BAM! (shhhh) wrote:The factor that blows my mind in NFL is the escape clauses from contracts, the regularity with which teams dump players does my head in - I can't believe the NFLPA allowed that in their CBA.
When looking at NFL contracts there are only two issues worth worrying about - the amount of guaranteed money and the cap implications. A 6 year $20M contract is only as good as the money guaranteed. Otherwise it's a contract with the potential to earn $20M.
The perception is that teams can walk away from their obligations at any time but this isn't the case. NFL contracts tend to be more performanced based than the AFL, but like all leagues, the better you are the more guaranteed money you can command.
Player list rules are complex in the NFL but free agency does keep everyone honest.
Teams can't rebuild through the draft alone - it's impossible. There's too many specific skill positions on an NFL team to be addressed through 7 rounds of a 32 team draft.
The same would be true in the AFL if it wasn't for priority picks and the PSD. In fact, it's why we have them. Otherwise a team like Carlton would never have got out of the hole they were in.
FWIW, I don't think the hit rate is any greater in the US either, just the potential for it through good use of the free agent pool... but you see what teams do over there during their offseasons with contracts, and you wonder at the sanity owners and general managers of those teams. There are always a couple of teams so obsessed with scraping into the playoff picture that they'll spend like it's going out of fashion on ensuring the long term development of the franchise is not given a chance to eventuate.
While some owners do some crazy s***, especially trading away picks in future drafts, I like the fact teams have a choice in how they build their list. Some teams will try and build their franchise through young players at key positions (see Atlanta), others will chase free agents to be competitive year-in-year out. Sydney seems to be the only team in the AFL with that choice due to their cap concessions.
The New England Patriots have been incredibly successful at remaining competitive and they have done it almost exclusively through the additions of free agents. In fact so strong is their reputation, free agents will go there for less than other teams. They have almost perfected the model on how to stay successful in a competition hell-bent on equalisation.
Most big rebuilds I've seen over there or here tend to be the result of exactly that - an eventual realisation that so much effort has been expended on achieving mediocrity that even that mediocrity is no longer in reach.
The cycle works the way teams make it work. It's easier to draft when it's harder to win and vice versa, but neither rule need hold true 100% of the time.
The NFL has become known as the Not-For-Long league for good reason. Teams can shoot from 3-13 seasons to 10-6 seasons and a win away from a Superbowl (see Saints again 2006/7). I'm yet to see a team in the NFL do it through the draft alone. In the case of the Saints it was free agent signing in Drew Brees that was the difference. A player incidently cut from the successful San Deigo Chargers because they had 1st round pick QB waiting in the wings (they did sack a coach too after a 14-2 season)
Houston are a good example of what you're talking about. They're building an impressive team on some early draft picks but did cut a #1 draft pick who has turned out to be a dud.