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Why the **** is Jessie Bates not signed yet?
(05-19-2022, 03:03 PM)Stewy Wrote: Are you sure about that?  I was just looking through franchise tag prices, and one of the things I read about the LeVeon Bell situation was that the Steelers didn't want to pay the or strangle their CAP with the 3rd TAG number which is 40% about the top 5 average.  If Bell didn't play under the 20% second tag bump, then why would they be concerned about the 40% bump on tag 3?  What am I missing?

In regard to safety, the numbers going through my head were as follows - 1st Tag - 12m/yr; 2nd Tag - 14.4m/yr; 3rd Tag - 17.2 m/yr:  Yes these numbers would obviously go up as the avg. increases per year, so the 2nd and 3rd tags would be worth more than these numbers.

So the 3rd Tag barely gets him to where he'd be by signing for (some have speculated this number) 17m.yr or even 15m/yr because if he sits out two years that's 26.5 mil lost.

And another thing to consider....if Bates sits out two tags, that two of his prime years gone.  He would have walked about from 27 mil guranteed, while likely turning down at least 15m/yr from the Bengals (a reasonable number).  He'll never get that money back.  It's money lost, due to age and years played.  He could sit two years and come out and sign a 5yr 100mil contract, but he'll never get a 3rd contract, and after not playing for two years, he'll find his market VERY thin.  More reasons why players do not have the leverage that some think they do.  Their clocks are ticking, constantly, and teams know it.

Third franchise tag is the average of top 5 quarterback salaries for any position other than quarterback.
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(05-19-2022, 12:56 PM)Nate (formerly eliminate08) Wrote: True enough, if you want to pay him only for the Playoffs go right ahead. Not my money.

I just love the Dax Hill pick enough and don't like the Agents BS enough to move on in anyway that is best for the team and Jessie.


Probably just a dream but that would be fantastic or just getting something for him would be just fine too.


No doubt that is the question. I don't like it myself even though he played great in the Postseason, to let the lack of a contract get
in his head like that and affect his game to that extent is not a good sign in my eyes. Gives me pause especially now with his Agent
being a doosh. If it was me I would of told my Agent to back off and would of just signed the extension offered already.

I am sure it is extremely fair and you get to play on a team that should be a contender for a long time with Burrow.


True if you want to pay him only cause of what he did in the SB run so be it. I think that is what he wants and we aren't going
to pay him that cause of his poor play in the regular season and his overall poor tackling his entire career. Dude has great range
though and that is rare, but Dax Hill makes him expendable even if he hasn't played an NFL down yet. He is way more pro ready
than Bates was coming out and is ten times the tackler with great range himself.


Great post Stewy, well said man. Rock On

He's was a top 10 Safety  as a rookie and he was the #1 Safety in 2020. Plus he is a young  proven player with a ton of upside. You're not signing him for just a playoff run.

As for the agent  thing it's just business no need to get butt hurt over it.
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J24

Jessie Bates left the Bengals and that makes me sad!
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(05-19-2022, 08:26 PM)J24 Wrote: He's was a top 10 Safety  as a rookie and he was the #1 Safety in 2020. Plus he is a young  proven player with a ton of upside. You're not signing him for just a playoff run.

As for the agent  thing it's just business no need to get butt hurt over it.

If you are going off of PFF grades you cannot dismiss him going from #1 to #37 this season either.  I dont believe Bates is the 37th best safety, but he sure as hell isnt #1.

His lackluster play during the regular season is the cause for the current contract standoff IMO.
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Is Jessie Bates iii the new Andy Dalton - only he wants top 3 at his position $? Can play great, can play bad, is mostly avg.... And dissapears at times?
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(05-20-2022, 09:23 AM)PDub80 Wrote: Is Jessie Bates iii the new Andy Dalton - only he wants top 3 at his position $? Can play great, can play bad, is mostly avg.... And dissapears at times?

i dont remember andy dalton ever holding out for more money especially not Top 3 at his position.


