Chris Johnson now loses a year towards free agency

Collapse
X
 
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • ThomasTomasz
    • Nov 2024

    Chris Johnson now loses a year towards free agency

    The standoff between Chris Johnson and the Tennessee Titans has reached the next level.

    ESPN is reporting that the Pro Bowl running back failed to report to training camp on Tuesday, which means Johnson has now lost a year towards unrestricted free agency, per the rules of the new collective bargaining agreement.

    In essence, Johnson will now enter the 2012 season with three years of service under his belt instead of four, even if he plays for the Titans in 2011.

    The 25-year-old dual-threat back has made it clear to the Titans that he has no intention of reporting to camp until the team signs him to a long-term contract extension, presumably for something in the neighborhood of what DeAngelo Williams received at the start of free agency.

    But here’s the rub: the Titans have said they won’t negotiate with Johnson until he shows up to camp.

    It will be interesting to see which side makes the next move in this standoff. Johnson has clearly outperformed his rookie contract, but with two years left on the deal, do the Titans really need to give him an extension now?

    http://sports.yahoo.com/nfl/news?slu...ails_to_report
    I didn't think Johnson would hold out this long, but considering his base salary isn't $1 million, I can see why.
  • BigBucs
    Unpretentious
    • May 2009
    • 12758

    #2
    He should hold out as long as it takes now. Dont need another Javon Walker situation. Hopefully he manages whatever money he made and is prepared for the long haul.




    Comment

    • Irish
      do you see my jesus chain
      • Oct 2008
      • 4416

      #3
      Bud Adams needs to stop being a goon and pay the man. Even if CJ falls apart in like 3 years, he has been the only reason to enjoy Titans games since McNair was hitting Drew Bennett.

      Comment

      • Chrispy
        Needs a hobby
        • Dec 2008
        • 11403

        #4
        The Titans need CJ, he is their team.

        Comment

        • Ravin
          Dishing the Gino's
          • Feb 2009
          • 6994

          #5
          I really hate this about the NFL. Signs a contract, gets all this money guarenteed, and yet because he is having good numbers, he wants a new contract. Fuck that shit. You signed the original contract, you get whatever it is. I hate hearing how these rookies sign contracts, then 3 years in and they want more money. You got $7M that isn't going anywhere. This $1M base salary is a joke when he is already sitting on $7M.

          I get how football works, and they will just throw money at players to get them on the field. I just wish for once a GM would come out and say, "you signed a contract with us, and you will honour it or you can retire right now, in which case, we will be asking for our money back."

          A contract is a contract. I don't know any other sport that players will hold out mid-way through their deal asking for a better one. Maybe they should all go to the Payton Manning school of business ethics.

          And just to add, I think it's shit that people think the team MUST pay him. He signed a deal. If he didn't like it, he shouldn't have signed. Football is a team sport. If CJ was a team player he would be at cap putting his talent to use for the money he signed.
          All you need to know when thinking of the NHL vs Madden series is the two people involved in making the games.

          "rammer" and "cummings"

          The NHL series is a giver, Madden takes the load.

          Comment

          • Chrispy
            Needs a hobby
            • Dec 2008
            • 11403

            #6
            Originally posted by Ravin
            I really hate this about the NFL. Signs a contract, gets all this money guarenteed, and yet because he is having good numbers, he wants a new contract. Fuck that shit. You signed the original contract, you get whatever it is. I hate hearing how these rookies sign contracts, then 3 years in and they want more money. You got $7M that isn't going anywhere. This $1M base salary is a joke when he is already sitting on $7M.

            I get how football works, and they will just throw money at players to get them on the field. I just wish for once a GM would come out and say, "you signed a contract with us, and you will honour it or you can retire right now, in which case, we will be asking for our money back."

            A contract is a contract. I don't know any other sport that players will hold out mid-way through their deal asking for a better one. Maybe they should all go to the Payton Manning school of business ethics.

            And just to add, I think it's shit that people think the team MUST pay him. He signed a deal. If he didn't like it, he shouldn't have signed. Football is a team sport. If CJ was a team player he would be at cap putting his talent to use for the money he signed.
            Bengals did that to Carson Palmer

            Comment

            • stevsta
              ¿Que?
              • Oct 2008
              • 4670

              #7
              easy to say that the players should honor their contracts when teams do not honor them either.

