PDA

View Full Version : Nick Perry not signed



Guiness
05-06-2019, 10:17 AM
Nick Perry is still out there unsigned. Do the Pack have no interest in him at all? I wonder if they would consider bringing him back as a rotational/backup player?

He obviously didn’t draw much interest on the FA market, and I can’t see his price being much over $2-3million with little or no signing bonus. They thought highly enough of him to give him a big contract not so long ago.

Tony Oday
05-06-2019, 10:18 AM
All sorts of nope. Waste of a roster spot.

pbmax
05-06-2019, 10:38 AM
Depends on price. No reason he couldn't rotate in. Might help keep him healthy.

MadScientist
05-06-2019, 10:51 AM
There's a reason he hasn't signed. At this point he'll probably wait to see what team has enough injuries to sign him. Peri is injured too much and just isn't good enough to waste a roster spot right now.

ThunderDan
05-06-2019, 10:55 AM
Depends on price. No reason he couldn't rotate in. Might help keep him healthy.

My thoughts exactly. For the right price we should be willing to look at anyone not signed yet.

Vincenzo
05-06-2019, 11:36 AM
Why Ted signed NP to a lucrative deal is beyond me. He showed so little prior to his signing.
Pure lazy POS.

gbgary
05-06-2019, 11:53 AM
All sorts of nope. Waste of a roster spot.

agree. he'd just get hurt again.

gbgary
05-06-2019, 11:56 AM
Why Ted signed NP to a lucrative deal is beyond me. He showed so little prior to his signing.
Pure lazy POS.

he developed, had a good contract year. he thought he'd arrived. hind-sight says it was a bad idea but at the time it seemed right. didnt' work out. hurt too much...not lazy.

red
05-06-2019, 01:08 PM
Packers have given him enough money for nothing already

pbmax
05-06-2019, 01:31 PM
Why Ted signed NP to a lucrative deal is beyond me. He showed so little prior to his signing.
Pure lazy POS.

You apparently have never seen him do the dirty work of holding the edge against the run versus a pro tackle. He's was/is unmovable at the edge.

Patler
05-06-2019, 01:49 PM
Perry is a good football player, he just doesn't play often enough. Nothing at all lazy about the way he plays. His stats per game played really are not bad, his games played per year are bad. I think an argument can be made that his numerous hand, wrist and arm injuries may have come from the violent way he attacks blockers. He always seems to have a cast of some sort on one arm.

N. Perry - 81 games - 32 sacks - 213 tackles
P Smith - 64 games - 24.5 sacks - 168 tackles
Z Smith - 58 games - 18.5 sacks - 119 tackles

The problem is that Perry's stats came over seven seasons, the Smith's just four seasons. Perry's best years were the season before and the season after signing his last contract, so you can't really argue he let down after signing the deal. The guy just can't stay on the field, and you can't build a defense expecting him to be a starter. But, at a reasonable price he could add value as an experienced, physical backup to spell your starters.

Oft-injured players make for tough decisions. You never know when they might turn things around, or how long his health will last. In the three years before his contract, Perry missed a total of five games. In the two years after, he missed 11 games. I can't blame GB for their decision to sign him in 2017, especially when you consider:

Casey Hayward seemed to have a chronic hamstring problem that stole his quickness, but he hasn't missed a game and has played very well in three seasons for the Chargers.

JC Tretter played in 0, 8, 16 and 7 games in his four seasons in GB, but now hasn't missed a game in two seasons for Cleveland.

Difficult to know what direction a player's health will go.

HarveyWallbangers
05-06-2019, 10:18 PM
Exactly. Nothing lazy about the way Perry plays the game.

call_me_ishmael
05-06-2019, 11:38 PM
Perry is a good football player, he just doesn't play often enough. Nothing at all lazy about the way he plays. His stats per game played really are not bad, his games played per year are bad. I think an argument can be made that his numerous hand, wrist and arm injuries may have come from the violent way he attacks blockers. He always seems to have a cast of some sort on one arm.

N. Perry - 81 games - 32 sacks - 213 tackles
P Smith - 64 games - 24.5 sacks - 168 tackles
Z Smith - 58 games - 18.5 sacks - 119 tackles

The problem is that Perry's stats came over seven seasons, the Smith's just four seasons. Perry's best years were the season before and the season after signing his last contract, so you can't really argue he let down after signing the deal. The guy just can't stay on the field, and you can't build a defense expecting him to be a starter. But, at a reasonable price he could add value as an experienced, physical backup to spell your starters.

Oft-injured players make for tough decisions. You never know when they might turn things around, or how long his health will last. In the three years before his contract, Perry missed a total of five games. In the two years after, he missed 11 games. I can't blame GB for their decision to sign him in 2017, especially when you consider:

Casey Hayward seemed to have a chronic hamstring problem that stole his quickness, but he hasn't missed a game and has played very well in three seasons for the Chargers.

JC Tretter played in 0, 8, 16 and 7 games in his four seasons in GB, but now hasn't missed a game in two seasons for Cleveland.

Difficult to know what direction a player's health will go.

Great post.

