Recent Forum Topics › Forums › The Rams Huddle › Ramsey trade
- This topic has 33 replies, 6 voices, and was last updated 1 year, 6 months ago by zn.
-
AuthorPosts
-
March 12, 2023 at 5:58 pm #143163znModeratorJourdan Rodrigue@JourdanRodrigueOk, so on the Jalen Ramsey trade agreement – I can confirm via source that Miami is sending back a 2023 third-round pick for Ramsey, as well as TE Hunter Long. Lower than expected, I personally think. Ramsey’s deal will get re-worked in 23-24, which Rams were not going to do.
More context here – as noted in previous reporting, it seemed like “time” for both, not in a contentious way at all, just Rams moving into “runway clearing mode” on books in 2023 with eyes on 2024, Ramsey goes to a great fit and defense he loves to play. Bonus due March 19 etc
Ramsey’s was the only untouched deal among their core stars. That was a signal to teams esp. after dismal 2022 that they may want his $ off their books despite skill level. You don’t leave so much non-guaranteed for a player you want to keep thru deal. Maybe affected trade (…)(…) in that a team doesn’t have to get as high as you’re expecting if they believe you’re ready to move on financially as it is. Good money for Ramsey on the other side to an AFC team doesn’t hurt talks.
March 12, 2023 at 6:46 pm #143164JackPMillerParticipantThat is a bad trade. A 3rd round pick plus a player, and that’s it? Dolphins won that trade easily. We should have gotten a first round pick in 2024.
March 12, 2023 at 6:51 pm #143167znModeratorFishkiller@FV_Mylia_Lynn
Take a deep breath everyone. Ramsey wanted the next 2 years of his contract fully guaranteed. The Rams weren’t going to do that. He wanted out. The Rams made the best deal they could with a team that would fully guarantee his next 2 years & that Ramsey would actually play for.Cornell@gqscholar
The team obtaining Ramsey having to guarantee the last two years of his deal was a value killer.Nick Wagoner@nwagoner
#Rams were always going to have to sell off expensive pieces after their run. But make no mistake, it wasn’t just a one-year, all in thing. They won 3rd most games in NFL with 2 SB appearances and one win from 2017-2021. Five-year window is a run any team would be happy to have.Patriots have skewed what sustained success looks like a little bit in the league over the past 20+ years. But unless you have one of those few QBs who always keeps you competitive, it’s tough to be in the hunt for a decade or more.
Jourdan Rodrigue@JourdanRodrigue
Good stuff. People forget that the trade FOR Ramsey in 2019 was the first big layer of duct tape around their foot and the gas pedal. “All in” was a years-long model, not 2021 alone. In many ways, as humans, you can see why the pace of that burned some of them out so completely.This is probably too cheesy for here but there is something cool about a player being such a catalyst/signal for the changing cycles of teams. Rams trade FOR Ramsey meant no turning back on fragile, high-stakes model that won them a Super Bowl. For Miami it now signals the same.
March 12, 2023 at 6:59 pm #143168znModeratorFROM A PREVIOUS THREAD
*
Adam Schefter@AdamSchefter
Trade is now agreed to, per sources:Dolphins get Pro Bowl CB Jalen Ramsey.Rams get 2023 third-round pick (No. 77) and TE Hunter Long. Trade will be processed Wednesday, when league year begins*3rd rounder. I give up. So for 3 seasons, we gave up two firsts, and the remaining value is a 3rd and a TE. M’kay. Better be a damn good TE.
*
The TE is not good either 😒
*
This was a seriously stupid trade, and it didn’t even garner that much Cap relief. According to Ramswire, less than 6 million.
____ The entire league knows the Rams are an easy mark. They give up waay too much for players they want, and they ask for waay too little in comp for players they trade away. To me, this looks like another case of them putting the wishes of a now former player above the best interests of the team. Ramsey wanted to go to Miami, so that’s where they sent him. Very likely Miami knew this and low-balled the Rams as a result. I think it’s time for new management and an end to this ethos of bending over backwards for players on their way out the door.
*
It sure seems that way to me. Ramsey is still in his prime. Not only do I disapprove of this trade, I can’t even see a plausible rationale for it. Hopefully, Rodrigue will explain this some day.
*
most heinous.
still got that trophy though.
