Devin Hester, this is
ridiculous.
Sorry to borrow Bears play-by-play man Jeff Joniak's
favorite adjective in reference to the All-Pro kick
returner, but that best describes one way Hester's
agent could have told the player how Tuesday's NFL
labor impasse might affect his contract talks with the
Bears.
Before the league's 32 owners voted unanimously to opt
out early from the collective bargaining agreement with
the NFL Players Association that was to have run
through 2012, Hester had two years left on his rookie
deal before he could have attained free agent status.
That unfathomable option—a potential Hall of Fame
player being allowed to sign with another team, even
for compensation—gave Hester unspoken leverage
during ongoing negotiations to extend his contract.
Now it has vanished as quickly as Hester through the
wedge on a kickoff return. If the 2010 season takes
place without a salary cap, maybe the biggest result of
Tuesday's vote, then an oft-overlooked provision
written into the original agreement in 1993 extends the
amount of required service for potential free agents in
an uncapped year from four seasons to six.
That means Hester wouldn't be permitted to test free
agency until after the 2011 season at the
earliest—in essence buying the Bears two more
years of highlights from Hester and more time to work
out a long-term deal.
The most underpaid athlete in Chicago is scheduled to
make $445,000 this season and $530,000 in 2009. He
signed a four-year, $2.61 million contract in 2006
after he was the 57th overall pick in the second round.
It should be filed under Hester Heist in a Halas Hall
drawer.
Hester has made it known he isn't happy with the terms
of his deal and the Bears began addressing the matter
with agent Eugene Parker in February at the NFL combine
in Indianapolis. Though less vocal about his contract
status than fellow stars Brian Urlacher and Lance
Briggs have been, Hester confided in mentor Deion
Sanders last month, surely knowing Sanders would share
the news with his NFL Network audience.
One view: While still unclear and reversible, Tuesday's
CBA development lessens the urgency for the Bears, who
don't like redoing contracts with two years remaining
anyway.
Another immediate result of playing 2010 without a
salary cap and a potential work stoppage looming a year
later could be teams showing more reluctance to commit
big money beyond the next three years. That could
factor into discussions involving Tommie Harris, who is
looking for the richest deal ever awarded a defensive
tackle.
Harris already has turned down an offer from the Bears
one source said was richer than the record-setting
seven-year, $50.5 million deal the Raiders gave Tommy
Kelly. Why would the Bears up the offer amid labor
uncertainty?
That's a question Harris might want to ponder, not that
his agent, Drew Rosenhaus, will persuade him to settle
for anything other than a historic contract.
On the other hand, Harris might have gained a slight
bit of leverage because he now can make the argument he
is served best over the long haul by signing nothing if
the Bears won't match his price.
Even if Harris and the Bears don't come to terms in the
next two months and he technically becomes a free agent
before the final capped season of 2009, expect the
Bears to apply the franchise tag to keep him in
Chicago. That would guarantee Harris around $7 million
in 2009 (the tag value for defensive tackles in 2008
was $6.3 million).
Then after the 2009 season, Harris would stand to be
the most hotly pursued free agent in a market that has
no ceiling because of the absence of a salary cap. Can
you imagine the potential bidding war between
Washington Redskins owner Daniel Snyder and Dallas
Cowboys owner Jerry Jones for a 27-year-old defensive
tackle who could be coming off five straight Pro Bowl
appearances?
Forget Harris donating equipment to a children's center
in Killeen, Texas. He could buy Killeen.
If 2010 ends up being an uncapped year, it also could
end up being significant in stabilizing the Bears'
quarterback position if Kyle Orton beats out Rex
Grossman and goes on to enjoy two seasons' worth of
success. Orton redid his deal to run through 2009, but
that would complete only his fifth season in the league
and the new caveat requires six years of service before
free agency.
Under that scenario—no guarantee for a guy who
hasn't proved he's a bona fide NFL starter—Orton
could face the prospect of negotiating with the Bears
before the 2010 uncapped season with a work stoppage
looming. That would be less than ideal for Orton or any
player looking for a long-term deal amid so much
short-term uncertainty.
Tuesday's news probably has no impact on Urlacher's
contract impasse, which he maintains is more about
respect than salary cap space. If he and the team find
a middle ground before training camp on July 23, as
expected, it likely will be the last contract Urlacher
signs.
John Tait and Adewale Ogunleye each might have one deal
left in them, but they will be 35 and 33, respectively,
before the 2010 season. Each player's contract is to
expire at the end of 2009.
Interest in either player may depend on where the Bears
are in their rebuilding project. And where they are in
the rebuilding project might depend on how happy and
productive they keep core players such as Harris and
Hester, two stars whose talks got more interesting
Tuesday without either saying a word.
(chicagosports.chicagotribune.com)