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Cousins and his contract
#81
Quote: @purplefaithful said:
@JimmyinSD said:
@purplefaithful said:
@medaille said:
I just don’t think it makes sense for the team to address
Cousins contract before the draft.  I
think Cousins has a lot of incentive to get locked up long term prior to the
draft and a lot of the urgency is from his camp.  I think long term plans become a lot more
solid after we figure out how the draft goes and we can give him an extension
later this offseason if we want to.  It
would be negligent for us to not have QB of the future as an option on the
table in the draft, and our plans probably vary based on if we get a QB we feel
like we can work with.  I think what
should happen is that if we draft a QB we really like, we should let Kirk ride
his contract out, and if not we should look at giving him another 2 years
guaranteed and 2 years of low salary with incentives to get it higher if he
wants that and we can get out of if we need to. 
I just don’t think there’s any way to guarantee him big QB money past 2025
as he’d be 38 in 2026. 


If we needed the money to go all in this year, and we needed
to redo his contract to get the money, that’d be one thing, but I just don’t
think we can rebuild this roster that quickly. 
I think we probably have to be looking at 2023 as year to build our
foundation on defense and 2024 as the year to be SB competitive.
At the bold, its intuitive and that might very well end-up the case...

We'll see if they shake things up with FA/Draft. I have no idea if that's how KOC/KAM are viewing things.

As Guru points out, the Vikings may be ok with some extension, but for how long may be at odds with what the KC camp wants. 

$42mm/year seems about right for him. 




42 M per year is right for KC?   Josh Allen is only 43,  Pat Mahomes is 45,  Kirk is no where near the level of player that they are and he is getting old.   I would say, assuming you are going to over pay,  he is worth no more than the 37.5 avg that Carr is shown as getting,  which isnt really even that high since only 60 million is guaranteed so he is essentially playing for about 30 million a year,  which is much more inline with what I said the team could justify for the position given the salaries they have to play KCs supporting cast to over come his short comings.  No QB is perfect,  but the less that they can do on their own ( in Kirks case its his lack of extending plays,  or making plays with his legs )  then the better OL, running game, and receivers they need to compete at a high level.  Kirks elite passing abilities only go so far when he is a virtual statue otherwise.

He wont play for that little,  but the story doesnt change,  so if why keep paying him high money if you wont have the team around him to get to the next level,  trade him or let him play it out and move on.
I was recalling Danny Dimes signing for $41mm so thats where I came-up with the $42
my thought on that are just because other franchises are willing to over pay for a QB,  doesnt mean its good for the team.  KAM is not tied to KC,  yet.  If he were to desperately give in and extend KC to a over valued contract IMO that then makes it his problem,  and if that hinders team growth as a result,  then I would say his future would be at risk. ... BUT,   I dont mind if the team takes a step or two back to go foward.  Some fans lose their shit and would be calling for heads to roll so,  while I personally dont understand how a person would want to continue to hitch the team to a player that IMO wont get it done,  I do undertand some fans desire to see the team do it,  "good enough" is good enough for some,  I personally am to the point where I dont give a shit about making the playoffs,  I want to be watching a team all season that I think has a legit shot at WINNING the playoffs. 
Reply

#82


One of the many difficult negotiations facing the Vikings this offseason involves Cousins. He has one year remaining on his contract. In a perfect world, he would agree to a restructured deal that frees up money under the salary cap so the Vikings can try to win big over the next few years with him as their starter.
Cousins could play it the way Tom Brady did in New England, and value winning over maximizing his salary. Given that he's made $201 million in his NFL career, he could afford to do so.
He is also represented by agents, and a member of a union, so it may be unrealistic to expect him to leave any money on the table.
What is certain is that Cousins is the best he's ever been, he's been remarkably durable, the Vikings have no succession plan, and a lot of teams that thought they could win by changing quarterbacks proved that it's not as easy as it looks. 
Reminders of this, and more difficulties, were everywhere last fall:
Deshaun Watson stunk. 
Aaron Rodgers had his worst season ever. 
Russell Wilson embarrassed himself. 
Derek Carr got himself cut.
Mac Jones regressed. 
Tom Brady eased toward retirement. 
Carson Wentz wentzed. 
Dak Prescott threw the ball to the other team. 
Baker Mayfield continued to interrupt his acting career with bad passes.
Matt Ryan aged like boxed wine. 
Matthew Stafford played like a Lion. 
Kyler Murray played like a teenager.
Today's question: How many quarterbacks would the Vikings feel good trading Cousins for, one-for-one?
Definitely:
1. Patrick Mahomes, who might be the greatest ever.
2. Joe Burrow. An ideal blend of skill and leadership.
3. Josh Allen. Had his struggles in 2022, but remains a top franchise quarterback.
4. Jalen Hurts. Might have been the NFL MVP had he remained healthy throughout the season.
5. Justin Herbert. Could be the next big thing, if the Chargers can surround him with a quality team.
Maybe:
1. Lamar Jackson is a former league MVP who has carried what has often been a nondescript team, but injuries and stalled negotiations have made him a risk.
2. Trevor Lawrence is beginning to fulfill his promise. A prototype in many ways, he's younger and more talented and might be a good bet.
3. Tua Tagovailoa had a strong statistical showing last season, but is small and hasn't been as durable as Cousins.
4. Rodgers is coming off a bad season, has become reclusive during offseasons, didn't work with his young teammates last summer and makes a massive amount of money. He's one of the greatest to ever play the position, but is there reason to believe he'll regain his form?
Nope:
1. Wentz is a lousy NFL quarterback.
2. Murray isn't trustworthy, as some of his teammates have said or hinted.
3. Jared Goff has played in a Super Bowl and helped elevate the Lions last year, but he's not better than Cousins, at least not at the moment.
4. Prescott damaged his stock with damaging interceptions last year when his team had a chance to make a run.
5. Stafford looked like he was playing for the Lions again last year.
6. Justin Fields may be a wonderful quarterback, but we won't know for sure until his team gives him an offense to work with and stops relying on his remarkable running ability.
7. Brock Purdy and Trey Lance could be great but have much to prove.
If Rodgers leaves the division, the Vikings will have the best quarterback in the NFC North for the first time in decades.
If Rodgers doesn't leave the division, the Vikings still might have the best quarterback in the NFC North. That's how much the league's quarterback rankings have changed in the last seven months.
https://www.startribune.com/kirk-cousins-minnesota-vikings-quarterback-contract-aaron-rodgers-tom-brady-jim-souhan/600258459/