Fritz
05-07-2019, 09:52 AM
Part of the problem is that you expect your backup linebackers to play special teams, I think. So is Perry willing to do that? He'd be a great rotational guy, play him on obvious run downs, maybe keep him healthy by keeping snaps down, but if he doesn't add value on special teams, can they really afford to carry a specialist, part-time guy?

bobblehead
05-07-2019, 10:47 AM
Clearly Pb and Patler didn't get the message. Stats and game film be damned, Perry was often hurt, therefore lazy and didn't do shit when on the field. Waste of money to pay $3 million for a guy who is as productive as the Smiths when he is on the field.

call_me_ishmael
05-07-2019, 11:05 AM
Clearly Pb and Patler didn't get the message. Stats and game film be damned, Perry was often hurt, therefore lazy and didn't do shit when on the field. Waste of money to pay $3 million for a guy who is as productive as the Smiths when he is on the field.

It's not about the money, it's about the roster spot. Perry has a knack for either ending up on injured reserve, or the even worse not-quite-healthy-enough-to-be-effective-but-not-injured-enough-for-injured-reserve situation. I would be totally fine signing him after week 1 so they can cut him if he gets dinged up again.

bobblehead
05-07-2019, 11:12 AM
Perry is a good football player, he just doesn't play often enough. Nothing at all lazy about the way he plays. His stats per game played really are not bad, his games played per year are bad. I think an argument can be made that his numerous hand, wrist and arm injuries may have come from the violent way he attacks blockers. He always seems to have a cast of some sort on one arm.

N. Perry - 81 games - 32 sacks - 213 tackles------------- .395 sacks and 2.63 tackles per game
P Smith - 64 games - 24.5 sacks - 168 tackles------------ .383 and 2.63
Z Smith - 58 games - 18.5 sacks - 119 tackles------------ .319 and 2.05

The problem is that Perry's stats came over seven seasons, the Smith's just four seasons. Perry's best years were the season before and the season after signing his last contract, so you can't really argue he let down after signing the deal. The guy just can't stay on the field, and you can't build a defense expecting him to be a starter. But, at a reasonable price he could add value as an experienced, physical backup to spell your starters.

Oft-injured players make for tough decisions. You never know when they might turn things around, or how long his health will last. In the three years before his contract, Perry missed a total of five games. In the two years after, he missed 11 games. I can't blame GB for their decision to sign him in 2017, especially when you consider:

Casey Hayward seemed to have a chronic hamstring problem that stole his quickness, but he hasn't missed a game and has played very well in three seasons for the Chargers.

JC Tretter played in 0, 8, 16 and 7 games in his four seasons in GB, but now hasn't missed a game in two seasons for Cleveland.

Difficult to know what direction a player's health will go.

Soooo....

bobblehead
05-07-2019, 11:13 AM
It's not about the money, it's about the roster spot. Perry has a knack for either ending up on injured reserve, or the even worse not-quite-healthy-enough-to-be-effective-but-not-injured-enough-for-injured-reserve situation. I would be totally fine signing him after week 1 so they can cut him if he gets dinged up again.

But clearly he is as productive as the 2 guys we signed when he is on the field. and if he plays 5 games for 3 Mill he is a better value than either of them.

bobblehead
05-07-2019, 11:14 AM
However all of this is a moot point cuz Perry will want to start and hope he "proves it" so he can get a payday again.

call_me_ishmael
05-07-2019, 11:15 AM
But clearly he is as productive as the 2 guys we signed when he is on the field. and if he plays 5 games for 3 Mill he is a better value than either of them.

Sure, he's a better value for those 5 games but what about the wasted roster spot and short depth the other 11 games?

pbmax
05-07-2019, 11:16 AM
Sure, he's a better value for those 5 games but what about the wasted roster spot and short depth the other 11 games?

Its only a wasted roster spot if you can't sign someone in October that you could have in August. Are there any replacement level OLB you really like out there?

bobblehead
05-07-2019, 11:16 AM
Sure, he's a better value for those 5 games but what about the wasted roster spot and short depth the other 11 games?

Valid point. But I can gamble that he stays healthy with limited snaps. I'd rather have him than Gilbert.

Patler
05-07-2019, 11:22 AM
Part of the problem is that you expect your backup linebackers to play special teams, I think. So is Perry willing to do that? He'd be a great rotational guy, play him on obvious run downs, maybe keep him healthy by keeping snaps down, but if he doesn't add value on special teams, can they really afford to carry a specialist, part-time guy?

Two thoughts:

First, I don't think it would be essential for him to play STs. When the Packers had Matthews, Perry and Peppers, none played STs on any regular basis. Now the group could be Smith I, Smith II and Perry. There will be a couple TEs and RBs, 2 or 3 Wrs, CBs and safeties and 3, maybe 4 other LBs to pick from, along with the occasional O or D linemen that fill a spot. I think they could meet their needs without him.

Second, I have no reason to think Perry wouldn't play, if asked. In recent years I have often been surprised to see veterans who are prolonging their careers as backups also now playing STs. It makes sense. If their goal is to extend their careers even when no longer starting, why not do whatever it takes?

