07-30-2023, 06:31 PM
Quote: @Wetlander said:
I don't think any of the bold is necessarily true. If he has a bad year, we'll consider ourselves lucky we didn't commit long term. If he has a good year, he'll get a big bag of money....from someone. But I don't think that necessarily means it won't be us. We'll have some cap space.@MaroonBells said:
This does keep us competitive this year like I said above, but it essentially guarantees Hunter walks after this season with the no tag option. His agent has a history of demanding new money for Hunter and I don't see that changing if he has a good year. All it does is increase the cost to keep him after this season and likely prices us out of re-signing him once other teams have the opportunity to offer him contracts. With the way these negotiations have gone, I think we'll need to offer a sweet deal for him to even consider coming back.@Wetlander said:
Great, another Kwesi non-move. So we get Hunter for this year (good for this season) but basically assures Hunter and his agent will want to test FA. Then we either have to overpay to keep him (unlikely) or he leaves and we get at best a 3rd round comp pick. But there are a dozen contingencies at play here. I think we draft a QB no matter what in 2024. But let's say for the hell of it, that Cousins has a bad year or gets hurt, the Vikings have no QB money in 2024 and a ridiculous amount of cap space. Vikings can decide then, based on his 2023, whether or not they want Hunter long-term before he even sees the market.
The 1-year deal was the obvious (probably the only) solution. It keeps the Vikings competitive rebuild, well, competitive. And the Vikings continue to avoid 2024 money like the plague.
In this case, I think it makes more sense to either commit to him as one of your core players moving forward and sign him long-term or trade him for picks that can help the team remain competitive in the future. This is a bandaid for this season when the defense is in flux with new players and a new scheme.
Yes, I think it's more likely he moves on to a team with deeper pockets, but Comet's right: the market for nearly-30 edge rushers is limited. Plus, his camp might consider a Flores-led defense key to his performance.