Reply

#83
Quote: @JimmyinSD said:
@purplefaithful said:
@medaille said:
I just don’t think it makes sense for the team to address
Cousins contract before the draft.  I
think Cousins has a lot of incentive to get locked up long term prior to the
draft and a lot of the urgency is from his camp.  I think long term plans become a lot more
solid after we figure out how the draft goes and we can give him an extension
later this offseason if we want to.  It
would be negligent for us to not have QB of the future as an option on the
table in the draft, and our plans probably vary based on if we get a QB we feel
like we can work with.  I think what
should happen is that if we draft a QB we really like, we should let Kirk ride
his contract out, and if not we should look at giving him another 2 years
guaranteed and 2 years of low salary with incentives to get it higher if he
wants that and we can get out of if we need to. 
I just don’t think there’s any way to guarantee him big QB money past 2025
as he’d be 38 in 2026. 


If we needed the money to go all in this year, and we needed
to redo his contract to get the money, that’d be one thing, but I just don’t
think we can rebuild this roster that quickly. 
I think we probably have to be looking at 2023 as year to build our
foundation on defense and 2024 as the year to be SB competitive.
At the bold, its intuitive and that might very well end-up the case...

We'll see if they shake things up with FA/Draft. I have no idea if that's how KOC/KAM are viewing things.

As Guru points out, the Vikings may be ok with some extension, but for how long may be at odds with what the KC camp wants. 

$42mm/year seems about right for him. 




42 M per year is right for KC?   Josh Allen is only 43,  Pat Mahomes is 45,  Kirk is no where near the level of player that they are and he is getting old.   I would say, assuming you are going to over pay,  he is worth no more than the 37.5 avg that Carr is shown as getting,  which isnt really even that high since only 60 million is guaranteed so he is essentially playing for about 30 million a year,  which is much more inline with what I said the team could justify for the position given the salaries they have to play KCs supporting cast to over come his short comings.  No QB is perfect,  but the less that they can do on their own ( in Kirks case its his lack of extending plays,  or making plays with his legs )  then the better OL, running game, and receivers they need to compete at a high level.  Kirks elite passing abilities only go so far when he is a virtual statue otherwise.

He wont play for that little,  but the story doesnt change,  so if why keep paying him high money if you wont have the team around him to get to the next level,  trade him or let him play it out and move on.
Allen entered the NFL in 2018. Same year Cousins came to Minnesota. Over that time....

Josh Allen: 18,397, 138 TDs, 60 INTs, 92.2 Rating, comebacks led by QB=11, game winning drives=15
Kirk Cousins: 20,934, 153 TDs, 50 INTs, 101.6, comebacks led by QB=14, game winning drives=16
Even if you’re nice and throw out Allen’s rookie year because he started slow, Cousins still wins. Allen is younger and a better runner, I'll give you that. But the level to which Viking fans under-appreciate their QB is at a comical level. 