              If Johnson gets hurt he risk's getting less money than he could of got if he wasn't hurt. and the fact RB statistically drop off after 30 and so you want to make as much as possible before that mountain-drop comes

              Johnson has the leverage as well in Tennessee where they have a shit team without him and are probably finishing 3-13 or less
              RIP

              Comment

              • Ravin
                Dishing the Gino's
                • Feb 2009
                • 6994

                #8
                Originally posted by cpollack09
                Bengals did that to Carson Palmer
                It does suck because good players are going to hold out, and leave/retire well before their time. And I don't think every single time a player gets pissed he should be traded, because it isn't fair to the team. If I were a GM, I'd say to players, you don't want to be here, fine, talk to me. Don't go blasting your mouth in the media. Because now for Palmer, who is basically the Bengals franchise QB, he'll get traded for nuts, and someone else will walk away laughing, all because it is basically a 'get something for him, or get nothing and he sits all year'.
                All you need to know when thinking of the NHL vs Madden series is the two people involved in making the games.

                "rammer" and "cummings"

                The NHL series is a giver, Madden takes the load.

                Comment

                • Ravin
                  Dishing the Gino's
                  • Feb 2009
                  • 6994

                  #9
                  Originally posted by stevsta
                  easy to say that the players should honor their contracts when teams do not honor them either.

                  If Johnson gets hurt he risk's getting less money than he could of got if he wasn't hurt.

                  Johnson has the leverage as well in Tennessee where they have a shit team without him and are probably finishing 3-13 or less
                  Then don't play football. To me this is not a reason for a player to sit out. You know when you play RB, you are going to get hurt and beat up.

                  Who is to say the team isn't honoring them? Who is to say when his contract is up, they don't offer him the biggest contract ever? Or at least a very good one? He sign a contract, and the team expects it to be honored. After the deal is done, if said team does not 'honor' him with a good deal, he can walk and go some place else. That's sports.
                  All you need to know when thinking of the NHL vs Madden series is the two people involved in making the games.

                  "rammer" and "cummings"

                  The NHL series is a giver, Madden takes the load.

                  Comment

                  • Aso
                    The Serious House
                    • Nov 2008
                    • 11137

                    #10
                    Originally posted by cpollack09
                    Bengals did that to Carson Palmer
                    Which is foolish because they can trade him and better their team. Mike Brown and his silly principles.

                    __

                    Also though, why is it so important for the players to honor contracts but not the owners?

                    Comment

                    • s@ppisgod
                      No longer a noob
                      • Apr 2011
                      • 1032

                      #11
                      Originally posted by Ravin
                      I really hate this about the NFL. Signs a contract, gets all this money guarenteed, and yet because he is having good numbers, he wants a new contract. Fuck that shit. You signed the original contract, you get whatever it is. I hate hearing how these rookies sign contracts, then 3 years in and they want more money. You got $7M that isn't going anywhere. This $1M base salary is a joke when he is already sitting on $7M.

                      I get how football works, and they will just throw money at players to get them on the field. I just wish for once a GM would come out and say, "you signed a contract with us, and you will honour it or you can retire right now, in which case, we will be asking for our money back."

                      A contract is a contract. I don't know any other sport that players will hold out mid-way through their deal asking for a better one. Maybe they should all go to the Payton Manning school of business ethics.

                      And just to add, I think it's shit that people think the team MUST pay him. He signed a deal. If he didn't like it, he shouldn't have signed. Football is a team sport. If CJ was a team player he would be at cap putting his talent to use for the money he signed.
                      Stop being naive. It's a two-way business in the NFL. The teams and players break contracts all the time with hold-outs and cuts. NFL fans, by and large, are completely full of shit in this regard. A guy gets cut and doesn't see the end of his contract (the team takes a HIT), and all the fanbase can say is "oh well, he's not good anymore. Not a big loss." NEVER "oh thats BS, they signed a contract." But when a player holds out (almost always a good player that they need), all they say is he's selfish. It's hypocritical. You don't see it in other sports because in the MLB or NBA, the player sees every penny of that contract if he plays. Doesn't matter if Grant Hill gets injured and isn't the same, or if Vernon Wells sucks. If they can make it into a uniform, the team holds up their end of the bargain and pays them.
                      SAMSUNG-SGH-A887/A887UCIJ1 SHP/VPP/R5 NetFront/3.5 SMM-MMS/1.2.0 profile/MIDP-2.1 configuration/CLDC-1.1

                      Comment

                      • Ravin
                        Dishing the Gino's
                        • Feb 2009
                        • 6994

                        #12
                        Originally posted by s@ppisgod
                        Stop being naive. It's a two-way business in the NFL. The teams and players break contracts all the time with hold-outs and cuts. NFL fans, by and large, are completely full of shit in this regard. A guy gets cut and doesn't see the end of his contract (the team takes a HIT), and all the fanbase can say is "oh well, he's not good anymore. Not a big loss." NEVER "oh thats BS, they signed a contract." But when a player holds out (almost always a good player that they need), all they say is he's selfish. It's hypocritical. You don't see it in other sports because in the MLB or NBA, the player sees every penny of that contract if he plays. Doesn't matter if Grant Hill gets injured and isn't the same, or if Vernon Wells sucks. If they can make it into a uniform, the team holds up their end of the bargain and pays them.
                        SAMSUNG-SGH-A887/A887UCIJ1 SHP/VPP/R5 NetFront/3.5 SMM-MMS/1.2.0 profile/MIDP-2.1 configuration/CLDC-1.1
                        And it should work both ways. Hey, you're preaching to the chour here. I'm an NHL fan, and ilya kovalchuk signed signed a 15year contract worth $100 million, with a cap hit of $6.66M. Kovy is 28 years old, meaning the team is "responsible" for a $6.66M cap hit for a 42 year old.

