Could the Dolphins pick no one at number 1?

Discussion in 'Draft' started by WW85, Apr 13, 2008.

  1. WW85

    WW85 MOCKERATOR
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    Interesting article....as someone stated in the article, it won't happen. Any Agent worth their salt would want #1 money.


    By Harvey Fialkov | South Florida Sun-Sentinel
    April 13, 2008 Just imagine, NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell walking to the podium on April 26 at about 3:10 p.m., and he says, "With the first pick of the draft the Dolphins ..." Tick. Tick. Tick. ... Silence.

    "The Dolphins pass and the Rams are now on the clock," Goodell continues.

    OK, it's highly unlikely that the Dolphins will pass on the overall first draft pick, but what if?

    In fact, it's never been done before, intentionally that is. The Vikings inadvertently dropped from No. 7 to No. 9 in the 2003 draft when a trade discussion with the Ravens caused their time to elapse.
    NFL spokesman Greg Aiello confirmed that it is a legal maneuver, and that any team can pass on their pick without any penalty. He also said that team could then jump in front of any team that has a later pick.

    Why would the Dolphins ever contemplate such an outlandish maneuver? Simple. They're a 1-15 team with more holes to fill than a Manhattan street.

    "We need linebackers, we need secondary players, we need receivers, we need linemen. We need a bunch of things right now," coach Tony Sparano said recently.

    Also, the Dolphins have the top pick of a draft with no clear-cut difference-maker who would be worth a potential $60 million contract, including a signing bonus around $35 million. The consensus top six players of the draft who have been invited to the proceedings at Radio City Music Hall in New York are: Boston College quarterback Matt Ryan, Michigan tackle Jake Long, Virginia defensive end Chris Long, LSU defensive tackle Glenn Dorsey, Arkansas running back Darren McFadden and Ohio State linebacker Vernon Gholston.

    All have upsides and downsides.

    "I wouldn't think it would be an intelligent move, no," said former Packers General Manager Ron Wolf, a friend of Dolphins vice president of football operations Bill Parcells. "I don't know why anybody would do that.

    "It puts a negative spin on your organization. You're trying to be positive. Miami has the first pick. They've got a whole new regime there. ... The object is to get a good player so that you can compete and be representative in a very short period or someone else will be sitting in your chair."

    If the Dolphins purposely slid to No. 4, they could save approximately $12 million in guaranteed cash, based on what the Raiders gave quarterback JaMarcus Russell at No. 1 last year vs. what the fourth pick ? defensive end Gaines Adams ? received.

    "Goodell would shove his foot up the butts of [GM] Jeff Ireland and Bill Parcells [if that happened]," said an agent who wished to remain anonymous. "It's absolutely atrocious. It makes a mockery of the draft process and of the collective-bargaining agreement. ... I think it's beyond realistic, and I'd advise against any team doing it. If it was my client they took at No. 5, I would want first overall pick money or my kid's not reporting to training camp."

    The team with the top pick is permitted to sign a player before the draft, and the Dolphins have already begun negotiations with the agents of Jake Long and Gholston. So they do appear to be honing in on their selection.

    If the Dolphins did shock the NFL establishment by taking a pass, the league could mandate that teams forfeit the pick if they didn't use it.

    "It would be detrimental to the league and force them to change the rule," said retired NFL executive Tom Braatz. "The first pick has always been so valuable that everybody tries to trade up. This is the first year nobody wants it."

    Such a move could push the NFL and NFLPA to amend a rookie scale that creates instant millionaires out of untested players while teams cut established veterans so they could get under the salary cap.

    Parcells has had the top pick twice before. In 1993, he was coaching the Patriots and selected quarterback Drew Bledsoe, who guided New England to a Super Bowl berth four years later. In 1997 with the Jets, Parcells traded down twice from No. 1 to 6 to 8 and took linebacker James Farrior, who didn't blossom until he was with the Steelers. The Rams ended up with future Hall of Fame tackle Orlando Pace at No. 1.

    "There's no value in doing that," said agent Leigh Steinberg, who has represented eight No. 1 picks. "The Chargers in 2004 made a tremendous trade, getting rid of a player they didn't want in [No. 1] Eli Manning for [No. 4] Philip Rivers, and he got a bundle for it. There still could be somebody who covets Bill's place ..."

    Because of the signing bonus, finding a suitable trade partner for the pick or passing on it would be as realistic as watching defensive end Jason Taylor dance on television in a pink tutu.

    Oops.

    "It's not going to happen," agent David Cantor said. "The Dolphins owe it to their fans to have a decisive, rock-solid 100 percent consensus on a player to become the face of this franchise, and that's what they're going to do."

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  2. HardHitta

    HardHitta Well-Known Member

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    Pretty good article , Thanx.
     
  3. PinPointPenning10

    PinPointPenning10 Well-Known Member

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    That's interesting. It does make some sense that the Dolphins, if they can't find any trade-down suitors, could decide they want someone like Gholston so instead of taking him at #1 they could drop to 4 or 5 if they think he'll still be there and save the money.
     
  4. Yisman

    Yisman Newbie
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    of course. it's being discussed more and more because the top 5 players picked receive ridiculous money, especially the #1 overall.
     
  5. hazmat

    hazmat New Member

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    The interesting aspect will be is if they can sign someone before the draft for less money then Russell received last year. I really think they're trying to negotiate with a bunch of players to get one to agree to be the first pick for less money. I would be curious if the player signs for less if it will effect the 2nd 3rd and 4th picks.
     
  6. Yisman

    Yisman Newbie
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    ^ well, the Texans did a similar thing. Went to different players to see if they could get any of them to agree to a lesser deal.
     
  7. Iversonheels

    Iversonheels New Member

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    I think if the dolphins passed intentionally then that might help the NFL get the NBA system of slotting the money... that would make alot of sense
     
  8. Don

    Don 2008 TGG Rich Kotite "Least Knowledgeable" Award W

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    Absolutely. Everything is based on what the #1 pick gets and then trickles down from there.
     
  9. rstrauss33

    rstrauss33 New Member

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    I doubt they'll pass intentially on the first pick. That would just be a mess. Later teams could atleast pretend they were working on a trade. In this case it would create a huge fight with the players union. I do agree that a slotting system ala the nba would be great for the nfl. It's sad how teams with high draft picks are often penalized by paying such high salaries when the bust rate is so high. This is one reason why the better teams stay better- they are not as constrained by high priced unproven rookie talent.
     
  10. flgreen

    flgreen New Member

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    Yes they did.


    Bush started making noise that he wanted #1 money because he was the best player in the draft. Don't remember how that came out.

    One thing is for sure, if the Fish just flat passed on #1 whoever they did pick would surely hold out for #1 money.

    If Florida sports radio is to be believed, it is interesting who they say the Fish are talking to. Both of the Longs, Gholston, and Harvey.

    I like Harvey and would be real happy if the Jets took him, but I was surprised he was on the Tuna's list
     

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