Reply

#84
Quote: @MaroonBells said:
@JimmyinSD said:
@purplefaithful said:
@medaille said:
I just don’t think it makes sense for the team to address
Cousins contract before the draft.  I
think Cousins has a lot of incentive to get locked up long term prior to the
draft and a lot of the urgency is from his camp.  I think long term plans become a lot more
solid after we figure out how the draft goes and we can give him an extension
later this offseason if we want to.  It
would be negligent for us to not have QB of the future as an option on the
table in the draft, and our plans probably vary based on if we get a QB we feel
like we can work with.  I think what
should happen is that if we draft a QB we really like, we should let Kirk ride
his contract out, and if not we should look at giving him another 2 years
guaranteed and 2 years of low salary with incentives to get it higher if he
wants that and we can get out of if we need to. 
I just don’t think there’s any way to guarantee him big QB money past 2025
as he’d be 38 in 2026. 


If we needed the money to go all in this year, and we needed
to redo his contract to get the money, that’d be one thing, but I just don’t
think we can rebuild this roster that quickly. 
I think we probably have to be looking at 2023 as year to build our
foundation on defense and 2024 as the year to be SB competitive.
At the bold, its intuitive and that might very well end-up the case...

We'll see if they shake things up with FA/Draft. I have no idea if that's how KOC/KAM are viewing things.

As Guru points out, the Vikings may be ok with some extension, but for how long may be at odds with what the KC camp wants. 

$42mm/year seems about right for him. 




42 M per year is right for KC?   Josh Allen is only 43,  Pat Mahomes is 45,  Kirk is no where near the level of player that they are and he is getting old.   I would say, assuming you are going to over pay,  he is worth no more than the 37.5 avg that Carr is shown as getting,  which isnt really even that high since only 60 million is guaranteed so he is essentially playing for about 30 million a year,  which is much more inline with what I said the team could justify for the position given the salaries they have to play KCs supporting cast to over come his short comings.  No QB is perfect,  but the less that they can do on their own ( in Kirks case its his lack of extending plays,  or making plays with his legs )  then the better OL, running game, and receivers they need to compete at a high level.  Kirks elite passing abilities only go so far when he is a virtual statue otherwise.

He wont play for that little,  but the story doesnt change,  so if why keep paying him high money if you wont have the team around him to get to the next level,  trade him or let him play it out and move on.
Allen entered the NFL in 2018. Same year Cousins came to Minnesota. Over that time....

Josh Allen: 18,397, 138 TDs, 60 INTs, 92.2 Rating, comebacks led by QB=11, game winning drives=15
Kirk Cousins: 20,934, 153 TDs, 50 INTs, 101.6, comebacks led by QB=14, game winning drives=16
Even if you’re nice and throw out Allen’s rookie year because he started slow, Cousins still wins. Allen is younger and a better runner, I'll give you that. But the level to which Viking fans under-appreciate their QB is at a comical level. 

you are starting a team tomorrow,  for the record,  do you take Kirk Cousins @ 42 million,  or Josh Allen @ 43 million?   Personally I think 43 is to much for Allen, but he may not have reached his ceiling yet,  pretty sure we know what we are going to get from KC.
Reply

#85
Quote: @JimmyinSD said:
@MaroonBells said:
@JimmyinSD said:
@purplefaithful said:
@medaille said:
I just don’t think it makes sense for the team to address
Cousins contract before the draft.  I
think Cousins has a lot of incentive to get locked up long term prior to the
draft and a lot of the urgency is from his camp.  I think long term plans become a lot more
solid after we figure out how the draft goes and we can give him an extension
later this offseason if we want to.  It
would be negligent for us to not have QB of the future as an option on the
table in the draft, and our plans probably vary based on if we get a QB we feel
like we can work with.  I think what
should happen is that if we draft a QB we really like, we should let Kirk ride
his contract out, and if not we should look at giving him another 2 years
guaranteed and 2 years of low salary with incentives to get it higher if he
wants that and we can get out of if we need to. 
I just don’t think there’s any way to guarantee him big QB money past 2025
as he’d be 38 in 2026. 


If we needed the money to go all in this year, and we needed
to redo his contract to get the money, that’d be one thing, but I just don’t
think we can rebuild this roster that quickly. 
I think we probably have to be looking at 2023 as year to build our
foundation on defense and 2024 as the year to be SB competitive.
At the bold, its intuitive and that might very well end-up the case...

We'll see if they shake things up with FA/Draft. I have no idea if that's how KOC/KAM are viewing things.

As Guru points out, the Vikings may be ok with some extension, but for how long may be at odds with what the KC camp wants. 

$42mm/year seems about right for him. 




42 M per year is right for KC?   Josh Allen is only 43,  Pat Mahomes is 45,  Kirk is no where near the level of player that they are and he is getting old.   I would say, assuming you are going to over pay,  he is worth no more than the 37.5 avg that Carr is shown as getting,  which isnt really even that high since only 60 million is guaranteed so he is essentially playing for about 30 million a year,  which is much more inline with what I said the team could justify for the position given the salaries they have to play KCs supporting cast to over come his short comings.  No QB is perfect,  but the less that they can do on their own ( in Kirks case its his lack of extending plays,  or making plays with his legs )  then the better OL, running game, and receivers they need to compete at a high level.  Kirks elite passing abilities only go so far when he is a virtual statue otherwise.

