Your link is playing loose with some terms. That's a little north of $1 million in guaranteed (if actually guaranteed, which normally it often isn't even when reported that way).You're right. It's $2.3 million. Not $2.2Check your math.$2.2 million isI didn't say he got the money because of his position. I said considering the length and types of contracts available at a draft position should be done in light of what position the potential draftee plays.So you are saying it is better to be an un-drafted free agent with NO guaranteed money than sign a 4 year deal? Plus the rookie contracts are set. AA got the deal he got because of WHERE he was drafted. Not the position he plays.To me, the key question is whether you'd be an undrafted FA or a top 3 rounder.
In some ways, it's better to enter the league as a FA, with the flexibility to sign where the fit is right, rather than getting draft by a team that may have just grabbed you because you were the top athlete/prospect left on their late rounds board (but not necessarily a great fit on the depth chart).
Also, a RBs considerations are much different than a lineman's. Signing up a 4 year contract at RB (which covers more than the average length of an RB's NFL career) is smart business. For a lineman, you might want to go as a F/A or sign a shorter deal where you can re-up or move sooner for more money after proving your worth after a year or two against NFL competition. For comparison RBs last on average 3.1 years. DL and OL about 4.1.
So while signing a 4-year deal worth $4mm is good for AA, it might be better for VV to take an initially lower value and shorter contract (say 2 years for $1mm) and then sign a bigger contract in year 3 (say 4 years at $2m per year).
Anyway, it doesn't sound like VV can make a "bad" decision here. So should be interesting to see what he ends up doing.
I also said that if you aren't a top 3 (or really top 2) round prospect, then you shouldn't worry about going as a drafted player or undrafted, as the last three rounds of the NFL draft offer very little difference in money from UAs. So really, if a player gets a report that he's a 5th rounder, he should probably go, even if that means he may not be drafted, unless he thinks a senior year could actually move him into the 2nd round. Otherwise, you lose out on a year of earnings, risk injury and are that much more delayed in signing your second (and more lucrative) contract.
Do you think that his $4.1M over 4-years is guaranteed?
http://overthecap.com/player/ameer-abdullah/3902/
Total Value: $4,156,126 (avg. $1,039,032/year; $2,291,551 fully guaranteed)
That's why most people only talk about signing bonuses when comparing "guaranteed" money across contracts. But if you want to include "guaranteed" base salary, then an apples to apples comparison should include the first year salary of an undrafted FA as "guaranteed" also.
So we are back at the same spot where a 2nd rounder is guaranteed about 1.5m where the undrafted FA is guaranteed almost nothing.
Last edited by a moderator: