Could The Dolphins Explore Trading Taylor (Cowboys Mentioned)

Messages
27,093
Reaction score
0
http://www.miamiherald.com/1190/story/241141.html

Time to consider trading Jason Taylor?

Posted on Mon, Sep. 17, 2007

Digg del.icio.us AIM reprint print email

BY ARMANDO SALGUERO

asalguero@MiamiHerald.com

The Dolphins obviously can't give away Jason Taylor as if he was a discarded suit in an outlet store. So anything less than a first-round pick wouldn't make it worthwhile for Miami.

The NFL trade deadline is Oct. 16 and that fact is important now only because the Dolphins should use the next four weeks to do the difficult thing and trade Jason Taylor.

The idea of Miami trading its best player is neither new nor born of desperation, but rather, it is a logical move that demands serious thought, a move any straight-thinking NFL man would consider.

Don Shula, only the winningest coach in NFL history, not only considered a similar move years ago, but nearly took the step when he almost traded Dan Marino to the Oakland Raiders. The reason Marino didn't play his final decade in silver and black is because Shula and Oakland owner Al Davis came to an agreement on the trade and then Shula increased the ante not once but twice, basically forcing Davis to walk away from the clearly lopsided deal.

But Shula's idea at the time is one the Dolphins should be seriously pondering now. The coach wanted to take the only marketable player he had on his roster and exchange him for multiple draft picks that could help him rebuild an aging, fading franchise.

Shula rescued those Dolphins of the early 1990s without having to make that blockbuster trade, but now Coach Cam Cameron and General Manager Randy Mueller face a similar scenario.

The Dolphins, barring an unexpected rebound, are several years and multiple solid drafts away from being a contending team. The first two games this season have proven Miami cannot run the ball and cannot stop the run, which in football parlance means the Dolphins have zero chance to win many games.

So it simply makes sense for this team to dangle Taylor between now and Oct. 16, or, failing that, try to trade the face of their defense after this season. It is not only the smart thing, but also the right thing to do.
It is the smart thing because somewhere out there, among the list of teams that count themselves one star pass-rusher from Super Bowl contention, Taylor's value is likely high enough to make a trade not only intriguing, but inviting.

The Dolphins obviously can't give away Taylor as if he was a discarded suit in an outlet store. So anything less than a first-round pick wouldn't make it worthwhile for Miami. It's a steep price but perhaps the Broncos, Colts, Seahawks, Cowboys, or even the Patriots, could be enticed into giving up such a pick for the 2006 NFL Defensive Player of the Year.

Sound crazy? The Patriots yielded a second and seventh round pick to the Dolphins for Wes Welker. That proves the lure of a championship, or another championship in the case of the Colts and Patriots, can be so hypnotic as to make even conservative personnel men consider the improbable.

There are, as with everything in the NFL, salary cap implications. And teams would have to believe Taylor, at 33, is not on such a precipitous decline that the trade would bring embarrassment. But there are ways to manage the cap, and a re-energized Taylor is likely to be a good player at least through the end of his current contract in 2009.

So it not only makes sense to try, it borders on the irresponsible if the Dolphins don't. It also would be crazy if Taylor didn't consider making the request himself.

The truth is he will never win a Super Bowl ring in Miami. The Dolphins are no closer to being a championship team today than they were five years ago when Taylor was younger and ascending.

The passing of those five years have brought the Dolphins zero playoff berths despite the presence of a proud defense. Taylor should be mature enough to recognize that the defense isn't too proud anymore as it gives up rushing yards in first-down chunks.

So that should suggest to Taylor his future in Miami could bear an uncanny, uncomfortable resemblance to Marino's final years about a decade ago.
Marino's final years were a struggle as he clashed with a new coach who was focused on fixing the long-broken defense. Taylor's final years promise much of the same, as his delicate relationship with Cameron could become a struggle as the new coach focuses on his offense.

