Originally posted by bud49:
I guess that would be 55.6 mil franchise tag for Brock if that were to transpire?
The exclusive franchise tag is calculated at the end of the restricted free agent signing period in late April. Before then, all franchise tagged players are tagged for the tender amount of the non-exclusive franchise tag.
Purdy still has 1 year left on his deal, so he cannot be franchise tagged this offseason. If he plays this season without an extension, he'll have a salary around 5.2M. The non-exclusive franchise tag for quarterbacks will be around 43-45M next year, so he would get that since it's higher than 120% of his previous salary.
Originally posted by bud49:
If the player signs with another team, the original team can match the offer or receive two first-round draft picks.
I would say that in the bold is why there has been no movement when a team has Franchised a QB plus the money.
When another team signs the player to an offer sheet, that offer sheet counts against that teams salary cap until the players prior team makes a decision on whether to match. If the new club tries to position itself to price out the prior team, the new club could have to manipulate existing contracts to create the cap space needed to take on the offer sheet. It's all too risky when a much safer and cheaper alternative exists. Trades. New clubs don't have to manipulate any contracts to accommodate the new contract until the trade is submitted to the league.
Teams also don't like to mess with other teams out of fear of retribution. In 2006, Steve Hutchinson was transition tagged by the Seahawks. Minnesota couldn't price out the Seahawks, so they inserted a poison pill that would turn the Seahawks off from matching. The contract offered by Minnesota was for 49M/7yrs with 16M guaranteed. If Hutchinson was not the highest paid offensive lineman on his team at signing, his contract would become fully guaranteed. The Vikings had no lineman making more than 7M AAV. The Seahawks had Walter Jones making more. The Seahawks filed a complaint and the arbitrator ruled that the Vikings poison pill wasn't prohibited by the CBA. In response, the Seahawks signed Vikings restricted free agent WR Nate Burleson to a 49M/7yr contract. In the contract were 2 poison pills. First, if Burleson played in five or more games in the state of Minnesota in any year of the contract, his entire contract becomes fully guaranteed. Second, if Burleson made more than all of the running backs combined on his team, his contract becomes fully guaranteed. Playing in Seattle and alongside Shaun Alexander made the contract safe for Seattle. Both teams were angry with each other. Other teams were upset with both teams. In response, the league unofficially banned poison pills until they were officially banned through the 2011 CBA.