PDA

View Full Version : Again, Broncos' Marshall seeks pay boost



Lonestar
08-18-2009, 01:00 PM
Receiver's agent comes to team seeking new contract and leaves without it
By Mike Klis
The Denver Post
Posted: 08/17/2009 08:26:04 PM MDT
Updated: 08/18/2009 01:39:15 AM MDT


That didn't take long.

On the first business day after Brandon Marshall was exonerated of battery charges following a trial Friday in Atlanta, his agent, Kennard McGuire, walked into Broncos headquarters at Dove Valley between training camp workout sessions Monday.

Two NFL sources said McGuire sought out Broncos management to get a feel for the team's position on giving Marshall a contract extension. The Broncos told McGuire that at this time they were not willing to rework the wide receiver's deal, which has one year and $2.2 million remaining.

Marshall then reiterated his trade demand that he first issued in June. The Broncos again told Marshall on Monday that they would not trade him.

Amid this contract disagreement was another issue that caused Broncos chief operating officer Joe Ellis to personally apologize to Marshall. A teammate had told Marshall that a member of the Broncos' public relations staff was telling players after their preseason game Friday night what to say if they were asked about Marshall's acquittal. According to one source, the players were told: "Don't say you're happy for Brandon. Say it's good for the organization that this is behind us."

Marshall, believing the PR staffer was getting a directive from a superior, met with Ellis on Monday. Accompanying the receiver was Harvey Steinberg, the lawyer who represented Marshall at his trial.

Ellis apologized to Marshall during the meeting. A team source said the PR staffer was independently offering the advice.

And so it goes with the Broncos and their young stars at Dove Valley.

Marshall was excused from the evening practice Monday — when not injured, he has been on a one-a-day camp schedule — and McGuire left the team's headquarters without comment around 6:40 p.m.

Despite issuing his trade request, Marshall is not planning a contract holdout, in part because he doesn't want to pay a daily fine of $15,888. He is expected to participate in the team's practice this afternoon.

A big reason the Broncos are pausing at revisiting Marshall's contract is collective bargaining rules would allow the team to recoup only a small portion of any guarantee through a "morals clause."

Because he has been previously suspended for violating the NFL's personal conduct policy, Marshall could be subject to a lengthy suspension with another off-field incident.

The Broncos would not have to pay Marshall any game checks for the length of his suspension, but the bulk of the money in football contracts is written into bonuses.

Let's use Roddy White as an example, as Marshall probably is. During his trip to Atlanta last week, Marshall spoke with White, the Atlanta Falcons' top receiver who recently received a six-year extension with an $18.6 million guarantee.

White recorded a combined 2,584 yards and 13 touchdowns the past two years while in that same period Marshall had 2,590 yards and 13 touchdowns.

If the Broncos gave Marshall a similar $18.6 million guarantee, they could use the morals clause to recover only $775,000 (25 percent of the prorated bonus in the particular year of his suspension).

As for trading Marshall, his off-field issues, offseason hip surgery and desires for a new contract figure to make it difficult for the Broncos to receive fair value in return.

Mike Klis: 303-954-1055 or mklis@denverpost.com

Dean
08-18-2009, 06:00 PM
Receiver's agent comes to team seeking new contract and leaves without it
By Mike Klis
The Denver Post
Posted: 08/17/2009 08:26:04 PM MDT
Updated: 08/18/2009 01:39:15 AM MDT


Amid this contract disagreement was another issue that caused Broncos chief operating officer Joe Ellis to personally apologize to Marshall. A teammate had told Marshall that a member of the Broncos' public relations staff was telling players after their preseason game Friday night what to say if they were asked about Marshall's acquittal. According to one source, the players were told: "Don't say you're happy for Brandon. Say it's good for the organization that this is behind us."

We don't know who or why but someone is trying to manipulate the media.

claymore
08-18-2009, 06:02 PM
We don't know who or why but someone is trying to manipulate the media.

Ummmm Josh Mcdaniels?

BigDaddyBronco
08-18-2009, 06:28 PM
Ummmm Josh Mcdaniels?

You sound like Zam and Shanny. Deep breaths. Deep breaths.

Lonestar
08-18-2009, 06:49 PM
By Lindsay H. Jones
The Denver Post
Posted: 08/18/2009 02:43:27 PM MDT
Updated: 08/18/2009 04:28:32 PM MDT

Disgruntled wide receiver Brandon Marshall participated in practice Tuesday afternoon, a day after he and his agent reiterated their desire for the team to either sign Marshall to a new contract or trade him.

Marshall ran consistently on the second team behind Jabar Gaffney. The only time he ran with the first team was in four wide receiver sets or obvious running situations.

