I do not fault Dak Prescott or any other professional team sports athlete for their salaries. They do not pay themselves. As I grow older, though, I feel the unilateral, self-sacrificing salary reduction counterpoint as more and more disingenuous.
Financial security is not equal for all earners, regardless of the pro or con argument. Its application diminishes the closer income approaches zero. Apply a hypothetical 50% pay cut to a flat yearly compensation at various income strata:
- Person A: $50 million slashed to $25 million
- Person B: $5 million sliced to $2.5 million
- Person C: $500,000 reduced to $250,000
- Person D: $50,000 cut to $25,000
In the US, approximately 90% of earners earn at or marginally above Person D. Asking them to relate a proposed 50% pay cut to the sacrifices of Persons A, B, and C is not financially conceivable in that sense. The circumstances would be classified as hardships or economically devastating to themselves.
On the other hand, the other 10% can better relate to the hypothetical administered amongst themselves. Even so, wealth is impacted differently as the ball gets kicked higher up that hill. Folks' financial security at the bottom of the hill would shrink far more than those above them.
Frankly, wealth is not a part of the vast majority of people's lives. Those with wealth own various levels of it. The bulk of the people being asked to sympathize equally with the "plight" of a truly wealthy individual is unfair. Most people see it from their financial stability perspective--not from having wealth.
Anyone can go after the person making the money. I prefer going after the person signing the checks. That person does have
absolute control and
should have the necessary budgetary acumen to comprehend the
risk associated with acquiring and retaining players over both the short and long term.
In the end, it is not what Prescott should be willing or unwilling to sacrifice contractually. It all boils down to Jerry Jones doing the actual job as general manager that he gave himself. Excuse makers will say otherwise, but successfully putting a winning, Super Bowl-caliber combination of players and coaches together is his job. If Prescott or Romo or whoever is not the right cog for HIS machine, it's his fault. No one else's. He can get rid of whomever he wants, WHENEVER he wants, as easily as he can keep them.