The Hamilton Spectator

Manziel toying with Ticats about starting

INCENDIARY COMMENTS

- DREW EDWARDS dedwards@thespec.com 905-526-2481 | @scratching­post

Johnny Manziel and his agent, Erik Burkhardt, have been quiet throughout the process of getting him to the CFL; but that changed Monday when he released a statement via NFL Network Insider Ian Rapoport.

There’s a lot to unpack in the incendiary comments, but here are five big take-aways from the firebomb Burkhardt just threw into negotiatio­ns.

1. He calls the CFL’s neg list system “archaic and restrictiv­e.” While there are critics of it, it exists at least in part to keep teams from engaging in bidding wars for players that would prove financiall­y unsustaina­ble for the CFL. Yes, it limits a player’s opportunit­y and ability to maximize his value — so does the NFL Draft process. Burkhardt doesn’t like the system because it’s making life difficult for his player. But it’s worked just fine for countless other guys who have come to the CFL, played for very little on their entry-level deal, then gone on to make more money as a veteran, after proving themselves (or an even bigger payday in the NFL.) If Manziel had better, higher-paying options he’d have already taken advantage of them.

2. Manziel wants to be one of highest-paid players in the CFL right away. Here’s the salient line: “... we believe ‘fair deal’ means on par with what Hamilton has paid their QB in recent years, despite not having much on-field success.” As was well reported, former starter Zach Collaros was the league’s highest-paid last season with a salary of some $540,000. There is absolutely zero chance the Ticats will pay Manziel that kind of money. Zero. First, they just dumped Collaros’ deal because it was too expensive. Second, they just signed Jeremiah Masoli to be their starter. Third, nobody has any idea whether Johnny Manziel will be any good. He could be Doug Flutie 2.0, Or he could be any one of dozens of former college stars who flamed out in the CFL. Add Manziel’s recent history of substance abuse and domestic violence and the doubts are even more significan­t: The Ticats aren’t blowing up their salary cap for a giant question mark.

3. Burkhardt has given the Cats a deadline of Jan. 31 “to work out a fair deal to make him their Quarterbac­k,” which makes it sound, along with the contract demands, that they expect Manziel to be the starter right from the get-go (which is not happening.) He adds: “If we cannot reach a deal with Hamilton by this date, we will turn our focus to several other profession­al options readily available to us.” Which would be what, exactly? The pipe dream that is a renewed XFL? An arena league? Maybe a spring showcase? The bottom line is that the CFL is the best — and maybe only — chance for Manziel to resurrect his career.

4. The Manziel camp talked to another, as-yet-unnamed CFL team about a possible trade, but decided to focus on Hamilton. There will be plenty of speculatio­n on which team (until it inevitably leaks out), but early speculatio­n is the Alouettes — the only CFL team at the moment without a presumptiv­e starting quarterbac­k in place (sorry Darian.) In general, Burkhardt says nice things about the Ticats, specifical­ly mentioning CEO Scott Mitchell, head coach June Jones and vice-president of football operations Kent Austin. “All of these interactio­ns have been very positive and served to reinforce Johnny’s excitement for coming out to play for the Tiger Cats,” he said. Sounds like the Ticats have handled this pretty well.

5. The whole thing’s remarkably tone-deaf. Manziel has earned at least a measure of early goodwill by essentiall­y staying silent. But his return to social media (where he chirped his former team the Cleveland Browns) and now this rocket from Burkhardt will have a significan­t chunk of the CFL fan base up and arms: Just another clueless American player and agent thinking they can do and say whatever they want in regards to the CFL. It feels disrespect­ful to the way things work around here. And makes Manziel seem like a guy who thinks he can walk into to Canada and dominate immediatel­y without having to earn the opportunit­y. That last part may be most galling of all.

It was beginning to feel like Manziel had learned something from his recent spate of trouble. But by allowing Burkhardt to issue this statement he has, once again, made himself the story.

At this point, it seems to be the only thing he’s good at.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Johnny Manziel: Man or myth?
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Johnny Manziel: Man or myth?

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