Paying the price
Today's lesson is all about the penalties you pay for poor drafting. Both JJT and Mickey Spags addressed the subject in their latest articles. In fact, it's almost like they collaborated on the central theme. Here's JJT:
Each was the definition of a bust. Jerry Jones is still paying for those wretched selections Bill Parcells encouraged him to make.
Literally.
Nice swipe at Parcells, JJT. Let it go. Anyway, here's Spags:
You pay for your mistakes in free agency. Generally, you overpay, a sort of double jeopardy for missing badly on the first day of the draft. That's the penalty.
As JJT and Spags noted, when you whiff in the draft, you end up overpaying for it. But when you whiff in free agency, you end overpaying on your overpayment, unless you rebuild and decide to wait for your draft classes to come of age. And to the benefit or detriment of the Cowboys, depending on your point of view, Jerry Jones is not one to rebuild.
In a way, free agency is like a draft that closes out the year. There are fewer players available, usually it's not the cream of the crop, and they cost a lot more. But you do get the added benefit of having watched them actually play in the NFL, you can't say you're taking them on potential. When you pay that kind of money, you better be sure. Lately, the Cowboys haven't been sure, and they have whiffed on quite a few, like Marco Rivera and Jason Fabini.
It's not just the money you pay these guys, because with the new salary cap, the Cowboys aren't paying the price this year of their contracts - we have plenty of room under the cap to make moves. But we do pay the price in developing other talent or making other moves because we believe these guys will do the job. Part of the reason we needed to sign Leonard Davis is because of Rivera's play. The Cowboys organization is being kind by saying its Rivera's back that's the issue, but it's really his play. So we had two positions on the line in flux with Marc Colombo in limbo, and Davis was picked to cover one of those two spots. If Rivera had worked out or had we made a better move in free agency that year we might've been able to just concentrate on Colombo once free agency began.
Really, it all comes back to one thing, evaluating talent. Seeing the talent or understanding the talent is there and just needs to be coached up, that is the true genius. Let's hope Jerry Jones slept at a Holiday Inn Express last night.
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35 comments
Comments
As Hemingway would tell Jerry:
by jsdoty on Mar 6, 2007 9:55 AM CST reply actions 0 recs
Hemingway
by dunkman on Mar 6, 2007 10:05 AM CST up reply actions 0 recs
Nah, football was too weak for Hemingway
by jsdoty on Mar 6, 2007 10:17 AM CST up reply actions 0 recs
i thought his quote was:
might be wrong though
by 325424 on Mar 6, 2007 10:20 AM CST up reply actions 0 recs
oops
"There are only three sports: bullfighting, motor racing, and mountaineering; all the rest are merely games."
This is one in a long list of quotations mysteriously attributed to Ernest Hemingway. While the general public seem to agree that this is in fact a Hemingway quotation, scholars have some reservations and for good reason. The early Hemingway did not believe that bullfighting was a sport. For him it was a tragedy. See his October 20, 1923 article titled "Bullfighting A Tragedy" reprinted in By-Line: Ernest Hemingway Selected Articles and Dispatches of Four Decades edited by William White. Hemingway reiterates his beliefs regarding the tragedy of bullfighting in his 1932 book, Death in the Afternoon.
In July of 2006, Gerald Roush, a visitor to Timeless Hemingway, provided a possible source for the "three sports" quotation. He cited a story titled "Blood Sport" by Ken Purdy, which originally appeared in the July 27, 1957 edition of the Saturday Evening Post. The story is reprinted in Ken Purdy's Book of Automobiles (1972). Gerald was kind enough to send a scan of where the quotation appeared and I was able to read it for myself: " 'There are three sports,' she remembered Helmut Ovden saying. 'Bullfighting, motor racing, mountain climbing. All the rest are recreations.' " Gerald informed me that the character of Helmut Ovden is modelled after Ernest Hemingway. This could explain why the quote has been so widely attributed to Hemingway over the years. I still believe, however, that Hemingway never made the remark
by 325424 on Mar 6, 2007 10:24 AM CST up reply actions 0 recs
interesting
I'm guessing that the problem for Hemingway scholars regarding all of his quotes is that for the last quarter of his life he was a raging alcoholic with serious paranoia issues. He thought the FBI was after him...and I think they were, but I also think they have dossiers on basically every public person in the 50s.
To wit: my favorite Hemingway paranoia story is that when he and his son drove through Mississippi (in the 50s I think) and stayed in a motel, Hemingway stayed up all night with a shotgun poise, just in case Faulkner sent "his goons" to rub him out. I guess being a famous writer was a dangerous sport too!
by jsdoty on Mar 6, 2007 10:40 AM CST up reply actions 0 recs
hilarious
he was about 4 foot 2.
and not sober as much as hemingway
by 325424 on Mar 6, 2007 10:47 AM CST up reply actions 0 recs
yeah I know, really absurd
by jsdoty on Mar 6, 2007 10:54 AM CST up reply actions 0 recs
I love it
For the purposes of free agency, let's go with pop novelist extra extraordinaire Stephen King, as interpreted in the movie The Shawshank Redemption. Ellis "Red" Redding, portrayed by Morgan Freeeman, said "I'm known to locate certain things from time to time." OK, Red, how about locating us a right tackle and a free safety. While you're at it, throw in a backup NT. You can charge your usual 20% markup.
