DrugBust wrote:
5 - Is Carolina really going to deal Peppers for a second round pick when Jared Allen, in a similar situation last season, fetched a mid first rounder and two thirds?
This is a very complicated situation, it seems.
If the Panthers shop Peppers around and because of the economy there aren't a lot of teams left anymore who are willing to pay Peppers in the area that he's going to want, they may not be able to get for him what they would like.
If say in free agency, teams had to give up a first round pick plus big money for the top free agents, we'd see less movement. It's a hefty price to not only pay a free agent big money, but then to also give up a draft pick or draft picks on top of the money. Another thing to consider with Allen is that when the Chiefs traded him, he wasn't basically refusing to play for the Chefs which gave them more leverage. If Peppers really is refusing to play for Carolina, other GM's know that Peppers has to be moved and then the main leverage left for the Panthers would be if numerous teams were competing to trade for him. If though there are few teams willing to both pay Peppers and and give up compensation, they may not get a big haul in return.
This is where talented deal-makers get things done. Would any of you guys give up our #1 pick for Peppers? I clearly would. We've got the cap space for him. We've got the need for him. TT also needs a home run move to win back the fans and position this defense to win next year.
Somehow I don't see Ted being capable of pulling off a move like this. But I'd like to hope they are at least thinking hard about this.
I agree that a bold move like this just isn't something i could see Ted even considering. If though in a pretend world that he was interested in Peppers, i could actually see TT being more interested in trading away the 9th overall pick than any second or third rounders. When you look at the NFL draft the last 5-7 years or so, you don't see that many trade ups by teams into the top 5 or 10 unless a QB is there because of the crazy money the top 5-10 picks get in todays NFL. Hell, the Dolphins had to give Jake Long 30 million in guaranteed money which i believe was the biggest contract ever for any offensive lineman even though he wasn't considered an amazing prospect or hadn't played a down yet in the NFL. Unless an elite prospect is sitting there, many teams hate the idea of having to pay unproven top 5-10 picks so much guaranteed money.
So if for pretend Thompson tried trading our first round pick to get Peppers, one benefit would be not having to pay out 9th pick money which could be used to offset money given to Peppers. Last year the Bengals took Keith Rivers 9th overall and had to give him 15.6 in million guaranteed money, so i'd assume the 9th pick this year will cost over 16 million guaranteed and as we saw with both Hawk/Harrell, high or fairly high draft picks are no guarantee to be impact players for the big money they get. The contract given to Haynesworth was reported as a 7yr/100 million dollar deal, but really it's about a 4yr/48 million dollar contract with fluff added by the 5th year to make the contract look bigger than it really is. So if for pretend Thompson traded #9 for Peppers, by trading that pick, he'd be in effect getting about half of Peppers contract paid for by not having to pay that 9th pick and you're getting a proven commodity for your money.
It's obviously not going to happen and maybe Peppers will end up not living up to the big money/draft compensation for the team he goes to, but the thought of both Peppers/Kampman attacking opposing quarterbacks sure does sound tantalizing.