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View Full Version : Lynch almost left the team!


Denver724
03-01-2008, 08:56 AM
What is the deal with the "budget crunch"? It is hard to believe we are this cash strapped. It is one thing not to over-spend on FA's, but quite another to ask a player like Lynch to take a paycut. I just wonder how much more money he could have gotten on the market.

http://www.denverpost.com/broncos/ci_8411562

Lynch remains a Bronco
Nine-time Pro Bowler has an overnight change of heart and takes a pay cut to stay.
By Mike Klis
The Denver Post
Article Last Updated: 03/01/2008 01:18:34 AM MST

John Lynch (Denver Post file photo)

Had Pat Bowlen not gone out for a well-timed late dinner Thursday night, John Lynch would have been finished as a Bronco safety.

"I had gone as far as typing up a statement saying goodbye to everyone," Lynch said. "I had made a decision that I was going to move on. I had actually called Mr. Bowlen to say thank you for everything the last four years."

Bowlen didn't answer. He was out to dinner. When the Broncos' owner later returned the call, Lynch had collapsed from the disappointing and emotionally draining negotiations and was asleep by the 9 o'clock hour.

"I slept right through my phone ringing," Lynch said. "Had I answered the phone, I would have told him, 'Thanks for the four years here, but I'm going to free agency.' "
Denver Broncos


Given an accidental chance to sleep on his decision, Lynch awoke feeling stressed. Moving on didn't seem right. Personal feelings stirred into a few more personal conversations Friday morning and afternoon with Bowlen and coach Mike Shanahan.

By 6 p.m. Friday, Lynch swallowed the insult of a pay cut in exchange for a chance to play a fifth, and mostly likely final, season with the Broncos.

The one-year agreement is for significantly less than the $3.12 million Lynch was going to make from his initial contract. Considering the enormously lucrative deals less-distinguished safeties were getting from the free agent market, the Broncos got Lynch at a bargain.

"I could probably go make more money elsewhere in the free agent market," Lynch said. "And I had really gone to bed excited about that.

"And then I woke up thinking, "What am I doing?" I've got four kids who are happy here. I've found a home here and I didn't want to be one of those guys going from team to team. I felt I had earned what I had coming to me but sometimes you have to step back and look at the big picture. And the big picture to me was: I had to find a way to make this work."

Lynch had good reasons for leaving. He had made nine Pro Bowl appearances, including four in his four seasons with the Broncos. He was supposed to take a cut from $3.12 million while unheralded safeties named Gibril Wilson and Madieu Williams were each getting six-year deals for $39 million and $33 million, respectively, from the free-agent market?

"Oh, to be 10 years younger," said Lynch, 36. "With all due respect, if these guys are making this much money, what could I have done in my prime? I'm actually happy to see it because it looks like the safety position is finally getting its due. It's been lagging behind, and I think people are starting to realize the importance of the position."

There were two phases to Lynch's offseason. The first was to contemplate retirement. Tugging at him was a desire to spend more time with his family. Before playing his 15th NFL season in 2007, Lynch and his wife Linda expanded their family with the birth of their fourth child, Leah Rose.

Then the season didn't go well, as the Broncos finished 7-9 while Lynch suffered a scary stinger injury in the area of a surgically repaired neck that had nearly finished his career four years earlier. He had received standing broadcast offers from television networks.

It wasn't until a telephone conversation with Hall of Fame safety Ronnie Lott that Lynch began leaning toward a return to the field.

Lott's message: A player only has one career. Once the decision is made to stop playing, that's it. Playing football is finished for life.

"He said, 'I can hear it your in voice,' " Lynch said. " 'You want to play. My advice would be, if you've still got that, you've to go.' "

A fun week at the Pro Bowl confirmed Lynch's decision to return. But then came the second phase of his offseason: Dealing with a Bronco team in the midst of a budget crunch.

The Broncos did increase their offer slightly Friday, but ultimately the agreement was reached because, regardless of cost, Lynch wanted to stay. Will this be Lynch's final season?

"I've learned you can't put a timetable on things," Lynch said. "It's likely my last year but I'm not going to say that definitively."

What Lynch fans do know definitely is that it's a good thing Bowlen didn't order takeout Thursday night.

Sassy
03-01-2008, 08:58 AM
already posted

27atwater
03-01-2008, 09:01 AM
Too bad he stayed...

Drek
03-01-2008, 09:11 AM
Too bad he stayed...

Its great that he stayed, now we can draft a rookie safety in the middle rounds to develop behind him.

Tom Zbikowski would be a great fit, similar attitude to Lynch but with more coverage ability.

27atwater
03-01-2008, 09:20 AM
Now Shanny will think that the gaping hole in the secondary is filled and will ignore a 5 year need for yet another season while this dude continues to chase after WRs and TEs from behind on other teams' highlight films, yet gain an undeserved invite to the Pro Bowl because he is, John Lynch afterall.

27atwater
03-01-2008, 09:21 AM
Its great that he stayed, now we can draft a rookie safety in the middle rounds to develop behind him.

Tom Zbikowski would be a great fit, similar attitude to Lynch but with more coverage ability.

The only "Lynch type" I want in this draft is Jamie Silva of Boston College.

fontaine
03-01-2008, 11:01 AM
I don't think they wanted to give Lynch a paycut because there's no money. It was because the guy shared his snaps with other safeties on the roster. It just doesn't make sense to play over $3million for a safety who's not an every down player any more.

dsmoot
03-01-2008, 11:01 AM
I know we have spent significant money in recent years without much return on free agency. Can anyone explain economically why their is a budget crunch.

wolf754life
03-01-2008, 12:18 PM
why? several million dollars spent up front right out of mr. bowlens pocket. See Dan Graham, Dre Bly, Champ Bailey, Jay Cutler, Javon Walker, Gerard Warren,Travis Henry, all these guys got several million dollars upfront when they signed their deals. You know, the backloaded poison pill deals so we could fit them in under the cap. THe fairy land make believe deals we are famous for!

Why do you think they raised ticket prices, all those back loaded contracts
and all that money coming due! people on this board need to pay attention to whats going on at dove valley? WAKE UP PEOPLE!!!