Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Packers can afford free-agency gambles

- Tom Silverstei­n Milwaukee Journal Sentinel USA TODAY NETWORK – WIS.

GREEN BAY - Those who think Green Bay Packers general manager Ted Thompson doesn’t know how to evaluate talent have it all wrong.

Thompson still is one of the shrewdest personnel evaluators in the NFL, even if his 2017 team was exposed for being too young and too thin to stay afloat while quarterbac­k Aaron Rodgers recuperate­d from a broken collarbone.

The problem with Thompson isn’t that he’s a poor judge of talent, it’s that he has refused to accept that the NFL financial landscape has changed and that it is not as risky as it used to be to participat­e in free agency.

Salary-cap management has changed dramatical­ly during the second half of the 10-year collective bargaining agreement signed in 2011. Thompson still is operating under the assumption free agency can bankrupt a team and compromise its ability to sign your very best players to second and third contracts.

Thompson’s philosophy has allowed him to give big contracts to Rodgers, Clay Matthews, David Bakhtiari, Mike Daniels, Jordy Nelson, Randall Cobb and Nick Perry without compromisi­ng the future.

As long as they were winning the NFC North or qualifying as a wild card with Rodgers under center, the Packers had a chance to go all the way.

It was a solid way of doing business until the salary cap went up $17 million in 2006 and the risk of being stuck in cap purgatory due to one or two bad free agent decisions went away.

One even could excuse Thompson for being conservati­ve early this decade when the cap went up only $3 million total from 2011 through 2013. But in ’14 it went from $123 million to $133 million. The next year it went up $10 million again. The next year, $12 million. And last year, $12 million again.

Estimates have the cap going up another $10 million this year to around $177 million.

Only the teams that have taken the biggest risks face uncertaint­y with their salary cap; the rest can eat a bad contract and not even spit out a seed.

“This is not like it was when the cap was going up 2, 3, 4 million a year and people were always up against it,” said an agent who has signed numerous bigmoney, free-agent contracts in recent years and will negotiate some others this off-season. “It steadily moves up $10 million a year now.

“You can afford to make a mistake now.”

Teams are also much shrewder. They structure free-agent contracts so that if the player bombs, they’re out from under the cap obligation in three or four years.

“That’s where guaranteed money comes into play,” the agent said. “When you’re negotiatin­g a deal, you’re thinking three years only because the team is thinking, ‘How long before I can get out of this contract?’ That’s why the first thing you’re dealing with is length of contract.”

Thompson has built a solid team around Rodgers, but it’s very difficult finding impact players while picking 29th, 27th, 30th, 21st, 26th, 28th or 32nd, as has been the case counting backward from April to the draft right after the Packers won Super Bowl XLV.

His yearly refusal to take chances in free agency continuall­y leaves the Packers short of talent and experience and results in them having to play undrafted rookies late in the year when injuries strike.

Thompson has made the argument that he’d prefer to sink money into the players he drafted, but there’s evidence now a team can both sign its own and sign others. And if you trust your personnel staff to evaluate mercurial 22year-olds, why wouldn’t you trust them to evaluate players who have been in the NFL four or more years?

The Packers got burned with unrestrict­ed free-agent tight end Martellus Bennett last off-season and haven’t gotten much out of street free agent Lance Kendricks. But unrestrict­ed free-agent guard Jahri Evans has been a solid starter and street free agents Ahmad Brooks and Quinton Dial have contribute­d enough to be worth their modest salaries.

Even if the Packers can’t get Bennett’s $4.2 million prorated signing bonus off their cap next year through a grievance they have filed, it’s not going to kill their salary cap.

According to a source with access to NFL Players Associatio­n salary-cap data, the Packers have 39 players under contract for 2018 at a cost of $145 million. They will carry over $10 million in leftover cap space from 2017 and thus will have an adjusted cap number of around $187 million.

It means that they’ll go into the offseason with about $42 million in salarycap room.

Yes, they must make Rodgers the highest-paid player in the NFL again, but if they want, the Packers can make his salary-cap number go down if they structure his deal a certain way. They might have to devote $17 million or so to the cap if they have to use the franchise tag on receiver Davante Adams, but they eventually will sign him to a longterm deal that will spread the cap obligation out over multiple years.

They have other free agents such as center Corey Linsley, tight end Richard Rodgers, safety Morgan Burnett and cornerback Davon House they might want to sign, but none should require blockbuste­r deals.

The bottom line is that they can afford to sign free agents to bolster their talent level.

When asked about his team’s use of free agency earlier this year, Pittsburgh Steelers coach Mike Tomlin said adding veterans helped increase competitio­n up and down the roster.

The Steelers are known as a draftand-develop team, but they supplement their ranks when they feel it is necessary.

This past off-season, they signed wide receiver Justin Hunter, cornerback Coty Sensabaugh and end Tyson Alualu and then gave former Pro Bowl cornerback Joe Haden a three-year, $27 million deal in August after Cleveland released him.

All four of those players are playing contributi­ng roles for the AFC North champions.

“I think more than anything, that’s what it’s about for us, to create an environmen­t that’s competitiv­e,” Tomlin said in a conference call before his team played the Packers.

“I think that brings the best out of everybody and I think largely, usually that comes in the form of someone that’s played a little football.”

If you look at the list of free-agent signings from the 2017 off-season there are more than a dozen that have been well worth the money, including 10 in which the player’s yearly average is $8 million or more.

Ask Jacksonvil­le if end Calais Campbell ($12 million) and cornerback A.J. Bouye ($8 million) have made a difference. Ask New England if cornerback Stephon Gilmore ($13 million) has made a difference. Ask Minnesota if tackle Riley Reiff ($11.75 million) or the Los Angeles Rams if tackle Andrew Whitworth ($11.25 million) have made a difference. Ask Baltimore if safety Tony Jefferson ($9 million) has made a difference. All of them will say yes.

There have been some free-agent duds, but that’s part of the same risk you take when you select a 22-year-old kid in the draft.

This off-season the cornerback freeagent class is going to be pretty good. Wide receiver is strong, too. A lot will depend on how many players re-sign before they reach free agency.

Thompson can’t sulk because the Bennett deal didn’t work out. He has a team that is desperate for more talent and needs to stop sitting on its hands in free agency if it wants to do more than ride Rodgers’ coattails.

The risk isn’t as great as it used to be.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States