PDA

View Full Version : Player who's smart with his $$ ?????



CaptainKickass
06-28-2006, 10:38 AM
Have you all ever heard of a player doing this?

Regarding Patrick Dendy on Packers.com this morning:

"What did you do with your first NFL paycheck?
I still have it. I haven't spent that much. Everybody laughs at me for being a little cheap. I still have almost everything I made last year."

I have to say I was severely impressed. If this guy can be that frugal and use his head in the small financial gains he has made as an undrafted player then he should be able to serve as an example to others. 8I wonder if they have anyone at the Rookie Symposium who follows his line of thought??

MadtownPacker
06-28-2006, 11:03 AM
there was a story on Tony Fisher last seaon. He spoke of saving his $$$ cuz he wasnt getting the big payday and was concerned about his future. I can see how some of these guys go from having nothing to having it all and cant deal with it but damn, how can they just crap it all down the toilet.

Partial
06-28-2006, 11:13 AM
My guess is a lot of guys that aren't first day picks invest most of it and live a modest lifestyle. You never know whats going to happen with injury, or if they'll be able to cut it and have staying power in the league. I also don't think too many are qualified for much else outside of football.

With that said, and this may be very wishful thinking, but I bet its not too uncommon. These guys have agents and I am sure they'd give them this advice.

FavreChild
06-28-2006, 11:16 AM
I've heard through interviews with Samkon and Santana Dotson that KGB also has quite the reputation for being "cheap" (also known as a good money manager, though). I think Samkon even said that KGB makes friends and family pay face value to use his allotment of player tickets!

Partial
06-28-2006, 11:21 AM
friends I can understand, but family?? This guy makes like what 4-5 mil a year? That's excessively stingy. Maybe outside of his immediate too, but if he's making his parents pay for games something is wrong!!!

FavreChild
06-28-2006, 11:31 AM
Well, prob. not his parents, but everyone else...

Unless Samkon was joking, he said KGB doesn't pay for dinner, either. I believe the word he used to describe KGB was "frugal." It's definitely a running joke on the team.

FavreChild
06-28-2006, 11:35 AM
Living in GB probably saves a lot of the players some money, at least during the regular season. I mean, how extravagant can you be, particularly in the nightlife arena? (Esp. now with the Nick Barnett club situation.)

You have to wait for the off-season to blow some real dough at the clubs(i.e., the Cheetah Lounge).

CaptainKickass
06-28-2006, 11:47 AM
Spending the $$ is the easy part, wouldn't you agree?

If I were a partying player I would rent a Limo and go to Milwaukee or jump a charter plane to the Twin Cities. Real easy. The cost of living in WI is much less than any other NFL city ('cept maybe NO).

I've got nothing but admiration for any of our players who act responsibly with their $$.

The KGB/alloted ticket thing may be a bit drastic, but if it's even remotely true I'll bet he doesn't have many friends or family members asking him for $$ and trying to ca$h in on his NFL status - that's pretty smart.

K-town
06-28-2006, 12:01 PM
I believe Javon Walker never spent any of the signing bonus he got when he was drafted for baseball (about 225K). At the time I was impressed and thought to myself: "Here's a guy with his head on straight." Later, after the contract fiasco, military medal analogies and whatnot, I concluded that that his head was on straight...up his a$$.

ny10804
06-28-2006, 12:10 PM
KGB is a very religious man, and therefore....is.....very....cheap...

Rastak
06-28-2006, 12:25 PM
KGB is a very religious man, and therefore....is.....very....cheap...


So was Jim Bakker and he threw money around like a drunken sailor....until he went to prison of course.

BlueBrewer
06-28-2006, 12:53 PM
I remember when Travis Jervey and Leshon Johnson were playing for GB and living together they tried to buy a real Lion, but got busted by the coaches. They also got busted by the WDNR for deer snares, what a couple of idiots.

ahaha
06-28-2006, 01:27 PM
I remember when Travis Jervey and Leshon Johnson were playing for GB and living together they tried to buy a real Lion, but got busted by the coaches. They also got busted by the WDNR for deer snares, what a couple of idiots.


Were the deer supposed to be food for the lion? How Roman.
If they were making Brett Favre money, that would be cool. But, Travis Jervey and Leshon Johnson throwing their big paychecks around? No wonder they tried to use snares, they couldn't afford to buy meat for the lion.

