Gosselin: Dez wants to be paid, but should Cowboys make the gamble?

boozeman

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Gosselin: Dez wants to be paid like Larry and Calvin, but should Cowboys make the gamble?

Rick Gosselin Follow @RickGosselinDMN rgosselin@dallasnews.com



Published: 22 May 2015 03:21 PM

Updated: 22 May 2015 03:29 PM

All that Larry Fitzgerald and Calvin Johnson have in life, Dez Bryant covets.

Fitzgerald and Johnson are the preeminent receivers in the NFL today. Johnson was the second overall pick in his draft and Fitzgerald the third in his. Both are former NFL receiving champions. Fitzgerald has been to eight Pro Bowls and Johnson five — and both now have contracts that place them among the highest-paid players in the game.

In 2011, Fitzgerald signed an eight-year deal for $120 million that takes him through the 2018 season. He turned 28 that year and rewarded the Cardinals with 80 catches and 1,411 yards.

In 2012, Johnson signed a seven-year contract extension for $132 million that takes him through the 2019 season. He turned 27 that year and rewarded the Lions with their first NFL receiving champion since Herman Moore in 1997. Johnson caught 122 passes that season for an NFL-record 1,964 yards.

Now Bryant finds himself at the pay window this offseason. It’s his turn to be rewarded financially as one of the game’s elite receivers. He turns 27 this season and in his prime. For the salary cap to handle the $100 million-plus Bryant hopes to command, the Cowboys would need to spread out his dollars over seven or eight years as the Cardinals did with Fitzgerald and the Lions with Johnson.

But I wonder if the Cardinals and Lions are having any second thoughts>


Since gaining those 1,411 yards in 2011, Fitzgerald has yet to catch 1,000 yards of passes in any of his last three seasons. Since gaining those 1,964 yards in 2012, Johnson fell off by almost 500 yards in 2013 at the age of 28 and by 400 more in 2014 at the age of 29. Fitzgerald and Johnson are paid to be the best receivers in the game, yet neither player ranked among the NFL’s top 30 in catches last season.

I believe there’s a reason for this. There has long been a wall for running backs. There are only so many hits a body can take and by the time most running backs reach the age of 29, they have hit that wall. There’s generally a dramatic falloff in production thereafter.

I think we now see a wall developing for receivers as well. The game has changed from the days when an O.J. McDuffie could catch 90 passes and lead the NFL in receptions. That was back in 1998. Every receiving champion since then has caught at least 100 passes.

There is more throwing in today’s game, quicker throwing. Shorter routes, shorter completions and, as a result, more contact for receivers. When you catch a pass, you get hit.

Antonio Brown led the NFL with 129 receptions last season but averaged barely 13 yards per catch. The Steelers targeted Brown 181 times with passes for him to catch those 129. Even when passes fall incomplete, receivers get hit. And those hits start adding up.

The Lions threw Johnson 204 passes in 2012 when he caught his 122. The Redskins threw Pierre Garcon 181 passes in 2013 when he led the NFL in receiving with 113 catches, and the Broncos threw Demaryius Thomas 184 passes a year ago when he finished as the runner-up to Brown with 111 catches.

The elite receivers command and demand the football. Reggie Wayne was thrown 195 passes in 2012, Andre Johnson 181 passes in 2013, Roddy White 180 passes in 2011, and Fitzgerald a 173 in 2010. That’s a lot of passes that translate into a lot of catches and a lot of hits.

Bryant fancies himself as a physical receiver. He’s been Michael Irvin reincarnate for Jason Garrett’s Cowboys. Like Irvin, Bryant isn’t going to run away from defensive backs. Not with 40 times in the upper 4.5s. DeSean Jackson he’s not. So Bryant is going to delivers blows and absorbs blows on his routes and receptions.

The Cowboys targeted him with 160 passes in 2013 and 137 more in 2014. His workload figures to increase in 2015 with the NFL rushing champion departing Dallas for Philadelphia this offseason. And with a franchise-tag salary of $12.8 million due Bryant this season — a sizable jump from the $3.148 million he pocketed a year ago — you can bet the Cowboys will get their money’s worth out of him.

But Bryant doesn’t want the franchise tag. He wants a long-term deal worth upwards of $100 million with a large chunk of it guaranteed. Johnson was guaranteed $60 million and Fitzgerald $50 million. The Cowboys could shower those same riches on Bryant and in all likelihood love his 2015 season when he’s 27 and his 2016 season when he’s 28. But does he too fall off the cliff when he turns 29?

No one anticipated the dramatic decline of Johnson and Fitzgerald, certainly not the Lions and Cardinals. And the Cowboys have a history of giving bad contracts to wide receivers. See Roy Williams and Miles Austin.

