Draft closes doors for many veterans
The draft is a time for turning college kids into future stars. But it's also a time for turning former stars into memories.
This is a week defined by the draft, beginning with NFL attorneys arguing to an appellate court panel why Maurice Clarett and Mike Williams and seven poseurs should not be in the lottery, and concluding with 255 prospects having officially entered the league.
It is also a week in which the available unrestricted free agents without jobs, admittedly a dubious remnant collection at best, gets booted further into the collective subconscious. Oh, there could be a few last-minute free agent deals before the draft, although, given the pace and presence of the past month, the agreements will offer little of consequence. For the most part, however, the free agents will be out of sight during draft week.
Finishing the second half of the ol' out-of-sight equation, that means the jobless veterans will be out of mind as well. And quite possibly -- and this is where things get tough for those players hanging onto the misguided belief that the next time the phone rings, it's going to be a desperate general manger, offering a seven-figure signing bonus -- out of the league for good.
"The uncertainty, yeah, that makes it hard," acknowledged tailback Stacey Mack, who opened the season with the Houston Texans in 2003 as the starter, before losing his job to Domanick Davis. "It can do a job on you. It's nerve-wracking, for sure, man."
And the draft, with all the accompanying attention it receives, certainly does nothing to reduce the anxiety level of still unemployed veterans. The league's annual initiation rite for rookies can be the equivalent of the last rites for veterans seeking to get into a training camp this summer. With all the new blood coming into the NFL this weekend, the already anemic chances for veterans to collect another season's worth of paychecks will be further reduced, so this is a tenuous and torturous time.
In a purge that is now reprised annually, the influx of promising rookies will result in some broken promises made to veterans by certain franchises, and careers will come to an abrupt end. For dozens of veterans still on ice in the inert unrestricted market, the draft can become the ultimate freeze-out, players and agent acknowledged last week.
Said veteran agent Ralph Cindrich: "Teams will tell you, 'If we don't draft a guy at that position, yeah, we'll be interested in your player.' But you know that the 'if element' is a pretty big one. The draft can knock your guy right off a team's 'to do' list."
Among the unemployed free agents represented by Cindrich is quarterback Jeff Blake, whose 100 career starts will probably get him a contract offer after the draft, especially with so many franchises unsettled at the primary backup spot. On the flip side, finding jobs for clients such as Tim Ruddy and Todd Perry could be a tougher endeavor. The veteran offensive linemen, released by Miami last month, might have an opportunity to return to the Dolphins before camp. But if Miami invests heavily in linemen during the draft, it will mitigate the necessity to bring back both, or even one, of the veterans.
Veteran agent Pat Dye likewise knows that if the Philadelphia Eagles move up in the first round and choose Oregon State tailback Steven Jackson, it likely renders moot the hours he has spent on the phone with club executives, pitching them on client James Stewart.
"With all the focus on the draft," Dye noted, "people lose sight of the fact there are still dozens of (veterans) still out there in limbo."
Further exacerbating angst levels is that, by all standards, this year's unrestricted pool was a treacherously shallow one from the outset. The top unrestricted veterans (relatively speaking) were gobbled up in a wild spending spree and, realistically, the competitive market opened and closed within a frenetic two-week stretch. So the threadbare collection of players still unsigned is arguably more shabby than the remnant of years past.
Of the top 30 unrestricted players rated by ESPN.com at the outset of the signing period, the only player unsigned is linebacker Ian Gold, and his unemployment is more a function of his exorbitant asking price than teams' disinterest in him. Coming off a season ended prematurely by knee surgery, Gold is arguably the best player still available, but will have to get more realistic in his contract demands.
The larger list of "viable" unrestricted free agents kept by ESPN.com, a litany that totaled 64 on March 3, has been whittled to just six. That doesn't take into account the list of so-called "street" free agents, veterans released just before the start of free agency or in the 6½ weeks that have followed, but even that roll call offers only slim pickings.
For the past five years, there has been an average of 75-80 unrestricted free agents who have gone into the market and are ultimately shut out, who never get back into the league again. It appears that average will hold and, in truth, could rise a bit in 2004. The lucky veterans who do find work will certainly find their financial expectations lowered, with most having to settle for minimum base salaries, and probably no signing bonus money.
One prominent general manager, who conceded he is still seriously considering a pair of unrestricted free agents to fill areas where he needs improved depth, emphasized that it is time for players still unsigned to "get realistic" about their plight. He pointed out that the minimum base salary, for most players, is still considerably more than "if they are forced to go out in the 'civilian world' and have to make a living."
"Let's face it, what's left (in free agency) is basically junk, really," said one head coach who is intimately involved in every personnel decision by his team. "Fans are always saying,like, 'Hey, Joe Blow is still (available). Why don't we sign him?' Well, the reason is that most of these guys have more 'name' than 'game' at this point of their careers."
For sure, there are plenty of familiar-name players still seeking work, guys such as quarterback Kordell Stewart, tailbacks Ki-Jana Carter and Dorsey Levens, defensive back Jason Sehorn, offensive lineman Vaughn Parker, defensive ends Chad Bratzke and Tony Brackens, linebackers Mo Lewis and Marvin Jones, among others.
For all of them, however, the clock is ticking. And this week, shoved to the background by all of the draft hype, that clock is going to be even more annoying than that incessant sound of the inexorable second hand on 60 Minutes every Sunday night.
It's draft week, a time for turning college kids into future stars and, in come cases, for turning former stars into memories.
Around the league
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Len Pasquarelli is a senior NFL writer for ESPN.com.