He wont play for that little,  but the story doesnt change,  so if why keep paying him high money if you wont have the team around him to get to the next level,  trade him or let him play it out and move on.
Allen entered the NFL in 2018. Same year Cousins came to Minnesota. Over that time....

Josh Allen: 18,397, 138 TDs, 60 INTs, 92.2 Rating, comebacks led by QB=11, game winning drives=15
Kirk Cousins: 20,934, 153 TDs, 50 INTs, 101.6, comebacks led by QB=14, game winning drives=16
Even if you’re nice and throw out Allen’s rookie year because he started slow, Cousins still wins. Allen is younger and a better runner, I'll give you that. But the level to which Viking fans under-appreciate their QB is at a comical level. 

you are starting a team tomorrow,  for the record,  do you take Kirk Cousins @ 42 million,  or Josh Allen @ 43 million?   Personally I think 43 is to much for Allen, but he may not have reached his ceiling yet,  pretty sure we know what we are going to get from KC.
I take Allen every day and twice on Sunday. He's younger, more mobile and he's a weapon on the ground. But to say that Cousins is "nowhere near" the level of Allen is just not true. As a passer, Cousins is actually better. 

My fear is that we're going to move on from our very good QB and become the Commanders, who ditched their very good QB, and have since started 14 different QBs in 5 years. 

I don't think we're that stupid though. I think we play hardball with KC, at least until the draft, then TRY to draft a QB we like. If we don't get one, we give Kirk what he wants. If we do, we let the '23 season determine the next move. 
Reply

#86
Quote: @MaroonBells said:
@JimmyinSD said:
@MaroonBells said:
@JimmyinSD said:
@purplefaithful said:
@medaille said:
I just don’t think it makes sense for the team to address
Cousins contract before the draft.  I
think Cousins has a lot of incentive to get locked up long term prior to the
draft and a lot of the urgency is from his camp.  I think long term plans become a lot more
solid after we figure out how the draft goes and we can give him an extension
later this offseason if we want to.  It
would be negligent for us to not have QB of the future as an option on the
table in the draft, and our plans probably vary based on if we get a QB we feel
like we can work with.  I think what
should happen is that if we draft a QB we really like, we should let Kirk ride
his contract out, and if not we should look at giving him another 2 years
guaranteed and 2 years of low salary with incentives to get it higher if he
wants that and we can get out of if we need to. 
I just don’t think there’s any way to guarantee him big QB money past 2025
as he’d be 38 in 2026. 


If we needed the money to go all in this year, and we needed
to redo his contract to get the money, that’d be one thing, but I just don’t
think we can rebuild this roster that quickly. 
I think we probably have to be looking at 2023 as year to build our
foundation on defense and 2024 as the year to be SB competitive.
At the bold, its intuitive and that might very well end-up the case...

We'll see if they shake things up with FA/Draft. I have no idea if that's how KOC/KAM are viewing things.

As Guru points out, the Vikings may be ok with some extension, but for how long may be at odds with what the KC camp wants. 

$42mm/year seems about right for him. 




42 M per year is right for KC?   Josh Allen is only 43,  Pat Mahomes is 45,  Kirk is no where near the level of player that they are and he is getting old.   I would say, assuming you are going to over pay,  he is worth no more than the 37.5 avg that Carr is shown as getting,  which isnt really even that high since only 60 million is guaranteed so he is essentially playing for about 30 million a year,  which is much more inline with what I said the team could justify for the position given the salaries they have to play KCs supporting cast to over come his short comings.  No QB is perfect,  but the less that they can do on their own ( in Kirks case its his lack of extending plays,  or making plays with his legs )  then the better OL, running game, and receivers they need to compete at a high level.  Kirks elite passing abilities only go so far when he is a virtual statue otherwise.

He wont play for that little,  but the story doesnt change,  so if why keep paying him high money if you wont have the team around him to get to the next level,  trade him or let him play it out and move on.
Allen entered the NFL in 2018. Same year Cousins came to Minnesota. Over that time....

Josh Allen: 18,397, 138 TDs, 60 INTs, 92.2 Rating, comebacks led by QB=11, game winning drives=15
Kirk Cousins: 20,934, 153 TDs, 50 INTs, 101.6, comebacks led by QB=14, game winning drives=16
Even if you’re nice and throw out Allen’s rookie year because he started slow, Cousins still wins. Allen is younger and a better runner, I'll give you that. But the level to which Viking fans under-appreciate their QB is at a comical level. 

you are starting a team tomorrow,  for the record,  do you take Kirk Cousins @ 42 million,  or Josh Allen @ 43 million?   Personally I think 43 is to much for Allen, but he may not have reached his ceiling yet,  pretty sure we know what we are going to get from KC.
I take Allen every day and twice on Sunday. He's younger, more mobile and he's a weapon on the ground. But to say that Cousins is "nowhere near" the level of Allen is just not true. As a passer, Cousins is actually better. 

