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An open letter to the NFL from Daunte Culpepper (1 Viewer)

oddball

Smart
Didn't see this in a search, and figured it was a good look into what he's thinking:

AN OPEN LETTER FROM DAUNTE CULPEPPER

Posted by Mike Florio on August 29, 2008, 1:12 p.m. EDT

[Editor’s note: We’ve recently posted several items about the current status of former Vikings, Dolphins, and Raiders quarterback Daunte Culpepper, who remains without a team as the 2008 regular season approaches. In an item for SportingNews.com, we argued that Culpepper needs to hire an agent, and we also have suggested that he possibly is being blackballed by the league. A member of the media pointed out to Culpepper one of our stories, and it prompted Culpepper to contact us about his situation. We offered to give him the space to make his case to the NFL’s 32 teams, and to the millions (OK, thousands) pro football fans who regularly visit this site. His letter appears below, unedited and unabridged.]

A letter to the NFL community:

Now that we are on the eve of teams selecting their 53 man rosters, I feel compelled to give my account of what I believe is a misunderstanding of who I am and what I have been trying to accomplish during this free agency period. It is my hope that I can provide some clarity by sharing what I am thinking straight from me and not through the interpretation of the media, or second hand information. That is why I am grateful to Mike Florio for giving me this platform to speak to the NFL community through the vehicle of profootballtalk.com.

First of all I want to explain why I have decided to exercise my right under the CBA to represent myself rather than hire an agent. This decision has more to do with my desire to handle my business affairs personally, than anything negative about agents. After the 2004 season I took a crash course in understanding my 10 year 102 million contract line by line. What I learned was that I had a long term deal with no guarantees for the remaining eight years. After my injury in 2005, the contract became an important issue that had to be dealt with. It took a trade to Miami and nearly 18 months to get out from under that contract.

My approach now is that I am looking for a relationship with a team that is based on mutual respect. I am willing to put on my suit when it comes to business and exchange it for an NFL uniform when it is time to play the game. I am not suggesting that this is the right approach for every player. I am only saying that it is what works best for me at this point in my career. I would only hope that teams would not keep me from working because of my approach to the business side of the game.

Secondly, I want to clear up the misinformation regarding my desire to only be a starter. I would think that every QB in this league wants to start. However, contrary to popular belief, I know how to play my role. I set out this free agency period with three categories that I wanted to explore.

1. Teams that were looking for a starter

2. Teams that were open for QB competition

3. Teams that needed a veteran back-up

With the help of the NFLPA, I researched what the market value was for each category. I contacted 14 teams that fell into these categories. Unfortunately, I did not receive any real interest from the teams I contacted. When the Packers finally offered for me to come to Green Bay to back-up Aaron Rodgers there were no real negotiations. They offered me a deal that was, according to my research, below market value. They said that they would get back to me after the draft.

When the beginning of training camp came and there was still no interest, I reached out to Commissioner Goodell to see if he had any suggestions. He asked Ray Anderson to check around the league and get back to me. Ray told me three things based on his discussions with teams. First of all he said that I should get an agent because teams were not comfortable dealing with me without one. The second thing he told me was that I should be ready to accept the vet minimum and start my career over. The third thing he said was that I would only have an opportunity if someone got hurt. This is why I went to Pittsburgh to work out for the team after Charlie got hurt, so I could see if what Ray Anderson said was true. After a great workout, I was offered the vet minimum with no negotiations. This is when I realized that there is something wrong.

For the sake of clarity, I never told anyone in Pittsburgh that I wanted to compete with Ben Rothlisberger for his job. This is an example of misrepresentation or misinformation.

Recently the Commissioner called to let me know that I was on the top of the list for a job if a key veteran got hurt. I really appreciate the Commissioner’s help, but I hate that I have to wait for a fellow QB to experience the misfortune of an injury in order for me to have an opportunity to continue my career. Why was I not given the chance to compete for a job? This is my question to the NFL. The answer seems to point to something that I choose not to embrace at this time. So instead, I will continue to believe for the best and prepare for the worst.