Marshall's agent, Kennard McGuire, met with the Broncos' front office Monday afternoon, the first business day since Marshall was acquitted of two misdemeanor battery charges in an Atlanta courtroom on Friday.

Told that the team was not going to give Marshall a new, lucrative deal, McGuire again said Marshall wanted to be traded. Marshall first requested a trade in June and then skipped the team's mandatory minicamp. The Broncos are not interested in trading their star receiver, who had back-to-back 100-catch season.

Despite his displeasure with the team and his contract, Marshall has not held out of training camp. The team would be able to fine Marshall up to $15,888 per day if he were not to show up.

Marshall is scheduled to make $2.198 million this season, the final year of his four-year contract.

Post Poll: Marshall's contract

Should the Broncos renegotiate Brandon Marshall's contract to give the star receiver more money? Read story

Yes: He's worth the money for 100 catches.
44.12 %
No: Too many issues, too much money.
55.87 %

http://www.denverpost.com/ci_13151969?source=rss&_requestid=5049840

broncohead
08-18-2009, 07:01 PM
I think he deserves a new contract but not worth what White got. Production wise yes but to many off the field issues to give him that much. It has been talked about a lot with the posters on this site but the only way I see him making what he wants to make is with insintive laiden contract.

Italianmobstr7
08-18-2009, 07:05 PM
He deserves a new contract, albeit incentive laden. I really hope he stays out of trouble and gets one. I want him to be a Bronco for a very long time.

Lonestar
08-18-2009, 07:06 PM
I think he deserves a new contract but not worth what White got. Production wise yes but to many off the field issues to give him that much. It has been talked about a lot with the posters on this site but the only way I see him making what he wants to make is with insintive laiden contract.


with yearly bonuses/guarantees IF he is still with the team and not in jail..

I see NO reason to give him any money guaranteed..

and we all know he wants that money up front.. so most likely he will not get it in DEN..

he is a RFA after this year with IIRC about a 3.5 mil salary.. in fact he is until after the 2011 season....

Denver Native (Carol)
08-18-2009, 08:28 PM
http://msn.foxsports.com/nfl/story/9884728/Marshall-miffed-again-with-Broncos

ENGLEWOOD, Colo. (AP) - Brandon Marshall has one more reason to be miffed at the Denver Broncos

Marshall, who is unhappy with his contract and wants either a raise or a trade, is annoyed with the way the team handled his acquittal on misdemeanor battery charges last week, a person close to him told The Associated Press on Tuesday.

The person spoke on the condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the situation.

Marshall learned upon rejoining the team that a member of the Broncos' public relations staff told his teammates after their preseason opener at San Francisco on Friday night that they shouldn't gloat over his acquittal hours earlier in an Atlanta courtroom.

The Denver Post, quoting a person it didn't identify, reported that players were told not to say they were happy for Marshall but instead to say it was good for the organization that the issue was behind them.

Marshall figured the directive came from someone higher up in the organization, so he met with Broncos chief operating officer Joe Ellis, who apologized to him Monday, the person familiar with the matter told the AP.

Broncos spokesman Jim Saccomano said the issue was handled internally and the team would have no comment.

Marshall walked off the practice field Tuesday without speaking to reporters, and coach Josh McDaniels declined to discuss the latest developments in this saga.

"Those are all private meetings and we're trying to do what's best for the football team," McDaniels said.

Marshall's agent, Kennard McGuire, declined to confirm reports that he had reiterated his request for a raise for his client and, barring that, a trade, during a meeting with the Broncos on Monday.

"Not sure where that story came from," McGuire said in an e-mail to the AP.

McDaniels said he's not concerned that Marshall's desires for more money or discontent over not getting it right away will detract from the team's preparations for the season.

"Brandon's out here performing the way that he's capable of performing. So, I don't have any reason to feel otherwise," McDaniels said.

He declined to say what he needed to see from Marshall to rework his contract, which calls for him to make $2.2 million this season.

"Those things are private matters, and when or if or what we're doing at this point, we're going to keep behind closed doors," McDaniels said.

Now that Marshall has cleared his name in the court of law - and, he hopes, the court of public opinion - the Pro Bowl receiver wants to put his signature on a hefty new contract. He hoped the verdict clearing him of charges he beat up his former girlfriend 18 months ago would give him leverage for a fresh start either in Denver or somewhere else.

But the Broncos are taking a wait-and-see approach with their recalcitrant receiver. They want to make sure he can keep out of trouble, stay healthy and deliver on the field like he did before he hurt a hip that required surgery in March.

Marshall hoped to follow Pro Bowl quarterback Jay Cutler out of Denver this offseason, but McDaniels didn't want to send a second superstar packing before he had even coached his first game and quickly quashed that notion.