March 12, 2023 at 7:12 pm #143170znModeratorCornell@gqscholarPer reports, Ramsey controlled where he went by being willing to negotiate his new contract for less with Miami vs. a different team. Ramsey would have demanded a bigger contract from a different team, meaning the offer from that team will be less in picks..Jourdan Rodrigue@JourdanRodrigue
They talked about it! A building torn between how genuinely illogical it would be to repeat, how much they needed/wanted to keep certain players/HC around and the rush/emotion of believing you could at least be a playoff team at min minus the injury catastrophe nobody saw coming
March 12, 2023 at 7:16 pm #143171znModeratorI hated the idea of moving Jalen Ramsey. I hate it even more for a THIRD-ROUND PICK https://t.co/1LL6JoE1tL
— Cameron DaSilva (@camdasilva) March 12, 2023
March 12, 2023 at 7:17 pm #143172znModeratorMore inside the agreement to trade Jalen Ramsey to the Dolphins, w/ @ByMikeJones – the Rams had five teams in on talks but certain factors affected team…and terms https://t.co/CIYej3zrrj
— Jourdan Rodrigue (@JourdanRodrigue) March 12, 2023
…
Rams finalizing trade sending Jalen Ramsey to Dolphins, per sources: How’s the return?
Jourdan RodrigueThe Los Angeles Rams are finalizing a trade to send All-Pro cornerback Jalen Ramsey to the Miami Dolphins in return for a 2023 third-round pick and tight end Hunter Long, people with direct knowledge of the trade talks confirmed to The Athletic on Sunday. CBS was first to report the sides were nearing a deal. Here’s what you need to know:
- Ramsey, 28, recorded 88 tackles, four interceptions and 18 passes defended last season.
- The Rams had been in talks with as many as five teams about Ramsey over the last several weeks, with the Dolphins showing early interest and then making a late push to come to a terms agreement.
- The Dolphins have also agreed to fully guarantee Ramsay’s contract for the 2023 and 2024 seasons, a league source told The Athletic.
- The trade cannot be made official until the new league year opens Wednesday.
Another aggressive move from Miami
First Tyreek Hill last offseason, now Ramsey this year. The Dolphins continue to swing big in an attempt to fortify their roster and build a contender. They appear committed to Tua Tagovailoa after picking up his fifth-year option this week. But it’s clear Miami brass knows they must surround the young QB with impact players on both sides of the ball to lighten his load.
Another aggressive move from Miami
After adding well-respected defensive guru Vic Fangio as coordinator this winter, now the Dolphins get him a top-flight cornerback in Ramsey. Now Fangio has two dynamic corners in Ramsey and Xavien Howard, which is crucial when going against the likes of Josh Allen, Patrick Mahomes, Justin Herbert, Joe Burrow — and maybe Aaron Rodgers — while on a quest to emerge as one of the elite teams of the AFC. — Jones
Evaluating the return for Ramsey
The terms are surprising in that the Rams were pretty open about hoping to get at least a future first-round pick in return for the All-Pro. At the same time, teams knew the Rams were not going to move forward with Ramsey’s contract as it was the only one of their core “stars” that Los Angeles had not recently reworked and the Rams were public about clearing some of their defensive cornerstones off of their 2023 books with an eye on 2024 and beyond. That could have immediately impacted the terms other teams were willing to offer, as could Ramsey’s age next season (29) and the fact that they didn’t want to trade him to an NFC team.
Why the Rams made the deal
Ramsey is a great fit in the Fangio defense — a scheme the Rams installed in 2020 with him as a centerpiece. Without the elite cornerback on their own roster, the Rams will depend on still-unproven young cornerbacks Cobie Durant, Derion Kendrick and Robert Rochell. Among the three, Durant showed the most consistency in limited reps in 2022.
The Rams have, in recent weeks, been pretty open about their intent to overhaul the defensive side of the ball — where corresponding acquired resources would not just help them correct their books after the spending sprees that won them a Super Bowl, but also be put back into their offense under offensive-minded coach Sean McVay. —Backstory
Ramsey, a three-time first-team All-Pro selection, has tallied 452 total tackles, 19 interceptions and six forced fumbles in his seven-year career. He started his NFL career with the Jaguars, who drafted him with the No. 5 pick in 2016, before being traded to the Rams during the 2019 season.
Los Angeles signed Ramsey to a five-year deal worth $100 million before the 2020 season.
What they’re saying
Ramsey was quick to respond to the reported trade, tweeting Sunday that he “prayed for this specifically for about a month.”
