Showing posts with label Andrew Luck. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Andrew Luck. Show all posts

Thursday, June 30, 2016

What Andrew Luck"s new deal means for the Bills, Tyrod Taylor


Is Andrew Luck more HYPE than RESULTS? - "The Herd"

Andrew Luck just signed an enormous extension. Lets examine what it means for the Bills and Tyrod Taylor.

My friend, Matt, texted me right after Andrew Lucks extension was announced.

He wrote:

Luck has to be the Bills second-favorite quarterback now.

So Doug Whaley can say the best young QB in the league gets $23M per year.

Hes begging to say that sentence right after Tyrod Taylors agent Adisa Bakari tells him how much Brock Osweiler makes.

Photo by Brett Carlsen/Getty Images

That, right there... is a tremendous point.

(For the record, Osweiler signed a deal with the Houston Texans this offseason that averaged $18M per season.)

It makes perfect sense for Bills fans to be curious about how Lucks six-year, $140M contract would affect the impending money talks with Tyrod Taylor.

But I dont really think Lucks monster extension impacts most future quarterback deals in the traditional sense, as in... setting the market.

If anything, it just creates a (lower-than-expected) quarterback-contract ceiling. His $23M average per year (APY) should and probably will act as bargaining leverage for NFL front offices during contract discussions with their signal-callers.

How many agents can plop down at the negotiating table and say, with a straight face, ok, lets start with that Luck got?

Yeah, probably none.

To me, Luck has fallen sliiiiightly short of the gigantic, Elway-esque, Peytonian expectations set forth for him by, well, just about everybody when he entered the league out of Stanford in 2012, but those expectations still carry significant weight.

When youre a white, 64 pocket passer from one of the most prestigious colleges in the country, universally viewed as the most impeccably clean prospect in decades among the ever-bickering #DraftTwitter and are ultimately selected No. 1 overall, your reputation is hard to tarnish.

Photo by Harry How/Getty Images

Luck looked the part from the start of his NFL career, throwing for 4,374 yards as a rookie en route to an unlikely playoff berth for the Colts. Both developments helped to serve as instant validation that, yes, the consensus draft evaluations were correct, and, yes, he was something special.

(Throwing for 4,761 yards and 40 touchdowns in his third season was super impressive, too.)

However, over his last 16 games which includes three playoff outings Luck has completed 56.7% of his passes (6.71 yards per attempt) with 30 touchdowns and 22 interceptions.

Still, though... if you survey NFL fans and media alike about the quarterback theyd select to start a franchise with today, the majority of the picks would be Luck.

Hence, even after an abysmal, injury-plagued fourth-year in the NFL, Indianapolis had seemingly no issue making him the highest-paid QB in league history.

Lucks guarantees $47M due at signing are critical, without a doubt. But his overall $23.3M APY and $24.5M APY in new money should have Whaley and Redskins GM Scot McCloughan smiling ear to ear.

That $23.3M equates to 15% of the 2016 salary cap. Just three years ago, $18.5M wouldve represented that same 15%.

In a few seasons, with the way the NFL salary cap is exponentially rising, well probably see Lucks contract as a colossal steal.

Obviously, theres no way to be sure what will ultimately happen with Tyrod Taylor and the Bills and, more specifically, how big his contract would be.

But it seems like Lucks mega extension actually did Buffalo a favor.

Source: http://www.buffalorumblings.com/2016/6/30/12067814/what-andrew-luck-s-new-deal-means-for-the-bills-tyrod-taylor

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Andrew Luck signed for $140 million, but he"s still underpaid


Andrew Luck would be a top-3 pick in a NFL expansion draft - "The Herd"

The Indianapolis Colts announced that its quarterback Andrew Luck had signed a monster $140 million, $87 million guaranteed contract on Wednesday. Luck is now the highest-paid player in the NFL, and it prompted a rash of reactions from people claiming he was overpaid.

That line of argument simply doesnt hold up, asmy colleague Steven Ruiz does a good job explaining, even when you account for his minor regression in 2015. On the contrary: Theres actually a better case to be made that Andrew Luck is still actually underpaid.

ESPNs Dan Graziano has a good piece about how Lucks deal is, in many ways, an underwhelming one, largely becauseit failed to keep pace with the previous growth in NFL quarterbacks salaries.

This is a deal that has been anticipated for more than a year now by people around the NFL But within the context of the NFL quarterback market, Andrew Lucks new deal is a pretty big letdown.

Itsimportantnot to get bogged-down in numbers here. It doesnt matter what Andrew Luck is gettingpaid if hes getting paid less than what hes worth. If I pay someone $5 an hour to do a job thats worth $20 an hour, it doesnt make it okay simply because Im paying him something.People have a right to earn their market value, whatever their level, and Andrew Luck is no different.

And thats the perpetual problem facing football at every level.

Theres an ever-growing acceptance that football is a violent and dangerous sport. Professionals know that, and increasingly, they accept it, even as the longer-term ramifications are becoming more clear. The unjustness of it all stems from the fact that these same players are ushered through a system that is constantly designed to strip them of their market value in a way that boxers, for example, are not.

(Via OlyDrop)

Players arent paid in High School (obviously), then are locked out of the NFL for the next three years. Thatessentially forces them into playing college football where, of course, they arent allowed to get paid again. Then they move onto the NFL, where theres a rookie salary cap. Even when theyre freed of that they spend the remainder of their careers negotiating contracts within the confines of their teams salary cap.Time and time and time again, forces around them are depressingtheir price as low as possible.