My fear is that we're going to move on from our very good QB and become the Commanders, who ditched their very good QB, and have since have started 14 different QBs in 5 years. 

I don't think we're that stupid though. I think we play hardball with KC, at least until the draft, then TRY to draft a QB we like. If we don't get one, we give Kirk what he wants. If we do, we let the '23 season determine the next move. 
Oh we've been there and done that...No encore's necessary:

Culpepper
Frerotte
Johnson
Bollinger
Holcomb
Tarvaris J
Favre
Tarvaris
Webb
Ponder
McNabb
Castle
Freeman
Teddy
Bradford
Hill
Keenum
Bradford
Cousins





Reply

#87
Quote: @purplefaithful said:


One of the many difficult negotiations facing the Vikings this offseason involves Cousins. He has one year remaining on his contract. In a perfect world, he would agree to a restructured deal that frees up money under the salary cap so the Vikings can try to win big over the next few years with him as their starter.
Cousins could play it the way Tom Brady did in New England, and value winning over maximizing his salary. Given that he's made $201 million in his NFL career, he could afford to do so.
He is also represented by agents, and a member of a union, so it may be unrealistic to expect him to leave any money on the table.
What is certain is that Cousins is the best he's ever been, he's been remarkably durable, the Vikings have no succession plan, and a lot of teams that thought they could win by changing quarterbacks proved that it's not as easy as it looks. 
Reminders of this, and more difficulties, were everywhere last fall:
Deshaun Watson stunk. 
Aaron Rodgers had his worst season ever. 
Russell Wilson embarrassed himself. 
Derek Carr got himself cut.
Mac Jones regressed. 
Tom Brady eased toward retirement. 
Carson Wentz wentzed. 
Dak Prescott threw the ball to the other team. 
Baker Mayfield continued to interrupt his acting career with bad passes.
Matt Ryan aged like boxed wine. 
Matthew Stafford played like a Lion. 
Kyler Murray played like a teenager.
Today's question: How many quarterbacks would the Vikings feel good trading Cousins for, one-for-one?
Definitely:
1. Patrick Mahomes, who might be the greatest ever.
2. Joe Burrow. An ideal blend of skill and leadership.
3. Josh Allen. Had his struggles in 2022, but remains a top franchise quarterback.
4. Jalen Hurts. Might have been the NFL MVP had he remained healthy throughout the season.
5. Justin Herbert. Could be the next big thing, if the Chargers can surround him with a quality team.
Maybe:
1. Lamar Jackson is a former league MVP who has carried what has often been a nondescript team, but injuries and stalled negotiations have made him a risk.
2. Trevor Lawrence is beginning to fulfill his promise. A prototype in many ways, he's younger and more talented and might be a good bet.
3. Tua Tagovailoa had a strong statistical showing last season, but is small and hasn't been as durable as Cousins.
4. Rodgers is coming off a bad season, has become reclusive during offseasons, didn't work with his young teammates last summer and makes a massive amount of money. He's one of the greatest to ever play the position, but is there reason to believe he'll regain his form?
Nope:
1. Wentz is a lousy NFL quarterback.
2. Murray isn't trustworthy, as some of his teammates have said or hinted.
3. Jared Goff has played in a Super Bowl and helped elevate the Lions last year, but he's not better than Cousins, at least not at the moment.
4. Prescott damaged his stock with damaging interceptions last year when his team had a chance to make a run.
5. Stafford looked like he was playing for the Lions again last year.
6. Justin Fields may be a wonderful quarterback, but we won't know for sure until his team gives him an offense to work with and stops relying on his remarkable running ability.
7. Brock Purdy and Trey Lance could be great but have much to prove.
If Rodgers leaves the division, the Vikings will have the best quarterback in the NFC North for the first time in decades.
If Rodgers doesn't leave the division, the Vikings still might have the best quarterback in the NFC North. That's how much the league's quarterback rankings have changed in the last seven months.
https://www.startribune.com/kirk-cousins-minnesota-vikings-quarterback-contract-aaron-rodgers-tom-brady-jim-souhan/600258459/
Been thinking a lot about this recently. Remember all those tweets and posts and radio commentary about QBs who were supposedly "better than" Cousins? You can probably take half of them off now. Seems every year another couple drop below...while KIrk remains....steady, consistent, reliable, durable, clutch and cheap (just seeing if Jimmy's paying attention).