                        Average age for an NHL player to retire is around 37-38. He retires, they are off the hook for that money. Year 1 and 2 he made $6m. Next 6 years he makes 10-11.5M a season. So he gets the bulk of his money, and then it drops off. In the last 5 years of his deal he makes $10M total. So when he is 38 and ready to retire, he will have already banked $90million from the deal. And the team gets off the hook.

                        I think in every sport, that if you sign a contract, you are stuck with it. No matter what. Both sides of it to. NFL cuts a player, well to bad, you pay that contract.
                        All you need to know when thinking of the NHL vs Madden series is the two people involved in making the games.

                        "rammer" and "cummings"

                        The NHL series is a giver, Madden takes the load.

                        Comment

                        • s@ppisgod
                          No longer a noob
                          • Apr 2011
                          • 1032

                          #13
                          Originally posted by Ravin
                          Then don't play football. To me this is not a reason for a player to sit out. You know when you play RB, you are going to get hurt and beat up.

                          Who is to say the team isn't honoring them? Who is to say when his contract is up, they don't offer him the biggest contract ever? Or at least a very good one? He sign a contract, and the team expects it to be honored. After the deal is done, if said team does not 'honor' him with a good deal, he can walk and go some place else. That's sports.
                          Who is to say the team doesn't honor them? Are you new to the system? It's completely one-sided. It'd be like if you borrowed $1,000 from me, and were contractually obligated to pay back every cent. But I can borrow $1,000 from you, then decide in the middle of paying you back that I only wanted to pay you back $500. And the legal system (in this case, the NFL) was ok with that. Only one of us (you/the players) has to live up to the contract, while the other (me/the owners) can end it at any time for a significantly lesser amount. The responsibility is only on 1 side. If thats your idea of "honoring" a contract, the I'd really like to actually borrow $1,000 from you....
                          SAMSUNG-SGH-A887/A887UCIJ1 SHP/VPP/R5 NetFront/3.5 SMM-MMS/1.2.0 profile/MIDP-2.1 configuration/CLDC-1.1

                          Comment

                          • s@ppisgod
                            No longer a noob
                            • Apr 2011
                            • 1032

                            #14
                            Originally posted by Ravin
                            And it should work both ways. Hey, you're preaching to the chour here. I'm an NHL fan, and ilya kovalchuk signed signed a 15year contract worth $100 million, with a cap hit of $6.66M. Kovy is 28 years old, meaning the team is "responsible" for a $6.66M cap hit for a 42 year old.

                            Average age for an NHL player to retire is around 37-38. He retires, they are off the hook for that money. Year 1 and 2 he made $6m. Next 6 years he makes 10-11.5M a season. So he gets the bulk of his money, and then it drops off. In the last 5 years of his deal he makes $10M total. So when he is 38 and ready to retire, he will have already banked $90million from the deal. And the team gets off the hook.

                            I think in every sport, that if you sign a contract, you are stuck with it. No matter what. Both sides of it to. NFL cuts a player, well to bad, you pay that contract.
                            If that were the way it was (guaranteed contracts, even with cut players), then I think you'd see waaaaaaaay fewer holdouts.
                            SAMSUNG-SGH-A887/A887UCIJ1 SHP/VPP/R5 NetFront/3.5 SMM-MMS/1.2.0 profile/MIDP-2.1 configuration/CLDC-1.1

                            Comment

                            • EmpireWF
                              Giants in the Super Bowl
                              • Mar 2009
                              • 24082

                              #15
                              Originally posted by Ravin
                              A contract is a contract. I don't know any other sport that players will hold out mid-way through their deal asking for a better one. Maybe they should all go to the Payton Manning school of business ethics.
                              Of course you don't see this in any other sport. The NFL is the only major sport where the contracts are not guaranteed.

                              There's nothing stopping owners from cutting guys and getting out from paying them millions. So why shouldn't one of the best players in the sport hold out when he's clearly being underpaid?

                              Johnson doesn't even have a big window in his prime to make a lot of money.


                              Comment

                              Working...