NEW YORK -- The whispers are that the deal could be done tonight, or already is done, but for some i-dotting and t-crossing. Peter King tells us to take it to the bank: Matthew Stafford is "going to be a Detroit Lion."It's been an open secret for days that Stafford, the former Georgia quarterback, is in serious negotiations with the Lions and is very likely to be the No. 1 pick in Saturday's NFL draft. Mark Sanchez is telling anybody who'll listen that Stafford-to-Detroit is a done deal. Aaron Curry, while still hoping it will be him, seems resigned to Stafford as the No. 1 pick.
The only one who's pretending not to know anything about all of this is Stafford, who told us with a straight face this afternoon that he hasn't been paying it any attention.
"I know they've all been working hard on it, but honestly, I'm out of the loop," Stafford said around noon as he and other prospective draftees hosted an NFL-sponsored clinic for kids in sun-splashed Central Park. "I've been trying to stay out of it."
This may take the cake. At this point, it's become clear that anything anybody says in the days before the draft is at best a smokescreen and more likely a lie. But for Stafford to stand there and tell us he hadn't talked to his agent since last night and wasn't concerned about whether he got his deal done with Detroit before the draft started might be the toughest bit of misinformation any of us has been asked to swallow. I guess you give the kid a break because what's he supposed to say, but jeez. These agents really have these guys trained, don't they?
"I don't even know what goes into all the contract stuff," Stafford said. "Apparently there's a whole lot more to it this year because of the new CBA situation, so anything can happen, really."
Okay, so, playing along, he's right. If the deal doesn't get done -- if the Lions instead go and sign Curry or Jason Smith, Stafford's got a chance to drop pretty far down the first round. The quarterback-needy teams that follow Detroit are thought to prefer Sanchez, and that's the Lions' leverage with Stafford. If he doesn't sign with them, who knows how far he might fall?
Of course, he said he hasn't paid attention to that either.
"It's not a big deal to me, really," he said. "I'd love to be the first pick. I'm sure everybody here would. But if it doesn't happen, I really don't mind where I go. I'll be playing football for somebody."
If it's not Detroit, it'll be the shock of the day tomorrow (or possibly late tonight). And if it is Detroit, Stafford faces an uphill battle to win over the town's fans. One thing he did admit to being aware of was the group of Lions fans who showed up at the team's new logo unveiling last week to voice their opinion that Curry should be the pick.
"I did hear about that, and it's cool," Stafford said. "Fans are going to have their opinions wherever you go, and that's fine."
He's not going in with any preconceived notions about Detroit anyway. In fact, he said, he doesn't know much about the city at all.
"I know the Pistons and the Tigers are there," Stafford said. "That's about it."
And the Red Wings, somebody reminded him.
"Oh yeah, of course, the Red Wings," Stafford said. "Can't forget the Red Wings. I'm from Texas, see. There's no hockey there."
Looks like Stafford has a lot to learn about the place he's likely to be calling home. First, though, he's got to finish hammering out that contract. You know. The one he doesn't know anything about.



















Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
4-24-2009 @ 7:03PM
nickstoli said...
Watch out for golddiggas, young man.
Sincerely,
Michael Jordan & Alex Rodriguez
Reply
4-24-2009 @ 7:20PM
GOLFERVERA said...
what about the dallas stars their a hockey team in texas.
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4-24-2009 @ 7:59PM
mikey said...
I hope Stafford puts rockets on his shoes, playing for the Lions.
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4-24-2009 @ 8:23PM
A.J. said...
As for playing with an NFL team on the field, the jury's still out, but Stafford has to be one of the more savvy young draft prospects I've seen in years when it comes to the business side of football. His decision to come out a year early - which is always maligned by analysts and draft pundits - probably earned him a couple dozen more million dollars.
Why did he come out a year early?
Because he knew he'd be the best choice in THIS year's draft. If he stays an extra year, then unless he puts up Graham Harrell-esque numbers playing for Georgia, he has to contend with the presence of Sam Bradford (who would have been the first QB taken if he had declared this year, Stafford's decision notwithstanding), Colt McCoy (hot on Bradford's heels as a close second), and possibly even Tim Tebow. The resulting backlash would have had him slide to being the fourth rated QB on the board, and while that class would have been seriously top-heavy as far as QBs were concerned, you hardly ever see four QBs taken in the first round - and certainly not in the top half of the first round.
Stafford seems very modest about the first-round pick. As hard as it possibly is to believe that anyone would want to play for Detroit after last season, there are two words that would change nearly any QB's mind:
Calvin Johnson. Let's face it. Stafford may not be as good as Matt Ryan was last year - but Stafford's already said to have a Cutler-like arm, and that's a pretty high compliment. People forget sometimes that the weather Cutler threw in with the Broncos (and will continue to throw in with the Bears) wasn't always friendly to passing attacks. Calvin Johnson made Dan Orlovsky look good at times. Dan freaking Orlovsky. Calvin Johnson put up 1200 yards receiving last year. He's 6'6", 240. If you're Stafford, Sanchez, or any rookie quarterback, it doesn't matter if your line doesn't exist and you're staring four defensive lineman down with nothing in front of them (which is, unfortunately, not too much different from playing for the Lions), you'd risk that just for a chance to have this guy on your team to make you look good.
While Curry's the safe pick, you don't reboot a franchise with a linebacker or an offensive tackle, and you'd almost have to start throwing games because, as likely as it is for Stafford and Sanchez to go top 5 this year, it's equally likely that the same thing happens with Bradford and McCoy next year.
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4-24-2009 @ 8:32PM
plaudenbach said...
OK, I knew I didn't like this guy. Just couldn't put my finger on why. Until now. Matt, Detroit is HOCKEY TOWN! Don't ever forget it! GO WINGS!
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