Mungo Burrows
Footballguy
Not just transition tags, but RFA's as well, although at least there, teams get draft picks as return and a potential disincentive to the offering team. I would expect every RFA, transition and any other "matchable" offer sheet to have $25M+ salary in the last year of the deal and some guarantee clause that only applies for the original team and will not kick in for the team making the offer. The offering team will renegotiate or cut the player before that year comes along, but the original team will be forced to guarantee it.The ability to match any type of offer just went out the window. Because there is no compensation for transition players, it is effectively dead as a way to restrict player movement. It's either franchise or UFA.That is only true if the signing team doesn't have someone already signed with a higher salary. I agree that this ruling will lead to abuse. It really strikes me as another mechanism to ensure parity in the NFL. Teams that do not have the high priced talent will be in a much better position to get transition tag players. That makes using the transition tag a very risky proposition for any team.The problem I have with this is if a team has two top players at the same position and the lower paid one becomes a free agent, he can now sign an offer sheet for $1 less than the other guy and force his original team to guarantee his contract or let him go.
This will invariably lead to other almost impossible to meet clauses (if not the highest paid player at his position, he automatically gets a $25 million bonus, etc.). Not a good idea in my book, as it gives the original team almost no chance of retaining the player.
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I will ackowledge to others I am arguing with here that it is very 'cheeky', but the rules are the rules. The Seahawks had a lot of cap space, so if a poison pill is not an option then the market demand for Hutchinson goes way down.
Somebody help this guy out and explain to him what this is.
and you take things way too serious.