Bates like many nfl players simply overvalues himself. vs the market
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(05-20-2022, 09:23 AM)PDub80 Wrote: Is Jessie Bates iii the new Andy Dalton - only he wants top 3 at his position $? Can play great, can play bad, is mostly avg.... And dissapears at times?

Did you miss how good Bates was in the playoffs? Ninja
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(05-19-2022, 08:26 PM)J24 Wrote: He's was a top 10 Safety  as a rookie and he was the #1 Safety in 2020. Plus he is a young  proven player with a ton of upside. You're not signing him for just a playoff run.

As for the agent  thing it's just business no need to get butt hurt over it.

If we're talking PFF grades, Bates' career averages a 71.8/season.  If you included his 90 postseason grade as a full season, that still only takes the average up to 75.5.  Good, but not elite.

Unfortunately with Bates, it's not even a typical upwards curve that you see with most guys on rookie deals.  It's a rollercoaster.  There is a lot of risk in paying him at an elite level, as in his down years, he's a liability to the defense and you can't have huge chunks of cap space tied  up in a guy that's a liability.  
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(05-20-2022, 09:55 AM)XenoMorph Wrote: Bates like many nfl players simply overvalues himself. vs the market


I am not going to guess which side is wrong in this case. None of us know what the Bengals have offered.

But it is not uncommon for players and teams not to agree. No player wants to get tagged and the teams usually don't want to either.  But when the tag is used the player rarely misses any games in a hold out of any kind.

I am not happy with the situation but I am pretty sure Bates will be playing for us this year.
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It's not like Mike Brown can't be stubborn and sometimes can't get out of his own way. But, on the "Bates" contract, I'm siding with the team.

Even last year, Bates said during the first part of the season he held back because of not getting an extension. Now, we are expected to believe he will come in after a contract hold out (so far) and be all sunshine and roses and play at a Pro Bowl level? Not buying it.

That franchise tag amount isn't mouse nuts. It's a huge number. You don't like it? Play on the tag and show the Bengals and all the NFL how wrong they were, and then really cash in.

He's already proven he can be less than average as a player when he sulks.

He can complain, whine, sit out and hope to get his way by sulking.

He talks about security for his family, there's a large multi-year contract waiting to be signed. I'm positive the Bengals didn't low ball him. He can become something special for this team, which no doubt is elite, and will continue to be elite for the foreseeable future.

Or. some team can step up and offer the Bengals a treasure chest of picks for a trade.

Or, as he's threatening, Bates can refuse to sign the contract, sit out, and then see what happens to his value.

The Bengals have players who can step up in his place. Would I prefer he be part of our success? Absolutely.

But, if he's only hoping for a few more million, that will not, in all honesty, make a whole lot of difference in his life vs holding out, he's not the player I thought he was. Hope another team will sign you for more money and see what you're remembered for. Holding out? Or, staying with a team that will get you a ring.
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(05-19-2022, 08:26 PM)J24 Wrote: He's was a top 10 Safety  as a rookie and he was the #1 Safety in 2020. Plus he is a young  proven player with a ton of upside. You're not signing him for just a playoff run.

As for the agent  thing it's just business no need to get butt hurt over it.

Not butt hurt over anything. 

Just don't understand a player just listening to his agent and not looking at his own play objectively when looking at a contract.

I am sure whatever we offered him was more than fair.

(05-20-2022, 08:27 AM)casear2727 Wrote: If you are going off of PFF grades you cannot dismiss him going from #1 to #37 this season either.  I dont believe Bates is the 37th best safety, but he sure as hell isnt #1.

His lackluster play during the regular season is the cause for the current contract standoff IMO.

For sure.  Rock On

(05-20-2022, 10:41 AM)Whatever Wrote: If we're talking PFF grades, Bates' career averages a 71.8/season.  If you included his 90 postseason grade as a full season, that still only takes the average up to 75.5.  Good, but not elite.

Unfortunately with Bates, it's not even a typical upwards curve that you see with most guys on rookie deals.  It's a rollercoaster.  There is a lot of risk in paying him at an elite level, as in his down years, he's a liability to the defense and you can't have huge chunks of cap space tied  up in a guy that's a liability.  