Cheaper than Daniel Stephen Dimes III anyway. Cheaper than 17 other QBs in total value. Cheaper than 10 other QBs in avg per season. Let's pay the man and get him up where he belongs. 
Reply

#88
Quote: @purplefaithful said:
@MaroonBells said:
@JimmyinSD said:
@MaroonBells said:
@JimmyinSD said:
@purplefaithful said:
@medaille said:
I just don’t think it makes sense for the team to address
Cousins contract before the draft.  I
think Cousins has a lot of incentive to get locked up long term prior to the
draft and a lot of the urgency is from his camp.  I think long term plans become a lot more
solid after we figure out how the draft goes and we can give him an extension
later this offseason if we want to.  It
would be negligent for us to not have QB of the future as an option on the
table in the draft, and our plans probably vary based on if we get a QB we feel
like we can work with.  I think what
should happen is that if we draft a QB we really like, we should let Kirk ride
his contract out, and if not we should look at giving him another 2 years
guaranteed and 2 years of low salary with incentives to get it higher if he
wants that and we can get out of if we need to. 
I just don’t think there’s any way to guarantee him big QB money past 2025
as he’d be 38 in 2026. 


If we needed the money to go all in this year, and we needed
to redo his contract to get the money, that’d be one thing, but I just don’t
think we can rebuild this roster that quickly. 
I think we probably have to be looking at 2023 as year to build our
foundation on defense and 2024 as the year to be SB competitive.
At the bold, its intuitive and that might very well end-up the case...

We'll see if they shake things up with FA/Draft. I have no idea if that's how KOC/KAM are viewing things.

As Guru points out, the Vikings may be ok with some extension, but for how long may be at odds with what the KC camp wants. 

$42mm/year seems about right for him. 




42 M per year is right for KC?   Josh Allen is only 43,  Pat Mahomes is 45,  Kirk is no where near the level of player that they are and he is getting old.   I would say, assuming you are going to over pay,  he is worth no more than the 37.5 avg that Carr is shown as getting,  which isnt really even that high since only 60 million is guaranteed so he is essentially playing for about 30 million a year,  which is much more inline with what I said the team could justify for the position given the salaries they have to play KCs supporting cast to over come his short comings.  No QB is perfect,  but the less that they can do on their own ( in Kirks case its his lack of extending plays,  or making plays with his legs )  then the better OL, running game, and receivers they need to compete at a high level.  Kirks elite passing abilities only go so far when he is a virtual statue otherwise.

He wont play for that little,  but the story doesnt change,  so if why keep paying him high money if you wont have the team around him to get to the next level,  trade him or let him play it out and move on.
Allen entered the NFL in 2018. Same year Cousins came to Minnesota. Over that time....

Josh Allen: 18,397, 138 TDs, 60 INTs, 92.2 Rating, comebacks led by QB=11, game winning drives=15
Kirk Cousins: 20,934, 153 TDs, 50 INTs, 101.6, comebacks led by QB=14, game winning drives=16
Even if you’re nice and throw out Allen’s rookie year because he started slow, Cousins still wins. Allen is younger and a better runner, I'll give you that. But the level to which Viking fans under-appreciate their QB is at a comical level. 

you are starting a team tomorrow,  for the record,  do you take Kirk Cousins @ 42 million,  or Josh Allen @ 43 million?   Personally I think 43 is to much for Allen, but he may not have reached his ceiling yet,  pretty sure we know what we are going to get from KC.
I take Allen every day and twice on Sunday. He's younger, more mobile and he's a weapon on the ground. But to say that Cousins is "nowhere near" the level of Allen is just not true. As a passer, Cousins is actually better. 

My fear is that we're going to move on from our very good QB and become the Commanders, who ditched their very good QB, and have since have started 14 different QBs in 5 years. 

I don't think we're that stupid though. I think we play hardball with KC, at least until the draft, then TRY to draft a QB we like. If we don't get one, we give Kirk what he wants. If we do, we let the '23 season determine the next move. 
Oh we've been there and done that...No encore's necessary:

Culpepper
Frerotte
Johnson
Bollinger
Holcomb
Tarvaris J
Favre
Tarvaris
Webb
Ponder
McNabb
Castle
Freeman
Teddy
Bradford
Hill
Keenum
Bradford
Cousins





So so true. We have our own pretty impressive streak, don't we? So do the Bears, the Browns, the Commies, the Jets, the Lions, etc. My friend Barr will remember this (if he ever shows up again), but when there was a big debate about whether or not we should extend Culpepper back in 2003 (10 years, 70M, btw). My point then is similar to what it is now. If you have a QB you can win with, you keep him. My warning was all the QBs in Lions history. A list of something like 30 QBs in 30 years, from Landry to Hipple to Peete to Mitchell, Batch and Harrington, none of whom amounted to anything. Now we have our own pretty sizable list....are we about to start a new one?
Reply

#89
Quote: @MaroonBells said:
@JimmyinSD said:
@MaroonBells said:
@JimmyinSD said:
@purplefaithful said:
@medaille said:
I just don’t think it makes sense for the team to address
Cousins contract before the draft.  I
think Cousins has a lot of incentive to get locked up long term prior to the
draft and a lot of the urgency is from his camp.  I think long term plans become a lot more
solid after we figure out how the draft goes and we can give him an extension
later this offseason if we want to.  It
would be negligent for us to not have QB of the future as an option on the
table in the draft, and our plans probably vary based on if we get a QB we feel
like we can work with.  I think what
should happen is that if we draft a QB we really like, we should let Kirk ride
his contract out, and if not we should look at giving him another 2 years
guaranteed and 2 years of low salary with incentives to get it higher if he
wants that and we can get out of if we need to. 
I just don’t think there’s any way to guarantee him big QB money past 2025
as he’d be 38 in 2026. 


