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NFL Question...
How come star players do not always end up at top teams (by top teams I mean teams making the playoffs every year)
RB Examples: Maurice Jones-Drew Chris Johnson Adrian Peterson In Europe with football (what you call soccer) any top player will always end up at a top team. In the NFL I see so many players who would kill if they were on a top team but are so limited now because they're on a meh-meh team. |
In the NFL playoff teams change every year. Very few teams continually stay on top. Also in the NFL until this year ther has been a salary cap. Which means teams could only spend so much on players. So no team could get all the good players. Also some players value money more than winning. Some players will sign for a team they know will suck but since they offered the most money they take the money. Also the NFL has a draft for college players where the worst teams pick first. And since supposedly the best college players would get picked first they would go to the worst teams.
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Other considerations are current personnel, and team salary caps. Players can sit out to avoid going to a bad team, but they do so at their own peril. After establishing themselves in the league, and fulfilling their initial contract (or getting cut), players can opt for Free Agency, and put themselves on the market, but it still comes down to what each team's individual needs are, and how much they are willing to pay for the top players (and how many top players they can afford while keeping themselves under the salary cap). http://101tees.com/blog/wp-content/u...-funny-pic.jpg Does the Bears vs Packers "Playoff" seem slightly ghey to anyone else? :helpme ADG |
Yeah I guess the draft system is a big part of this. I always assumed the top teams would attract star players after they run through their first contract but lots of players tend to re-sign.
It's just hard to see players with so much talent, breaking records, meanwhile knowing they will never have a SB ring. |
Because in America we have a concept called anti-trust.
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5 of the 12 teams that made the playoffs in 2009 did not make the playoffs in 2010. 4 of the 12 teams that made the playoffs in 2008 did not make the playoffs in 2009. 6 of the 12 teams that made the playoffs in 2007 did not make the playoffs in 2008. 6 of the 12 teams that made the playoffs in 2006 did not make the playoffs in 2007. 7 of the 12 teams that made the playoffs in 2005 did not make the playoffs in 2006. So as you can see over the last 5 years about 47% of teams that make the playoffs don't make the playoffs the next year. In fact 25 of the 32 teams in the NFL have made the playoffs at least once in the last 5 years. That's 78%. Between 2000-2009 14 teams of 32 have gone to the Super Bowl. 9 different teams have won a super bowl in the last 12 years. So to say players KNOW they won't ever get to a super Bowl is a bit naive. Also to say Adrian Peterson hasn't been on good team shows lack of knowledge. He's been in the NFL for 4 seasons. Minnesota was bad in 2010, but in 2009 almost made it to the super bowl. His team also made the playoffs in 2008. In his 4 seasons the Vikings have a regular season record of 36-28. |
Two main reasons.
1. The Draft and contracts. A team that sucks has a chance at drafting a good player and signing them to a long term contract so they can hold on to them. 2. The salary cap. The NFL is set up in a way that each team is only allowed to spend a certain amount on its player payroll. For 2009 that cap was 128 million. So you can pay a guy whatever you want, but you only have 128 million to put an entire team together. If there were no cap you would likely see teams that just bought the best players, but the cap keeps that from happening. |
Salary cap. Thread closed.
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How many great players look great because they are on a shit team? Maybe that's more of a basketball thing...
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I like the salary cap. It would be pretty hollow for a team to win just because they bought the best money could buy. Building through the draft creates parity in the league.
Maybe the best players aren't always on the best team, but at least those players give those crappy teams a chance to be better. Look at the Texans and Arian Foster-- no way they would have all of those wins without him being the league leading rusher this season. Now that they have the running game situated, they can build around him. That's how you create a good team, not by just buying the best free agents. Baseball needs to have a cap also, so the Yankees can't go chasing after players like Cliff Lee just because they can afford it. |
I did not know about the salary cap by the way, that is a good reason as well. No Real Madrid antics in the NFL then.
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The teams on top want to keep their advantage. Many of the teams on the botton do not want a cap either. A salary cap will also mean a salary FLOOR which will require teams to spend a minimum amount. Teams on the bottom either can't or won't want to do that. The NFL gets many more BILLIONS in TV contracts than baseball does. So it's easy to have a $150 mil cap. most TV money in baseball come form LOCAL TV. Obviously a team like the Yankees pull in much more TV revenue than say Cincincatti since NY is so much bigger than Cincy is. |
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From my point of view it looks like over paid rich people chasing balls while wearing tight uniforms and then showering together. |
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The Texas Rangers who defeated the Yankees to win the AL Penant, were fourth from the bottom in payroll, at $55 million (nearly a quarter of the $206 million the Yankees paid on player salaries). The $40 million more that the Yankkees paid than Boston on payroll, is more than the entire payroll of the Pittsburgh Pirates. :helpme ADG |
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Sadly, that is what bottom teams now are. They are basically farm systems for the big boys. They develop players and then either lose them to free agency or trade them near the end of their contracts because they know they can't afford to keep them. |
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