c_hawkbob wrote:Oh come on, it's not like the last offer he was going to get. If he didn't accept this offer it would only be bigger next time (which is why that was the route his agent was advising). It's also not like he was living the life of a pauper in the mean time. For you to insist Russell's only motivation for signing now was greed is the definition of intransigence.I cant believe you expect everybody to agree with you, nothing is ever one extreme or the other, it's always somewhere between.
I never said it was his "only" motivation. I also do not expect everyone, or even anyone, to agree with me. Gaining a consensus around my opinions has never been a priority with me. If it was, I would have quit posting long ago. I just don't happen to agree with the altruistic motivations you are suggesting as a possible reason for Russell's signing.
None of us know exactly what Russell's motivations were for signing. But the facts are that Russell waited until the last possible moment to sign where the only options were to either break his promise to play out his contract if a deal wasn't reached by TC and continue negotiating or to walk away from $30M, and that he eventually leveraged what many observers have characterized as a "monster" contract and the second richest deal in all of football. These facts suggest to me that Russell's two primary goals were to (1) to sign a deal before training camp and (2) to squeeze every last penny he could out of the Hawks prior to his self imposed deadline. IMO any other consideration was incidental, regardless of what his paid agent has said about the subject.
These negotiations have changed my opinion of Russell's make-up, not that I've lost any respect for him. Up until now, we have been treated to his "Go Hawks!" end to interviews, Children's hospital volunteerism, playing catch with a kid on the stadium field after MNF, spiritual revelations, donning a shirt and tie for interviews. But now I think that he's a little more selfish, a little less perfect, and more like one of us rather than this super hero image we've all been led to believe of him. In a way, it's a bit refreshing.