Patriots extended a one-year, $1.1 million, May 9 tender to free agent RB LeGarrette Blount.
Huh? This is a very rarely-used tender, so leave it to the Patriots to be the ones to bring it to light. May 9 was the deadline for free agents to count in the compensatory pick formula. By extending this tender, the Patriots protect the comp pick and will get one if Blount signs with another club before July 22. If Blount remains unsigned after July 22, he can only negotiate with the Patriots through Week 10 of the season. The tender pays the player 110 percent of what he made the previous season, so it amounts to $1.1 million for Blount. It's unclear if the Patriots value Blount or the comp pick more, but we'd bet he signs with a new club before the July 22 deadline. Per Jeff Howe of the Boston Herald, Blount has no plans to sign the Patriots' tender.
Source: Profootballtalk on NBC Sports
I strongly disagree.I get why they did it, but it's kind of bogus. Go figure the Patriots use a rarely used rule in the rule book.
They want the comp pick. They have no intention of signing Blount. But at this point if he doesn't get more than 1.1 million next season, if I'm Blount I just accept the tender and force their hand with 7 RBs on the roster.
That didn't take longAt this point he should just sign with NE for nothing and take home the $107k winners Super Bowl check.
the latterIgnorant question: would the club that hypothetically signs Blount owe the Pats this comp pick -or- would it come from the draft fairy (e.g. 33rd pick in the 4th round)?
Potentially a little of both. Compensatory picks are awarded based on qualifying free agent additions and subtractions. The compensatory pick levels are determined by the average yearly contract value of each player. (There's wording in the compensatory pick calculation formula having to do with playing time and player performance, but from what I have seen that has never really been a consideration).Ignorant question: would the club that hypothetically signs Blount owe the Pats this comp pick -or- would it come from the draft fairy (e.g. 33rd pick in the 4th round)?
White just signed a 3 yr /12 M contract. Not sure if you're just looking at his base for '17 but they guaranteed nearly $5 M of the total contract.I strongly disagree.
NE probably just thinks Blount would be worth $1.1mil to them. Why wouldn't they?
Gillislee and Burkhead seem like the two main guys that they wanted and are paying them like they want them. White/Lewis/Blount would be nice to have but they would all get paid less than $2mil this year and I'm sure they could move one of them at their salary if they really wanted to. Lewis could get injured before September anyway and then you are just talking about 4 RB's. The other guys are just roster bubble guys and nice to have around in case multiple guys get hurt. They were probably doomed anyway since the RB position has improved so much. Keep in mind those Bolden/Foster type guys couldn't beat out Blount for carries last year..... so many they aren't as good.
Doesn't seem bogus to me at all. Seems like NE would be dumb if they didn't make the move. The Patriots are a stronger team no matter how this plays out. There is no downside.
Yeah, I was basing it on what he is being paid this season(just under $1.8mil cap hit). I'm not sure exactly how it's structured but if it's a 3 year deal where $5mil is guaranteed I think my point still stands. It's a relatively cheap contract even based on the current salary cap. Three years from now it will likely look even cheaper. Both Gillislee and Burkhead count over $3mil against the cap for this season alone.White just signed a 3 yr /12 M contract. Not sure if you're just looking at his base for '17 but they guaranteed nearly $5 M of the total contract.
According to ESPN's Josina Anderson, interested teams are trying to work around the May 9 tender the Patriots placed on free agent RB LeGarrette Blount.
The May 9 tender allows Blount to remain part of the compensatory pick formula. Blount can negotiate with teams until training camp starts, but if he remains unsigned once training camps open, he can only negotiate with the Patriots through Week 10. It significantly weakens Blount's market, but teams are trying to find a way around the seldom-used tender the Patriots pulled out.
Related: Patriots
Source: Josina Anderson on Twitter
May 11 - 9:49 AM
Wouldn't rule out the "both" optionBlount must have slept with or punched BB's wife.
but they win, so they can give the big FU to everybody and it doesn't matter. Guys will still sign there.So the guy scores 18 TDs for them last season, and they reward him by signing career backups to way more than they were willing to pay him and then as a final FU screw with his market just to maybe gain an extra pick at the end of round 4?
Seems kind of classless.