If we needed the money to go all in this year, and we needed
to redo his contract to get the money, that’d be one thing, but I just don’t
think we can rebuild this roster that quickly. 
I think we probably have to be looking at 2023 as year to build our
foundation on defense and 2024 as the year to be SB competitive.
At the bold, its intuitive and that might very well end-up the case...

We'll see if they shake things up with FA/Draft. I have no idea if that's how KOC/KAM are viewing things.

As Guru points out, the Vikings may be ok with some extension, but for how long may be at odds with what the KC camp wants. 

$42mm/year seems about right for him. 




42 M per year is right for KC?   Josh Allen is only 43,  Pat Mahomes is 45,  Kirk is no where near the level of player that they are and he is getting old.   I would say, assuming you are going to over pay,  he is worth no more than the 37.5 avg that Carr is shown as getting,  which isnt really even that high since only 60 million is guaranteed so he is essentially playing for about 30 million a year,  which is much more inline with what I said the team could justify for the position given the salaries they have to play KCs supporting cast to over come his short comings.  No QB is perfect,  but the less that they can do on their own ( in Kirks case its his lack of extending plays,  or making plays with his legs )  then the better OL, running game, and receivers they need to compete at a high level.  Kirks elite passing abilities only go so far when he is a virtual statue otherwise.

He wont play for that little,  but the story doesnt change,  so if why keep paying him high money if you wont have the team around him to get to the next level,  trade him or let him play it out and move on.
Allen entered the NFL in 2018. Same year Cousins came to Minnesota. Over that time....

Josh Allen: 18,397, 138 TDs, 60 INTs, 92.2 Rating, comebacks led by QB=11, game winning drives=15
Kirk Cousins: 20,934, 153 TDs, 50 INTs, 101.6, comebacks led by QB=14, game winning drives=16
Even if you’re nice and throw out Allen’s rookie year because he started slow, Cousins still wins. Allen is younger and a better runner, I'll give you that. But the level to which Viking fans under-appreciate their QB is at a comical level. 

you are starting a team tomorrow,  for the record,  do you take Kirk Cousins @ 42 million,  or Josh Allen @ 43 million?   Personally I think 43 is to much for Allen, but he may not have reached his ceiling yet,  pretty sure we know what we are going to get from KC.
I take Allen every day and twice on Sunday. He's younger, more mobile and he's a weapon on the ground. But to say that Cousins is "nowhere near" the level of Allen is just not true. As a passer, Cousins is actually better. 

My fear is that we're going to move on from our very good QB and become the Commanders, who ditched their very good QB, and have since started 14 different QBs in 5 years. 

I don't think we're that stupid though. I think we play hardball with KC, at least until the draft, then TRY to draft a QB we like. If we don't get one, we give Kirk what he wants. If we do, we let the '23 season determine the next move. 
i agree with everything you said, except that part of them being on the same level, 

 Kirk is the better passer,  but that not by a huge margin,  as far as the rest,  Kirk is not in the conversation for any of it. 

Avoiding sacks,  JA-- Kirk has one move and that is if they come in high he ducks,  other than that I am pretty sure  most of us could sack KC.

Off-script plays,  JA--  Kirk has actually regressed at this IMO,  he is locking onto JJ to often and when that isnt there  ( well, he is usually sacked by that point ),  but when he is able to avoid that sack and move out of pocket,   he doesnt scramble well at all in terms of creating more time on his own to let receivers work open,  he typically just drops his head and trys to get back  to the LOS.

making plays with his legs, JA  Kirk is really just not a runner, at all, watching him try and slide is like trying to watch a baby animal  walk for the first time.  He just looks so scared when running.

age JA-- once again,  I know you think KC has discovered the fountain of youth,  but I just dont see him playing a long time,  especially at a higher level.  I think he actually looked worse last year than in the past,  and that wasnt a stat thing,  just wasnt delivering the ball with the same precision and timing as in the past,  sure it may have been the new system,  but he has been in so many new systems I have a hard time thinking that was the problem.
Reply

#90
Quote: @JimmyinSD said:
@MaroonBells said:
@JimmyinSD said:
@MaroonBells said:
@JimmyinSD said:
@purplefaithful said:
@medaille said:
I just don’t think it makes sense for the team to address
Cousins contract before the draft.  I
think Cousins has a lot of incentive to get locked up long term prior to the
draft and a lot of the urgency is from his camp.  I think long term plans become a lot more
solid after we figure out how the draft goes and we can give him an extension
later this offseason if we want to.  It
would be negligent for us to not have QB of the future as an option on the
table in the draft, and our plans probably vary based on if we get a QB we feel
like we can work with.  I think what
should happen is that if we draft a QB we really like, we should let Kirk ride
his contract out, and if not we should look at giving him another 2 years
guaranteed and 2 years of low salary with incentives to get it higher if he
wants that and we can get out of if we need to. 
I just don’t think there’s any way to guarantee him big QB money past 2025
as he’d be 38 in 2026. 


