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Monday, April 20, 2009

Sheldon Brown feels taken for granted, the steady Eagles corner told your Eagletarian Monday evening.

"I've always been treated like the redheaded stepchild, ever since I was drafted," Brown said. He was explaining how he came to tell ESPN that he wanted to be traded, a move that provoked a strong, lengthy statement from the team Monday afternoon, denying his request and asserting that the contract extension Brown signed in 2004 does not make him underpaid in 2009.

"I've always been the nice guy, never said anything. I think they took that for granted," Brown said.

Brown said he reached the boiling point when, after a year of trying to get the Eagles to address his deal, he heard that team president Joe Banner had gone on WIP and said Brown's dissatisfaction had not been brought to his attention. Subsequently, Brown said, agent Jason Chayut's attempts to negotiate were shuffled off to recently hired Eagles consultant Andrew Brandt, who kept postponing planned meetings.

"My agent has been trying to do it in a respectful fashion," he said.

Brown said he made the public trade request in the spirit of "how do we get people to understand that this has been brought to your attention?"

Asked if he would skip the upcoming mandatory minicamp or hold out from training camp -- steps that most agents would consider financially counterproductive -- Brown said: "Who knows?" 

Asked if the dispute might affect his play, should the Eagles stick to their vow not to trade him, Brown said: "It might. You never know. It's certainly something I'm going to be answering questions about all season long."

Here is the text of the Eagles' statement:

“It’s very unfortunate and counterproductive that Sheldon has chosen to go public with his feelings about his situation. After thorough evaluation by himself and discussions with his family and agents, he chose to accept an extension of his rookie contract early that provided his family financial security for the rest of his life. It removed any concerns about health or performance that all other players in his draft class had to worry about. He has four years remaining on that contract and, after taking the signing bonus and his first two years of salary into account, we feel that Sheldon is being paid fairly. Focusing only on a player’s salary for a given year is not a valid analysis.

“There have been league MVP’s, Super Bowl champion quarterbacks, and perennial Pro Bowlers who have been in a similar situation. All of their teams have required them to wait until their contract expired or there was only one year remaining before any adjustment took place. It is only in the most extraordinary, in fact, less than a handful of circumstances in the last ten years that any players two new years into a contract with four years left have been adjusted. We don’t think this qualifies as an extraordinary circumstance.

“Sheldon’s comments under the circumstances actually serve to devalue him in a trade if we were willing to consider it; which we are not.”

Brown attempted to rebut several of those points.

First, he told the Daily News his reasoning when he signed the contract extension in 2004 was "they came to me early to do a deal" and if he continued to play well, that would happen again. As to other 2002 drafted corners' "concerns about health or performance," Brown said: "Most of the corners drafted in 2002 are out of the league now." As for diminishing his trade value by speaking out, Brown said the Eagles just traded for Buffalo tackle Jason Peters, who held out last summer, with three years left on a contract. "They just traded for a guy who diminished his trade value last year," Brown said.

But as incongruous as it might sound, Brown also said he wanted to stress that to him, "this is business, it's not personal. I appreciate (owner) Jeffrey Lurie; I love him to death."

Brown said the trade of fellow disgruntled corner Lito Sheppard to the Jets made him think the team might be open to dealing him.

"If you traded your Pro Bowl player for a fifth-round pick, well, I'm pretty sure I can go out and get you that right now," he said.

 