Marshall contends that with back-to-back 100-catch seasons he has outperformed the modest four-year contract he signed in 2006 as a fourth-round draft choice out of Central Florida.

Yet, Marshall has issues on and off the field that are hindering his trade value and preventing him from cashing in.

He has already been suspended once for violating the league's personal conduct policy over a series of domestic disputes. Another misstep would subject him to another, perhaps lengthy suspension.

After boycotting the team's offseason workouts over his contract and his contention that the team made him play on a bum hip last year, Marshall has only practiced about a half-dozen times at training camp. He sustained a hamstring injury on Aug. 2 and didn't return to practice until Sunday.

Northman
08-18-2009, 08:38 PM
Regardless of how this ends if Denver keeps holding off (which they are entitled too) in paying him Marshall will just become more bitter and bitter. He wont be a Bronco next year, you heard it here first.

horsepig
08-18-2009, 09:19 PM
He needs to be compensated on an "earnest money" type deal. He's sure as hell worth more than we're paying him, throw him a few million bones.

broncohead
08-18-2009, 10:42 PM
Regardless of how this ends if Denver keeps holding off (which they are entitled too) in paying him Marshall will just become more bitter and bitter. He wont be a Bronco next year, you heard it here first.

I don't think McD cares though otherwise they would have at least discussed some kind of contract.

wbmustang
08-18-2009, 11:05 PM
I dunno I am torn here. The more and more drama B Marsh spews off the less I like him. I mean you just almost got done from A) Possibly going to jail B)Getting suspended by Roger Goddell and you get of with a Denver Broncos lawyer then you ante up the negotiating team. Sorry for the run on sentence.

WTF Marshall you at least need to show the team you can stay healthy and play well and then talk about a contract. I just think it is tacky imo.

Northman
08-18-2009, 11:23 PM
I don't think McD cares though otherwise they would have at least discussed some kind of contract.

Oh, im sure they dont im just saying. I thought for sure after the trial they would offer him something with some incentives or whatever but i guess they feel that they can go on without him. Its no skin off my nose. lol

honz
08-18-2009, 11:39 PM
Franchise his ass next year and make him prove that he can stay out of jail.

Tempus Fugit
08-19-2009, 12:51 AM
He deserves nothing more than he's already scheduled to earn. If the team and he come to agreement on an extension, so be it. Otherwise, they can revisit the issue after the season is over, when there will be no salary cap, but there will still be a franchise tag.

Lonestar
08-19-2009, 03:22 AM
Franchise his ass next year and make him prove that he can stay out of jail.


unless they sign a new CBA he is a RFA till the end of 2011.

Which means he will get a #1 tender and we have the right of first refusal should someone offer him a contract.. IF we refuse we get their #1 in the following draft.. IF we match the contract he is OURS..

Lonestar
08-19-2009, 03:29 AM
The Denver Post
Posted: 08/19/2009 01:00:00 AM MDT
Updated: 08/19/2009 01:54:03 AM MDT


Brandon Marshall may be recovered from hip and hamstring injuries that kept him out of much of the first two weeks of training camp, but the Broncos' star receiver is finding that he's not going to just resume his place as the team's top receiver.

Marshall was relegated to the second team for much of Tuesday's practice. Even worse, he was asked to practice as a gunner of the scout team on punt coverage.

Defensive teammates on the sideline playfully heckled Marshall as he engaged in physical blocking drills with cornerback Joshua Bell.

It's not exactly the treatment a Pro Bowl receiver is used to.

Marshall, who, along with his agent met with team officials Monday to discuss the possibility of a new contract, left the field

Post Poll: Marshall's contract

Should the Broncos renegotiate Brandon Marshall's contract to give the star receiver more money? Read story

Total Votes = 4420
Yes: He's worth the money for 100 catches.
42.89 %
No: Too many issues, too much money.
57.10 %

without commenting Tuesday.
Coach Josh McDaniels refused to talk about Monday's meeting with Marshall and said he was confident that Marshall's ongoing drama will not be a distraction to the team.

"Our players understand what we're trying to do and get done, and Brandon's out here and performing the way he's capable of performing," McDaniels said. "I don't have a reason to feel otherwise."

McDaniels said it was too early to decide if Marshall might start in Saturday's preseason game at Seattle. The team opened in a four-receiver set in San Francisco, and if that is the case again Saturday, Marshall likely would be included.

"Certainly, every day he gathers more information about our offense and system," McDaniels said. "We'll make that decision as we go forward here, certainly a chance he could be on the field."

Only a maybe.

Safety Brian Dawkins has practiced this week wearing an orange jersey — marking an injured player — with a large cast on his fractured right hand.

McDaniels said he wasn't ready to commit to Dawkins playing against Seattle.

"We'll make the decision here as we go," McDaniels said.