Pack0514
06-28-2006, 01:45 PM
I remember when Travis Jervey and Leshon Johnson were playing for GB and living together they tried to buy a real Lion, but got busted by the coaches. They also got busted by the WDNR for deer snares, what a couple of idiots.

Somebody correct me if I am wrong but I believe that Leshon Johnson fucker got busted a year or so ago for running a dog fighting ring. Sick Fuck...... I'd let a pit bull clamp onto his nuts and watch him cry like a baby.

BlueBrewer
06-28-2006, 05:12 PM
I had not heard that about the dog fighting ring, that is messed up. I would like to break his nose for that shit.

Harlan Huckleby
06-28-2006, 06:04 PM
I remember when Travis Jervey and Leshon Johnson were playing for GB and living together they tried to buy a real Lion, but got busted by the coaches. They also got busted by the WDNR for deer snares, what a couple of idiots.

they sound like they could be good special teams players. extra brains are a liability for kickoff coverage guys.

Deputy Nutz
06-28-2006, 06:35 PM
I remember an article in Sports Illustrated about Leshon and his baby Pitbulls and how much he cared and nurtured them. Well it turns out that he did, nurtured them into killers.

I guess thats what passes for a good time in Oklahoma.

Anyways, I remember the big fasco with Walker and Rosenhaus last summer and there was an article about how players spend their signing bonuses. It was laughable. In most cases before the draft these players have already racked up dept to their agents. Agents give players these loans for living expenses, workout costs, SUVs, homes, and Jewelry.

Most of the signing bonus is pissed away before they even get it. Whats left of it is usually invested into long term deals where they will get hit with huge penalties if they remove the money before it matures. So when they are barely getting by on their minimum contract for the first couple of years of the deal because they have already pissed their signing bonus down the drain they need more money to keep up their way of living, so you have these rookies threatening hold outs, and they don't even have to be rookies, they can be Terrell Owens.

Scott Campbell
06-28-2006, 07:14 PM
I remember an article in Sports Illustrated about Leshon and his baby Pitbulls and how much he cared and nurtured them. Well it turns out that he did, nurtured them into killers.

I guess thats what passes for a good time in Oklahoma.

Anyways, I remember the big fasco with Walker and Rosenhaus last summer and there was an article about how players spend their signing bonuses. It was laughable. In most cases before the draft these players have already racked up dept to their agents. Agents give players these loans for living expenses, workout costs, SUVs, homes, and Jewelry.

Most of the signing bonus is pissed away before they even get it. Whats left of it is usually invested into long term deals where they will get hit with huge penalties if they remove the money before it matures. So when they are barely getting by on their minimum contract for the first couple of years of the deal because they have already pissed their signing bonus down the drain they need more money to keep up their way of living, so you have these rookies threatening hold outs, and they don't even have to be rookies, they can be Terrell Owens.

They're just like lotto winners. Just because you have money doesn't mean you automatically have the skills to keep it.

HarveyWallbangers
06-28-2006, 08:52 PM
KGB is a very religious man, and therefore....is.....very....cheap...

Strange comment. Ever heard of tithing?

woodbuck27
06-29-2006, 11:24 AM
KGB is a very religious man, and therefore....is.....very....cheap...

The CHURCH gets all his extra money then. :roll:

GrnBay007
07-02-2006, 11:06 AM
Symposium Teaches Rookies Other Parts Of Game

by Mike Spofford,
posted 06/30/2006

Ingle Martin


Listening attentively at the 10th annual NFL rookie symposium this week, Packers second-round draft choice Greg Jennings couldn't help but connect to what he was hearing.

One of many role-playing scenarios, designed to make young professional football players aware of what they might encounter with their newfound status and (in some cases) wealth, depicted a married rookie with a family to support who was out to dinner with several other family members and friends.

Naturally, everyone expected the NFL "star" to pick up the check, right?

"Everybody wanted him to do this, do that, pay for this, pay for that, and he couldn't say no," said Jennings, a wide receiver out of Western Michigan. "He got himself in a bind because he felt it was his obligation.

