
    • I didn't realize Robidas is Stankoven sized lol
    • No, but considering that over a third (~35%) of their schedule are the other three teams in the NFC South and all three have strong starting (and back-up) RBs that the offense leans heavily on to open up the pass game. ATL: Bijan has this season and next season before the Falcons have to make a decision on his fifth-year option, Tyler Allgeier is a proven back-up RB that could start for some teams, and 2024 sixth-round selection Jase McClellan returns from a knee injury that sidelined him for the remainder of the season starting in early September. Combine that with their QB situation, and that's a team that is going to lean heavily on the run just like they did last season when they were 8th in the league in rushing attempts, 10th in rushing yards, 8th in rushing TDs, 9th in rushing attempts on 1st down, . NO: Similar situation as ATL, but for different reasons. Derek Carr is in the second to last year of his deal and the QBs behind him are Spencer Rattler, Jake Haener, and Ben DiNucci. However, they also have Alvin Kamara. One thing that we know about Kellen Moore from his stints as an OC is that he likes to lean heavily on a versatile RB1 while bringing in an arguably equally versatile RB2 to keep their foot on opposing defenses. When Moore had Zeke in Dallas, Zeke was 4th in the league in touches during those four years but Pollard still averaged 10 touches and nearly 60yds a game. Look for the Saints to shore up their RB room in the draft with Kendre Miller, CEH, Jordan Mims, and Xazavian Valladay all competing for touches behind Kamara. TB: Bucky Irving exploded onto the scene last season, but we can't forget more than capable (now-)RB2 Rachaad White. White is on the last year of his rookie deal, but Irving is under contract until 2028. Last season, the Bucs were 10th in rushing attempts, 4th in rushing yards, 3rd in YPC, 7th in carries of 20+, 8th in carries of 40+, and 7th in first down rushing attempts and that helped Baker Mayfield be one of the most efficient passers in the league with a 71.4% completion percentage (good enough for 2nd in the league).
×
×
  • Create New...