I prayed for this specifically for about a month & now it’s happening! 🙏🏾@MiamiDolphins LETSGO! 🧡
— Jalen Ramsey (@jalenramsey) March 12, 2023
March 12, 2023 at 7:28 pm #143173znModeratorJourdan Rodrigue@JourdanRodrigue
While trading Ramsey to Miami *because* he wanted to go there is not something I have personally heard, he absolutely wanted to go there. What I did hear is they didn’t want to trade him to an NFC team, among other financial/team build variables mentioned in story.Even if his age/$ was a reason some offers didn’t quite escalate, the Rams are very aware of what he’s still capable of. So IF a trade is already a forgone conclusion, at least don’t do it somewhere you’re gonna have to game plan against him. Doesn’t mean the terms square up ofc.
Ramsey’s deal will get re-worked in 23-24, which Rams were not going to do.
March 12, 2023 at 7:44 pm #143174znModeratorThanks to an adjusted contract, Jalen Ramsey has two years fully guaranteed left to complete a deal that averages $20M per year. He got an additional $25M guaranteed as part of the trade … and he gets his preferred destination in the #Dolphins. https://t.co/a2uiNarBo8
— Ian Rapoport (@RapSheet) March 12, 2023
March 12, 2023 at 9:06 pm #143175znModeratorAndrew Whitworth@AndrewWhitworthBecause that’s what teams offered. That’s what people are missing! That’s a reflection of You being desperate seller Jalen’s contract value Jalen wanting better contract (why Miami had to guarantee more years) You think the rams chose that deal over two 1st rounders??? No that’s what teams saw as Jalen’s worth with the requirements to get deal done. That’s not that hard to understand. Take out emotion and it’s easy.Fibonacci & Rams@henry_petzoldRams couldn’t/wouldn’t pay the $25 million guaranteed in 2024, which Jalen is getting in Miami! Rams will have all their picks in 2024 and tons of Cap Space (for now 🙂.Sarah Barshop@sarahbarshopThe key for the Rams here was getting Jalen Ramsey’s salary off the books. His performance last season didn’t help his market, and few teams were likely willing to guarantee him the money that Miami did..By taking the dead money for Ramsey and Leonard Floyd on this year’s salary cap, the Rams are on target for a clean 2024.March 13, 2023 at 1:42 am #143177znModeratorRodrigue: Rams’ trade of Jalen Ramsey moves them to new window, old pattern
By Jourdan Rodrigue
https://theathletic.com/4300711/2023/03/12/rams-offseason-plan-jalen-ramsey-trade/
An NFL building with the luxury of continuity will work in patterns, and the Los Angeles Rams — a core of leaders bound together for better and for worse since 2017 — are no different.
The Rams agreed Sunday to trade star cornerback Jalen Ramsey to the Miami Dolphins for a 2023 third-round pick and tight end Hunter Long, multiple people with direct knowledge of the trade told The Athletic. The terms were surprising to many: Ramsey will be 29 in October, and his age caused a few of the five teams involved in trade talks for him to balk. But he’s still elite and a perfect fit inside the defensive system deployed by so many in the NFL (its architect, Vic Fangio, is Miami’s defensive coordinator). The Rams initially hoped they could get at least a second-round pick in the deal; the trade they settled on is more equivalent to two third-rounders.
But Ramsey also was due money, and the Rams weren’t going to pay it. They signed him to a five-year, $100 million extension in 2020, and other than a simple auto-restructure at one point, they never touched the deal again. It lacked guaranteed money on the back end, which Ramsey and the Rams have mutually understood for weeks would have to come from somewhere else, and the Dolphins were willing and able to add it. The Rams preferred not to trade him to an NFC team, a few of whom were in the sweepstakes for Ramsey down to the wire.
The Rams are not looking at 2023 as a year that they can contend for a championship, as opposed to the previous five seasons. The dead money they are taking on — a running sum now up to about $45.5 million in 2023 between the Leonard Floyd and Bobby Wagner cuts and the Ramsey trade — is a short-term issue, offset in their minds a little by the tens of millions in cash they have subsequently freed, which can go toward bonuses, managing restructures and holding space for elements of eventual new deals. In 2023, they have 11 draft picks (no first-rounder) to help them overhaul their depth on both sides of the ball, and other resources will go into jacking up an offense that ranked among the worst in the league last season. In 2024, they’ll have cash, cap space and draft picks, including a first-rounder. That’s also about the time they’ll start pushing harder — spending instead of offloading as they are now.
