gopkrs
Cheesehead
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If Iupati was cheap; I could see signing him and not using him till the 2nd half of the season or later. (Knees)
$9 mil seems a little high but I don't know why anyone would think Amos would be cheap.
I wouldn't mind the Packers paying that kind of money to Amos to solidify the free safety position.
I can see the Bears letting him walk at that ask, they have a lot tied up in that defense and I think Eddie Jackson's contract is due up after 2020. I'm hoping for another soft Safety market like we saw last year. Some decent options to choose from off of this "Top 10".
1. Earl Thomas
2. Tyrann Mathieu
3. Lamarcus Joyner
4. Landon Collins
5. Adrian Amos
6. Tre Boston
7. Eric Reid
8. Ha Ha Clinton-Dix
9. Ron Parker
10. Kenny Vaccaro
Thanks for the input. My BIL is perfectly fine with letting him walk at that price (or anything near it for that matter) It seems to me that he just doesn't care for him that much. I've really watched the guy play so I don't know.
HRE do you mean it sounds high for Amos or for the position in general.
With that much talent available it might hold prices down. I can see at least half the guys on that list I wouldn't mind having and even the ones I wouldn't want will probably be in demand elsewhere adding to the supply.
Wait why would you pay 9 million for Amos when you could get Earl Thomas for about that? I mean maybe you have to pay Thomas 10 million per but I'm taking Thomas all day. Amos is solid but nowhere near the play maker Thomas is
Age and injuries perhaps. Sign Amos for four years and there is a good chance you get all four from him. Thomas? who knows.
$9 mil is a little high in my view, but were the Thomas/Amos money the same I'd prefer Amos. Thomas will be 30 years old before the season starts and has had 2 serious injuries in the last 3 years. Amos is 4 years younger and ascending.Wait why would you pay 9 million for Amos when you could get Earl Thomas for about that? I mean maybe you have to pay Thomas 10 million per but I'm taking Thomas all day. Amos is solid but nowhere near the play maker Thomas is
I'm thinking more like $8 mil per year for 4 years for Amos. I wouldn't pay that for any of the guys in pokerbrat's list a few posts above.HRE do you mean it sounds high for Amos or for the position in general.
Only probably gonna have to give Thomas 3 years. Rather have 2 great years of safety play for 30 million than 4 ok, so so years of Amos for 36 million. Amos has 3 int in 4 years starting most of those games and only missing 4. There's no logical reason to assume that will change now and he'll become a play maker. That kind of money should be reserved for guys who consistently make impact plays not guys who just consistently don't make bad plays
I'm thinking more like $8 mil per year for 4 years for Amos. I wouldn't pay that for any of the guys in pokerbrat's list a few posts above.
$9 mil is not too much for a preeminent FS. If we were talking about Earl Thomas following his 2013 season, entering his 5th. year, or the following year after a 5th. year option season, you couldn't touch him for $9 mil/year today.
I'm thinking more like $8 mil per year for 4 years for Amos. I wouldn't pay that for any of the guys in pokerbrat's list a few posts above.
$9 mil is not too much for a preeminent FS. If we were talking about Earl Thomas following his 2013 season, entering his 5th. year, or the following year after a 5th. year option season, you couldn't touch him for $9 mil/year today.
If you are going to critique Amos in this way you should at least get the Eddie Jackson part correctly. Jackson route jumps and Amos backstopped him in a predominantly zone defense. Balls don't get over his head and he doesn't miss tackles, which are pretty much Job #1 and Job #2 in a free safety.Are you saying Thomas isn't worth 9 million a year ? Because I guess I would tend to agree but then Amos certainly isn't worth 8. The only reason I agree Thomas isn't worth 9 is because of the injury history the age doesn't bother me safeties Specifically elite ones tend to play at a very high level late into their careers and years. If you knew Thomas would play every game he's 100% worth 9 million a year but you don't so he's probably not.
But I was just commenting on the suggestion the packers should sign Amos for 9 m per. In which case I'd rather throw that money at Thomas the proven guy rather than the guy you say is "ascending " because he had 2 picks last season doubling his career total. Amos isn't a bad player he may even be an above avg starter. He just doesn't make plays and the packers already had that in Morgan Burnett. And don't get me wrong that guy is awesome to have as your number 2 safety when you have nick Collins or say earl Thomas or even in the situation Amos would be leaving Eddie Robinson. But asking Amos to be your number 1 play making safety is a recipe for the same tired play we've seen back there since Collins. Amos is robin not Batman and what's robin without batman?
