Cheap. Thrifty. Low budget. Tightwads.
The Arizona Cardinals have been called all of that -- and more -- over the years. Much of it has been justified. For years, the Cardinals were an organization that didn't want to spend to be good. Part of it was they couldn't.
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| Fitzgerald in four seasons: 330 catches, 4,554 yards and 34 touchdowns. (US Presswire) |
Or at least they shouldn't be. These aren't the same Cardinals, including at the negotiating table.
Which brings us to receiver Larry Fitzgerald.
The Cardinals have put themselves into a tough situation with Fitzgerald, their star player, because he has hit accelerators in his contract that raise his salary to $14.6 million in 2008 and $17.4 million in 2009. Even with the cap at $116 million, that's way too much money for one player.
That's why there's a problem.
The Cardinals want to keep Fitzgerald. Who wouldn't? But they don't want to do it at those numbers. They've hinted that they might be forced to release players and they won't be able to add new ones in free agency. They might not be able to re-sign linebacker Calvin Pace, a player they want back.
Fitzgerald's deal doesn't work financially the way it is. But they have said they will keep Fitzgerald, no matter what.
So these are the options: Keep him and possibly cut some of his friends to make it happen -- weakening the team in the process -- or give him a new long-term deal. The Cardinals are tying to get the latter done, but so far they've reached no deal.
Fitzgerald has been told this several times. According to sources, he had a sit-down with coach Ken Whisenhunt in which the coach outlined the harsh realities of the situation, that his current number would make it impossible to improve the team.
I'm all for players getting every cent they can. And I don't think what one player does should have an impact on what the rest of the team is doing -- that's up to the organization to make it work -- but in this case, things are a bit out of whack.
Here's why: The Cardinals have offered to make Fitzgerald the highest-paid receiver in the league as well as the highest-paid player in team history. The deal they are offering, according to a team source, would make him the third highest-paid, non-quarterback in the league.








