xTitan wrote:Fort Minor wrote:MickeyDavis wrote:He's a free agent after this season so we either trade him now, resign him (which won't happen) or he leaves and we get nothing.
Couldn't we tag him, then trade him?
If 2010 remains an uncapped season, I don't believ you can tag a vested veteran, I believe after a certain amount of years they are free to walk. I do not know the free agent list, but what they could do is use that money they save on Kampman and try to sign a 3-4 type rush LB, if one is on the market.
From my understanding, teams will actually be able to tag
more players than they usually would. I know that Ryan already made a post about it, but I'll throw this into the mix as well. Ryan's source makes it sound like two tags total, but the source I read said that each team would have three tags. Not sure which is correct, or if I am misreading my source. This is from an article Kirwan did a year ago talking about how no salary cap could actually limit free agency:
Pat Kirwan wrote:Currently, a team can put either a franchise tag (average of the top five salaries at his position) or a transition tag (average of the top ten salaries at his position) on any one player on the club to protect the team from losing the unrestricted free agent. If the NFL gets to an uncapped year in 2010 and 2011, teams will have use of one franchise tag and two transition tags. So not only would none of the young players with less than six years of service be free, but now the top three players who are eligible for free agency on a roster can be protected.
Now, I'm not sure if that means three total tags over those two years or not. Maybe Kirwan is saying that over 2010 and 2011 teams would have use of 3 total tags. Not sure. Or maybe something changed somehow since he wrote this last year. But it reads to me that each team would have three tags to use: one franchise, and two transitional.
http://www.nfl.com/news/story?id=09000d5d80864e15&template=with-video&confirm=trueETA: Also interesting...
Pat Kirwan wrote:All you have to do to realize how lean the free agent market will be is go back and look at all the players from the 2005 draft who signed five-year deals, all the players from the 2006 draft who signed four-year deals and even players from the 2007 draft who signed four-year deals. None of these players, under the non-CBA trigger points, would be eligible for unrestricted free agency when their originals contracts expire. Here are some examples of whom it might affect if the owners choose not to continue the current CBA and a new CBA isn't negotiated:
Second-round picks from 2006 such as DeMeco Ryans, D'Qwell Jackson, Rocky McIntosh, Thomas Howard, Deuce Lutui, LenDale White, Cedric Griffin, Marcus McNeill, Greg Jennings, and Tarvaris Jackson should be the core of the free-agent market in 2010, but unless they have the ability to "void" their contracts, they will not be free as planned. They would stay with their teams as restricted free agents and it might mean two more years of service before they experience the big payday.
Pat Kirwan wrote:If the league gets to the point of an uncapped year, people are afraid that deep-pocket owners such as Jerry Jones and Daniel Snyder will come in and buy a championship. If the aggressive owners already have playoff teams, there will be restrictions on how much money they can spend. The formula may slide with the number of players they lose in free agency, but the plan is designed to not let teams buy a championship. The truth is, the first two triggers aren't going to leave too many players available to acquire anyway.