Who is outraged? I don't expect Pat fans to ever admit they can do anything wrong. If you can't see it, maybe you're the dingbat?The tender is a binding agreement to pay a guy that doesn't currently have a job. How is that classless? Because they didn't pay him more than the zero other teams that had given him contact offers? Because if someone doubles their offer, they might get a 7th round comp pick?
Find a better reason to be outraged, dingbats.
Somebody is awfully sensitive this morning. Nobody kicked your dog. Lighten up FrancisThe tender is a binding agreement to pay a guy that doesn't currently have a job. How is that classless? Because they didn't pay him more than the zero other teams that had given him contact offers? Because if someone doubles their offer, they might get a 7th round comp pick?
Find a better reason to be outraged, dingbats.
Oooh.Who is outraged? I don't expect Pat fans to ever admit they can do anything wrong. If you can't see it, maybe you're the dingbat?
Teams were waiting to sign him until after the deadline where he would count against the pick formula. A team like Baltimore that was considering him. may not now.
They had every right to sign those guys and not Blount - that wasn't really the main point of the post (was just trying to look at it from Blount's perspective on that).I don't really understand why teams would avoid signing Blount because of this, unless NFL teams don't fully understand how the compensatory pick process works. Sure, I get that sports media folks may not get it, but NFL teams should know how this stuff works.
As for those saying the Pats dissed him for "career backups," just because they sat in BUF or CIN doesn't mean they will sit in NE. People are ignoring that the high octane NE offense enabled Blount to score 18 TD last year. While Blount capitalized and got in the end zone, IMO, a lot of backs could have scored just as many times given the frequency the Pats got to the red zone.
I liked Blount and enjoyed having him on my fantasy teams for a song. But the other backs in NE are more well rounded, regardless of their price tag.
I do find it interesting that BB is opening up his pocketbook to spend money at the RB position, something he really hasn't done since Dillon was around.
LolThey obviously did not want Blount (despite the disingenuous views of some irrational Pats' fans) so they should have just let him walk without putting any restrictions on him.
Go Pats!!!Lol
How is it obvious that they don't want to sign him? I'll obviously agree that they "obviously" don't want to pay him more than 1.1 million, but that's basically the same deal they gave him last year and they were the highest offer then too.
They gave a binding offer to a running back who turns 31 this season and hadn't made any other deal yet while still letting him pursue other offers. How does that mean they obviously don't want him?
I obviously don't like the patriots. I've only shown them my loyalty and given them money for their products and services for years and offered to do the same again this yearGo Pats!!!
Bostonfred, the most sensible guy on the boards.....until the conversation is about the Patriots.Find a better reason to be outraged, dingbats.
That doesn't seem out of the realm of possibility to me. All it would take is the right injury to a team that THINK they are contender(whether they are or not) or even have a coaching staff/GM on the hot seat.The lowest annual contract value of the Top 32 player contracts was for a little over $2 million a year. Blount would need to sign with another team before 7/22 for more than $2.05 million to land in the last compensatory pick slot (7th round).
Is this for real?According to an Adam Schefter tweet in 2016, "Hope for underdogs: There are more undrafted free agents on NFL rosters today (481) than 1st- and 2nd-round picks combined (480), per Elias".
Yeah, I probably should have given a link....Is this for real?
Teams get one first round pick but can sign as many free agents as they want within the roster limits and salary cap. Seattle brought in a bunch of starters just bringing in people with a similar profile - like big defensive backs - and quickly cutting all but the best guys. There are hundreds of undrafted free agents every year.Is this for real?
Most teams get 1 first round pick (well, those not named New England do). Plenty of teams sign 20 UDFA's as soon as the draft is over . . . and then will have multiple open tryout sessions and will bring in guys as camp bodies. The thing is, the general public doesn't often hear about those sessions (and reporters don't generally cover them).Teams get one first round pick but can sign as many free agents as they want within the roster limits and salary cap. Seattle brought in a bunch of starters just bringing in people with a similar profile - like big defensive backs - and quickly cutting all but the best guys. There are hundreds of undrafted free agents every year.
The other thing to consider is that a) there is no guarantee the Pats would actual get a 7th round compensatory pick for Blount, The league could determine that in the net gains and losses that he wouldn't merit a pick . . . or they could say NE already had their picks slotted based on other net gains or loses. Similarly, the team that signed Blount may not be in line to be awarded a compensatory pick in the first place (or his signing may not impact the pick they might get).That doesn't seem out of the realm of possibility to me. All it would take is the right injury to a team that THINK they are contender(whether they are or not) or even have a coaching staff/GM on the hot seat.
