CardShark
DEAL WITH IT!
The league has let this get out of hand. They need to put restrictions on when a team and its players can renegotiate. My suggestion would be from the end of the season heading into the final season of the contract until the trading deadline of the final year of the contract.
I, for one, am fed up. As much as I like Boldin, it comes back to the fact that he was okay signing the contract at the time and his agent let him do it. The same goes for Dockett. The team didn't get to penalize them when they had bad games such as in New England. Their contract protects them. Of course there will be some dillweed that says, "well the team can cut them". They can if they were petty enough and were willing to have all of their signing bonuses accelerated against the cap. A team won't do that with its good players.
I truly believe this is more about Rosenass telling his clients to demand more. Again the dillweeds will say that this is a good agent looking out for the best interest of his clients. POPPYCOCK! It's Rosenass looking out for himself. The more he gets them, the more he gets. He couldn't care less if his player ends up in a worse situation as long as he can see money coming in. If the Cardinals ended up trading Boldin to the Raiders or the Lions, do you think he'll advise Boldin that he's in a worse situation? Not on your life. He'll push for that team to restructure his contract and then he'll be pushing for a trade the following season. At which point he'll push for a new contract once again.
Another facet that has to stop? The backloaded contracts. It inflates the value of this type of contract and the player will in all likelihood never see it unless they work out a new contract, but the agent turns around and says "Look what I did for my client!". That starts the feeding frenzy.
When it comes right down to it, I wish all of the positions were wage structured according to position and 1st, 2nd and special teams. The only fluctuation would be in signing bonuses, but even they would be capped based on the number of years in the contract.
I don't know if I'm making a good case here, because I just got off work and I'm tired.
I, for one, am fed up. As much as I like Boldin, it comes back to the fact that he was okay signing the contract at the time and his agent let him do it. The same goes for Dockett. The team didn't get to penalize them when they had bad games such as in New England. Their contract protects them. Of course there will be some dillweed that says, "well the team can cut them". They can if they were petty enough and were willing to have all of their signing bonuses accelerated against the cap. A team won't do that with its good players.
I truly believe this is more about Rosenass telling his clients to demand more. Again the dillweeds will say that this is a good agent looking out for the best interest of his clients. POPPYCOCK! It's Rosenass looking out for himself. The more he gets them, the more he gets. He couldn't care less if his player ends up in a worse situation as long as he can see money coming in. If the Cardinals ended up trading Boldin to the Raiders or the Lions, do you think he'll advise Boldin that he's in a worse situation? Not on your life. He'll push for that team to restructure his contract and then he'll be pushing for a trade the following season. At which point he'll push for a new contract once again.
Another facet that has to stop? The backloaded contracts. It inflates the value of this type of contract and the player will in all likelihood never see it unless they work out a new contract, but the agent turns around and says "Look what I did for my client!". That starts the feeding frenzy.
When it comes right down to it, I wish all of the positions were wage structured according to position and 1st, 2nd and special teams. The only fluctuation would be in signing bonuses, but even they would be capped based on the number of years in the contract.
I don't know if I'm making a good case here, because I just got off work and I'm tired.