The Myth of Having to Go Into a Season With Cap Space - Printable Version +- Cincinnati Bengals Message Board / Forums - Home of Jungle Noise (https://thebengalsboard.com) +-- Forum: Cincinnati Bengals / NFL (https://thebengalsboard.com/forum-3.html) +--- Forum: JUNGLE NOISE (https://thebengalsboard.com/forum-2.html) +--- Thread: The Myth of Having to Go Into a Season With Cap Space (/thread-12043.html) |
RE: The Myth of Having to Go Into a Season With Cap Space - michaelsean - 11-09-2017 (11-09-2017, 02:26 PM)THE PISTONS Wrote: It's really tough to see our team with 3 wins and enough cap space still after a Burfict extension to upgrade 2-3 positions. Until those injury settlements rear their ugly head. RE: The Myth of Having to Go Into a Season With Cap Space - Shake n Blake - 11-09-2017 (08-17-2017, 10:30 PM)jowczarski Wrote: Everyone has philosophical differences on how they believe teams should be run. To each his own. 1. I think the "crying poor" is referring to Geoff Hobson writing his (literally) annual article that always lists off some embellished reasons why the Bengals never have any money to go after mid-tier free agents. The best we can ever expect is guys like Law Firm and LaFell, and we only sign guys like that to replace a departed player. We never actually improve from one year to the next using free agency. 2. Sure that's the benefit. The obvious (and huge) downfall is having to stay loyal to "dead-weight" players like a Leon Hall, when that money could be used to improve a hole on the roster, or just sign a difference maker. So it hurts us in 2 ways. Staying loyal to players whose play isn't living up to their contracts, and not having more cap flexibility to aggressively pursue upgrades. I'd also argue that the benefit isn't all that great. It essentially allows the Bengals to be lazy. Plenty of teams do it the right way and find creative ways to stay below the cap while also improving their roster at the right times. Timing is everything. As you mentioned, not many teams spend to cap every year, but they try to strike at the right times. When they feel they're close to contention. When we've been close to serious contention, we can't bring in more talent because we're hindered by how they do business. As for the good players we've retained, sure, Dalton, Green, Atkins etc were probably lured by the loyalty, but guaranteed money probably would've worked too. (08-18-2017, 08:28 PM)jowczarski Wrote: @ochocincos I had zero issue with letting Marvin Jones, Sanu, Whit or Zeitler walk. In fact, I've defended each (non?) move. What irks me is that we watched these guys walk and didn't use the money elsewhere. We offered a big contract to Marvin Jones? We offered big money to Whit? Ok...well where did that money go? Why didn't we sign a different (maybe cheaper) Tackle or Guard in free agency? There were plenty available. As BenZoo pointed out, it's hard for fans not to be pissed when we're watching our offense set records for futility behind a train wreck o-line...while there's 18 million in unused cap space just sitting there. We gave up 41 sacks and ranked 23rd in YPC last year, watched our 2 best linemen walk, and responded by sitting on our hands? Paul Alexander wasn't fired. Our big move was to bring back a washed up Andre Smith? Regardless of the Bengals theories on team building, there's no excuse for that. It looks awful. RE: The Myth of Having to Go Into a Season With Cap Space - Hoofhearted - 11-09-2017 (11-09-2017, 02:26 PM)THE PISTONS Wrote: It's really tough to see our team with 3 wins and enough cap space still after a Burfict extension to upgrade 2-3 positions. How do we know difference making players WANT to come here? RE: The Myth of Having to Go Into a Season With Cap Space - THE PISTONS - 11-09-2017 (11-09-2017, 03:18 PM)Shake n Blake Wrote: 1. I think the "crying poor" is referring to Geoff Hobson writing his (literally) annual article that always lists off some embellished reasons why the Bengals never have any money to go after mid-tier free agents. The best we can ever expect is guys like Law Firm and LaFell, and we only sign guys like that to replace a departed player. We never actually improve from one year to the next using free agency. Yes. And if you're planning on letting your 2 best lineman walk from a mediocre offensive line...you may not want to draft a fast, injury prone WR in Round 1, and a flashy RB in Round 2 that will average 2.9 ypc. Take a Center in the 2nd Round and then hope that Mixon is there in Round 3. Without blocking, skill players struggle. RE: The Myth of Having to Go Into a Season With Cap