So it would be in Taylor's best interest to think about playing somewhere else, with a team not in need of major reconstruction, where he is the final piece of a now-complete puzzle instead of the cornerstone of a huge rebuilding project.

The alternative is Taylor will be thought of in the same light as Marino -- gifted superstars that played their entire careers with a team that wasted their skills.
Armando Salguero can be heard every weeknight 7-8 p.m. on 790 The Ticket.
 

ajk23az

Through Pain Comes Clarity
Messages
7,953
Reaction score
422
Taylor had one hell of a year last year but Champ shoulda been DPOY. Taylor is DEFINATELY on the downside of his career, but also is better than our ends.
 

ABQCOWBOY

Regular Joe....
Messages
58,929
Reaction score
27,716
air0208;1654053 said:
Taylor had one hell of a year last year but Champ shoulda been DPOY. Taylor is DEFINATELY on the downside of his career, but also is better than our ends.


He wouldn't play end for us. He'd likely play OLB. I wouldn't do this for a 1st. That's stupid IMO.
 

YosemiteSam

Unfriendly and Aloof!
Messages
45,858
Reaction score
22,189
CowboysZone LOYAL Fan
ThreeSportStar80;1654043 said:
The Dolphins obviously can't give away Jason Taylor as if he was a discarded suit in an outlet store. So anything less than a first-round pick wouldn't make it worthwhile for Miami.

This guy is high on crack. Nobody is going to trade a first round draft choice for a 32 year old defensive end and I don't care that he was the DPOY last year. You would possibly be trading a (twelve year+) player for probably only (two) more years of decent play tops. This guy (Taylor) isn't going to be leading a defense at the ripe old age of 35.
 

YosemiteSam

Unfriendly and Aloof!
Messages
45,858
Reaction score
22,189
CowboysZone LOYAL Fan
numnuts23;1654057 said:
I'd give up OUR pick this next year for him.

Whew, for a second there I thought a phsyco was running the Cowboys then I realized what you think means nothing. :laugh1:
 

slick325

Well-Known Member
Messages
9,515
Reaction score
9,343
CowboysZone ULTIMATE Fan
No way! Not even for a 2nd day pick. He's on the wrong side of 30 and Dallas has put tons of money into the OLB positions in the past three years. No thank you despite the fact that he is better than every OLB Dallas has save Ware.
 
Messages
27,093
Reaction score
0
I definitely wouldn't give up a 1st round pick for him... But he would be a heck of a pass rusher to go along with Ware!
 

LeonDixson

Illegitimi non carborundum
Messages
12,299
Reaction score
6,808
ABQCOWBOY;1654058 said:
He wouldn't play end for us. He'd likely play OLB. I wouldn't do this for a 1st. That's stupid IMO.

nyc;1654063 said:
This guy is high on crack. Nobody is going to trade a first round draft choice for a 32 year old defensive end and I don't care that he was the DPOY last year. You would possibly be trading a (twelve year+) player for probably only (two) more years of decent play tops. This guy (Taylor) isn't going to be leading a defense at the ripe old age of 35.

I agree with you guys. A 1st is way to steep.

I'd love to have Taylor, as he's still better than what he showed against us. But never would I give a 1st for him at his age.
 
Messages
27,093
Reaction score
0
McCordsville Cowboy;1654067 said:
If they will take Carpenter for him, why not....

Or even Ellis for him...

I would definitely trade this guy for Taylor regardless of age! I would even throw in a 5th round pick to make it happen.
 

RomoIsBack

Active Member
Messages
1,319
Reaction score
0
air0208;1654053 said:
Taylor had one hell of a year last year but Champ shoulda been DPOY. Taylor is DEFINATELY on the downside of his career, but also is better than our ends.


na i think jason got that by alot dpoy
 

jcollins28

Well-Known Member
Messages
1,656
Reaction score
150
Did this guy write this before or after Tony Romo made Jason Taylor look like a boy trying to play football with a man?
 
Top