wiki says Jan 14th 2005 so yeah that was the year he released Sharper and I think Wahle. Rivera was a free agent and he chose not to resign him.
"porky88" wrote:
I don't think it was so much that he chose not to resign Rivera as it was he had extremely limited resources to do it. The only reason he was not over the cap was by letting those three go. My recollection was after letting Sharper, Wahle, and Rivera go the Cap came out of the red to $1.9 mil.
The only way he keeps Rivera would have been to free cap space by cutting ties with other players salaries to get what he needed to sign him. To me thats just treading water and that's not what he was brought in to do.
I think Thompson realized the talent we did have here was getting old, the roster was paper thin, and the cap was horrendously bad off. The triple whammy.
I remember back then when that roster did not have any young players being developed that were going to be starters one day and would contribute. Wells. He's the only one I recall that would develope into a starter one day.
I also remember a high "wasted cap" number on salaries of players that were no longer on the team and a high number of players being paid the minimum to offset those numbers.
The DIFFERENCE in what Thompson has done is now the lower paid players are DRAFT PICKS with potential being compensated off of their rookie contracts VS. players picked up to fill the roster because the draft picks weren't good enough to stick.
Now we have a much more balanced Cap and a player developement program where younger talent can work themselves up and be ready to take over for a player that retires or leaves vs. looking up one day and saying "geez, what are we going to do about that?"
And if that player we need to fill a hole doesn't develope enough or fast enough Ted Thompson always has some tucked back now if he needs to fill a void.
Some tough decisions had to be made to get it to that point, or, he could have just fooled himself, and believed we were SB ready back in '05 and held off doing what was going to have to be done anyways.
"The train is leaving the station."