Space - THE PISTONS - 11-09-2017 (11-09-2017, 03:57 PM)Hoofhearted Wrote: How do we know difference making players WANT to come here? That's a MB made this bed now he has to lie in it thing. The 26+ years of futility this franchise experienced is unprecedented. All they had to do was hire a GM and more scouts and they would have experienced the same success as the other teams in the league which would be 5+ playoff wins over that span. How can I say this? Because most of the league has 5+ playoff wins since we last won one. RE: The Myth of Having to Go Into a Season With Cap Space - Shake n Blake - 11-09-2017 (11-09-2017, 03:59 PM)THE PISTONS Wrote: Yes. And if you're planning on letting your 2 best lineman walk from a mediocre offensive line...you may not want to draft a fast, injury prone WR in Round 1, and a flashy RB in Round 2 that will average 2.9 ypc. Or if you're planning on letting you're 2 best linemen walk from a mediocre o-line and also planning on using your top picks on skill position players, use that free 15+ million in cap space to address the line via free agency. Whatever you do, just don't completely neglect a line that was already bad. I really wouldn't have cared either way, as long as they addressed the line somehow. RE: The Myth of Having to Go Into a Season With Cap Space - THE PISTONS - 11-09-2017 (11-09-2017, 04:11 PM)Shake n Blake Wrote: Or if you're planning on letting you're 2 best linemen walk from a mediocre o-line and also planning on using your top picks on skill position players, use that free 15+ million in cap space to address the line via free agency. Whatever you do, just don't completely neglect a line that was already bad. I really wouldn't have cared either way, as long as they addressed the line somehow. Honestly, I think deep down some of us know that following the Bengals is like hoping that Enron stock goes back up in value. We know they're poorly managed. We know they're not coached that great. We know they're processes are different than the rest of the NFL. Yet we keep following and even in some cases arguing in their favor. RE: The Myth of Having to Go Into a Season With Cap Space - Shake n Blake - 11-09-2017 (11-09-2017, 04:14 PM)THE PISTONS Wrote: Honestly, I think deep down some of us know that following the Bengals is like hoping that Enron stock goes back up in value. I think loyalty is a trait that all die-hard Bengals fans share. If I picked my team based on common sense and evidence, I would've stopped being a Bengals fan a long...long time ago. Mike Brown really makes being a Bengals fan a miserable experience. His personality makes Ben Stein look like a party animal. His logic makes me want to kick puppies. He makes Ebeneezer Scrooge look like a reckless spender. He makes Matt Millen look like a football genius. RE: The Myth of Having to Go Into a Season With Cap Space - PhilHos - 11-09-2017 (11-09-2017, 03:18 PM)Shake n Blake Wrote: I had zero issue with letting Marvin Jones, Sanu, Whit or Zeitler walk. In fact, I've defended each (non?) move. What irks me is that we watched these guys walk and didn't use the money elsewhere. We offered a big contract to Marvin Jones? We offered big money to Whit? Ok...well where did that money go? Why didn't we sign a different (maybe cheaper) Tackle or Guard in free agency? There were plenty available. Exactly. RE: The Myth of Having to Go Into a Season With Cap Space - PhilHos - 11-09-2017 (11-09-2017, 04:11 PM)Shake n Blake Wrote: Or if you're planning on letting you're 2 best linemen walk from a mediocre o-line and also planning on using your top picks on skill position players, use that free 15+ million in cap space to address the line via free agency. Whatever you do, just don't completely neglect a line that was already bad. I really wouldn't have cared either way, as long as they addressed the line somehow. Even if it failed, I think we'd all still at least be grateful that they tried. RE: The Myth of Having to Go Into a Season With Cap Space - Wyche'sWarrior - 11-09-2017 (11-09-2017, 04:59 PM)PhilHos Wrote: Even if it failed, I think we'd all still at least be grateful that they tried. Exactly, like how the Vikes sent their entire line packing and started over. RE: The Myth of Having to Go Into a Season With Cap Space - bambino5130 - 11-10-2017 Woah, I actually almost sounded like I knew what I was talking about back in August? That’s a first, but I didn’t think the Bengals Oline would be as bad as it is right now. I also didn’t think four months later I would be looking for better things to do on Sundays. RE: The Myth of Having to Go Into a Season