There’s a pattern, and even a little poetry, in the timing of this trade. The Rams have already been here before — at the start of something. It’s just that before, their adjustments were hidden in the afterglow of a team that stayed relatively competitive following its Super Bowl loss to New England. The Rams never actually went through a full “rebuild” in 2019, though it was their second-worst season in the Sean McVay era (and still not a truly terrible one) and a year in which they began to change almost everything about their team.
It was the year they traded for Ramsey. In doing so, they set off a ripple effect that featured a total systemic overhaul of their defense, which then helped prompt a quarterback change, and ultimately the trade signaled a commitment to the high-stakes, fragile team-building model that won them a Super Bowl. They had dabbled in picks-for-players trades before, yes. But the Ramsey trade meant duct-taping their foot on the gas pedal. No turning back, whatever happened. And it worked.
Now they’re overhauling at least part of their roster again. General manager Les Snead has referred to quarterback Matthew Stafford, receiver Cooper Kupp and defensive tackle Aaron Donald as “weight-bearing” walls. The fourth, left unspoken but implied, is McVay.
Why not just blow up the whole thing? Why trade some players, but not all?
Sometimes, the answer is so simple yet still so complicated: Who is the head coach?
McVay nearly walked away from coaching two years in a row. Two offseasons ago, it would have been from a team contemplating what life would be like if it just pressed the red button right then, imploding the roster right after the Super Bowl in early 2022 and starting anew, internally knowing how illogical it would be to repeat a title. It would have meant McVay moving toward the comfort and glow of a fat broadcasting deal and none of the irrational, impractical things a head coach in the NFL has on his to-do list on a daily basis. That wouldn’t have made him happy, and he knew it. The Rams also believed they could at least stretch their window at least one more season. The contracts they tried to get done (Von Miller) and eventually doled out (Stafford, Kupp, Donald) showed it. McVay coming back and the players’ extensions seemed tied together at that time in ways that are even clearer now.
Then McVay almost walked away again, this time with a deeper understanding of an internal personal crisis that had been building for years, aligned with the Rams’ years-long sprint back to a Super Bowl and so intertwined with it that each was the function of the other. During the months (not days) that McVay contemplated his future, as the Rams spiraled to a 5-12 finish, he grew to understand more about the factors that enable his own worst qualities. He committed to returning, and the Rams committed to getting out of McVay the best version of himself, whatever that meant.
And so a total rebuild, for that reason, never seemed to be an option for a team that operates wire to wire like this one does. A team that still has Stafford (most likely, though he has been the subject of trade rumors), Kupp and Donald — and McVay — can’t be a rebuilding team. It can’t be a tanking team. A team without McVay doesn’t have Stafford, Kupp and Donald, nor perhaps does a team without Stafford, Kupp or Donald have McVay.
Contention is one thing, and for so long it was the only thing. The hope of competition in a setup year is something very different. The Rams may instead be a team that sacrifices one side of the ball for the sake of the other in the short term. In this case, the Rams can hope a younger and more raw defense will be lifted a little by an experienced offense that has gotten back to its scoring ways and, maybe, a wiser head coach.
Of course, it may not work out the way they think it will. Statistically speaking, and in consideration of the arc of the modern league, they could be guessing right. If they are, and they have the resources they think they will in 2024, their “remodel” could be a quick and even competitive one.
They have been here before, in a way. They once opened a door with Ramsey, and now they are opening another one. It all becomes easier to understand once you realize that, by the act of moving through the first door, a second one becomes inevitable.
We actually already know what will happen next. They are showing us the answer. The people in charge work in patterns because the sport does and the league does, and they all have been here before. Just because you don’t like how it feels right now doesn’t make it any less their plan.
Everything we need to know about the Rams, they have already told us.
March 13, 2023 at 9:02 am #143178Billy_TParticipantGrading the Jalen Ramsey trade for the Rams: LA loses this deal
____
Personally, I think the D- grade above is too generous.
