Sturm: A contract I’d propose that can make Dez Bryant and the Cowboys happy

Cotton

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By Bob Sturm

The Cowboys enjoyed a very successful bye week and were accommodated by losses from all divisional foes – Philadelphia, New York, and Washington – as well as Seattle and Detroit. That means that although they did not even play, they picked up games on almost everyone in the NFC. Of course, the exceptions were Green Bay, San Francisco, and Arizona who all won, which means that the latter two teams that have head-to-head tie-breakers with Dallas are now bigger concerns than they were.

What we don’t know is whether the Cowboys spent the bye weekend trying to sew up the details for the Dez Bryant contract. I assume that most of us are not stressing out about this as you would if your best player was about to be a free agent in any other sport because in the NFL if you want to keep your version of LeBron or Cliff Lee, you simply lock him down to the Franchise Tag and he is powerless to leave. It is an amazing tool that has been negotiated by the teams to make sure that a franchise player – especially a QB that is considered elite – doesn’t change teams unless for some reason the franchise itself decides to cut him loose (like Drew Brees from San Diego or Peyton Manning from Indianapolis).

Meanwhile, a player – like Bryant – who has performed at an elite level for an extended period of time and feels like he should be paid accordingly, has very little leverage to avoid being given the franchise tag other than giving the impression that he would get very, very angry. That or a training camp holdout and the festering media swarm that would follow are the only real weapons that someone like Dez has at his disposal. And that is why he has carefully navigated the last several months with calculated media sessions, rumors of unrest on the agent front, and even the occasional hint delivered while in uniform that he would take it personally if the team tried to find “financial common sense” at his expense.

In 2014, the “Franchise Tag” for a WR was the 3rd highest position in the sport at $12.3 million for the season, behind only QB ($16.1m) and DE ($13.1m). It pays a player an average of the top 5 players at the position, but it is also a 1-year tag that resolves nothing but kicking the overall problem down the road a bit. Of course, during that 1-year, players know that entire career paths may become diverted or even stopped. So, while you might find very little sympathy for a player who would make about $770k for each of the 16 games in 2015 (after he made $130k a game in his first 5 seasons), Bryant would feel that his chance for the monster payday that puts him in the same class as Mike Wallace, Dwayne Bowe, and Percy Harvin may have to come elsewhere as it did for Wallace (Miami from Pittsburgh) and Harvin (Seattle from Minnesota and then on to New York).

It would be incorrect, I believe, to argue that the Cowboys don’t want to extend him out and get this behind them. They have no plans of letting him wear another uniform during his prime and are simply trying to accomplish the #1 employer objective in any walk of life: to get the employee to work at as small a pay rate as possible. This, of course, flies directly in the face of the #1 employee objective: which is to get as much from the employer as possible to perform said job. We all deal with it as well, albeit with considerably fewer zeroes on our pay-stubs.

So, today, my hope is to arrive at a deal as an independent arbiter. I want to consider both sides and the going rate and project a total deal that will get this to the finish line. The Cowboys have every right to drag their feet on this and can certainly exercise their negotiated right to a franchise tag, but it seems that in this particular case, unless they know something we don’t know about off-field conduct, there is no reason that Bryant wouldn’t be thought of as a franchise cornerstone from now until 2020 or so.

In other words, it seems obvious that this is a deal that both sides really want, so using those assumptions, let’s find a number that makes sense.

I know we get caught up in the total value of a deal and the number of years used to inflate the contract, but for this exercise, let’s limit the discussion somewhat. I want to focus on the numbers that are interesting to a player ultimately – guaranteed money and average per year.

The guarantee is an interesting topic in itself, because Dez is the type of guy to bet on himself and in a world where Tyron Smith received $22m of his roughly $100m as guaranteed dollars. That means that there will come a time (basically after 2016) where Smith will have almost all of his money on a pay-as-you-play basis. Yes, he is extended through 2023, but when people talk about how Tyron agreed to a team-friendly contract (that also was called the largest deal ever given to a offensive linemen in the history of the sport), that is what they are talking about.

I believe that is what the Cowboys have in mind. Pay Dez handsomely and competitively, but keep the onus on him to still be elite or close enough each year to validate their paychecks beyond the first 2 years of the deal.