"Some of those things I've already experienced - everyone thinking you've already got millions and millions of dollars and wanting to put a hand in your pocket. We're fortunate enough to have a job that pays well over what the average employee is going to make, but the biggest thing is you still have to learn to say no."

That was one message Jennings and the Packers' other 11 draft picks brought back with them after this past week's four-day symposium in San Diego, which concluded on Wednesday.

The program, with attendance mandatory for all 255 draftees in 2006, addressed the whole gamut of off-the-field issues, financial concerns, career planning and other circumstances young players may be encountering for the first time.

"The biggest thing players (are warned about) is having that mentality of 'It's not going to be me,'" Jennings said. "That's the biggest misperception everybody has, even myself. You always think it's not going to be me, and then later on down the line it is that person.

"They're trying to make you aware of and make you think about your future now."

One way to stress the importance of considering the future now was with a statistical exercise. As Packers fifth-round pick Ingle Martin recalls, everyone in the room stood up, and the speakers started to rattle off, round by round, the percentage of players who will survive in the league long-term. The portion who wouldn't sat down.

By the end, only three of every 10 players from this year's draft class were still standing.

"They said, 'All you guys sitting down aren't going to be here,'" said Martin, a quarterback from Furman. "You're going to be doing something else, working 9-to-5. You have to take advantage of this opportunity. People would give anything for this, and it's something that doesn't come along to everybody."

The Packers players noted the panel discussions with current and former NFL players were the most beneficial. Hearing the stories from players who have been through it all already, and what they learned and what they would do differently, provided the most valuable perspective.

Some of the more prominent players in attendance included Cleveland Browns defensive end Willie McGinest, New York Jets running back Curtis Martin, and San Diego Chargers linebacker Shawne Merriman, among many others.

Two Packers, running backs Samkon Gado and William Henderson, also contributed to the panel discussions.

Gado, now in his second year in the NFL, talked a lot about what he encountered as an undrafted free agent last year who came out of nowhere to begin leading the Packers in rushing and gaining instant notoriety.

Henderson, a 12-year veteran, stressed the importance of finding a productive role on a team to maximize your career, and being smart financially along the way. Jennings noted Henderson made an impression on several players when he mentioned he just now began tapping into some of the signing bonus money from his first big contract.

"That just tells you that it's your responsibility to make that money last and make that money work for you," Jennings said. "You don't want to just spend and not have anything to show for it."

Hearing from two teammates at entirely different stages in their careers made an impression as well.

"You get a different perspective from both of them because they're totally opposite guys the way they came into the league and what they've done," said second-round pick Daryn Colledge, an offensive lineman from Boise State.

"Will is a guy who's been in the league a long time and knows how to stick around and do well. He talked about how you can protect your money. And Gado is one of those guys who says, 'Hey, I came from the hardest route and I've been successful so here's what you watch out for. They'll love you today but if something goes wrong they won't love you tomorrow, so roll with it.'"

The symposium concluded with a presentation by former All-Pro wide receiver Cris Carter, who emphasized what got these players to the NFL in the first place - a love for the game.

"It was just a reminder of how passionate you have to be about the game to get you through it," Colledge said. "It's never as bad as you think or as good as you think. You have to remain even keel, and your passion for the game is going to get you through those times."

As an added benefit, the Packers' rookies also felt they turned the event into a team-building experience. Unlike some, the Packers' draft picks stayed on the same floor of the hotel, ate together, worked through their session together, and generally spent more off-the-field time together in four days than they had since being named Packers in late April.

"It was a great bonding experience," Colledge said. "We hope the rookie class got to know each other better and can use that and roll it into training camp."

Martin added that the more he got to know his fellow rookie teammates, the more appreciative he is that he landed in Green Bay.

"We learned a lot about the guys, and we could see that not all the teams went after the same things Green Bay went after, bringing in high-quality guys," he said.

"We're thankful for that. It makes it so much easier to play with guys you really like and respect."

mraynrand
07-02-2006, 11:15 AM
KGB is a very religious man, and therefore....is.....very....cheap...

Strange comment. Ever heard of tithing?

Harv, I just tithed the floor in my bathroom. What does that have to do with religion?

Harlan Huckleby
07-02-2006, 10:56 PM
Strange comment. Ever heard of tithing?

Does it have something to do with bondage?