tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3808369.post3808838813599635052..comments2008-03-04T17:22:54.632-05:00Comments on Ace Davis' Cleveland Browns weblog: The holdout that backfiredAce Davishttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09241213520059916776noreply@blogger.comBlogger3125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3808369.post-41438942661419066002008-03-04T17:22:00.000-05:002008-03-04T17:22:00.000-05:00Thanks for that insightful comment concerning the ...Thanks for that insightful comment concerning the agent's role. I've long thought Quinn was too trusting and/or passive when it came to dealing with Condon, whose interests clearly diverged from his client's in this case.<BR/><BR/>Bottom line for me is that Quinn hired him, Quinn stuck with him, Quinn held out, and Quinn now suffers the consequences (if someone in his position can truly be called suffering). Tough lesson for someone so young, but welcome to the NFL, rook!Ace Davishttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09241213520059916776noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3808369.post-68460444617067091432008-03-04T15:14:00.000-05:002008-03-04T15:14:00.000-05:00It will be interesting to see if Quinn's situation...It will be interesting to see if Quinn's situation will be sufficient evidence to steer High-end draft prospects away from Tom Condon.<BR/><BR/>Immediately following the draft and reaching full amplification during Quinn's (or should we call it "Condon's"?) holdout, rumors swirled about Condon's motives for the Quinn holdout. There were whispers that, in an effort to pump-up his prestige with another Big-Name Client getting Big Money as a top 5 selection, Condon had overplayed his hand, asking for too much money than many of Quinn's early suitors were unwilling to pay. There was even speculation that Oakland would have taken Quinn #1 if Condon had simply accepted a more reasonable offer of guaranteed money. Condon and his client then experienced one of the most conspicuous freefalls in draft history, as hours passed and a distraught Quinn finally got out of the spotlight to cope with things in a private room.<BR/><BR/>WHen the Browns took Quinn, it was both a reprieve for the QB and his agent. But Condon would not concede the point, and, instead of serving his client selflessly, Condon took a decidedly "me first" approach" at a time when his client really needed him to be a professional. <BR/><BR/>Condon's top priority, in hindsight (and at the time, according to many) was not Quinn's future, but his own. He needed to salvage something from his (rumored) mishandling of Quinn's negotiations with the teams at the top of the board; that meant squeezing the Browns for anything and everything he could put on his resume. Condon wanted to preserve his reputation as a Super Agent to the Stars of the Draft(his bread and butter).<BR/><BR/>And so Brady held out, then lost out...and so if we want to get really tough on him, we can lay tens of millions of dollars lost by Quinn at Condon's feet, without getting too loony in our speculations. <BR/><BR/>Condon is a veteran agent; he knows the NFL, and he knows the Browns as well if not more than any other NFL team. Many of his clients have worn Orange and Brown, and it was no secret that in Crennel's camp rookies - esp. holdouts - have always had to pay their dues before they see the field on Fall Sundays. <BR/><BR/>Even if he were naive, he could have flipped on ESPN or surfed the web for ten minutes to discover that a holdout, in what was an "Open" competition at QB in Cleveland, would have been crippling. <BR/><BR/>In closing, isn't it ironic as hell that the bone of contention in the "Condon" Holdout was playing time triggers? The holdout itself made these stipulations more unrealistic with each passing day...<BR/><BR/>Tom Condon: caveat emptor.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3808369.post-24695947057844382742008-03-02T02:29:00.000-05:002008-03-02T02:29:00.000-05:00Nice post.Nice post.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com