In the meantime my request is simply that teams give me the respect of talking directly to me rather than trying to interpret what I think or desire. I can handle the truth if they can handle my presence in discussions. I hope that my body of work in the league will earn me at least a conversation.

Daunte Culpepper

Link

 
Does someone need to remind him of how he has played since his surgery. That might have more to do with it then not having an agent. Im pretty sure if he was 2004 Daunte, teams would be lined up to sign the guy.

ETA: He didnt play that great in the start of the 05 season either. I think that was when Moss left but Im not sure

 
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Is it normal for the commish to help players find jobs? This is a serious question, not a facetious one.

 
Isn't it true that he wants a job where he wants to have a very good chance at being the starter? Has anyone told him that he isn't starting material? Maybe Culpepper needs to come to grips with reality?

 
Isn't it true that he wants a job where he wants to have a very good chance at being the starter? Has anyone told him that he isn't starting material? Maybe Culpepper needs to come to grips with reality?
Thats not what it says in the letter.
Secondly, I want to clear up the misinformation regarding my desire to only be a starter. I would think that every QB in this league wants to start. However, contrary to popular belief, I know how to play my role. I set out this free agency period with three categories that I wanted to explore.1. Teams that were looking for a starter2. Teams that were open for QB competition3. Teams that needed a veteran back-up
You read the letter, right?
 
Isn't it true that he wants a job where he wants to have a very good chance at being the starter? Has anyone told him that he isn't starting material? Maybe Culpepper needs to come to grips with reality?
Brodie Croyle, Kyle Orton , Trent Edwards, JT Osullivan are starting QBS in the NFL JPLosman, Rex Grossman, Alex Smith and Kyle Boller are all rostered NFL QBs Who would you rather have? Culpepper or any of the above?
 
This is what struck me...

Ray told me three things based on his discussions with teams. First of all he said that I should get an agent because teams were not comfortable dealing with me without one. The second thing he told me was that I should be ready to accept the vet minimum and start my career over. The third thing he said was that I would only have an opportunity if someone got hurt. This is why I went to Pittsburgh to work out for the team after Charlie got hurt, so I could see if what Ray Anderson said was true. After a great workout, I was offered the vet minimum with no negotiations. This is when I realized that there is something wrong.

- Guy tells you point blank that teams are wary because you represent yourself. Okay, understandable but that can be overlooked. He tells you that you should be ready to accept the vet minimum and possibly "show off" to the other teams that you're healthy, for real, etc. So you go to Pittsburgh with a great team and by your own admission, have a "great workout" but get offered the vet minimum.

There's something wrong? Yes... you're a veteran coming off injury plagued seasons and are not the guy who was gold in 2004. The teams have backups and guess what, Batch got injured. If you sign, they'll have Ben, You, and Batch for 3 QB spots and somebody's gonna be feeling left out. Batch has a history with that offense and is a capable backup (arguably best in the NFL in that role). You're coming in... why should they offer you more than the vet minimum? They could sign another QB (i.e. see what they did with Leftwich) and you're left in the cold.

Culpepper's issue is that he seems to overinflate his importance (and impact) to a team and isn't willing to accept the veteran minimum, instead seeking a higher payday that he feels he's "earned" through past play which may not apply anymore.

 
Isn't it true that he wants a job where he wants to have a very good chance at being the starter? Has anyone told him that he isn't starting material? Maybe Culpepper needs to come to grips with reality?
Brodie Croyle, Kyle Orton , Trent Edwards, JT Osullivan are starting QBS in the NFL JPLosman, Rex Grossman, Alex Smith and Kyle Boller are all rostered NFL QBs Who would you rather have? Culpepper or any of the above?
He doesn't listen very well. If everyone is telling you to get an agent, and you hold very few cards, GET AN AGENT.If you want a chance to show your stuff, and someone makes you an offer for the vet minimum, ACCEPT THE OFFER.You don't have many cards, you are on the outside looking in, take what you are offered, prima donna.
 