I disagree with Whit here:
Andrew Whitworth@AndrewWhitworthBecause that’s what teams offered. That’s what people are missing! That’s a reflection of You being desperate seller Jalen’s contract value Jalen wanting better contract (why Miami had to guarantee more years) You think the rams chose that deal over two 1st rounders??? No that’s what teams saw as Jalen’s worth with the requirements to get deal done. That’s not that hard to understand. Take out emotion and it’s easyFirst off, he doesn’t know what teams offered. He’s guessing, like everyone else on the outside. Second, it’s not “emotional” to say this was a terrible trade. It’s “emotional,” IMO, to make excuses for the Rams FO in this case, especially if one says they had to do it. If not emotional, then reflexive..No one forced them to make this trade. It was a choice. And if one wants to say the Cap made ’em do it, well, who got them into Cap Hell? Jourdan says the Rams acted “emotionally” after the Super Bowl when they did their extensions of Stafford and others. All of that guaranteed money, when they didn’t have to extend their QB yet, and definitely not with that kind of contract? Ramsey was actually the better bet, if we’re talking guarantees, given his lack of injuries and relative youth..I’m not in the same camp with people who seem to think that because the Rams won the Super Bowl, you can’t criticize any of their decisions. Winning the Super Bowl was fantastic, but those mistakes weren’t necessary ingredients for that win. They won despite the mistakes, and fewer of them likely leads to more Super Bowls..Goff was extended years too soon. Same with Gurley. Same with Stafford. They keep making the same errors, and they keep living in Cap Hell. Dumping players like Floyd and Wagner (plus Lewis, Hendo, Burgess, Hollins) with zero compensation is not good team-building, and it’s not a valid excuse to say they had to, cuz, again, they made their own bed, cap-wise, etc..Bottom line for me: If all I can get for Ramsey is a third and a bench-sitting TE, I pass. I also don’t limit the pool of suitors by worrying about the best landing spot for Ramsey, and I don’t eliminate the NFC cuz I don’t want to face him. That sounds “emotional” to me.March 13, 2023 at 10:33 am #143179Billy_TParticipantQuick side note: I tried several times to fix the paragraphs, but it wouldn’t take. Showed it was fine, though, before I posted.
Not sure if it’s on my end or the site’s. Oh, well.
March 13, 2023 at 4:06 pm #143181Billy_TParticipantJourdan’s podcast is a coupla days early this week. Ad-free if you have The Athletic.
March 13, 2023 at 4:32 pm #143182znModeratorJourdan’s podcast is a coupla days early this week. Ad-free if you have The Athletic. https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/inside-the-jalen-ramsey-trade-whats-next-for-rams/id1477535034?i=1000603975002
Is it entirely about the Ramsey trade? If not, maybe it should be it’s own thread? I fixed your ¶s in that one post btw.
March 13, 2023 at 6:55 pm #143186InvaderRamModeratori think this is all being done in preparation for 2024. and if stafford was even just five years younger i’d be cool with it. but who knows how stafford looks in 2024. or maybe they have a plan there too.
after thinking about it i’m not sure what more they could have done. ramsey held all the cards on this one. and more power to him by the way. i’ll always. almost always. side with the player. if he wasn’t willing to budge on his demands and the rams were set on getting rid of him what more could they have really got for him?
if they try to get rid of him next year how does that impact the cap. does it just further delay the inevitable and waste another year of stafford? i don’t know. but it sure seems like they are conceding 2023. with hopes that they can be competitive in 2024. only problem is how good stafford will be in 2024.
March 13, 2023 at 7:20 pm #143189znModeratori think this is all being done in preparation for 2024. and if stafford was even just five years younger i’d be cool with it. but who knows how stafford looks in 2024. or maybe they have a plan there too. after thinking about it i’m not sure what more they could have done. ramsey held all the cards on this one. and more power to him by the way. i’ll always. almost always. side with the player. if he wasn’t willing to budge on his demands and the rams were set on getting rid of him what more could they have really got for him? if they try to get rid of him next year how does that impact the cap. does it just further delay the inevitable and waste another year of stafford? i don’t know. but it sure seems like they are conceding 2023. with hopes that they can be competitive in 2024. only problem is how good stafford will be in 2024.
Was Ramsey’s contract guaranteed for 23 and 24 before the trade or after the trade?
I haven’t done full-out research on this yet but I did catch a whisper or 2 that the reason for the trade in the first place was because JR wanted his money for 23 and 24 to be guaranteed.
