3 years left on his deal and he wants more now...
Trib wrote:
Briggs wants more money
After seeing others surpass him, linebacker seeking adjustment from Bears
NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Matt Forte isn't the only Bear with contract issues as the regular season approaches.
Linebacker Lance Briggs confirmed to the Tribune that he recently approached the Bears about a pay raise, although he declined to elaborate on the matter. Briggs, who missed his second consecutive exhibition Saturday night with a knee bruise, said the injury and his contract stance are unrelated. He vowed to be back on the field when healthy.
Briggs, 30, has three years left on his current deal and is scheduled to make $3.9 million this season (including bonuses), $4 million in 2012 and $6.5 million in 2013.
The six-time Pro Bowl selection wants money added to this year's salary after watching Packers linebacker A.J. Hawk secure $10.95 million (including bonuses) this season, Steelers linebacker Lawrence Timmons pull in $18 million in bonuses earlier this month and Jets linebacker David Harris secure $29.5 million guaranteed in a four-year deal. Moreover, the Panthers rewarded linebackers Jon Beason and Thomas Davis with five-year extensions.
All five are younger than Briggs.
When approached Saturday evening about Briggs' situation, Bears general manager Jerry Angelo declined to comment. He obviously isn't too thrilled with Briggs' request.
A veteran linebacker approaching the organization for a raise with multiple years left on a contract is not unprecedented. Brian Urlacher did the same in 2008 with four years remaining and received a one-year extension that included a $6 million signing bonus and $1 million added to each year's base salary. Potentially, the deal included $18 million in new money.
The Bears considered Urlacher a special case because he's the face of the franchise. Naturally, Urlacher would say his tag-team partner Briggs deserves to be rewarded too.
Briggs has made it clear he will demand a trade if he doesn't get a new deal before the season ends. The Bears are about $19 million below the salary cap.
When he had contract issues in 2007, Briggs went public and vowed never to play for the Bears again before signing a one-year, $7.2 million franchise tender. The Bears and 49ers apparently discussed a trade that season. Subsequently, the 49ers were found guilty of tampering with Briggs and were penalized with the loss of their fifth-round draft pick and had to swap their third-round spot with the Bears.
The next season Briggs figured he was destined for the Redskins or 49ers via free agency but eventually signed a six-year, $36 million contract with $13 million guaranteed to remain in Chicago with a contract significantly less than he anticipated.
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Juice's Lecture Notes wrote:
I smell a bit....