Posted by Les Bowen @ 2:36 PM  Permalink | 219 comments
219
Comments   
Posted 02:43 PM, 04/20/2009
Dierte
Week of the NFL draft...this stuff will go on until the Eagles pick at 21
Posted 02:46 PM, 04/20/2009
Irish Frank
Sheldon - worry aboput your game - not how much others are making!
Posted 02:46 PM, 04/20/2009
Irish Frank
Sheldon - worry aboput your game - not how much others are making!
Posted 02:47 PM, 04/20/2009
heinz guderian
good for him. that and $2.50 will get him a cup of coffee. when you're signed for four more seasons you don't have a whole lot of leverage. at least brown's gotten paid, unlike westbrook when he wanted to re-negotiate.
Posted 02:49 PM, 04/20/2009
tothehouse
rip up his contract and renegotiate another--this guy is too good to lose, especially after we just traded Lito---but as we all know-The Eagles are very unlikely to do this
Posted 02:52 PM, 04/20/2009
chainsawpaul
huge sigh...just when things seem to be going a little better (?) for us with Peters we go through this. Offer him some more money, make him happy...we need him. No way do we want to waste our first pick on a corner. Unless......Brown 4 Boldin??? anybody?
Posted 02:53 PM, 04/20/2009
Dierte
heinz - you are right, he doesn't have much leverage. He still has up until 2014 and has never made a Pro Bowl. I like Sheldon and don't think we can afford to lose him, but dudes gotta do something before he starts acting like he's the man...
Posted 02:55 PM, 04/20/2009
jonnyB
I believe Brown gets 5 million a year. What a jerk.
Posted 02:57 PM, 04/20/2009
reddevil
show me the guy who has a lousy season and the team stuck with 3 more years tells him they are doing his contract over
Posted 02:57 PM, 04/20/2009
eaglebobby1
Sorry heinz guderian, you're wrong about Westbrook--Westbrook was a RFA in 2005--because his agent only wanted him to sign a 3 year deal when he was drafted. On the eve of training camp, the Eagles finally signed him to a 5 year 25M deal-and of course he missed the last 4 games of the '05 season with another injury. After a monster '07, he held out of training camp until the Eagles redid his deal--again. In between, the Eagles payroll dept accidentally paid him a roster bonus twice--and it took them over a year to get the money back--because he didn't want to pay it back. The Eagles opeandus modi has always been the same--when they extend a player, they give him a nice signing bonus, that he can invest in right away--in return, they give small base salaries. The players, are only too happy to accept this money--until some team overpays a FA--then all of sudden they're underpaid. Please--Sheldon has been a solid corner, but never been to the Pro Bowl, never been named All Pro, never lead the team in INTs.
Posted 02:57 PM, 04/20/2009
allsprtsfan84
He is a solid corner not great by any means, if it comes to him being traded thats fine hes replaceable, if he stays thats fine too, its not a real big issue it shouldnt affect the draft at all.
Posted 02:59 PM, 04/20/2009
Leegles
There's a reason Sheldon never makes the Pro Bowl: he never gets thrown at because he locks down his guy, and therefore never gets many interceptions, passes defended, etc.
Posted 03:00 PM, 04/20/2009
moderndaymesh
A lot of talk that the reason Lito was so good was because nobody wanted to throw to Sheldon's side. Plus, he's such an intimidating force in the secondary. I say we hold on to him and maybe re-negotiate his deal. I know he hasn't made a Pro Bowl, but do you really want Joselio Hansen starting for us?
Posted 03:00 PM, 04/20/2009
Relocator
Break a deal - face the wheel.
Posted 03:01 PM, 04/20/2009
nuggett
Les ...you are an idiot.....like the agent has any need, desire, inclination or obligation to call you back....you are a stinking sports writer who makes up stuff to fill a column and you don't do that all too well.......stand up to andy and joe and show us your stuff instead of cowering in the shadows during news conferences...get news Les.....not conjecture and weak words...
About Eagletarian Blog
Les BowenLes Bowen has covered the Eagles for the Daily News since 2002. Before that, he spent nearly 13 years covering the Flyers. It took Les only a few seasons after the switch to figure out that there was no penalty box at the Linc, and that the time really wasn't his, despite what Andy Reid kept saying. Les came to Philadelphia and the Daily News from Charlotte in 1983. In the intervening years, he has pretty much lost track of NASCAR, and his accent. He, his wife Barbara, and their two sons live in Haddon Township, New Jersey.

You can now follow Les Bowen on Twitter.

Paul DomowitchPaul Domowitch has been with the Daily News since 1982. He has spent most of his 27 years at the paper covering the Eagles and pro football. For the last 10 years, he’s been a selector for the Pro Football Hall of Fame. A native of Wilkes-Barre and a graduate of Wilkes University, Domo came to the Daily News from the Fort Worth (Tx.) Star-Telegram, where he covered some god-awful Texas Ranger baseball teams. His first beat at the Daily News actually wa s boxing, which he covered just long enough to lose two sports coats to blood spatter before moving on to football. Domo and his wife Shelley, a University of Oklahoma grad and very dangerous to be around following a Sooner loss, have been married 29 years and have raised 2 terrific daughters – Allison, 26, a lawyer and graduate of Boston University School of Law; and Amy, 23, who graduated from Clemson and works in marketing and sales for a professional baseball team.