March 13, 2023 at 7:31 pm #143190ZooeyModeratori think this is all being done in preparation for 2024. and if stafford was even just five years younger i’d be cool with it. but who knows how stafford looks in 2024. or maybe they have a plan there too. after thinking about it i’m not sure what more they could have done. ramsey held all the cards on this one. and more power to him by the way. i’ll always. almost always. side with the player. if he wasn’t willing to budge on his demands and the rams were set on getting rid of him what more could they have really got for him? if they try to get rid of him next year how does that impact the cap. does it just further delay the inevitable and waste another year of stafford? i don’t know. but it sure seems like they are conceding 2023. with hopes that they can be competitive in 2024. only problem is how good stafford will be in 2024.
Yeah, it looks like 2023 is over before it starts. But they are reloading for 2024.
I don’t understand it, but I am also aware that Snead and McVay know more about the football situation and the cap than I do. And they recently delivered a Lombardi. So I will just sit here hoping they are right.
I just don’t understand giving up on a team so quickly after winning the SB. According to reports, they weren’t even optimistic about last year even before the injuries ensured an awful season. On paper, though, the roster looked pretty much the same minus Von Miller and OBJ. The “general” roster strength besides the Stars seemed more-or-less the same to me, and replacing those guys didn’t seem impossible, even if some ground was lost there in overall quality.
But trading Ramsey finishes the team off, in my eyes. The CB situation is now looking “JV with upside.” And they still haven’t replaced Miller and OBJ.
March 14, 2023 at 9:58 am #143195Billy_TParticipantZN,
Responded twice yesterday to your comment about the podcast, but it didn’t post. Not sure if this one will, either. No links in the posts, if memory serves, so not sure why it didn’t go through.
Anyway, I’m good with wherever you want to put the podcast. It’s mostly about the Ramsey trade, but not entirely.
March 14, 2023 at 10:06 am #143196Billy_TParticipantQuick comment about the trade, mostly via readings/listenings including Jourdan’s. I think where the Rams really hurt themselves is by limiting their trade partners to AFC only. Jourdan said the return was a lot worse than it should have been, and she suggested that was primarily due to limiting the pool of partners.
My inference is that the Rams would have gotten at least a 2nd, and possibly a 1st, if they had said yes to NFC too. Didn’t see this broken down further by just saying No to their own division, which would have been understandable.
Yes, the guaranteed money was a big factor. But I think that would have been negated if you open things up to at least NFC North, South, and East.
March 14, 2023 at 10:40 am #143198znModeratorI just don’t understand giving up on a team so quickly after winning the SB
But if reports are true that Ramsey asked for his money to be guaranteed in both 23 and 24, then they didn’t do anything except move on from a player they couldn’t afford.
Here;s his 2020 contract:
Here’s what Miami did with it:
The Dolphins retooled his contract, guaranteeing him his full $17 million salary in 2023 and $17.5 million in 2024.
Another report:
Ramsey is set to make nearly $30 million in new money over the course of this contract, fully guaranteed. Next season, his cap hit climbs to $28 million. In 2025, that cap hit is $22 million.
from https://phinphanatic.com/2023/03/14/numbers-game-jalen-ramsey-deal-helps-miami-dolphins-cap-in-23/
According to Rodrigue, Ramsey also controlled where he could be traded by indicating which new contracts he was willing to sign. Plus the DC in Miami is Fangio, and Ramsey has been in that system since Staley in 2020.
March 14, 2023 at 10:58 am #143199Billy_TParticipantBut if reports are true that Ramsey asked for his money to be guaranteed in both 23 and 24, then they didn’t do anything except move on from a player they couldn’t afford.
ZN,
I get that they thought they had no choice but to move on, cuz of the guaranteed money. Perhaps for other reasons we don’t know about, as well. The issue to me is the compensation, and why they narrowed the pool of possible trading partners. It’s clear to me they botched that part. It’s also clear to me that they put themselves in the position of having to say no to Ramsey’s contract demands because of their impulsive contract extensions after the Super Bowl, especially Stafford’s.
IMO, Ramsey would have been the better guy to extend than Stafford, if it came down to a choice. More likely to actually see the field for the majority of his new contract. I just don’t see Stafford as playing for much of his. He’s taken a beating throughout his career, and while he’s tough as nails, I’m not sanguine about his future with the Rams. Don’t know how retirement impacts contracts and guaranteed money, but I’d bet Stafford retires after this season, especially if the Rams don’t make it to the playoffs. AD likely too.
In short, I stand with Achebe: Things Fall Apart.
