Clarence Hill: Just CHILL: No franchise tag for Miles Austin

Juke99

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Just CHILL: No franchise tag for Miles Austin and possibly no long term deal


Clarence Hill

There will be no franchise tag and possibly no long-term deal for breakout receiver Miles Austin, according to Cowboys vice president Stephen Jones.

While keeping Austin in Dallas is one of the team's top priorities of the off season, Jones shot down any thoughts of the Cowboys putting the franchise tag on the restricted free agent to help ensure he remains with the Cowboys.
A franchise tag would cost the Cowboys a $9.521 million salary for next year and require two first round picks as compensation if another team signed him to a long deal. However, Jones said there no reason to do that when the highest restricted free agent tender of $3.168 million with a first- and third-round draft pick compensation will do.

"We don't need to use the franchise tag," Jones said. "How many times have seen another team give up a one and a three?"

The strategy seems tenuous considering Austin's sensational season and the number of teams, including the Miami Dolphins and former Cowboys coach Bill Parcells, looking for a No. 1 receiver.

But the Cowboys have the right to match any offer and Jones reiterated as owner Jerry Jones did on the radio on Tuesday that they don't plan on letting Austin go anywhere.

"We're just not going to have Miles Austin any place but with the Dallas Cowboys," owner Jerry Jones said on 103.3 FM ESPN radio.

Jerry Jones has said on a number of occasions since the end of the season that he would like to sign Austin to a long-term deal. Stephen Jones wants the same thing. However, he expressed doubts about that being a realistic possibility in the current labor labor situation.

With no collective bargaining agreement in place between the owners and players, 2010 will be an uncapped year.

Stephen Jones said problem is that they don't know what the longterm ramifications are regarding the salary cap. He expects a deal to be in place at some point. But as of now its hard to make a long-term offer to Austin or anyone else not knowing what the future is going to be, Jones said.

"It's very difficult for us to make an offer when we don't know what the system is going to be," Jones said. I'm not saying that it won't happen, but it may be difficult. We want to win next year but we want to win the future."

Clarence E. Hill Jr.
 

cowboyjoe

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Just CHILL: No franchise tag for Miles Austin and possibly no long term deal
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Clarence Hill

There will be no franchise tag and possibly no long-term deal for breakout receiver Miles Austin, according to Cowboys vice president Stephen Jones.

While keeping Austin in Dallas is one of the team's top priorities of the off season, Jones shot down any thoughts of the Cowboys putting the franchise tag on the restricted free agent to help ensure he remains with the Cowboys.

A franchise tag would cost the Cowboys a $9.521 million salary for next year and require two first round picks as compensation if another team signed him to a long deal. However, Jones said there no reason to do that when the highest restricted free agent tender of $3.168 million with a first- and third-round draft pick compensation will do.

"We don't need to use the franchise tag," Jones said. "How many times have seen another team give up a one and a three?"

The strategy seems tenuous considering Austin's sensational season and the number of teams, including the Miami Dolphins and former Cowboys coach Bill Parcells, looking for a No. 1 receiver.
But the Cowboys have the right to match any offer and Jones reiterated as owner Jerry Jones did on the radio on Tuesday that they don't plan on letting Austin go anywhere.

"We're just not going to have Miles Austin any place but with the Dallas Cowboys," owner Jerry Jones said on 103.3 FM ESPN radio.

Jerry Jones has said on a number of occasions since the end of the season that he would like to sign Austin to a long-term deal. Stephen Jones wants the same thing. However, he expressed doubts about that being a realistic possibility in the current labor labor situation.

With no collective bargaining agreement in place between the owners and players, 2010 will be an uncapped year.

Stephen Jones said problem is that they don't know what the longterm ramifications are regarding the salary cap. He expects a deal to be in place at some point. But as of now its hard to make a long-term offer to Austin or anyone else not knowing what the future is going to be, Jones said.

"It's very difficult for us to make an offer when we don't know what the system is going to be," Jones said. I'm not saying that it won't happen, but it may be difficult. We want to win next year but we want to win the future."

Clarence E. Hill Jr.
 

Givincer

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How often do you see someone give up a one and a three... Ugh. :lmao2:
 

SDogo

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No team is going to give up a 1 and 3 for Austin. Relax. Jerry and Stephen are doing the right thing. You will see more then a few teams open their wallets then scramble when a new labor deal is made.
 

dbair1967

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SDogo;3283095 said:
No team is going to give up a 1 and 3 for Austin. Relax. Jerry and Stephen are doing the right thing. You will see more then a few teams open their wallets then scramble when a new labor deal is made.

I dont think thats absolutely true. If somebody drafting in the 2nd half, especially late in round 1 really needs a WR and feels that Austin is head and shoulders better than anyone they could select (and he would be) I think they'd consider it.

Just because they make an offer, doesnt mean we'd lose him though. I think Jones would match just about any offer for Austin.
 