If Iupati was cheap; I could see signing him and not using him till the 2nd half of the season or later. (Knees)
Are you saying Thomas isn't worth 9 million a year ? Because I guess I would tend to agree but then Amos certainly isn't worth 8. The only reason I agree Thomas isn't worth 9 is because of the injury history the age doesn't bother me safeties Specifically elite ones tend to play at a very high level late into their careers and years. If you knew Thomas would play every game he's 100% worth 9 million a year but you don't so he's probably not.
But I was just commenting on the suggestion the packers should sign Amos for 9 m per. In which case I'd rather throw that money at Thomas the proven guy rather than the guy you say is "ascending " because he had 2 picks last season doubling his career total. Amos isn't a bad player he may even be an above avg starter. He just doesn't make plays and the packers already had that in Morgan Burnett. And don't get me wrong that guy is awesome to have as your number 2 safety when you have nick Collins or say earl Thomas or even in the situation Amos would be leaving Eddie Robinson. But asking Amos to be your number 1 play making safety is a recipe for the same tired play we've seen back there since Collins. Amos is robin not Batman and what's robin without batman?
It will be interesting to see what Thomas signs for and how his injuries will effect his contract. He wasn't happy playing his final year on a 4 year $40 M contract and I thought I read he was seeking Eric Berry like money which was six years for $78M or $13M/year.
Someone not in his right mind might offer Thomas that kind of contract, which in Berry's case represented a 4 year committment until the dead cap/cap savings reached tolerable levels for release at age 33 if circumstances demanded. In Thomas' case it would be age 34.It will be interesting to see what Thomas signs for and how his injuries will effect his contract. He wasn't happy playing his final year on a 4 year $40 M contract and I thought I read he was seeking Eric Berry like money which was six years for $78M or $13M/year.
I said at the start of last season that this was not a championship caliber roster and Mack would not make it so. I suppose some might have thought the Packers were one elite player away. My case is proven. And yet, with that reality now evident, we have discussions on a smaller scale where there is a seeming perception that signing Brown or Bell and/or Thomas is some magic potion as though the team is something like two players away.HRE, I think these are the subtleties that a lot of posters miss when , for example, arguing their displeasure in not getting Mack. You make a big bold move such as for Mack when you already have a loaded team that you feel is one such player/move away from winning a Super Bowl. For the Packers as they stand now, getting Mack not only would have not resulted in a Super Bowl this season, it would likely have set us back further in the long run also.
As for the Rams example, they have who they feel to be their long term answer at QB on his rookie deal, and had tons of cap space. So getting a lot of high end free agents to make a push now was a feasable option for them.
I think a lot of the big free agents this year are going to resign or get tagged and wont hit the open market. I think Clowney is fun to think about in Green and Gold but even if he hits FA, its not realistic and that size of a contract wouldn't allow us much other options at other positions. The edge position is going to get gut this offseason so we're going to need to sign more than one guy. We have a lot of issues to address this offseason if we want to put ourselves back in contention so going all out on one guy isn't going to allow us improve in other positions.
I think the best move we could make this offseason would be getting Thomas. I believe getting a veteran to anchor our defense behind King, Alexander and hopefully Breeland would take our secondary to the next level. The reason I want Thomas is because I think we need to go get a ball hawk that will sure up the back end of our defense. I think Collins is a great player but he's a box safety which I don't think makes us much better. If last year was any indication of what the market is going to be for safeties this year, I don't think it will break our bank. Especially since he's turning 30 and coming off the injury. But if you look at his production before he got hurt, he can still play at a very high level. A lot of people are really concerned with his injuries the past two years, but he also started 108 consecutive games before the injury in 2017. As an aggressive safety, that doesn't strike me as a guy with durability issues. I think we could get him for a reasonable amount and that would leave us with a lot of money to grab a few solid OLBs and start to fix the right side of our offensive line. Dollar for dollar I think Thomas is the best move we can make.
Because of those injuries and his age, the only way I am comfortable signing Thomas is on a 1 year prove it deal and it wouldn't be for the top $ he was wanting before his injury either.There's no doubt Thomas is still capable of performing at an elite level when healthy but with him having suffered two season ending injuries in consecutive years there's reason to doubt he's durable enough to justify signing him to a lucrative long term deal.
There's no doubt Thomas is still capable of performing at an elite level when healthy but with him having suffered two season ending injuries in consecutive years there's reason to doubt he's durable enough to justify signing him to a lucrative long term deal.