Two division rivals were engaged in an interesting game of tug-of-war at the tail end of the 2020 draft, with the prize being Mississippi State quarterback Tommy Stevens. On Day 2 of the draft, New Orleans traded pick nos. 130, 169, 203, and 244 to the Vikings for the right to move up to no. 105 and select Dayton tight end Adam Trautman. That left the team with no Day 3 selections, so as Jeff Duncan of The Athletic writes, the Saints spent much of that day planning for the UDFA signing period.
One of New Orleans’ top UDFA targets was Stevens, who may ultimately fill the same QB2/gadget role that Taysom Hill presently occupies. But the Saints learned that the Panthers were interested in Stevens as well and were prepared to offer him a $15K signing bonus and guarantee $30K of his salary if he signed with Carolina as a UDFA. The Saints swooped in and offered a massive $144K in guaranteed salary if he would agree to sign with New Orleans, but then Stevens’ camp stopped answering the Saints’ calls.
Perhaps the Panthers topped the Saints’ offer, or perhaps Stevens viewed Carolina as a better long-term fit. But Saints head coach Sean Payton coveted the 6-5, 235-pound signal-caller, so he helped engineer a trade back into the seventh round of the draft to grab him, leaving the Panthers stunned.
This makes for an interesting story, one that may ultimately have no significance if Stevens, like most seventh-round picks, doesn’t pan out. The problem, as Mike Florio of Pro Football Talk observes, is that both the Saints and the Panthers flagrantly violated league rules. Once the draft begins, teams are at liberty to let prospects know that they are interested in them if they go undrafted, but they cannot discuss financial details. The NFL drove that point home in a league-wide memo this year, perhaps because the UDFA signing period was expected to be even more frenzied than usual.
As Florio notes in a separate piece, the league has yet to comment on the matter, though the Panthers have said that their actions were in compliance with league rules. And these particular rules are surely violated all the time, probably by every team in the league. The casualness with which the Saints brass discussed the situation suggests as much. Nonetheless, a league source expects both teams to be punished, though it remains to be seen what that punishment will entail.
If this wasn’t the saints the nfl wouldn’t have an issue with it. They’re always out to get them
Stop breaking the rules!! Problem solved!!
Pats do this and nothing happens lol
Lol if it was the Pats, there would be a full on investigation
When you have a history of cheating you deserve to get heavily investigated any time you are thought to be cheating again
Every team dos the same thing. If you stop, you fall behind
Who cares in life EVERYONE BREAKS RULES
Huh? If this were the Pats, you’d want one of their Lombardi trophies to be posted on EBay. Even if every team in the league does it, your team is the cheater-du-jour. Enjoy.
The Panthers are getting punished too….
It’s a terrific story and reminds me of those devious (and often comical) shenanigans that took place during the AFL-NFL player signing wars of the late 60s.
Maybe they can whine about and get a rule changed for a year.
Lol. Truth
144 – 45 = 99 reasons he should have been answering the phone.
I read another article that said Stevens told New Orleans that he had already made a commitment to Carolina and felt compelled to honor it.
We also don’t know what Carolina’s final offer was.
I read the same thing on multiple sites, Lars MacDonald. New Orleans is such a class organization, I’m SURE they’re still going to pay him the $144K…. right?
Still a business and he is the product. Offer you cant ignore.
So Carolina trying to engineer a contract signing with a player before draft’s end is less suspect than the Saints trading back into the draft and selecting him?
Honestly I don’t see the big deal here… teams want to be silly enough to offer details to a potential UDFA while the draft is still on going then that’s on them. It doesn’t have to be a first come first serve situation. And if teams want to negotiate they leave themselves open to be beat with a late trade.
Yeah I don’t understand the big deal either. It’s very likely that every team discusses money with UDFAs during the draft (how else would you agree to terms so quickly?), but as long as the draft is still going you can’t finalize anything yet.
The only way to prevent that from happening is to use a draft pick on someone, which the Saints did. Not really a big deal here.
As if the draft isnt a communist mechanism to begin with
N = NO
F = FUN
L = LEAGUE
Is there any point in actually having team rivalries if you don’t allow a bit of harmless mischief? The NCAA understands the value of rivalries whereas the NFL want’s everything regulated to the point where wearing socks too low earns you a ten grand fine.
Hahaha, this is the most publicity this dude will ever get!
And he didn’t even have to get himself arrested.
Wow, just wow.
Tommy’s lookin’ like Logan Paul in this picture. Yikes…
scrap the draft all together and allow teams to bid for players. They don’t do this for anything other then sports. Lawyers don’t get drafted, neither do doctors or any other profession. Highest bidder gets the best players.
They do it to artificially depress the amount of money that they pay these players. Sports drafts are anti-capitalism!