Yeah, Bates is really inconsistent which also takes him out of elite money talk IMO.
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(05-20-2022, 05:18 PM)Nate (formerly eliminate08) Wrote: I am sure whatever we offered him was more than fair.


What did we offer him?
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I don't think a lot of people here understand what is going on.

Jessie Bates is not "holding out".

Jessie Bates has never said he would "hold out".

Many of the biggest names in the NFL have done the exact same thing that Bates is doing now when they had the franchise tag put on them
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(05-21-2022, 12:47 PM)fredtoast Wrote: What did we offer him?

We don't know what the Bengals are offering or what Bates is asking. We can only speculate.


Historically, the Bengals have tried to undervalue free agents at positions they don't find to be premium.


Kevin Zeitler, Joe Thuney and Andrew Whitworth (or people close to them) all came out saying that the Bengals' offers to them were considerably lower than other teams' offers and that all three had some inclination to come to Cincinnati had they been offered similar contracts to the market.


Considering guard (and aging OT) and safety are on the lower end of the "value charts" for many teams, I wouldn't be surprised if the Bengals were approaching Bates in a similar fashion.

We also have a tendency to not offer as much guaranteed money as other teams. This may be due to Mike Brown not being as wealthy and liquid as other owners since he made his money exclusively through football (where as many other owners like the Browns' Jimmy Haslam made his fortune via a truck stop chain and a petroleum corporation) so he may not be able to put down the guaranteed money that other owners can (when you put guaranteed money on a contract, that money must go into escrow at the time of signing, not when it's due to the player). 

The Bengals, historically, stay around 35% of the contract guaranteed or less.



Trey Hendrickson got 16/60 (27%), DJ Reader 20.5/53 (39%), Joe Mixon 10/40 (25%), BJ Hill 13/40 (32.5%), Cappa 11/35 (31%), Awuzie 7.5/22 (34%), Hubbard 10/40 (25%), Waynes 15/42 (36%).



Going back further, Dalton 17/96 (18%), Green 33/60 (55%), Palmer 19/97 (20%).


Unless I'm forgetting any big names, it seems we've only given >50% guaranteed a single time, with Green. Many are in the 25 to 35% range. The recent safety contracts are in the 40 to 70% range.


My guess is that Jessie Bates is pursuing a contract at least similar to Marcus Williams' deal with the Ravens, which was 5 years, 70 million with 37 million of it guaranteed. 

And it wouldn't surprise me if the Bengals are angling for closer to what Tyrann Mathieu or Justin Reid got (3yr/28.3 M/18M guaranteed and 3/31.5/20.5, respectively).

Hopefully, they'll land somewhere in between like John Johnson's contract with Cleveland (3/33.75/24), maybe with a little more AAV and a little less guaranteed, something like 3/39/15.

I don't think Bates will go for that kind of deal, but maybe we get lucky.


When it comes to "who to blame" I lean more towards the Bengals than Bates since we are unlike most other NFL teams when it comes to guarantees, but I think what Bates may not be considering is that, while the Bengals don't do well with literal guarantees, they are pretty good about giving "practical" guarantees. Look at Tray Waynes. Only 15 million was guaranteed, but the Bengals kept him for 2 years for doing nothing at all, meaning his actual guarantee was 30.8 million, which would be 73%... I wish Bates' agent would realize this and advise his client appropriately. Because at least the first two years of any deal Bates signs are guaranteed. And the only way they'd cut him at that point is if he had a catastrophic implosion or is injured for both years.


There have been a few anomalies like Preston Brown, but there are many more examples where a player is kept too long rather than not long enough.


We'll see how things play out. I take solace in knowing that we drafted safety in the draft so, if absolutely nothing can be done and Bates does hold out/sit out the season, we aren't bereft at the position. I don't think he'd ultimately do that though. My expectation is that Bates will play on the tag this year and will likely leave in free agency in 2023, especially since he will not be a priority signing in next year's off season, as both Burrow and Higgins are eligible for extensions at that point.
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(05-21-2022, 12:47 PM)fredtoast Wrote: What did we offer him?