Isn't it true that he wants a job where he wants to have a very good chance at being the starter? Has anyone told him that he isn't starting material? Maybe Culpepper needs to come to grips with reality?
Brodie Croyle, Kyle Orton , Trent Edwards, JT Osullivan are starting QBS in the NFL JPLosman, Rex Grossman, Alex Smith and Kyle Boller are all rostered NFL QBs Who would you rather have? Culpepper or any of the above?
I'd rather have Culpepper over Grossman, Alex smith, and that's it.
 
Chris Henry can get a job with the same team that cut him, Pacman Jones gets another chance, but Culpepper can't? It wasn't worth it for the Bears to bring in Culpepper to see what he had in the tank? Seriously!?

Yeah, I'd say that Culpepper not having an agent is a terrible decision. At this point it looks like it's costing him his career. Agents can kind of suck, I'm with Culpepper on that, but he sure doesn't seem to be getting any shot without one. Seems like a necessary evil.

 
Isn't it true that he wants a job where he wants to have a very good chance at being the starter? Has anyone told him that he isn't starting material? Maybe Culpepper needs to come to grips with reality?
Brodie Croyle, Kyle Orton , Trent Edwards, JT Osullivan are starting QBS in the NFL JPLosman, Rex Grossman, Alex Smith and Kyle Boller are all rostered NFL QBs Who would you rather have? Culpepper or any of the above?
He doesn't listen very well. If everyone is telling you to get an agent, and you hold very few cards, GET AN AGENT.If you want a chance to show your stuff, and someone makes you an offer for the vet minimum, ACCEPT THE OFFER.You don't have many cards, you are on the outside looking in, take what you are offered, prima donna.
Or since you are old and could probably do better in a shortened season wait for the first team to freak out when their top 2 qbs go down.
 
Why is Green Bay carrying 3 QB's who have never started an NFL game? After Rodgers the two rooks have looked awful, can you imagine what GB would look like if Rodgers goes down (again)? If C. Pep would be willing to play the backup he couldn't be worse than what GB currently has on the bench.

 
I like the guy, seems smarter than the average NFL cookie, was fun to watch in Minnesota, etc....but he overestimates his current market value.

I also don't see why the lack of an agent is a bad thing from the perspective of NFL teams. It could ruffle some feathers with the agents association(if there is such a thing) and possibly the player's union(the mouth-breathing portion), but I think I'm correct in assuming that most GM's would much rather deal with C-Pep than C-Pep AND his greedy agent.

 
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:unsure: :lmao: :shrug:

what an #####.

I only have 2 questions:

wtf was that published?

and wtf did I read it?

oh, also --- I wonder why he didn't mention his awesome fantasy team line-up.

 
When the Steelers offered Culpepper the vet league minimum after the Packers offered him the same he should have realized that is pretty much his current value. His only chance to get a better contract is to sign a 1-year deal, hopes he gets some playing time, and does well.

You aren't going to get a better deal sitting on your #### and writing open letters to the NFL.

 
if I were the bears, I'd make C-Pep the starter on day 1 ... even if he signed today

oh wait, if I were really the bears, I'd ignore all FA's possibly worthy of being signed and trade away every asset the team has. I wonder how many future 3rd rounders we could get for Hester ........

 
Chris Henry can get a job with the same team that cut him, Pacman Jones gets another chance, but Culpepper can't? It wasn't worth it for the Bears to bring in Culpepper to see what he had in the tank? Seriously!?
QB is different from WR or CB. You have to know the system better and leadership skills are much more necessary. I agree that the Bears should probably have looked at him given their situation, but most teams have 2nd stringers who are either vets of the system or young guys they want to groom.
 
odd.

i really wonder if he should just become an agent at this point.

i can't really blame him for not playing for less than he thinks he's worth though.

