Jul/29/08 05:02 PM Filed in:
Vernon Carey
DAVIE - Lifelong South
Florida resident Vernon Carey is proud to admit he
has always been a Dolphins fan. But that doesn't
mean the Dolphins' starting tackle plans to end
his career with his hometown team.
Unlike most NFL players entering the final year of
their contacts, Carey plans to play out this season
without pushing the organization for a new contract.
Even though there's plenty of salary-cap space to get a
deal done, the Dolphins have not approached Carey or
his agent about renegotiating his contract. And that
doesn't bother the former first-round pick one bit.
In fact, the 27-year-old from the University of Miami
seems intrigued about the prospects of hitting the open
market in 2009.
"It doesn't matter," Carey said when asked about
pursuing a new deal. "That's not important to me right
now. What's important to me is winning. I want to be
part of a winning team. Winning!
"Of course I'd love to stay here. I'm from Miami and
love the Dolphins. I admit I think about it, but I
don't like to think about [my contract] because I can't
control it. That's out of my hands. It's in
[managements] hands. All I want to do is win."
Carey is scheduled to make a little more than $2.5
million this season in the final year of the five-year
contract he signed in 2004.
Offensive tackles are the fourth highest paid position
in the NFL behind quarterbacks, defensive ends and
cornerback, but most of that money goes to left tackles
because they protect a quarterback's blindside. Right
tackles like Carey, who did start all of last season on
the left side before getting displaced by Jake Long,
are paid slightly less.
The Dolphins have little depth at tackle behind Carey
and Long - the first pick of the 2007 draft - after
cutting second-year player Julius Wilson and rookie
free agent Dan Gore because they failed their
conditioning re-check last Friday.
Ikechuku Ndukwe, a guard who spent a portion of last
season on the Dolphins practice squad, and Daren
Heerspink, an undrafted rookie free agent, are serving
as the lone backup tackles. The Dolphins front office
will likely address their tackle shortage by signing a
few veterans once teams trim down their training camp
rosters.
(sun-sentinel.com)