Patler
05-07-2019, 11:52 AM
Just to be clear, I'm not really advocating signing him, nor not signing him. I don't much care either way. If they think they have a hole in their roster at OLB, he would be an interesting player to plug it. Cutting his snaps in half would limit the opportunities for injury, but, obviously any injury can come at any time. However, as a backup, if he misses a game or two here or there it doesn't impact your defense all that much. If he goes on IR, hopefully by that time there will be a younger player ready for more opportunities. If limiting his snaps allows him to play a full season, I think he could make a decent contribution.

Realistically, players don't often take such reductions in their role with the team for which they had prominent roles previously. Normally, they are released or their contracts expire and they go elsewhere. Probably a lot of reasons for that for both the player and the team.

call_me_ishmael
05-07-2019, 12:05 PM
Its only a wasted roster spot if you can't sign someone in October that you could have in August. Are there any replacement level OLB you really like out there?

It's a wasted roster spot if he can't play and the rotation is short. The problem with Perry in my eyes is he's always hurt but seemingly always healthy enough to get a cast put on and keep playing, at least for a month or two before IR. During that time, he's ineffective. It's a real problem in my eyes.

call_me_ishmael
05-07-2019, 12:05 PM
Valid point. But I can gamble that he stays healthy with limited snaps. I'd rather have him than Gilbert.

I would 100% be on board bringing him back in a limited role.

pbmax
05-07-2019, 01:43 PM
It's a wasted roster spot if he can't play and the rotation is short. The problem with Perry in my eyes is he's always hurt but seemingly always healthy enough to get a cast put on and keep playing, at least for a month or two before IR. During that time, he's ineffective. It's a real problem in my eyes.

A. If he can't play and you are short, you cut or IR him. Its not a long term deal that hurts you with dead money.

B. He still put up those numbers, club on his hand or not.

I suspect Patler is right, they are carrying him and his dead cap weight on the books now ($11 mil). I doubt they want to be reminded of it since they washed their hands of him once.

run pMc
05-07-2019, 04:55 PM
I think the cap hit plus the reduced salary/role would be tough for each. I'd be surprised if he's still unsigned by Week 1. He can still play at a decent level when healthy. Playing him in a rotation/limiting his snaps could keep him healthier and get the most out of him.
Would I take him over Fackrell? Only if he could stay healthy.

I think the odds of Perry's return are very low (< 10%), especially now that they drafted Gary to rotate in with the Smiths.

texaspackerbacker
05-07-2019, 07:34 PM
Perry is not as good as what we had before this off-season much less what we have now. Fackrell and Gilbert both performed better than Nick Perry even when Perry was as close to healthy as he ever was. I wouldn't want him to take up a roster spot even if he would play for nothing.

mraynrand
05-07-2019, 09:56 PM
Fackrell and Gilbert both performed better than Nick Perry even when Perry was as close to healthy as he ever was.

After that came out, did you wipe your anus?

Deputy Nutz
05-08-2019, 08:24 AM
Z. Smith was a bit of a project coming in to the NFL, he wasn't a first round draft pick that got rotational snaps off the bat. He has slowly improved throughout his career. We can compare stats, I like that, but I think potential is what got the Smith's their contract, and what got Perry cut.

mraynrand
05-08-2019, 09:54 AM
Z. Smith was a bit of a project coming in to the NFL, he wasn't a first round draft pick that got rotational snaps off the bat. He has slowly improved throughout his career. We can compare stats, I like that, but I think potential is what got the Smith's their contract, and what got Perry cut.

Yup. Perry's highest future potential is to be on the injury report.

run pMc
05-09-2019, 01:30 PM
Z. Smith was a bit of a project coming in to the NFL, he wasn't a first round draft pick that got rotational snaps off the bat. He has slowly improved throughout his career. We can compare stats, I like that, but I think potential is what got the Smith's their contract, and what got Perry cut.

Yep. Perry is 29, he's not going to get any better. He sets the edge well vs. the run and can bull rush, but the Smiths are younger, healthier, and still in their prime.
And yes, when healthy he's better than Fackrell or Gilbert.

Fritz
05-10-2019, 02:35 PM
Well, as someone pointed out, the team is carrying his dead cap money, so it seems unlikely they'd then sign him - again - and pay him more. Maybe they'll pick up some UDFA who can play ST and convince them he might develop.

pbmax
05-10-2019, 05:02 PM
You should be able to sign a player who is dead money on your cap for some kind of cap benefit. Veterans and teams spending cash all benefit.

"We cut him, it costs us $11 mil this year to carry the cap hit, but we saved $3 million of that hit when we resigned him for a year."

MadScientist
05-10-2019, 05:11 PM
Well, as someone pointed out, the team is carrying his dead cap money, so it seems unlikely they'd then sign him - again - and pay him more. Maybe they'll pick up some UDFA who can play ST and convince them he might develop.

UDFA Greg Roberts from Baylor got 65K of his salary guaranteed. I'm guessing the odds of him being on the roster are a lot higher than Peri.
https://packerswire.usatoday.com/2019/05/08/packers-give-7k-signing-bonuses-to-7-undrafted-free-agents/