Irish Boy wrote:
The Gridiron Assassin wrote:
I'd imagine if an RFA holds out, he gets no pay, and he doesn't accrue any service time towards the 6 years.
So in other words.... the world needs ditch diggers too.
The franchise tag would be a non-factor moving forward if they don't ratify a new CBA before the deadline.
It would be a non-factor moving forward, but not for 2010. After 2011 all bets are off, cats and dogs living together, mass hysteria, etc. until the new CBA is agreed to.
Link:
http://www.nfl.com/news/story?id=09000d ... nfirm=trueCurrently, a team can put either a franchise tag (average of the top five salaries at his position) or a transition tag (average of the top ten salaries at his position) on any one player on the club to protect the team from losing the unrestricted free agent.
If the NFL gets to an uncapped year in 2010 and 2011, teams will have use of one franchise tag and two transition tags. So not only would none of the young players with less than six years of service be free, but now the top three players who are eligible for free agency on a roster can be protected.If this situation existed in 2008, a team like Pittsburgh -- which used a transition tag to retain OT Max Starks -- could have also tagged Alan Faneca with either a transition or franchise tag if it so desired. If every team in the league used one or two tags, not even the three they would possess, it could take another 40 quality free agents off the market.
There is speculation teams would not overuse this trigger because so many of their quality younger players would not be free to depart.
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The name's Rockmore.
Beef Rockmore