As a Kraken fan, I'm totally happy with this deal. The risks involved seem reasonable ones at this price and duration.
Bridge deals are only useful to keep a competitive window open. In Seattle's case they aren't there yet. They have no need for cap space in the next couple years so a it doesn't matter if the AAV is a bit high now. It'll pay for itself in the back half when Beniers, hopefully, is $1-2-3M under market rate.I don't like this deal. I don't understand why teams don't take advantage of bridge deals.
Sign the player for 2-3 years at a lower cap hit, make sure he's the real deal and then sign him to the 7 year deal when he's closer to free agency. You get some cap savings and control the player longer.
This deal pays him big money before producing big numbers and he's a UFA in 7 years.
Exactly. The reason the player signed this is because it's an overpay. Massive financial security for a player who could easily be worth it eventually. For Seattle it probably makes sense to overpay for the next 3-4 years though and have him on a potentiall underpaid deal in years 5-7 when they might make the playoffs.Once again the majority are proclaiming it's a great deal for the team, so if these long-term deals based on promise are always great deals for the team, why does the player agree to them?
This should be looked at as a great deal for Beniers. He's proven nothing to earn $50m. What happened last year erases his early success and puts him back into needing to prove himself to earn this much money. I think the broader question is whether or not Beniers is even that good in the first place. That Michigan team was so deep that the danger is automatically believing that all of them are good independently of each other. And it's been a similar story in Seattle. Their high tide lifted all boats in his rookie year. His boat sank the hardest when the tide rolled out last season.
it's an overpay based on what he has accomplished so far, taking a massive step back this past season. Seattle banking on a return to his rookie form and improvement. Rather use up cap room now when they have it, to hopefully save on the cap in years 4-7 of this deal vs just doing a bridge with him now and then doing a $8.5 mill or higher AAV on the next contract.Exactly. The reason the player signed this is because it's an overpay. Massive financial security for a player who could easily be worth it eventually. For Seattle it probably makes sense to overpay for the next 3-4 years though and have him on a potentiall underpaid deal in years 5-7 when they might make the playoffs.
I don't agree. I think bridge deals also lead to longer terms of service and lower AAV's over the life of the contract. When you give a 21 year old a 7 year deal he's a UFA at 27. When you give a 21 year old a 3 year bridge and then do the big long-term deal he's yours at a reasonable rate for 11 years.Bridge deals are only useful to keep a competitive window open. In Seattle's case they aren't there yet. They have no need for cap space in the next couple years so a it doesn't matter if the AAV is a bit high now. It'll pay for itself in the back half when Beniers, hopefully, is $1-2-3M under market rate.
What do you think he's going to cost when he's a 27 year old UFA and the cap is $110m? $12m per? I'd rather have him for 3 years at a bridge number and then 7 years at $9m (if he proves over the next 3 years that he's actually a $9m player) than risk losing him in the prime of his career.With the cap going up in the next few years, that deal is almost a guaranteed bargain. In 2-3 years, he ends up signing for 9-10M because the cap has gone up, he has nothing to prove and your buying off more UFA years.
Not if he blows up during his bridge.I don't agree. I think bridge deals also lead to longer terms of service and lower AAV's over the life of the contract. When you give a 21 year old a 7 year deal he's a UFA at 27. When you give a 21 year old a 3 year bridge and then do the big long-term deal he's yours at a reasonable rate for 11 years.
I’m with you. Seattle takes all the risk. So let’s hurry and sign him to a 7.14 mil AAV before he breaks out then we will have to pay him an 8 mil AAV? This deal made no sense for Seattle.I don't like this deal. I don't understand why teams don't take advantage of bridge deals.
Sign the player for 2-3 years at a lower cap hit, make sure he's the real deal and then sign him to the 7 year deal when he's closer to free agency. You get some cap savings and control the player longer.
This deal pays him big money before producing big numbers and he's a UFA in 7 years.