With Cap Space - Synric - 11-10-2017 (11-09-2017, 04:11 PM)Shake n Blake Wrote: Or if you're planning on letting you're 2 best linemen walk from a mediocre o-line and also planning on using your top picks on skill position players, use that free 15+ million in cap space to address the line via free agency. Whatever you do, just don't completely neglect a line that was already bad. I really wouldn't have cared either way, as long as they addressed the line somehow. The issue I have with people arguing about last year's free agency is timeline. We are saying we needed to replace Cedric Ogbuehi before his second year playing when it's common knowledge that most linemen take a big step year two. Hopkins and Andre were here to compete for Zeilter's spot. Hopkins had a couple good preseason's under his belt and was concensus for someone that needed to get snaps in the regular season. Andre a former top 10 first round pick with a solid albeit slightly injury prone career was brought in for competition. ( I don't wanna hear the guard vs tackle experience because lineman shift back and forth between the two every week all and cross the league.) As for Fisher...they didn't know what they had until know. My argument he Bengals never spent picks or brought in any talent to compete with back end of the roster guys like TJ Johnson and Eric Winston. Right now isn't about letting this or that guy go. It's about bad picks and even worse depth. RE: The Myth of Having to Go Into a Season With Cap Space - THE PISTONS - 11-10-2017 (11-10-2017, 09:37 AM)Synric Wrote: The issue I have with people arguing about last year's free agency is timeline. Yeah...it's death by 1000 papercuts. They let 2 good players go. Didn't bring in viable options to replace them instead relying on what they had. The coaching was bad. The guys didn't perform. At some extent...I know you can't draft a guy in the 1st Round then when he doesn't show talent for 2 years draft another replacement in the 1st Round...but you have to atleast have some Plan B in case he fails. There was no Plan B. I don't even know if there was a Plan A. RE: The Myth of Having to Go Into a Season With Cap Space - Synric - 11-10-2017 (11-10-2017, 12:56 PM)THE PISTONS Wrote: Yeah...it'd death by 1000 papercuts. They let 2 good players go. Didn't bring in viable options to replace them instead relying on what they had. The coaching was bad. The guys didn't perform. See again this is after knowing both tackles flop. If only one flopped they had Andre Smith. But not only are the tackles flopping but the RG between Johnson and Hopkins (Both have been here getting time. Johnson was actually resigned as a backup). Like I've said the issue was rolling with Winston and Johnson as depth for alot of seasons. They never brought in anyone else to develop. RE: The Myth of Having to Go Into a Season With Cap Space - THE PISTONS - 11-10-2017 (11-10-2017, 01:12 PM)Synric Wrote: See again this is after knowing both tackles flop. If only one flopped they had Andre Smith. Except Smith was brought in to play Guard...not as a backup Tackle. Then at some point Smith refused to play Guard. We have all 5 lineman grading out as Poor by PFF and MAJOR issues now. RE: The Myth of Having to Go Into a Season With Cap Space - THE PISTONS - 11-30-2018 As has been brought up in other threads, keeping Whitworth likely was cheaper than having to pay Ced and Glenn. Plus, Whitworth is way more productive than that duo. RE: The Myth of Having to Go Into a Season With Cap Space - ochocincos - 11-30-2018 (11-30-2018, 10:44 AM)THE PISTONS Wrote: As has been brought up in other threads, keeping Whitworth likely was cheaper than having to pay Ced and Glenn. Plus, Whitworth is way more productive than that duo. You mean to say that Ogbuehi didn't amount to anything in the four years he's been in Cincinnati? I'm shocked. Shocked, I tell you. RE: The Myth of Having to Go Into a Season With Cap Space - THE PISTONS - 11-30-2018 (11-30-2018, 10:49 AM)ochocincos Wrote: You mean to say that Ogbuehi didn't amount to anything in the four years he's been in Cincinnati? I'm shocked. Shocked, I tell you. Well...and they lowballed Whitworth who was the team leader. And ultimately paid more without equal production. RE: The Myth of Having to Go Into a Season With Cap Space - Wyche'sWarrior - 11-30-2018 (11-30-2018, 10:51 AM)THE PISTONS Wrote: Well...and they lowballed Whitworth who was the team leader. And ultimately paid more without equal production. As is the case in life, generally, you usually cost yourself more work/money trying to take the easy/cheap road in doing things. |