 
When the beginning of training camp came and there was still no interest, I reached out to Commissioner Goodell to see if he had any suggestions. He asked Ray Anderson to check around the league and get back to me. Ray told me three things based on his discussions with teams. First of all he said that I should get an agent because teams were not comfortable dealing with me without one. The second thing he told me was that I should be ready to accept the vet minimum and start my career over. The third thing he said was that I would only have an opportunity if someone got hurt. This is why I went to Pittsburgh to work out for the team after Charlie got hurt, so I could see if what Ray Anderson said was true. After a great workout, I was offered the vet minimum with no negotiations. This is when I realized that there is something wrong.

In the meantime my request is simply that teams give me the respect of talking directly to me rather than trying to interpret what I think or desire. I can handle the truth if they can handle my presence in discussions. I hope that my body of work in the league will earn me at least a conversation.

Link
He didn't listen to the wise advice given
 
I'm a Culpepper apologist and make no bones about it, but this letter struck me as both rational and forthright. I don't quite understand why he doesn't hire an agent; it hardly means he can't be instrumental in the negotiations of his deal and can make it clear with his agent that he wants to learn every nuance of the business side of things. But beyond that, it's absolutely mind blowing to me that he can't land a job. There are some god awful starters projected and quite a few more QB2s that really shouldn't even be in the league.

I assumed Culpepper wasn't getting looks b/c he might still be hurt and/or out of shape.

 
Does someone need to remind him of how he has played since his surgery. That might have more to do with it then not having an agent. Im pretty sure if he was 2004 Daunte, teams would be lined up to sign the guy.ETA: He didnt play that great in the start of the 05 season either. I think that was when Moss left but Im not sure
FWIW, and I can't remember the name of the GM who said it earlier this offseason, but he had Leftwich and C-Pep in to work out on the same day and he couldn't believe either one of the guys was actually available and "walking the streets" as he put it, because of their great showings.
 
When the Steelers offered Culpepper the vet league minimum after the Packers offered him the same he should have realized that is pretty much his current value.
NO -- he did RESEARCH!and it showed him that he was a $100 million qb, and anybody who claims different is racist.
 
Does someone need to remind him of how he has played since his surgery. That might have more to do with it then not having an agent. Im pretty sure if he was 2004 Daunte, teams would be lined up to sign the guy.ETA: He didnt play that great in the start of the 05 season either. I think that was when Moss left but Im not sure
FWIW, and I can't remember the name of the GM who said it earlier this offseason, but he had Leftwich and C-Pep in to work out on the same day and he couldn't believe either one of the guys was actually available and "walking the streets" as he put it, because of their great showings.
:popcorn:
 
Is it normal for the commish to help players find jobs? This is a serious question, not a facetious one.
I'll bet it has something to do with filing a blackball grievance.
Why would anyone want to blackball culpepper? That has to be one of the most stupid acusations I've ever heard before. Next thing you know he will play the race card.
The teams are pretty much saying "we don't want to deal with the player without an agent. That sounds like a labor issue/union grievance possibility, no?" And to accomplish this they are only offering the league minimum, when it's pretty clear there are less talented players making more. :popcorn:
 
I'm a Culpepper apologist and make no bones about it, but this letter struck me as both rational and forthright. I don't quite understand why he doesn't hire an agent; it hardly means he can't be instrumental in the negotiations of his deal and can make it clear with his agent that he wants to learn every nuance of the business side of things. But beyond that, it's absolutely mind blowing to me that he can't land a job. There are some god awful starters projected and quite a few more QB2s that really shouldn't even be in the league.I assumed Culpepper wasn't getting looks b/c he might still be hurt and/or out of shape.
:popcorn:
 
The guy has played for 3 teams and been offered contracts by 2 more teams already this off season and he is saying he has been blackballed? That makes no sense. Barry Bonds. Now that's someone who has been blackballed. Culpepper just cant' get paid or offered a position he feels is worthy of his talents.