The Cowboys gave Williams a $54 million deal in 2008 at the age of 27 and he never caught more than 40 passes in any of his three seasons in Dallas. The Cowboys also gave Austin $54 million contract extension in 2010 at the age of 26 and he was done by the time he was 29, catching only 24 passes.

So I can understand why the Cowboys would want Bryant to play for the franchise tag this season — and next season as well, for that matter. That’s their right under the NFL collective bargaining agreement. If the new wall for receivers is 29, you wouldn’t want a descending receiver as one of your highest-paid players with five years left on his contract.

Maybe Bryant can be an exception. Maybe he can outrun the wall. But is that a gamble the Cowboys are willing to take?
 

Cotton

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Yes. The answer is yes.
 

L.T. Fan

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I dont think it is a coincidence that a young talent performs well with a low paying contract then when they land the big one their performance goes to pot. There are too many examples of this but I am not sure shat the solution is short of an incentive laden contract.
 

Stars

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We're going to have to bite the bullet on Dez.

In my opinion, you don't want to be known as a franchise that lets all of their star players go when it's time for a new contract. I don't see how that would be good for team chemistry etc. Although in the past we were too far the other direction, giving shitty contracts to players that didn't deserve it, and we're still paying for it. I think Dez is worth the gamble though. He has the right mindset for winning and he is passionate about the game, not to mention freakishly talented. I do not think he would dog it after getting a big contract, I rather think he would play better to show he was worth it. That's my take at least.

Also, I do not want to play against him after the Eagles or Redskins throw a bunch of money at him if we couldn't get a deal done. Fuck that.
 

townsend

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Fitzgerald caught 10 TDs in 2013, his tenth year in the league. Considering the crap he's had at QB since Warner's retirement, I'd say Larry has been a hell of a receiver. The 29 thing is bunk. How old was Moss when he caught 24 TDs? Owens had one of the best seasons of his career at 36. Chris Carter's best span of his career was 30-35. This writer is a putz.
 
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midswat

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Compelling argument, but my answer is a resounding yes.
 

ravidubey

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They have to do this. Every player is different. I personally think Dez plays so violently that he's going to wear down sooner than other wideouts might.

But he is so passionate about the game that I don't see him dropping off for several years at which point Dallas will have paid out all guaranteed money and would be able to renegotiate or release him.

Dallas needs to understand they've already squandered some of this guy's prime by building a poor defense, no OL, and passing too much.

They fixed the OL (finally) and now the reverse is true-- they must pay Dez to not squander Romo's remaining time and this OL's youth.
 

fortsbest

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Pay the man and make him happy. A happy Dez will make this team so much better for years to come and like Ravi said, make Romo that much better over his remaining years. We haven't sen passion for this team and game around here since Irvin and we all saw how his passion and willingness to do what it took on the field elevated his team's game. It's rare that come from a WR. Dez is a once in a generation guy and you keep those guys happy.

And yes, Gosselin is a PUTZ! I hate listening to him when he's on the radio here.
 

skidadl

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You gotta pay the dude. I don't want the mega contract by any means but is there really a choice?
 

Rev

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You gotta pay the dude. I don't want the mega contract by any means but is there really a choice?
Nope. Thats the only choice.
 

Clay_Allison

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I say give the man his money. He's the best WR in the NFL, bar none, by the numbers and I say he has more passion and will than Cal will ever have. Dez is Optimus Prime.

This is also the perfect time to show the guys we've brought on board how we "do right" by the people who perform.
 

L.T. Fan

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On the other hand I wonder why the organization hasn't signed him already. Is there something they know that isn't public knowledge yet? I think he should be signed also but I wonder why he isn't signed.
 

Genghis Khan

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On the other hand I wonder why the organization hasn't signed him already. Is there something they know that isn't public knowledge yet? I think he should be signed also but I wonder why he isn't signed.
I think it's the same reason that the Broncos haven't signed Demarius Thomas. No team wants to set the new WR market.
 

ravidubey

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No team wants to set the new WR market.
Bingo. Megatron and Fitzgerald's numbers are each greatly out of line compared with their production. No one wants to willingly enter the same kind of agreement.

Dez is great, but is he worth crippling the cap for?
 

fortsbest

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I've heard also that the "boys want him to keep some sort of advisor/protector that Wells was, but he doesn't feel he needs it. Not sure if that is the only hold up or not.
 

ravidubey

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I've heard also that the "boys want him to keep some sort of advisor/protector that Wells was, but he doesn't feel he needs it. Not sure if that is the only hold up or not.
I've read that often enough to guess it's a big sticking point with Dez. Dude might want to unleash years of pent up partying, but I think he mainly wants to run his own life outside of football.
 
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