In response to this...Has he learned anything from the Mannings, both Peyton and Eli stayed for their Senior year. From what I heard this morning on the radio Luck asked Peyton for advice and guess what Peyton told him...This is ****ing moronic. I thought Stanford kids were supposed to be smart. Did he learn nothing from Leinhart and Locker? This is going to cost Luck, at a minimum, tens of millions of dollars. He could've signed a deal for darn near $18-20 mil a year if he came out this year and now he will be lucky to get more than $5 mil a year if they put in a rookie wage scale and he is forfeiting one year of money making. Over the next five years, this will cost him something like $80 million.
I am utterly and totally shocked.
Jan 14th, so about a week. Kid is staying at Stanford bro.I think this is an attempt to try and get Harbaugh to stay. I think if Harbaugh officially leaves, Luck will follow. What is the latest date that he can change his mind?
As for Amir, I think he has more of a connection with Harbaugh and coaching staff then with Andrew Luck.
He's not staying just for the degree, he is staying for the college experience. That is something he can't go back and get. He can go back and get his degree, but not the experience of being in college.I am absolutely floored by this decision. In my opinion and almost everyone I have heard on TV or radio, this is just plain STUPID!!!
He is staying to get his education??? You can come and get that with the MILLIONS you will be paid in the NFL.
I cannot understand how you do this being the lock as number 1 in the NFL draft.
In response to this...Has he learned anything from the Mannings, both Peyton and Eli stayed for their Senior year. From what I heard this morning on the radio Luck asked Peyton for advice and guess what Peyton told him...
This is ****ing moronic. I thought Stanford kids were supposed to be smart. Did he learn nothing from Leinhart and Locker? This is going to cost Luck, at a minimum, tens of millions of dollars. He could've signed a deal for darn near $18-20 mil a year if he came out this year and now he will be lucky to get more than $5 mil a year if they put in a rookie wage scale and he is forfeiting one year of money making. Over the next five years, this will cost him something like $80 million.
I am utterly and totally shocked.
You make some valid points...Maybe money doesn't matter to Luck. his dad played in the NFL so they are probably well of already. Like I said before the only thing I can think of is he loves the college experience.Normally I would totally buy this logic. However, with the looming rookie wage scale and potential departure of Harbaugh.... the situation is quite different then the one faced by either Manning. Also, for every Manning there are probably two Leinarts or Lockers. If you're the #1 guy, you should probably go. If you're the #1 guy and there is a looming wage scale and your coach is probably going to be gone, I'd say you should definitely go.
Then again, I'm just an engineer with an internet connection and my opinion isn't really worth two $hits. And maybe he knows something we don't about Harbaugh.
I was thinking the same thing, but that is equally strange to me considering that Miami is reportedly offering $6-8 mil a year. How can you walk away from that kind of money?
Why do some people decide what is stupid and right for others? Luck wanted to stay in school, enjoy the college experience (for some, there'snothing better) and not enter the effed up business world that is the NFL just yet. BFD. That is not stupid nor moronic...it's called a person choosing to be happy.
For some, making money makes them happy. For others, it doesn't. Everybody's different. Seriously, if he loses 8 million or whatever, what difference does it make down the line, when you have a 60 million or a 100 million dollar contract or whatever he'll end up signing years from now? When you're that rich, there's only one thing money won't be able to buy - and that's one more year of playing college football, where you are king; where you go to class, play football, enjoy the sunshine, bang the hottest co-eds on campus, and generally enjoy a carefree life.
Cmpare that to the NFL, where you're in meetings half the day, where you're on a POS team (Carolina) on a POS franchise, surrounding by crap talent, throwing the ball to the biggest malcontent athlete on the planet (Steve Smith) and a bunch of nobodies.
Hmmmm, I loved college, and if I were as comfortable as he is financially, I'd make the same choice. Call me a moron all you want, but I'd choose whatever makes me happy. So did Luck, and good on him...
I can understand a player not wanting to go to the death trap that Carolina appears to be right now. But I sort of question what kind of shape Stanford will be in with what looks to be 7 starters graduating (according to the teams website) on offense, and of course Harbaugh leaving.
Luck must really love college life and value his education.
Why do some people decide what is stupid and right for others? Luck wanted to stay in school, enjoy the college experience (for some, there'snothing better) and not enter the effed up business world that is the NFL just yet. BFD. That is not stupid nor moronic...it's called a person choosing to be happy.
For some, making money makes them happy. For others, it doesn't. Everybody's different. Seriously, if he loses 8 million or whatever, what difference does it make down the line, when you have a 60 million or a 100 million dollar contract or whatever he'll end up signing years from now? When you're that rich, there's only one thing money won't be able to buy - and that's one more year of playing college football, where you are king; where you go to class, play football, enjoy the sunshine, bang the hottest co-eds on campus, and generally enjoy a carefree life.
Cmpare that to the NFL, where you're in meetings half the day, where you're on a POS team (Carolina) on a POS franchise, surrounding by crap talent, throwing the ball to the biggest malcontent athlete on the planet (Steve Smith) and a bunch of nobodies.
Hmmmm, I loved college, and if I were as comfortable as he is financially, I'd make the same choice. Call me a moron all you want, but I'd choose whatever makes me happy. So did Luck, and good on him...
Couldn't agree more! Plus, it is a once in a lifetime opportunity to win a collegiate National Championship. Maybe he also wants a shot at the title next year.
All the stuff NDinL.A. said above plus, Palo Alto is a beautiful place to live and Stanford has an amazing campus. Great student body and just an overall great experience on campus. I think it is great to see him put other things ahead of the almighty dollar. He will be rich some day. If not from football, he has a freakin' degree from Stanford. I doubt he will be hurting for cash.
Couldn't agree more! Plus, it is a once in a lifetime opportunity to win a collegiate National Championship. Maybe he also wants a shot at the title next year.
All the stuff NDinL.A. said above plus, Palo Alto is a beautiful place to live and Stanford has an amazing campus. Great student body and just an overall great experience on campus. I think it is great to see him put other things ahead of the almighty dollar. He will be rich some day. If not from football, he has a freakin' degree from Stanford. I doubt he will be hurting for cash.
I didn't see him play much but in the little that I have seen... I wasn't that impressed. I was more impressed by his OL. He seems like a solid QB, not a great QB.
To me, if you're a guaranteed top 10 pick... you go!!! To much at risk and that is pretty much the definition of a loose loose situation. He can't be rated any higher than he is right now and if he gets hurt in college I seriously doubt his insurance will come anywhere near what he would have been guaranteed in the pros.
People are right... a Stanford degree will last him a lifetime... but please tell me why he can't complete it over a couple of off seasons like other players have done.