 
This is what struck me...Ray told me three things based on his discussions with teams. First of all he said that I should get an agent because teams were not comfortable dealing with me without one. The second thing he told me was that I should be ready to accept the vet minimum and start my career over. The third thing he said was that I would only have an opportunity if someone got hurt. This is why I went to Pittsburgh to work out for the team after Charlie got hurt, so I could see if what Ray Anderson said was true. After a great workout, I was offered the vet minimum with no negotiations. This is when I realized that there is something wrong.- Guy tells you point blank that teams are wary because you represent yourself. Okay, understandable but that can be overlooked. He tells you that you should be ready to accept the vet minimum and possibly "show off" to the other teams that you're healthy, for real, etc. So you go to Pittsburgh with a great team and by your own admission, have a "great workout" but get offered the vet minimum.There's something wrong? Yes... you're a veteran coming off injury plagued seasons and are not the guy who was gold in 2004. The teams have backups and guess what, Batch got injured. If you sign, they'll have Ben, You, and Batch for 3 QB spots and somebody's gonna be feeling left out. Batch has a history with that offense and is a capable backup (arguably best in the NFL in that role). You're coming in... why should they offer you more than the vet minimum? They could sign another QB (i.e. see what they did with Leftwich) and you're left in the cold.Culpepper's issue is that he seems to overinflate his importance (and impact) to a team and isn't willing to accept the veteran minimum, instead seeking a higher payday that he feels he's "earned" through past play which may not apply anymore.
Did Leftwich get the vet minimum?
 
If I'm a general manager and I see that letter, I think:

1. He seems to be a headcase. Not sure I want an over the hill headcase in my most important position.

2. He has an overinflated sense of what he's worth.

3. Not sure i want to even talk to a headcase with an overinflated sense of what he's worth.

If I am Culpepper, I think:

1. Maybe I should get an agent.

2. They're not going to offer me what I think I'm worth.

3. So the alternative is: Do I want to play football for the veteran minimum, or would I rather be a greeter at WalMart?

4. I think I'll play football.

 
Culpepper confirms turning down Packers

By Gregory Broome

STAR-BANNER

Published: Sunday, June 22, 2008 at 6:30 a.m.

Last Modified: Saturday, June 21, 2008 at 11:44 p.m.

OCALA - Daunte Culpepper did indeed turn down an offer from the Green Bay Packers, the free agent NFL quarterback confirmed Saturday, but he declined to explain exactly why.

LEE FERINDEN/SPECIAL TO THE STAR-BANNER Vanguard High graduate Daunte Culpepper had a 1-year, $1 million offer to be a backup quarterback in Green Bay, but turned it down."It just wasn't good for either side," said Culpepper on a short break from fellow Vanguard High School graduate Drayton Florence's annual Make It Happen Youth Football Camp.

The Green Bay Press-Gazette reported this week that the Packers met with Culpepper and fellow free agent quarterbacks Quinn Gray and Gus Frerotte in an effort to fill the backup spot behind starter Aaron Rodgers. The report indicated that the team extended Culpepper a 1-year, $1 million contract offer, which Culpepper refused, leading the media to adopt the conventional wisdom that the Ocala native is waiting for a starting job, or at least a fair opportunity to earn one in training camp.

Culpepper confirmed Saturday that he did turn down the Packers' offer but said the report was "not the whole story," though he would not elaborate.

"I don't want to comment on it too much," he said.

Culpepper did say he would like to be a starter this season, but stopped short of saying he was "holding out" for that opportunity.

"I hope that, you know, that's what I want, in a perfect world. But we'll see what happens," Culpepper said.

"I'm just waiting for the right situation for me. I'm in talks with a couple of different teams right now."

Culpepper declined to identify those teams. Asked if he'd be interested in joining Florence with the nearby Jacksonville Jaguars, a team he has been linked to in each of the past two summers, Culpepper only laughed.

"You never know," he said. "You never know."