So, now let’s examine the guaranteed money and average yearly salaries to the Wide Receivers in this discussion:

Calvin Johnson, 29 (today’s ages) – $48.7m g/$16.2 per year – March 2012

Larry Fitzgerald, 31 – $27m/$16.1m – August 2011

Mike Wallace, 28 – $27m/$12m – March 2013

Vincent Jackson, 31 – $26m/$11.1m – March 2012

Andre Johnson, 33 – $20.5m/$9.7m – August 2010

Dwayne Bowe, 30 – $20m/$11.2m – March 2013

If we are to believe reports, the Cowboys are offering a $20m guarantee to Bryant (26 years old, by the way) as part of a deal that sounds like it is about 6/$60m with a number of extra years and larger figures on it to help them have flexibility and to make the player feel good, even though he won’t see years 9-10 no matter what.

So, now the conversation turns to what the Cowboys think are reasonable comparable to Dez in the other direction:

Antonio Brown, 26 – $8.5m g/$8.3m per year – July 2012

Victor Cruz, 28 – $15.6m/$8.6m – July 2013

Jordy Nelson, 29 – $11.5m/$9.7 – July 2014

Marques Colston, 31 – $17.7m/$7.2m – March 2012

Those 4 can all claim to have accomplishments that are in the neighborhood (or superior) to Bryant over the period of time from 2011-2014. The ages don’t work perfectly, but when Jordy Nelson accepted a deal of 4 years, $39m with $11.5 guaranteed back in July, that wasn’t very good news for the Bryant camp. The ages aren’t the same, but the on-field impact is close. Bryant has 16 more yards during that span and has played in 3 more games. He has 3 more touchdowns but has 105 more targets during that 4 season sample.

The problem with this group being used as a comparable is that either the player had not shown elite productivity (Brown) or their were past the age of elite contract status (26-28). Dez is in the rather unique situation of proven and only 26. That is a key to really focus upon.

There is a 3rd group that is all looking on carefully at this situation and will either get their deals after Bryant or they could actually set the market for Dez if we wait into the next offseason:

DeMaryius Thomas, 26, Denver

AJ Green, 26, Cincinnati

Jeremy Maclin, 26, Philadelphia

Michael Crabtree, 27, San Francisco

Julio Jones, 25, Atlanta

Green and Jones have one more year of their rookie deals, but Thomas, Maclin, and Crabtree are already to go free this March. DeMaryius – drafted right before Bryant – has apparently turned down a deal in the $13m per year range. That is about where I would think Bryant would want his floor, but maybe Thomas’ stance should have me thinking $15m is the end goal for these guys. And make no mistake, this group – at least Thomas, Green, and Jones all see Bryant as a comparable and therefore it is likely when one sets the market, they will all be looking for that level.

So, considering the ages of the players above, the level of performance Bryant has offered, and the relative values of those around him, it seems he has every right to want to get to the levels above Wallace/Bowe/Jackson and below Fitzgerald/Johnson. He may not want to slate in below them, but based on a salary cap world, it seems Calvin Johnson also set a ceiling where teams realized paying a WR that level ($1m per game) hamstrings the entire roster and therefore I don’t foresee another team going that high anytime soon.

I think the deal that gets this done would be in the 6 year-$84m total with $28m guaranteed. I am sure that Bryant wants to break $30m guaranteed and might be able to if he let’s DeMaryius Thomas’ situation play out, but the Cowboys better be careful if they wait. They can put the franchise tag on him, but I imagine he would negotiate a settlement that the following year he would hit the market and the Cowboys would lose their tagging leverage altogether. By then, AJ Green and Julio Jones will have their new deals and $14m a year may not seem absurd.

So, there is where I see it. 6 years, $84m, and $28 guaranteed. He is happy and so are they at have this done and then they can even consider using the tag elsewhere (RB?). But, if the Cowboys are dug in with a Jordy Nelson/Victor Cruz type deal, then they better be prepared to ultimately lose Bryant. I imagine their fan base would not look kindly on that after the last few seasons has has put together.

