by gsdgsd » Mon Oct 19, 2009 2:12 pm
I started responding to this last night, then had a computer issue and lost it, so rest assured everything I would have said last night was far more insightful and articulate.
There comes a time in some player-team relationships where you just have to say -- "if this guy is going to improve, he's not going to do it here." For whatever reason (and I'm not going to pretend to know anything about the locker room culture on the Bucs or Bears or anyone else) it often gets to the point where it's just best to cut your losses. Here, I think of Alex Smith and the 49ers -- neither side has made many good decisions, but god, dragging on this farce is painful for anyone to watch. Smith's career has been more or less ruined and yet player and team hang on to each other like a codependent couple.
In Adams-Bucs... there's issues on both sides. Fairly or not, there's questions about Adams' effort. He hasn't been much of a presence this year. Meanwhile, as he's entering what should be his prime, there are few teams more in disarray than the Bucs -- a mixture of guys who are one step from retirement and guys who are still unproven, one of the teams that's farthest from contending. So what should they do -- hang on to him, hope he develops as he could, risk having an increasingly-disgruntled player taking up a big salary spot? Or say "hey, when we get to the point of being good again, he probably wouldn't be here anyway" and get what you can for him?
Of course, this kinda reeks of '80s-Bucs -- developing a player for a few years, then trading him away. But, I think they made the right move.
I started responding to this last night, then had a computer issue and lost it, so rest assured everything I would have said last night was far more insightful and articulate.
There comes a time in some player-team relationships where you just have to say -- "if this guy is going to improve, he's not going to do it here." For whatever reason (and I'm not going to pretend to know anything about the locker room culture on the Bucs or Bears or anyone else) it often gets to the point where it's just best to cut your losses. Here, I think of Alex Smith and the 49ers -- neither side has made many good decisions, but god, dragging on this farce is painful for anyone to watch. Smith's career has been more or less ruined and yet player and team hang on to each other like a codependent couple.
In Adams-Bucs... there's issues on both sides. Fairly or not, there's questions about Adams' effort. He hasn't been much of a presence this year. Meanwhile, as he's entering what should be his prime, there are few teams more in disarray than the Bucs -- a mixture of guys who are one step from retirement and guys who are still unproven, one of the teams that's farthest from contending. So what should they do -- hang on to him, hope he develops as he could, risk having an increasingly-disgruntled player taking up a big salary spot? Or say "hey, when we get to the point of being good again, he probably wouldn't be here anyway" and get what you can for him?
Of course, this kinda reeks of '80s-Bucs -- developing a player for a few years, then trading him away. But, I think they made the right move.