March 14, 2023 at 11:22 am #143201znModeratorBut if reports are true that Ramsey asked for his money to be guaranteed in both 23 and 24, then they didn’t do anything except move on from a player they couldn’t afford.
ZN, I get that they thought they had no choice but to move on, cuz of the guaranteed money. Perhaps for other reasons we don’t know about, as well. The issue to me is the compensation, and why they narrowed the pool of possible trading partners. It’s clear to me they botched that part. It’s also clear to me that they put themselves in the position of having to say no to Ramsey’s contract demands because of their impulsive contract extensions after the Super Bowl, especially Stafford’s. IMO, Ramsey would have been the better guy to extend than Stafford, if it came down to a choice. More likely to actually see the field for the majority of his new contract. I just don’t see Stafford as playing for much of his. He’s taken a beating throughout his career, and while he’s tough as nails, I’m not sanguine about his future with the Rams. Don’t know how retirement impacts contracts and guaranteed money, but I’d bet Stafford retires after this season, especially if the Rams don’t make it to the playoffs. AD likely too. In short, I stand with Achebe: Things Fall Apart.
I just don’t see it that way BT.
I respect the fact that you do see it that way. There will be a wide range of opinions on their 2023 off-season, I’m sure of that.
March 14, 2023 at 11:53 am #143202Billy_TParticipantTis true, ZN.
Lotsa different ways of looking at this. But the only angle worth a Picasso is mine, all mine!!
;>)
Woman in a Chemise in an Armchair, by Pablo Picasso. 1913
It goes without saying that I’m hoping the Rams make this all work to the max, and they compete well in 2023, and turn things around completely in 2024. I’ve stuck with the Rams since 1966. Not going anywhere.
March 14, 2023 at 1:01 pm #143185Billy_TParticipantJourdan’s podcast is a coupla days early this week. Ad-free if you have The Athletic. https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/inside-the-jalen-ramsey-trade-whats-next-for-rams/id1477535034?i=1000603975002
Is it entirely about the Ramsey trade? If not, maybe it should be it’s own thread? I fixed your ¶s in that one post btw.
Thanks for the edits, ZN.
The podcast is mostly about the trade, but not entirely. Jourdan gives her take on the comp for the trade, and they touch upon general team issues and looking to 2024. It’s pretty good. Better, IMO, than Jourdan’s recent article on the trade. She’s more to the point. etc. Just my take.
March 14, 2023 at 1:01 pm #143184Billy_TParticipantJourdan’s podcast is a coupla days early this week. Ad-free if you have The Athletic. https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/inside-the-jalen-ramsey-trade-whats-next-for-rams/id1477535034?i=1000603975002
Is it entirely about the Ramsey trade? If not, maybe it should be it’s own thread? I fixed your ¶s in that one post btw.
Thanks for the edits.
The podcast is mostly about the trade, but she does touch upon Rams philosophy in general, looking ahead to 2024, and some other issues. Ramsey dominates the show, though, and Jourdan gives her opinion on the compensation.
If you think it should be on its own, that’s kewl too.
March 14, 2023 at 1:03 pm #143207znModeratorIf you think it should be on its own, that’s kewl too.
I haven’t heard it yet but I trust your judgment on it.
March 14, 2023 at 6:46 pm #143208InvaderRamModeratorWas Ramsey’s contract guaranteed for 23 and 24 before the trade or after the trade?
my understanding is it was after the trade. it was the only way he’d agree to a trade.
someone should correct me if i’m wrong.
March 14, 2023 at 7:03 pm #143209wvParticipant“…The Rams are not looking at 2023 as a year that they can contend for a championship, as opposed to the previous five seasons…” J.Rodrigue
—
I think this was true with or without Ramsey.
It will be fun to see what McSnead can do with this team next year, and of course
the year after that.
They need a lot of good personnel decisions and they need a healthy OLine.
I will be here to state the obvious all week.
w
v
March 17, 2023 at 11:10 pm #143229znModeratorCornell@gqscholarThe answer to why the Rams didn’t get more compensation for trading Ramsey. Ramsey was willing to negotiate x amount of money with Miami, while other teams he demanded x + y amount of money (more money from a team that wasn’t Miami). Ramsey power move, decreased compensation..
Jalen Ramsey made it very clear that he wanted to go to the Dolphins and also talked about the value of leverage https://t.co/haiRLjksFG
— Rams Wire (@TheRamsWire) March 17, 2023
-
AuthorPosts
- You must be logged in to reply to this topic.