If we needed the money to go all in this year, and we needed
to redo his contract to get the money, that’d be one thing, but I just don’t
think we can rebuild this roster that quickly. 
I think we probably have to be looking at 2023 as year to build our
foundation on defense and 2024 as the year to be SB competitive.
At the bold, its intuitive and that might very well end-up the case...

We'll see if they shake things up with FA/Draft. I have no idea if that's how KOC/KAM are viewing things.

As Guru points out, the Vikings may be ok with some extension, but for how long may be at odds with what the KC camp wants. 

$42mm/year seems about right for him. 




42 M per year is right for KC?   Josh Allen is only 43,  Pat Mahomes is 45,  Kirk is no where near the level of player that they are and he is getting old.   I would say, assuming you are going to over pay,  he is worth no more than the 37.5 avg that Carr is shown as getting,  which isnt really even that high since only 60 million is guaranteed so he is essentially playing for about 30 million a year,  which is much more inline with what I said the team could justify for the position given the salaries they have to play KCs supporting cast to over come his short comings.  No QB is perfect,  but the less that they can do on their own ( in Kirks case its his lack of extending plays,  or making plays with his legs )  then the better OL, running game, and receivers they need to compete at a high level.  Kirks elite passing abilities only go so far when he is a virtual statue otherwise.

He wont play for that little,  but the story doesnt change,  so if why keep paying him high money if you wont have the team around him to get to the next level,  trade him or let him play it out and move on.
Allen entered the NFL in 2018. Same year Cousins came to Minnesota. Over that time....

Josh Allen: 18,397, 138 TDs, 60 INTs, 92.2 Rating, comebacks led by QB=11, game winning drives=15
Kirk Cousins: 20,934, 153 TDs, 50 INTs, 101.6, comebacks led by QB=14, game winning drives=16
Even if you’re nice and throw out Allen’s rookie year because he started slow, Cousins still wins. Allen is younger and a better runner, I'll give you that. But the level to which Viking fans under-appreciate their QB is at a comical level. 

you are starting a team tomorrow,  for the record,  do you take Kirk Cousins @ 42 million,  or Josh Allen @ 43 million?   Personally I think 43 is to much for Allen, but he may not have reached his ceiling yet,  pretty sure we know what we are going to get from KC.
I take Allen every day and twice on Sunday. He's younger, more mobile and he's a weapon on the ground. But to say that Cousins is "nowhere near" the level of Allen is just not true. As a passer, Cousins is actually better. 

My fear is that we're going to move on from our very good QB and become the Commanders, who ditched their very good QB, and have since started 14 different QBs in 5 years. 

I don't think we're that stupid though. I think we play hardball with KC, at least until the draft, then TRY to draft a QB we like. If we don't get one, we give Kirk what he wants. If we do, we let the '23 season determine the next move. 
i agree with everything you said, except that part of them being on the same level, 

 Kirk is the better passer,  but that not by a huge margin,  as far as the rest,  Kirk is not in the conversation for any of it. 

Avoiding sacks,  JA-- Kirk has one move and that is if they come in high he ducks,  other than that I am pretty sure  most of us could sack KC.

Off-script plays,  JA--  Kirk has actually regressed at this IMO,  he is locking onto JJ to often and when that isnt there  ( well, he is usually sacked by that point ),  but when he is able to avoid that sack and move out of pocket,   he doesnt scramble well at all in terms of creating more time on his own to let receivers work open,  he typically just drops his head and trys to get back  to the LOS.

making plays with his legs, JA  Kirk is really just not a runner, at all, watching him try and slide is like trying to watch a baby animal  walk for the first time.  He just looks so scared when running.

age JA-- once again,  I know you think KC has discovered the fountain of youth,  but I just dont see him playing a long time,  especially at a higher level.  I think he actually looked worse last year than in the past,  and that wasnt a stat thing,  just wasnt delivering the ball with the same precision and timing as in the past,  sure it may have been the new system,  but he has been in so many new systems I have a hard time thinking that was the problem.
I dont want to get in the middle of you two but..It doesn't matter how they compare. 

Just as in previous years, what are the better options? And how good is KC compared to his counterparts? Who is going to max the potential of JJ and Hock? 

The better options aren't out there.

That is unless they get very lucky in the draft - and that isnt the Vikings way (not since The Sheriff). 


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