A chance to be a part of an ascending team that just had a shot at a championship, and has the possibility to do it again?... All the while making enough money to take care of himself, and his loved ones for life?

I don't begrudge anyone trying to get anything they can, and I'll always side with the millionaire over the billionaire (Not sure there is a billionaire in this case). But I just can't wrap my head around breaking the bank for an inconsistent safety.... Especially when we just drafted a cheaper option.
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(05-21-2022, 12:47 PM)fredtoast Wrote: What did we offer him?

Only the ones in the know know...

I am sure it was fair though for an inconsistent Safety.

(05-21-2022, 01:31 PM)Crazyjdawg Wrote: We don't know what the Bengals are offering or what Bates is asking. We can only speculate.


Historically, the Bengals have tried to undervalue free agents at positions they don't find to be premium.


Kevin Zeitler, Joe Thuney and Andrew Whitworth (or people close to them) all came out saying that the Bengals' offers to them were considerably lower than other teams' offers and that all three had some inclination to come to Cincinnati had they been offered similar contracts to the market.


Considering guard (and aging OT) and safety are on the lower end of the "value charts" for many teams, I wouldn't be surprised if the Bengals were approaching Bates in a similar fashion.

We also have a tendency to not offer as much guaranteed money as other teams. This may be due to Mike Brown not being as wealthy and liquid as other owners since he made his money exclusively through football (where as many other owners like the Browns' Jimmy Haslam made his fortune via a truck stop chain and a petroleum corporation) so he may not be able to put down the guaranteed money that other owners can (when you put guaranteed money on a contract, that money must go into escrow at the time of signing, not when it's due to the player). 

The Bengals, historically, stay around 35% of the contract guaranteed or less.



Trey Hendrickson got 16/60 (27%), DJ Reader 20.5/53 (39%), Joe Mixon 10/40 (25%), BJ Hill 13/40 (32.5%), Cappa 11/35 (31%), Awuzie 7.5/22 (34%), Hubbard 10/40 (25%), Waynes 15/42 (36%).



Going back further, Dalton 17/96 (18%), Green 33/60 (55%), Palmer 19/97 (20%).


Unless I'm forgetting any big names, it seems we've only given >50% guaranteed a single time, with Green. Many are in the 25 to 35% range. The recent safety contracts are in the 40 to 70% range.


My guess is that Jessie Bates is pursuing a contract at least similar to Marcus Williams' deal with the Ravens, which was 5 years, 70 million with 37 million of it guaranteed. 

And it wouldn't surprise me if the Bengals are angling for closer to what Tyrann Mathieu or Justin Reid got (3yr/28.3 M/18M guaranteed and 3/31.5/20.5, respectively).

Hopefully, they'll land somewhere in between like John Johnson's contract with Cleveland (3/33.75/24), maybe with a little more AAV and a little less guaranteed, something like 3/39/15.

I don't think Bates will go for that kind of deal, but maybe we get lucky.


When it comes to "who to blame" I lean more towards the Bengals than Bates since we are unlike most other NFL teams when it comes to guarantees, but I think what Bates may not be considering is that, while the Bengals don't do well with literal guarantees, they are pretty good about giving "practical" guarantees. Look at Tray Waynes. Only 15 million was guaranteed, but the Bengals kept him for 2 years for doing nothing at all, meaning his actual guarantee was 30.8 million, which would be 73%... I wish Bates' agent would realize this and advise his client appropriately. Because at least the first two years of any deal Bates signs are guaranteed. And the only way they'd cut him at that point is if he had a catastrophic implosion or is injured for both years.


There have been a few anomalies like Preston Brown, but there are many more examples where a player is kept too long rather than not long enough.