For that matter I still don't understand how Blount wouldn't be worth at least $2mil for PHI/GB/IND/DET/LAC even without an injury. Not saying he'd play nearly as well in those situations as he has in NE but those teams all need Blount more than NE imo.
But I will admit I see think 7th rounders are more valuable that most people do. According to an Adam Schefter tweet in 2016, "Hope for underdogs: There are more undrafted free agents on NFL rosters today (481) than 1st- and 2nd-round picks combined (480), per Elias". With extra 7th rounders you don't have to recruit those players. There is talent out there in the 7th round(and later) even if the casual fans don't realize it.
If I'm understand this correctly (doubtful at best) - a week or so ago teams could have just signed Blount to a 1 year $1.5m deal (making up numbers). Now it will cost them that same $1.5m and the potential slide from maybe a 4th round compensatory pick to a 5th or 6th rounder.I don't really understand why teams would avoid signing Blount because of this, unless NFL teams don't fully understand how the compensatory pick process works.
Doubtful but I suppose there may be a non-zero chance. By now, teams should know where they fall on the pecking order to be awarded compensatory picks. The site with the link I posted earlier has been very accurate in how things have played out over the years. Some teams have mastered the compensatory pick game while others haven't really entered the fray all that much. Teams like NE and BAL generally get a lot of picks awarded to them because of the way they set up contracts. For example, signing a player to a one year contract with a team option for a second year (with no real interest in keeping the player for a second year) will get the team credit in the "lost player" category. The Patriots have been setting up contracts like that for 10 years (at least as far back as Donte Stallworth in 2007). They did the same thing more recently with Revis and some other players.If I'm understand this correctly (doubtful at best) - a week or so ago teams could have just signed Blount to a 1 year $1.5m deal (making up numbers). Now it will cost them that same $1.5m and the potential slide from maybe a 4th round compensatory pick to a 5th or 6th rounder.
I guess I always thought it was for salary cap reasons. If you hit on a young player(and you have a much better chance of doing that by having extra picks) you can have a contributing player at a very, very cheap contract for several years. For instance Thuney(3rd round'16), Andrews(UDFA'15), Mason(4th round'15), Cannon(5th round'11) and Solder(1st round'11) allowed NE to sign Gilmore to a substantial FA deal. The entire OL for the SB champions has been pretty cheap salary cap wise and only one of them required a premium pick. Nate Solder makes a tidy sum now.... but how much has NE averaged paying him over his entire time as a starter on a very successful team? So because they drafted him he has actually been relatively cheap over the course of his career as a Patriot.On a side note, I always wondered why teams treat picks like gold and why they wouldn't trade picks for established players (the strategy NE invoked this year). Teams often trade picks for picks, but don't trade picks for players anywhere near as often. I always felt that teams would know what they were getting in an established player vs. a complete unknown rookie that they would use with the draft pick.
750 total yards/7 TDs?Adam Schefter
✔@AdamSchefter
Eagles are signing former Patriots' RB LeGarrette Blount to a one-year deal, per team official. Cardinals also had some mild interest.
9:16 AM - 17 May 2017
Glad it wasn't the Cardinals. Signing with NYG would have been interesting.Great landing spot for Blount.
Eagles signed RB LeGarrette Blount, formerly of the Patriots, to a one-year contract.
How about this for a late-offseason addition? Blount led the league with 18 rushing touchdowns last season and set a new career-high with 1,161 yards on the ground, but he's already 30. He adds nothing in the pass game, but the Eagles already have Darren Sproles, Wendell Smallwood, and rookie Donnel Pumphrey there. Blount figures to handle all of the first- and second-down work and short-yardage carries in Philly, and this is a great fit in a spread-type offense that Blount also played in with New England. Blount also gets to run behind one of the better offensive lines with the Eagles. This is as about as great of a landing spot Blount could have hoped for, and ESPN's Adam Schefter reports the Cardinals also had interest. Blount's addition should lead to Ryan Mathews' release.
Related: Patriots
Source: Adam Schefter on Twitter
May 17 - 10:27 AM
Matthews should be on the waiver wire soon.Glad it wasn't the Cardinals. Signing with NYG would have been interesting.