by Dave Halprin on Mar 6, 2007 11:26 AM CST up reply actions 0 recs
The Shawshank Redemption
by Deke on Mar 6, 2007 11:48 AM CST up reply actions 0 recs
Does anyone else find it ironic that
by jsdoty on Mar 6, 2007 12:10 PM CST up reply actions 0 recs
Mine is "Tommy Boy"
by kcbrett5 on Mar 6, 2007 2:28 PM CST up reply actions 0 recs
Unfortunately, our FA haul
by jsdoty on Mar 6, 2007 12:10 PM CST up reply actions 0 recs
I think
(1) Huge diversity of posters
(2) The positively glacial pace of Cowboys' signings
(3) Another snow day in jsdoty's adopted Iowa prairie home
by dunkman on Mar 6, 2007 12:17 PM CST up reply actions 0 recs
This
Thanks Iowa!
by dunkman on Mar 6, 2007 12:30 PM CST up reply actions 0 recs
Iowa
I think it's on the back of the new state quarters.
by APerfectStar on Mar 6, 2007 2:04 PM CST up reply actions 0 recs
money quote from JJT article
The simple answer: They're the Cardinals. After all, they've gotten rid of quality players like Simeon Rice, Aeneas Williams and Thomas Jones - not to mention Jay Novacek - in the past."
Yeah, if Davis turns out to be as good as those players, I'll be happy.
by Terry on Mar 6, 2007 9:59 AM CST reply actions 0 recs
They ask
by dunkman on Mar 6, 2007 10:06 AM CST up reply actions 0 recs
Simeon Rice quote after escaping Arizona
by kcbrett5 on Mar 6, 2007 10:31 AM CST up reply actions 0 recs
Interesting take Grizz
The points they missed that you hit on are:
(1) FA cost more because the probability of performing at the desired level is much higher than through the draft. You pay more for a known (or semi-known) quantity.
(2) Talent evaluation is the issue, and it's not a science composed of stats and records. The players are human and the factors influencing performance are qualitative and complex.
I think Parcells deserves great credit for turning around the scouting process, and Ireland has given the organization a better ability to assess talent.
by dunkman on Mar 6, 2007 10:00 AM CST reply actions 0 recs
Spags Q&A on signing a FS
>Will the Cowboys look at Ken Hamlin, Deon Grant, or Mike Doss? The free safety position has been one of if not their biggest defensive problem each of the past four years. Why not go out and get a pretty good one when they are available? Would they prefer a safety in the draft?
Mickey: That's still a possibility. But when asked Monday about going after one of the top free-agent safeties, Cowboys executive vice president Stephen Jones said the Cowboys won't be paying a $10 million signing bonus for a free safety. He said the club still is high on the two young guys they have, Patrick Watkins and Abram Elam. He said if they picked up a veteran safety, it might be later in free agency when the prices come down. And as for Hamlin and Doss, aren't those guys a poor man's Roy Williams? They are guys who must play in the box more than centerfield. And I'll say it one more time, the problem at safety might not be the free safety, it just might be the strong safety has to improve his reads when playing in zone coverage.
by Cowboys81 on Mar 6, 2007 10:27 AM CST reply actions 0 recs
Exactly
Could someone explain to me why people think we need a FS? I'm being serious I need enlightenment cuz I don't see why Pat Watkins isn't our guy.
by Burt D on Mar 6, 2007 2:09 PM CST up reply actions 0 recs
Rogers and Peterman were killed by injuries
Peterman, tore up his knee and never got healthy after that.
If a player never makes it because of an injury is it a bust or is it bad luck.
Do you consider Yatil Green a bust? and fault the Dolphins for drafting him?
and yes, I just made a Yatil Green reference.
by bob maplethorpe on Mar 6, 2007 11:59 AM CST reply actions 0 recs
It's still a bust
by APerfectStar on Mar 6, 2007 2:14 PM CST up reply actions 0 recs
I dunno
The implication is "bad choice" not "bad luck". Rogers and Peterman were either bad luck or disappointments but not necessarily bad choices.
by dunkman on Mar 6, 2007 2:26 PM CST up reply actions 0 recs
no Tom is right
by Terry on Mar 6, 2007 2:33 PM CST up reply actions 0 recs
This is hilarious
I guess it's just another ill-defined term we hear in the sports media...
by dunkman on Mar 6, 2007 2:36 PM CST up reply actions 0 recs
ROTFL. Stop it, you're killin me...
by kcbrett5 on Mar 6, 2007 2:51 PM CST up reply actions 0 recs
we should create different levels of bust
Akili Smith---big bust
so take Bryant Westbrook... a pretty good player until he blew out his achilles...was that a busted pick then?
Robert Edwards?
both of our guys got hurt before they had a chance to take the field during the regular season.
If you were the owner do you go to your head scout and yell at him for the picks or fire him?
by bob maplethorpe on Mar 6, 2007 3:01 PM CST reply actions 0 recs
It's a bust from the teams standpoint
I'm saying it doesn't matter the reason, if they don't play then its a bust for the team.
Rogers was BP's pick, other people said forget him, too injury prone, but BP overrode them and he turned out to be wrong. In that case fire nobody.
Peterman wasn't anything great, we probably took him to high in the draft and then he suffers a knee injury (or whatever the injury was) in that case the scouting dept. gets yelled at due to frustration, but no one gets fired.
Someone out west takes Maurice Clarrett in the late 3rd round, the player never makes it to starting day with the team, he is cut , and eventually arrested for armed robbery, now somewhere in jail on multiple weapons charges.
Now THAT guy should be fired.
by APerfectStar on Mar 6, 2007 3:17 PM CST up reply actions 0 recs
Bo Jackson
by OskieOskie on Mar 6, 2007 8:11 PM CST reply actions 0 recs

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