The Cowboys are simply trying to be responsible and should be congratulated for that. But, for a number of reasons, after all of the deals they have written, this would be an odd one to take a stand on. What is really working against them – beyond their payment of $55m guaranteed to Tony Romo – is the Brandon Carr deal. Carr’s contract included $25.5m guaranteed, and I would assume Bryant is well aware of that. So, any guaranteed money that comes in below Carr is likely rejected on principle. And frankly, that is understandable if you mean as much to Dallas as Dez has.

That said, the Cowboys are trying to get him for as little as possible. In the end, I wouldn’t be shocked if it all gets done soon, to be honest.

Then again, I had them 6-10 this year so what do I know?
 

Cotton

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Cowboys' new way of business impacting Dez Bryant
November, 17, 2014

By Todd Archer | ESPNDallas.com

IRVING, Texas -- Dez Bryant's contract situation seems to get more scrutiny by the day.

In case you haven't heard, Bryant is scheduled to be an unrestricted free agent when the season ends. The Dallas Cowboys had talks with Bryant's former agent, Eugene Parker, but never really came close to a deal. The Cowboys have said hello to Bryant's new agents, Roc Nation, as well as CAA's Tom Condon, but the dynamic remains the same in the negotiations.

The Cowboys want to keep Bryant on a long-term deal. Bryant does not want to leave the Cowboys.

While this would seem like an easy marriage, negotiations are never easy and this will likely be Bryant's final time to cash in.

Hanging over the discussions is the franchise tag, which the Cowboys can put on Bryant next year, guaranteeing Bryant will be paid the average cap figure of the top-five wide receivers. Bryant would like to avoid the tag because it puts him on a year-to-year basis, but there is little he can do to fight it other than sit out in 2015. And if he does that, he makes zero.

The Cowboys used the franchise tag on Anthony Spencer for two straight years, paying him nearly $20 million in 2012 and '13, and Spencer played in 15 of a possible 32 games. The Cowboys liked Spencer but they weren't sure they loved him, which is why they went the franchise-tag route and not the multi-year contract route.

The Cowboys love Bryant, but they want to have some protection.

And this is where Bryant seems to be caught in the Cowboys' new way of doing business.

In the past, they were not too concerned with paying Terrell Owens twice, paying Roy Williams after an ill-advised trade with the Detroit Lions, and paying Miles Austin. They have showered deals on their own free agents to-be such as Tony Romo (twice), Jason Witten, DeMarcus Ware, Terence Newman, Marc Colombo, Bradie James and Andre Gurode almost without reservation.

But now the Cowboys are looking for what can be called "team friendly" deals. Sean Lee signed a six-year, $42 million deal that provided the Cowboys some insurance in case he got hurt again. Tyron Smith signed a 10-year, $110 million deal in training camp with a $10 million signing bonus and $40 million guaranteed. In the strange world that is the NFL, some observers felt Smith left money on the table.

The Cowboys were criticized in some circles for giving kicker Dan Bailey a seven-year contract for $22.5 million. The deal included a $4 million signing bonus and $7.5 million guaranteed. Now the NFL's most accurate kicker in history, Bailey's base salaries max out at $3.4 million, which could be a pittance for the best kicker in the game five years from now.

Even the free-agent deals the Cowboys doled out this offseason offered protection. Henry Melton's four-year, $29 million deal is really a one-year deal with a three-year option the Cowboys have to pick up by the first day of the 2015 league year. Coming off a major knee injury, the Cowboys wanted some protection in the Melton deal.

The last non-team friendly deal the Cowboys gave out was to Romo last year. Some of that had to do with the leverage Romo had because of the position he plays and the language in his old contract. Through a technicality the Cowboys could not place the franchise tag on Romo and needed to get a deal done to create salary-cap room.

The result was a six-year, $108 million extension that included $55 million guaranteed.

The Cowboys have never been afraid to pay a player. They have never lost a player they really wanted to keep either.

The Cowboys won't be afraid to pay Bryant either. He and generations of his family will be set for life when it gets done. If he has to get franchised twice, like Spencer, he will still be set for life.

These talks take time. In the past, it just didn't take quite as much time.
 

ravidubey

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We definitely don't want Thomas or Green to set the market for Bryant in mid-negotiation like Finnegan did for Carr.
 
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