Signing exclusive rights FA's to longer than one-year deals is done all the time, particularly with draft picks. I never once said we should sign him this week, as has been wrongly asserted.
Things could change between now and the offseason when the issue will most likely come up. I don't think they will. We have much more to go on with Bigby than we do with a draft pick. In my opinion, he's a player, and I believe he'll continue to be a player.
Signing talented football players to multi-year deals is how you get value, and signing value is how you ultimately win Super Bowls.
Is it risky? All signings are. But it's better to be wrong with a young up-and-comer that you can sign cheap relative to his talent level than an old free agent that you overpay for even if he performs.
People who don't believe or understand what they see on the field might say it is risky, and why take the risk... People like Ted Thompson who know talent when they see it and understand that you trust your evaluations would say that's how you build a winning franchise. But GMs better be right more often than not, and eventually, they need to hit the jackpot.
I believe Bigby has the potential to be a stalwart contributor to a tough and physical defense that dictates games. That's what I see. There's no reason for me to believe he won't continue to display those skills, short of debilitating injury. He may never be Brett Favre or Reggie White, but he's got jackpot talent.
Bigby could be a flash in the pan. I don't think he will be. His game is very different than Marques Anderson's ever was - even when he had some picks and fumble recoveries that year.
Atari Bigby is fundamentally sound, a punishing tackler, has a nose for the ball, forces the action, and possesses the attitude, will, and intangibles that it takes to be a winner. Time will tell whether I'm right or wrong about that, and we'll see what Thompson's conclusions are most likely during next offseason.
Things could change between now and the offseason when the issue will most likely come up. I don't think they will. We have much more to go on with Bigby than we do with a draft pick. In my opinion, he's a player, and I believe he'll continue to be a player.
Signing talented football players to multi-year deals is how you get value, and signing value is how you ultimately win Super Bowls.
Is it risky? All signings are. But it's better to be wrong with a young up-and-comer that you can sign cheap relative to his talent level than an old free agent that you overpay for even if he performs.
People who don't believe or understand what they see on the field might say it is risky, and why take the risk... People like Ted Thompson who know talent when they see it and understand that you trust your evaluations would say that's how you build a winning franchise. But GMs better be right more often than not, and eventually, they need to hit the jackpot.
I believe Bigby has the potential to be a stalwart contributor to a tough and physical defense that dictates games. That's what I see. There's no reason for me to believe he won't continue to display those skills, short of debilitating injury. He may never be Brett Favre or Reggie White, but he's got jackpot talent.
Bigby could be a flash in the pan. I don't think he will be. His game is very different than Marques Anderson's ever was - even when he had some picks and fumble recoveries that year.
Atari Bigby is fundamentally sound, a punishing tackler, has a nose for the ball, forces the action, and possesses the attitude, will, and intangibles that it takes to be a winner. Time will tell whether I'm right or wrong about that, and we'll see what Thompson's conclusions are most likely during next offseason.


Comment