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NFL Holdout Discussion

12
Vote

Drew Rosenhaus is a man known for holding his clients out from NFL training camp and even into the regular season if he feels that the players he represents are not being paid for the value they are producing. The general public was brought into the realm of “holdout discussion” primarily through the discourse revolving around Terrell Owens' holdout from the Philadelphia Eagles this past year. But has the media framed the holdout issue in an unfair way? Do the teams end up looking like the victims of undervalued player holdouts while the players should be seen as the victims of teams always looking to cut overvalued players while under contract.

In the book, Next Man Up by John Feinstein, Mr. Feinstein is 100% correct in saying that there may be no more meaningless phrase in sports than “Joe Smith signed a seven-year contract today” with an NFL team. The signing bonus within the contract signed by a player is the only gauranteed money as no contracts are truly gauranteed in the NFL. If a player refuses to restructure his contract, he is often cut by the team sometime in the duration of his contract. Because NFL teams have such enormous power and often ruin people’s lives by deciding to end their professional career because of a refusal to be undervalued, are individual players wrong when they holdout in order to be fairly valued if they end up having the upper hand in a negotiation with their team?

Another good question is why does the media ignore the actions made by the team and sensationalize the bargaining power of few individual NFL players who decide to holdout in order to be properly valued?

The most recent addition to the list of scrutinized holdouts is Deion Branch of the New England Patriots. He is upset with the amount of money he is being paid and the fact that the Patriots do not want to grant him a new multi-year contract. He is greatly undervalued by the team as he is still being paid based on his original worthless 5-year rookie contract.

Surprisingly, criticism has come from a former NFL player (Jerry Rice). Not surprisingly, it was still done on a major media outlet. The main problem I have with Jerry Rice’s statement is when he says:

"Why are you going to hold out? You are still under contract. It makes no sense."

Maybe it does not make sense to Jerry Rice, an anomaly in the game of football. He was able to serve a very long career and was never threatened by the San Francisco 49ers with a salary cut. But the NFL is not all peaches and cream. Instead of being ignorant and saying that it makes no sense, maybe Mr. Rice should look at the situation from another angle.

Is Branch right? Is Rice right? Are the Patriots right? Should the media change its focus?



Source

  • http://www.sportsagentblog.com


Date

Sat 06/17/06, 12:27 pm EST


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ChristofMVP
1301 days ago
Score 0+-
Once upon a time, Rosenhaus was against hold outs as well. Then he got Walker and TO, and his tune suddenly changed. It did both of those guys a lot of good last year, didn't they???
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AlanschechVarsity
1300 days ago
Score 2+-
If you don't like the money you are being offered in a contract, don't sign it. These babies need to stop crying about being undervalued, and play.
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Anonymous Fanatic #1
1300 days ago
Score 0+-
even if there are holdouts i am sick of hearing about them, when those stories get attention it promotes more people to holdout, get the attention, and force the team to either release, trade, or give more money to the player; once the media stops caring then teams won't be under so much pressure from fans and these situations will be dealt with properly
Permalink | Reply
Gamebuzz
1300 days ago
Score 1+-
I'll support Rice's statement. These guys are making a ton of money. A salary cut to them sometimes is more than I'll make in my lifetime, but they are still going to take in in 16 weeks the same that it'll take me a lifetime to haul in. When you're talking a paycut from 5 to 4 million, it's greed. That's all it is. That's way to much money in the first place. But to support Rice, it wasn't all "peaches and cream" for him either. Yeah he had it great in Frisco, but when he went to Oakland, and later to Seattle, he was harshly underused. Seriously, I'm a Rams fan, I know the woes that the Seahawks have had with receivers, heck we beat them three times in one year. They can't catch a football, and even as a 'Hawk, Rice was third string. The guy could catch, but they didn't use him. Think how frustrating that had to be for Jerry.
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