And that has happened to Andrew Luck once again.

He went unpaid through college than was the second draft class to suffer the consequences of a rookie salary cap. He signed a $22 million, four-year contract when he came into the league in 2012despite being afar better prospect than Sam Bradford,who made more than double that just in guarantees two years earlier, before the cap was imposed.

(AP)

This contract is probablygoing to be the biggest one Luck ever signs, and it was negotiated with the deck stacked against him. Luck may be the most important player in Indianapolis, butwhen youredealing with a hard cap, that doesnt matter as much. You cant have Andrew Luck plus 52 scrubs. You still need to fill out a team.

NFL owners have constructeda masterful, intricate system designed, above all else, towards maximizing their own profits. Until that changes,no football player will ever be paid what theyre truly worth. And therein lies footballs greatest problem.

Charles Barkley: I told Johnny Manziel "you"re s******g up your life"3hr ago3 inferior quarterbacks who are about to make even more money than Andrew Luck5hr agoWhy should anyone believe Johnny Manziel will ever get sober?6hr ago

Source: http://ftw.usatoday.com/2016/06/andrew-luck-signed-for-140-million-but-hes-still-underpaid

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Understanding $140M: 10 things Andrew Luck could buy with his monster payday


Andrew Luck & Colts Mic"d Up Mega Comeback vs. Chiefs 2013 Playoffs | NFL

Andrew Luck"s new 6-year, $140 million deal makes him the NFL"s highest-paid player. The 10 players below him are also QBs. Who are they? Phil Friend/IndyStar

Indianapolis Colts quarterback Andrew Luck, practices at the Indiana Farm Bureau Football Center, Thursday, June 9, 2016.(Photo: Kelly Wilkinson / IndyStar)Buy Photo

$140 million. It"s stupid money. It"s money that we can"t even understand. But Andrew Luck"s going to have to get his head around it with his new contract.

Now, he won"t receive the money in a lump sum, but for the sake of visualizing just how much cash this is, we"re going to pretend he will.

Here"s just how much money Andrew Luck is going to make:

  • He could buy a Boeing 757 and still have $40 million to spare.
  • If he donated all his money to Gleaners Food Bank, he could provide 420 million meals to hungry Hoosiers. That would feed every person in the combined populations of Fort Wayne and Evansvillethree meals a day for a year.
  • He could buy the naming rights for Lucas Oil Stadium. The Lucas family provided a paltry $122 million over 20 years.
  • He could buy 146 of the most expensive guitar Jim Irsay has ever purchased -- aFender Stratocaster used byBob Dylan.
  • Since he"s a big reader, he could donate his whole haul to IndyReads and provide76,712 YEARS of literacy training.

Your move, Luck.

Allison Carter is an engagement producer at IndyStar. Andrew Luck, if you"re reading this and want to toss some cash my way, get a Twitter account and follow me @AllisonLCarter. Let"s talk.

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Indianapolis Colts quarterback Andrew Luck (12) prepares to pass in a 2013 game arter against the Denver Broncos. Ron Chenoy, USA TODAY Sports

Indianapolis Colts quarterback Andrew Luck (12) during a 2013 game against the Buffalo Bills. Thomas J. Russo, USA TODAY Sports

Andrew Luck shakes hands with Denver Broncos quarterback Peyton Manning after the two faced off in a game in 2013 that was Manning"s return to Indianapolis. Thomas J. Russo, USA TODAY Sports

Colts quarterback Andrew Luck throws a pass as he is hit by Denver Broncos defensive tackle Terrance Knighton (94) during a 2013 game. Thomas J. Russo, USA TODAY Sports

Indianapolis Colts quarterback Andrew Luck (12) prepares to pass in the third quarter against the Denver Broncos in 2013. Ron Chenoy, USA TODAY Sports

Indianapolis Colts quarterback Andrew Luck (12) passes in a 2013 game against the Tennessee Titans. Jim Brown, USA TODAY Sports

Indianapolis Colts quarterback Andrew Luck (12) is chased by an Arizona Cardinals defender during a 2013 game. Mark J. Rebilas, USA TODAY Sports

Indianapolis Colts quarterback Andrew Luck throws a pass while being pressured by Houston Texans in 2013. Brian Spurlock USA TODAY Sports

Indianapolis Colts quarterback Andrew Luck throws a pass during a 2013 game against the Houston Texans. Brian Spurlock. USA TODAY Sports

Andrew Luck (12) throws a pass during the second half of the game against the Kansas City Chiefs. Denny Medle, USA TODAY Sports

Indianapolis Colts quarterback Andrew Luck runs n for a touchdown in a 2012 game against the Cleveland Browns Jabaal Sheard. Matt Kryger, Indianapolis Star

Indianapolis Colts quarterback Andrew Luck walks off the field after his NFL debut in 2012 against the Chicago Bears. Mike DiNovo, USA TODAY Sports

Indianapolis Colts quarterback Andrew Luck signs autographs after minicamp practice at Lucas Oil Stadium in 2012 Brian Spurlock, USA TODAY Sports

NFL commissioner Roger Goodell, left, introduces quarterback Andrew Luck as the first overall pick of the 2012 NFL draft by the Indianapolis Colts. James Lang, USA TODAY Sports

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Source: http://www.indystar.com/story/sports/2016/06/29/understanding-140m-things-andrew-luck-could-buy-his-monster-payday/86525150/

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