This is what we voted on. And as best as I can tell I didn't read the "clearer" version well enough and added that to the constitution, not realizing that the wording actually changed the rule.Cybergeek wrote: Which of the two was actually voted on?
The compensatory draft picks must be the original draft picks (or the next closest, draft pick that is higher that the original, is no longer owned) of the team that signed the tagged player.
This is something that hasn't come up very often. In years past the combination of the tagged salaries at QB, RB and WR and draft pick compensation really limited what teams were willing to do, we just haven't had a lot of bidding on tagged players over the years. The two big ones that come to mind are Calvin and Aaron Rodgers and I think in hindsight the guy who bid on Rodgers realized what a huge mistake that was. He ended up leaving the league after one season and Rodgers is still arguably the worst contract in the league despite being a great player. I'll let Poker speak to the Calvin Johnson deal.Cybergeek wrote:
What has the league perception been regarding this rule since it was voted on in 2009?
When I read the voting thread, It sounds like the vote was to add the option to only use a pick higher than your original if you had traded it. The voting title was very clear on what was being voted on. "VOTE!! Compensatory draft picks on tagged players change"
I think a couple things potentially make this year different, though its still early.
1. We changed the tagging salaries and compensation for some of the tags last year. So this is our first offseason with the current rules. Now there are only draft picks given up for Franchise and RFA and nothing for the transition tag. I think the goal was to increase the activity on the RFA tag. This change is something for us to continue to monitor but so far so good from my perspective.
2. The other thing that I think we all saw coming a few years ago is that Gronk, Graham (and Hernandez at the time) were way underpaid and locked into long term contracts on the cheap. There weren't any other elite TE's that would raise the average salary of TE's to the Franchise tag level of other positions (9-12 million). Vernon Davis and Gates have had decent salaries but they haven't been Gronk and Graham good.
At under 5 million Gronk and Graham are both underpaid when comparing them to other elite players at there positions. I don't think we've ever had a player franchised two times in a row but given where the TE position is salary wise it wouldn't surprise me at all.
If Gronk or Graham started at 9-12 million for the franchise tag we may not even be having this discussion, no one would make a bid and we would go another year of not looking into this.