FavreFan wrote:
But he never said it was a bad move, and explicitly said "It definitely makes the pot sweeter for the Bears, but the idea is still that the Bears are paying Mack something like $35 million per year after you account for the value of the picks. Which isn’t necessarily wrong, just a lot."
He's simply trying to gauge the overall cost of Mack as accurately as he can instead of just writing a lazy "Bears got Mack and that's all that matters!" article. Unless you're actively seeking to be less informed about the league and team, I can't understand calling the article silly, even if you don't agree with his conclusion.
That part seems fairly objective but the tone of the article indicated that he wasn't a big fan of how much the Bears gave up. The "DPOY 4 times in a row" was just the most extreme example of that given that the greatest defensive players in history have not done that.
FavreFan wrote:
It's very easy to justify. To simplify this for the sake of argument, let's assume Mack is indeed being paid accurately for what he produced in Oakland. Paying a player like Mack what he is supposedly worth is still a valuable contract - it's valuable to have dominant edge rushers even if you have to pay them accordingly, similar to how it's valuable to have elite QB's even if paying them accordingly. He's saying he can't simply be a dominant edge rusher anymore in order to add SURPLUS value to the contract. To add surplus value, he would need to be the best defensive player in football - which isn't really a stretch. MANY here seem to think he is just that.
From what I could tell, the argument seemed to be about total allocation of salary and not simply that Mack would be worth roughly what he was getting paid. It seemed to indicate that while the player may perform at a level to justify his salary it doesn't make the team better because in a salary cap league you only have so much money to allocate and therefore you need players to outperform their contracts to really make it worthwhile. To me, that means that he really isn't valuable at the cost and instead he's just doing his job at a rate that is balanced out by his compensation. It's like those gifs about "You have $15, build your all time great lineup" where people have to decide if Kobe is valuable at $4 or Stephon Marbury is better at $2.
To put it another way, Carson Wentz is a lot more valuable now than he will be when he gets his big deal in a few years. If he is performing at a rate that simply justifies his salary I don't think I would call him valuable just like I wouldn't say that (Pro Bowl QB) Trubisky was valuable last year because he was cheap and below average.