SDogo

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dbair1967;3283115 said:
I dont think thats absolutely true. If somebody drafting in the 2nd half, especially late in round 1 really needs a WR and feels that Austin is head and shoulders better than anyone they could select (and he would be) I think they'd consider it.

Just because they make an offer, doesnt mean we'd lose him though. I think Jones would match just about any offer for Austin.

I disagree with the first part but your second point is key. Dallas would get a chance to match anything a team offered him and probably still come out with the better end of the deal.

Bottom line either way, Austin is going nowhere
 

TheCount

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dbair1967;3283115 said:
I dont think thats absolutely true. If somebody drafting in the 2nd half, especially late in round 1 really needs a WR and feels that Austin is head and shoulders better than anyone they could select (and he would be) I think they'd consider it.

Just because they make an offer, doesnt mean we'd lose him though. I think Jones would match just about any offer for Austin.

Yeah, I think being able to match is the key. The teams at the bottom of the 1st round don't really seem to have WR needs worth giving up two high picks for anyway.
 

johnnyd

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SDogo;3283120 said:
I disagree with the first part but your second point is key. Dallas would get a chance to match anything a team offered him and probably still come out with the better end of the deal.

Bottom line either way, Austin is going nowhere

this has got poison pill written all over it . hope im wrong . but a 1 and 3 for austin would be a steal for some team .
 

Chief

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Givincer;3283079 said:
How often do you see someone give up a one and a three... Ugh. :lmao2:

No kidding.

:lmao2:

Not only Roy, but Jerry gave up two No. 1s for Galloway, too.

Austin may turn out to be better than both of those guys combined.
 

TNCowboy

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TheCount;3283122 said:
Yeah, I think being able to match is the key. .
I doubt anyone will give up a 1 & 3 (the pool of those willing to do that sort of thing shrinks considerably Jerry Jones isn't in it), but if they do, they could easily make it impossible for Dallas to match.
 

Sb or Bust

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TheCount;3283122 said:
Yeah, I think being able to match is the key. The teams at the bottom of the 1st round don't really seem to have WR needs worth giving up two high picks for anyway.

Yeah, I do not see the Ravens, Chargers, or Jets needing a number 1 WR or willing to trade a mid 20 pick and a 3rd for Austin. Seeing how they already have All-pros at WR.
 

viman96

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They recently signed Ware to a long term deal and they knew about the uncapped year coming up. And the Cowboys gave up a 1st and 3rd for a #1 WR.
 

Eldorado

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That's painfully ironic that Jerry would say "How often do you see someone giving up a 1 and a 3".
 

Chief

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Eldorado;3283176 said:
That's painfully ironic that Jerry would say "How often do you see someone giving up a 1 and a 3".

I think Stephen said it, which is even more surprising.

Short memories at Valley Ranch.
 

TheSport78

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SDogo;3283095 said:
No team is going to give up a 1 and 3 for Austin. Relax. Jerry and Stephen are doing the right thing. You will see more then a few teams open their wallets then scramble when a new labor deal is made.

I disagree. What if there's a team like the Baltimore Ravens with the #25 pick in the 1st round? There is not a better WR than Miles Austin at #25. If I were a Ravens fan I would have no problem giving up a low 1st and low 3rd for Miles Austin. Jerry and Stephen are really pushing it right now.
 

superonyx

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TheSport78;3283185 said:
I disagree. What if there's a team like the Baltimore Ravens with the #25 pick in the 1st round? There is not a better WR than Miles Austin at #25. If I were a Ravens fan I would have no problem giving up a low 1st and low 3rd for Miles Austin. Jerry and Stephen are really pushing it right now.

I agree. I am not comfortable with dallas assuming no one will give a 1 and 3 for a receiver. They also said they dont see giving Austin a long term contract with the labor issues. So they what is left? They didnt want to franchise him and pay him 9 million. What are they hoping to do? Get him to sign a 2 year deal with no signing bonus at a minimum contract?
 

Eskimo

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The Cowboys FO proves once again how clueless they are at managing risk. There is little to be gained from the 1st and 3rd tender over the franchise designation. Any savings are immaterial from a product on the field point of view as there is no salary cap this year and there will be no forward carriage of any salary cap implications on a 1-year contract.

Jerry is just being cheap here. He figures it is okay to underpay Miles since RW11 is overpaid.

I rate it at 50% the chance that some team tries to poison pill Jerry and us ending up with one low first rounder and one low third rounder in the end which is a reasonable price to pay a young Pro Bowl WR.

It would be worth it to lose Miles if it meant Jerry finally realized he is not a good GM and brought in a proper personnel guy to run the show but that won't happen either so the point is moot.
 

Sb or Bust

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If another team signs Austin then Jerry will get what he deserves. You just do not expose very good players to free agency like that. I hope we sign him long term but exposing him is risky. On the bright side if the Ravens or Jets sign him we might be able to get both O-line, and ballhawk safety in 1st then draft a Wr like Gilyard in the later rounds.
 
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