- Mar 11, 2009
- 10,526
- 3,647
- 28,180
Recall Denver took this same action giving Peyton Manning a 5 year deal nearing his 36th birthday, and this was after his neck surgery and him missing a full year in Indy. This contract wasn't as binding as Wilson's however, and it was later restructured, but it was huge for the day at $96m. This isn't saying Wilson is on Manning's level. But Manning's first 2 years in Denver he picked up right where he left off in Indy. He started to slide after that, and his arm strength was fading, but he still had his uncanny ability to throw to the one single guy who was about to get open, and walked out a SB winner (though the Denver D was the reason). I am guessing this is exactly what they were expecting from Wilson.
Most teams do what Tampa did with Brady, or the Jets with Rodgers. Hand out a heap of cash, but on a 2-year deal. But keep in mind Rodgers actually is taking a pay cut for the Jets compared to what the Packers had been paying him. So injury or not, you can see what the Jets were thinking and how it could have made some sense.
Maybe Joe Flacco's agent can convince Denver to sign him next season to a 5-year, $240m deal, with $220m of it guaranteed?!
Deshaun Watson is only 28. Here's the thing though, he's shown flashes of excellence, but he's never been a winner. He's had more bad games than good ones. His best year in Houston was a lot of padded stats because the team lost a lot of games. His career record isn't very good, and when he has won, he heavily relied on the team to do so (like Cleveland this season). He's also quite frankly not the best person, has a sketchy background, and from what I can tell has shown little to no leadership for any team he's been on.
Most teams do what Tampa did with Brady, or the Jets with Rodgers. Hand out a heap of cash, but on a 2-year deal. But keep in mind Rodgers actually is taking a pay cut for the Jets compared to what the Packers had been paying him. So injury or not, you can see what the Jets were thinking and how it could have made some sense.
Maybe Joe Flacco's agent can convince Denver to sign him next season to a 5-year, $240m deal, with $220m of it guaranteed?!
Deshaun Watson is only 28. Here's the thing though, he's shown flashes of excellence, but he's never been a winner. He's had more bad games than good ones. His best year in Houston was a lot of padded stats because the team lost a lot of games. His career record isn't very good, and when he has won, he heavily relied on the team to do so (like Cleveland this season). He's also quite frankly not the best person, has a sketchy background, and from what I can tell has shown little to no leadership for any team he's been on.
