Kam Chancellor Needs To Honor His Contract With The Seattle Seahawks

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“Show me the money.”  A line made famous by Cuba Gooding Jr.’s character in Cameron Crowe’s 1996 drama Jerry Maguire.  But while a fictional depiction of a modern day athlete’s perspective on professional sports, it’s also a realistic portrayal of an NFL mindset bordering on absurd.

NFL football players earn their money.  I’ve made my opinion on that abundantly clear, and as recent as a few weeks ago, did so regarding the travails of one Russell Wilson.  But what we’ve also seen in those same recent years, and more so in recent weeks with Seattle’s Kam Chancellor, is a mindset so befuddling it leaves me scratching beyond my head, and looking for another’s to dig-in on.

Two years ago, Mr. Chancellor signed a 4-year contract extension.  Meaning:  He, and his agent (the same agent undoubtedly driving this renegotiation bus) negotiated and came to an agreement as to what the standout safety deserved and was worth going forward.  However, now – a year into a deal set to expire following the 2017 season – a legionnaire of the “Legion Of Boom” and his Jerry Maguire are hitting the brakes on the 2015 season, and requesting a redo on the very contract they rubber-stamped.

This was a good contract in 2013.

Wasn’t it?

After all, if the agent negotiated it, player signed on the dotted line, and later the 2 likely toasted said deal with a high-end cocktail or 2, it had to have been an acceptable level of compensation for the player and management alike.

But now, roughly 2 years later, during a year when a handful of Kam’s teammates have broken the bank, the All-Pro safety from Virginia Tech is stomping his feet and plugging his ears in protest over compensation he now deems insufficient.

This isn’t a mindset isolated to Kam and his agent.  It’s one becoming popular throughout franchises across the NFL.  In recent years, a handful of players have tried such as an attempt to either get more guaranteed money near the end of a deal, secure a raise, or rip a deal and start from scratch.  I get it, relating to a player nearing the end of a rookie contract he’s spent the first 3 years significantly outplaying.  But for a veteran player like Chancellor, not even at the mid-point of a contract he signed:  It’s simply a bad look for a guy who’s always been above such.

Chancellor is set to make $4.5 million this year, with another million coming as part of a $5 million signing bonus.  But rather than accept the terms of which he agreed upon, he’s chosen to holdout from training camp and roll the dice in an attempt to up his compensation.

The Seahawks, as part of the league’s collective bargaining agreement, can fine Chancellor $30,000 a day for holding out.  And if he were to miss all of training camp, he’d be subject to a fine of 25% of his annual signing bonus, which in Chancellor’s case would equate to an additional $250,000.  In other words, to this point Seattle’s strong safety has accrued essentially $600,000 worth of punishment.

That’s real scratch.

I get it.  An NFL player has a small window to cash-in compared to his compatriots in other professional sports, and he’s always a play away from that window slamming shut.  But to sign a contract extension, then a year into it cry about that very same contract, garners little to no sympathy from me.  When you sign a deal, you should have the foresight to project it into the future, and also understand that the market will shift beyond your market price in present NFL life.

Do you think Russell Wilson is better than Tom Brady?  LeSean McCoy is better than Adrian Peterson?  Or Jeremy Maclin is better than Calvin Johnson?  Of course not, but the former are all making more than the latter due to the timing of their deals.  It’s the way of the world, and more importantly, the way of today’s NFL world.

Kam Chancellor may not be THE problem, but he’s a sign of one plaguing the league, and ultimately the fans and the franchises they love.

And it’s frustrating to watch.

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