Dawkins had surgery the first week of camp to repair a fracture and did not practice until Monday.

Pump up the volume.

The team spent time practicing with loud music blaring as it prepares to play at Qwest Field, which is regarded as one of the league's noisiest venues.

McDaniels and assistant Mark Thewes created the playlist, which included rap (Notorious B.I.G.), pop (Michael Jackson) and rock (U2).

But the mix wasn't universally appealing. After the offense scored during a red-zone drill, defensive end Kenny Peterson shouted at Thewes to change the artists away from U2 to something a little more up-tempo.

Footnotes.

Wide receiver Brandon Lloyd, cornerback Jack Williams and running back Knowshon Moreno were injured players held out of practice. . . . With Moreno out, Correll Buckhalter, LaMont Jordan and Peyton Hillis are getting the bulk of the carries with the starting offense. . . . Dawkins and rookie safety Darcel McBath took repetitions with the first team in the nickel package. McBath started in place of Dawkins in the first preseason game last week.

http://www.denverpost.com/ci_13154799?source=rss

Lonestar
08-19-2009, 03:30 AM
Arnie Stapleton, AP Sports Writer
ENGLEWOOD (AP) ― Brandon Marshall has one more reason to be miffed at the Denver Broncos.

Marshall, who is unhappy with his contract and wants either a raise or a trade, is annoyed with the way the team handled his acquittal on misdemeanor battery charges last week, a person close to him told The Associated Press on Tuesday.

The person spoke on the condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the situation.

Marshall learned upon rejoining the team that a member of the Broncos' public relations staff told his teammates after their preseason opener at San Francisco on Friday night that they shouldn't gloat over his acquittal hours earlier in an Atlanta courtroom.

The Denver Post, quoting a person it didn't identify, reported that players were told not to say they were happy for Marshall but instead to say it was good for the organization that the issue was behind them.

Marshall figured the directive came from someone higher up in the organization, so he met with Broncos chief operating officer Joe Ellis, who apologized to him Monday, the person familiar with the matter told the AP.

Broncos spokesman Jim Saccomano said the issue was handled internally and the team would have no comment.

Marshall walked off the practice field Tuesday without speaking to reporters, and coach Josh McDaniels declined to discuss the latest developments in this saga.

"Those are all private meetings and we're trying to do what's best for the football team," McDaniels said.

Marshall's agent, Kennard McGuire, declined to confirm reports that he had reiterated his request for a raise for his client and, barring that, a trade, during a meeting with the Broncos on Monday.

"Not sure where that story came from," McGuire said in an e-mail to the AP.

McDaniels said he's not concerned that Marshall's desires for more money or discontent over not getting it right away will detract from the team's preparations for the season.

"Brandon's out here performing the way that he's capable of performing. So, I don't have any reason to feel otherwise," McDaniels said.

He declined to say what he needed to see from Marshall to rework his contract, which calls for him to make $2.2 million this season.

"Those things are private matters, and when or if or what we're doing at this point, we're going to keep behind closed doors," McDaniels said.

Now that Marshall has cleared his name in the court of law -- and, he hopes, the court of public opinion -- the Pro Bowl receiver wants to put his signature on a hefty new contract. He hoped the verdict clearing him of charges he beat up his former girlfriend 18 months ago would give him leverage for a fresh start either in Denver or somewhere else.

But the Broncos are taking a wait-and-see approach with their recalcitrant receiver. They want to make sure he can keep out of trouble, stay healthy and deliver on the field like he did before he hurt a hip that required surgery in March.

Marshall hoped to follow Pro Bowl quarterback Jay Cutler out of Denver this offseason, but McDaniels didn't want to send a second superstar packing before he had even coached his first game and quickly quashed that notion.

Marshall contends that with back-to-back 100-catch seasons he has outperformed the modest four-year contract he signed in 2006 as a fourth-round draft choice out of Central Florida.

Yet, Marshall has issues on and off the field that are hindering his trade value and preventing him from cashing in.

He has already been suspended once for violating the league's personal conduct policy over a series of domestic disputes. Another misstep would subject him to another, perhaps lengthy suspension.

After boycotting the team's offseason workouts over his contract and his contention that the team made him play on a bum hip last year, Marshall has only practiced about a half-dozen times at training camp. He sustained a hamstring injury on Aug. 2 and didn't return to practice until Sunday.

http://cbs4denver.com/broncos/Brandon.Marshall.Broncos.2.1134259.html

Orange7
08-19-2009, 05:21 AM
If he wants more pay, fine, I don't blame him. How could you blame anyone for wanting a higher pay check?

The problem is that his attitude is not deserving of that contract at the moment.

Regardless of what anyone from the Broncos says, this type of thing will become a distraction.