'roadkill1292 said:
'Dr. Octopus said:
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They would hold his rights until he signs or until the next draft (or perhaps longer). He would then still only get the same "offer" (since their is a cap), while also taking the chance that his draft stock would fall based on the holdout, while also losing a year towards his free agency and bigger payday. I don't anticipate many players would go that route. What would be the advantage?
Aren't all those factors in play now? Why doesn't it ever happen? If the negative ramifications to the player are so huge, why do clubs think they are overpaying high picks?
You're not focusing on the key part of Doc Ocs post.Holdouts do happen now. There are some examples of players who have held out for an entire season (Bo Jackson, Kelly Stoufer, etc), but there aren't a lot. I think it's fair to characterize most of those holdouts as "player doesn't want to play for the team who drafted him and is willing to sit out a year to get traded or redrafted", or else he has something else (Bo Jackson baseball, Mossy Cade 6th overall pick to USFL, etc) he can do in the meantime to where he's fine with not being in the NFL for a year.
The other type of holdout then the player is signing some point after training camp and especially after the regular season starts, and it's about money, not what team he is on. Lots more examples of this. Jamarcus Russell signed after week 1. Cornelius Bennett after week 6. Michael Crabtree signed the first week of October. Emmit Smith held out for a month and a half. I think the NFL probably averages a couple players a year who hold out through camp, and maybe even averages close to 1 a year who hold out into the regular season.
So let's talk leverage. When Crabtree came into the league he was able to get as much money as he could get the 49ers to sign him for. Crabtree's leverage includes the 49ers loss of not having him on the field, as well as the potential risk he could sit out an entire season. The 49ers leverage includes that by not signing Crabtree is losing money once those game checks start.
Now what happens with a rookie wage scale? That's the key part of Doc Oc's post I mentioned. "He would then still only get the same 'offer'". Now you're adding huge leverage onto the 49er's side. Crabtree can sit out as long as he wants, the new rules potentially won't allow the 49ers to pay him anything other than what they first offered him.
So there is no financial gain with his current team for the player to hold out anymore. Which was the vast majority of the reason that rookies hold out. For him to get a better contract than what was already offered by the team who first drafts him, he'd have to sit out a year and get drafted in a higher slot. And most teams won't see a player's value go up when he's out of football for a year. Even if he does get drafted to a higher slot, for the player to come out ahead he has to be drafted high enough that the new contract makes up for the value of what he would have made that first year, but didn't since he didn't play.
So now the benefit for the player of holding out is pretty much limited to, "I don't want to play for you... trade me or I'll hold out and wait to be redrafted next year."