
To me I think that next year people may do that more with there high price losers on their team.
At 6:45pm I actually thought about that with Fitz & Plax, but that's just not my style. I understand it's within the rules, but I just feel it's bush league.bonscott wrote:Technically I could have dropped Gore just before 7pm and then bid him at minimum and got him super cheap as the 7pm deadline expires.
I'm in complete agreement. If there is an ongoing auction, it needs to be able to finish. No new players should be able to be put up for bid, but the ones going should be able to finish.bonscott wrote: I think we need to do something like this to prevent this in the future:
1) Off-season auction ends in terms of calling up new players a week before the season starts. Technically auction is still going on so the commish and others will need to police that nobody new gets brought up. If someone breaks the rules and calls up a player then the commish will need to stop the auction for that player and put him back as a free agent.
2) This will then allow those players still on the block to be bid on for another week but will prevent this bad move of dropping a guy just before the deadline.
Thoughts?
I agreejoe.commish wrote:I'm in complete agreement. If there is an ongoing auction, it needs to be able to finish. No new players should be able to be put up for bid, but the ones going should be able to finish.bonscott wrote: I think we need to do something like this to prevent this in the future:
1) Off-season auction ends in terms of calling up new players a week before the season starts. Technically auction is still going on so the commish and others will need to police that nobody new gets brought up. If someone breaks the rules and calls up a player then the commish will need to stop the auction for that player and put him back as a free agent.
2) This will then allow those players still on the block to be bid on for another week but will prevent this bad move of dropping a guy just before the deadline.
Thoughts?
yugimoto wrote: I am willing to give DeCleaters the benefit of the doubt that it was not their intent, especially with the recent news being published about McGahee ...
Unfortunately half the league that is on the west coast were still at work and many of us didn't even get to the site after the game started at 7. I got on about 6:30. I would have bid but he was already out of my cap room. 2 hours was not enough to allows everyone to be able to bid on him.bonesman wrote: I appreciate that... and I assure you that when I dropped McGahee I assumed that every owner (with some $ to spend) would have a fair chance at bidding on him.
Just need 20 total including those on your practice squad. So 18 active and 2 PR would be fine. Or 19 active and 1 PR. Sorry you had salary issues but honestly you should have seen that weeks ago and could have dropped McGahee then (or even last week) and then everyone would have had a shot at him fairly. Rudi went for over 4 million for example just in the past week, plenty of moola out there.My reasoning for dropping him was that I felt I had to make room for Rice's salary to field a competitive team week one... I was initially going to cut McDonald but then I saw in our rules that we're required to have a minimum of 20 players. That means I had to add 2 players or risk forfiting games.
Start shopping for a replacement owner.braven112 wrote:Just wanted to check in before I head to a buddies house this weekend. No point in pretending was just a coincidence, no one is that naive![]()
bonesman wrote:Start shopping for a replacement owner.braven112 wrote:Just wanted to check in before I head to a buddies house this weekend. No point in pretending was just a coincidence, no one is that naive![]()
braven112 wrote:bonesman wrote:Start shopping for a replacement owner.braven112 wrote:Just wanted to check in before I head to a buddies house this weekend. No point in pretending was just a coincidence, no one is that naive![]()
Sorry if you are offended but, are you saying you weren't trying to get him for under market value?
With that being said then just sign him for the remainder of this season.bonesman wrote: I'm saying I didn't anticipate having a chance to win in the bidding at all. $3 mill is about all I had to throw at him... someone surely could've and would've outbid me if they hadn't gotten locked out. I say open the bidding and let them have it... I released him w/the full expectation he'd never be on my roster again.
So let me just make sure I understand.braven112 wrote:Does anyone have a problem with making all players that aren't won by the deadline being thrown back into the blind bid pool? Also I think the teams that are the highest current bider should have to be the same as what the players are when the auction is over. Hopefully that made sense.
Biggest thing from my perspective is that what ever rule we come up with should be easy to monitor and require no additional monitoring, I think doing what I'm saying above it should encourage teams to get these type of bids out a little earlier.
There's a lot of things I should do but I don't (and things I shouldn't do, but do)... I'm a disorganized, impulsive, lazy procrastinator. What I am *NOT*... is a liar.bonscott wrote:But when he gets dropped only 2 hours before the auction is over and no more bids can come in that doesn't give people a whole lot of chance to bid on him. Shoulda dropped him a couple days ago at least if not a couple weeks ago if your intention was to free up salary and just let him go.
And the people that were high bidders at the deadline would be required to bid as much as they did when the auction came to an end.bonscott wrote:So let me just make sure I understand.braven112 wrote:Does anyone have a problem with making all players that aren't won by the deadline being thrown back into the blind bid pool? Also I think the teams that are the highest current bider should have to be the same as what the players are when the auction is over. Hopefully that made sense.
Biggest thing from my perspective is that what ever rule we come up with should be easy to monitor and require no additional monitoring, I think doing what I'm saying above it should encourage teams to get these type of bids out a little earlier.
What you're saying is that if there are any players still on the auction board when the deadline hits they automatically become free agents and available in the first blind bidding waivers?
Thus in the case of what happened this year McGahee and the other player 2 players that were still up for bid would get tossed back in the free agent pool available in blind bidding.
Do I got that straight?
Could they bid more?braven112 wrote:And the people that were high bidders at the deadline would be required to bid as much as they did when the auction came to an end.bonscott wrote:So let me just make sure I understand.braven112 wrote:Does anyone have a problem with making all players that aren't won by the deadline being thrown back into the blind bid pool? Also I think the teams that are the highest current bider should have to be the same as what the players are when the auction is over. Hopefully that made sense.
Biggest thing from my perspective is that what ever rule we come up with should be easy to monitor and require no additional monitoring, I think doing what I'm saying above it should encourage teams to get these type of bids out a little earlier.
What you're saying is that if there are any players still on the auction board when the deadline hits they automatically become free agents and available in the first blind bidding waivers?
Thus in the case of what happened this year McGahee and the other player 2 players that were still up for bid would get tossed back in the free agent pool available in blind bidding.
Do I got that straight?
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