We'll see how things play out. I take solace in knowing that we drafted safety in the draft so, if absolutely nothing can be done and Bates does hold out/sit out the season, we aren't bereft at the position. I don't think he'd ultimately do that though. My expectation is that Bates will play on the tag this year and will likely leave in free agency in 2023, especially since he will not be a priority signing in next year's off season, as both Burrow and Higgins are eligible for extensions at that point.

Nice post. Lots of work you put in there CJD, appreciate it.

Would be just fine if Bates just played on the Tag and left next year...

Especially after all of this.

(05-21-2022, 01:39 PM)jason Wrote: A chance to be a part of an ascending team that just had a shot at a championship, and has the possibility to do it again?... All the while making enough money to take care of himself, and his loved ones for life?

I don't begrudge anyone trying to get anything they can, and I'll always side with the millionaire over the billionaire (Not sure there is a billionaire in this case). But I just can't wrap my head around breaking the bank for an inconsistent safety.... Especially when we just drafted a cheaper option.

Precisely where I am at on this situation.

And not just a cheaper option, Dax Hill could very well be better than Jessie Bates, maybe not as a rookie but down the road.
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(05-21-2022, 01:31 PM)Crazyjdawg Wrote: Historically, the Bengals have tried to undervalue free agents at positions they don't find to be premium.



Historically, the entire NFL has undervalued free agents at positioins they don't find to be premium.  Different positions have been paid less ever since free agency has existed.


(05-21-2022, 01:31 PM)Crazyjdawg Wrote: Kevin Zeitler, Joe Thuney and Andrew Whitworth (or people close to them) all came out saying that the Bengals' offers to them were considerably lower than other teams' offers and that all three had some inclination to come to Cincinnati had they been offered similar contracts to the market.



Why did you just list 3 names?  Pretty much 100% of free agents would come here if we offered them more money than any other team.
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(05-21-2022, 02:49 PM)fredtoast Wrote: Why did you just list 3 names?  Pretty much 100% of free agents would come here if we offered them more money than any other team.

They're examples of times we underbid players. Which was a central argument of my post.
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(05-21-2022, 02:51 PM)Crazyjdawg Wrote: They're examples of times we underbid players. Which was a central argument of my post.


What central argument?

That players go to the team that offers them the most money?

Since the Bengals have signed so many big money free agents lately you can no longer claim they are being "cheap" or "underbidding" for all these free agents.  Our offers have obviously been MORE than "competitive".  We have actually outbid all the other teams in the league for a long list of free agents over the last two years.  And the percentage of "guaranteed money" is just a part of the total package.  Sometimes players are offered an option of more money and less guaranteed, or less total but more guaranteed.  You can't just cut out the guaranteed portion of the contract and say that was the deal breaker.

If we don't sign Bates it is not because the front office was "too cheap".
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(05-21-2022, 03:17 PM)fredtoast Wrote: What central argument?

That players go to the team that offers them the most money?

Since the Bengals have signed so many big money free agents lately you can no longer claim they are being "cheap" or "underbidding" for all these free agents.  Our offers have obviously been MORE than "competitive".  We have actually outbid all the other teams in the league for a long list of free agents over the last two years.  And the percentage of "guaranteed money" is just a part of the total package.  Sometimes players are offered an option of more money and less guaranteed, or less total but more guaranteed.  You can't just cut out the guaranteed portion of the contract and say that was the deal breaker.

If we don't sign Bates it is not because the front office was "too cheap".
The two Arguments were:
Historically, we underbid the "non- premium" positions moreso than other franchises. Especially guard but safety is in that same category. 

Historically, we don't offer a lot of guaranteed money. 

Given these two historical bases, it's likely we are underbidding and/ or offering less guarantees than the current market would. 

Which may be why Bates isn't signing.
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There were 12 safeties whose contracts averaged $10m+/yr in 2021. The only one of them to win a playoff game was Tyrann Mathieu as the 7th highest paid.

Safety just doesn't seem like a smart position to be paying guys Top-5 money to. Let alone one who is not consistent in quality of play. If you had an Ed Reed or a Troy Polamalu, sure, but otherwise it really seems like RB where it's just a poor place to allocate top dollar to.
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