A first-round draft pick of the Minnesota Vikings in 1999, Culpepper was among the league's elite quarterbacks until he suffered a devastating knee injury in 2005. He was traded a year later to the Miami Dolphins, who released Culpepper after a season cut short by another surgery on his knee. The three-time Pro Bowler played in seven games for the Oakland Raiders last year, throwing for 1,331 yards with 5 touchdowns and 5 interceptions and adding 3 rushing touchdowns.

BLACKBALLED

 
This is what struck me...Ray told me three things based on his discussions with teams. First of all he said that I should get an agent because teams were not comfortable dealing with me without one. The second thing he told me was that I should be ready to accept the vet minimum and start my career over. The third thing he said was that I would only have an opportunity if someone got hurt. This is why I went to Pittsburgh to work out for the team after Charlie got hurt, so I could see if what Ray Anderson said was true. After a great workout, I was offered the vet minimum with no negotiations. This is when I realized that there is something wrong.- Guy tells you point blank that teams are wary because you represent yourself. Okay, understandable but that can be overlooked. He tells you that you should be ready to accept the vet minimum and possibly "show off" to the other teams that you're healthy, for real, etc. So you go to Pittsburgh with a great team and by your own admission, have a "great workout" but get offered the vet minimum.There's something wrong? Yes... you're a veteran coming off injury plagued seasons and are not the guy who was gold in 2004. The teams have backups and guess what, Batch got injured. If you sign, they'll have Ben, You, and Batch for 3 QB spots and somebody's gonna be feeling left out. Batch has a history with that offense and is a capable backup (arguably best in the NFL in that role). You're coming in... why should they offer you more than the vet minimum? They could sign another QB (i.e. see what they did with Leftwich) and you're left in the cold.Culpepper's issue is that he seems to overinflate his importance (and impact) to a team and isn't willing to accept the veteran minimum, instead seeking a higher payday that he feels he's "earned" through past play which may not apply anymore.
<_< The league thinks Culpepper is worth vet minimum, and Culpepper thinks he's worth more. Who's right? Hint: it's not Culpepper. If he thinks that he's that good, then sign a one-year deal and prove it. The money will follow if he's right. He needs to stop whining about "respect" and go out and earn it. The truth is that he's done nothing in the league for four years now, which is an eternity, so he needs to go earn respect rather than whine about how it's not being given to him.
 
Isn't it true that he wants a job where he wants to have a very good chance at being the starter? Has anyone told him that he isn't starting material? Maybe Culpepper needs to come to grips with reality?
Brodie Croyle, Kyle Orton , Trent Edwards, JT Osullivan are starting QBS in the NFL JPLosman, Rex Grossman, Alex Smith and Kyle Boller are all rostered NFL QBs Who would you rather have? Culpepper or any of the above?
I would rather give C-Pep a shot as a veteran backup than Grossman, Alex Smith or Boller. Those guys are absolute garbage. At least with C-Pep you got a guy that could come in off the bench and potentially put up 5 TD's like he did for the Raiders against Miami last year. Sure he looked rusty and he'll never be the player he once was for the Vikings. But you could do a lot worse than Culpepper for a quality backup. Guys like Joey Harrington, Gus Ferrotte, and Kerry Collins are still in the league as backups. Why can't Culpepper have a shot?
 
Hiring an agent would solve all of his problems. I have no doubt that if he had an agent right now, he would have a backup job right now.

I can also understand why he is turned off towards agents. He saw that the big contract he got had very little guaranteed and he viewed that as a negative towards agents. The truth of the matter is that most big contract are written just like that. They inflate the numbers to make the look contract much bigger than it is. A stroke of the player's ego really. It's just how it works and Daunte doesn't realize it.

I think that he's done a good job being an agent. He did everything an agent would do for him. The problem is that no one wants to deal with a self-represented player. He made a huge mistake by not taking the Packers job when it was offered to him. With the receivers they have there, one Aaron Rodgers injury could revive his career. But even if he's signed now, he won't know the offense. He missed his chance.

 
Why is Green Bay carrying 3 QB's who have never started an NFL game? After Rodgers the two rooks have looked awful, can you imagine what GB would look like if Rodgers goes down (again)? If C. Pep would be willing to play the backup he couldn't be worse than what GB currently has on the bench.
Packers offered Dante $1M to be a backup for them in the spring. He turned it down.Culpepper is Exhibit A in why players should have agents. Someone to patiently explain the difference between what you think your nfl value is and your actual nfl value.
 
Hard to feel bad for Daunte here after he turned down the Pack. What a great opportunty it could of been with those WR's. He could of had his head in the playbook for the last 6 months, instead he felt insulted for a $1 mil backup offer and turned it down. I've never been a Daunte fan in the least. Always got the impression he felt a sense of entitlement after 1-2 solid NFL seasons. Blamed everyone but himself for the Miami debacle. Same with Minnesota.

Look at the opportunity Leftwich has in Pitt now. While he'll never be the long-term starter (like Daunte's had his mind set on being), he's one injury away from leading a likely playoff bound team. And doing so could lead to a future starting opportunity.

Edit: And what an odd time for a letter to the league and for him to determine what his market value is.

I really wanted to hear him say: You might remember me as the guy that threw long deep balls which Randy went up and got about 5 years ago. I believe I can come into your camp right now w/o knowing your playbook and do the same thing. Let me make the next Randy Moss. Thanks, Daunte.

 
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Why is Green Bay carrying 3 QB's who have never started an NFL game? After Rodgers the two rooks have looked awful, can you imagine what GB would look like if Rodgers goes down (again)? If C. Pep would be willing to play the backup he couldn't be worse than what GB currently has on the bench.
Packers offered Dante $1M to be a backup for them in the spring. He turned it down.Culpepper is Exhibit A in why players should have agents. Someone to patiently explain the difference between what you think your nfl value is and your actual nfl value.
Exactly right. He's trying to sell his house without a real estate agent, asking for way too much money, and wondering why its still on the market.....He really thinks that it was his arm, and not Moss's hands that made him a great QB. No wonder he doesn't want an agent...... he doesn't want anyone to tell him otherwise. Culpepper needs to start listening to the people around him.Jaime
 
The Packers $1 mil deal was "below market value"? :bye: It sounds like it was ABOVE market value. Daunte is cutting off his nose to spite his face. He needs to hire an agent and let him handle the business. Teams don't want locker room lawyers, especially those with inflated egos and and an unproven track record of late.

With all that said I think the team that he should pursue (even at that measly veteran minimum :loco: ) is the New England Patriots. His connection with Randy Moss is obvious but that team has everything that it would take to make it work with Team Daunte in the mix. 1) veteran leadership 2) starting QB that nobody disputes 3) talent surrounding him if he should play when it matters 4) Super Bowl aspirations

Considering how the QB play looked for the Patriots in the pre-season (0-4) maybe they bite?

 
You guys beating this "hire an agent" drum are really missing the point.

Daunte sez it's better to get 100% of $0 than to get 90% of the league minimum.

 
The Pack's offer was early in this process, before the draft. It's understandable that at that point he felt he was being low balled and the smart thing was to look for better. It also sounds like he now fully understands hi s value is league minimum but currently lacks such an offer. Which means his value is actually below the league minimum at this point, and that means he's done until his value goes back up to the minimum. The problem here isn't Culpepper overvaluing himself or his representing himself. The problem is that his value is currently below league minimum, and he turned down a couple offers to get there. It happens in negotiations all the time. As stated in the third item of information provided by the league, he will only get an opportunity if a starting QB gets hurt. He's moved ahead of Vinnie Testaverde on the depth chart, needs to stay in shape and wait for his value to reach league minimum again. Culpepper played and negotiated himself into this situation. He is as bad an agent as he is a QB, but I hope he gets another shot.

 

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