Albert Haynesworth For Vincent Jackson Trade Makes Sense
Those who have been following the storyline of Albert Haynesworth in 2010 know he has fallen out of favor with the organization and especially head coach Mike Shanahan. The man who was signed to a $115 million contract, including $41 million guaranteed, found himself on the bench in the teams opening game victory over the Dallas Cowboys.
The Redskins second game against the Houston Texans found Haynesworth deactivated. Washington claims a foot injury is the reason, but it appears the defensive tackle has worn out his welcome with a malcontented attitude where he put himself ahead of the team and championship dreams.
Vincent Jackson is a tall, strong, fast wide receiver holding out on the San Diego Chargers for more money after making his first Pro Bowl team last season. The Chargers appear uninterested in fulfilling his wishes, and apparently have placed him on the trading block. Rumors claim San Diego general manager A.J. Smith was seeking two first-round draft picks, which will most likely not happen.
The Minnesota Vikings would love to acquire Jackson's services to help out their running game and aging quarterback Brett Favre after losing Sidney Rice for much of the year because of injury. It is unknown if Minnesota is willing to mortgage so much for an aging team that is on the cusp of needing rebuilding.
San Diego has lost two key defensive linemen the past two years in Igor Olshanskyand Jamal Williams. Olshansky signed a free agent contract with Dallas in 2009, and Williams was an aging three-time Pro Bowler released at the end of 2009. While San Diego got Cam Thomas late in the first round to play nose tackle, most of the rest of the defensive line is a mix of cast-offs and veterans.

Haynesworth would prefer to play in a 4-3 defense, but San Diego runs the 3-4 like the Redskins started to this year. He stated he would prefer playing defensive end over nose tackle, which was something the Redskins did not want to hear. He would represent an upgrade over current starting defensive end Jacques Casaire for the Bolts.
Jackson would immediately become the number-one receiver on Washington. Santana Moss holds that position now, but he is known for his frequent drops and would be best suited as a number-two receiver. With 38-year old Joey Galloway starting over the slow developing Devin Thomas, Jackson's arrival would be a huge boon for the team.
The only question to get this deal worked out in the end would be money. Washington would probably have to eat some more of Haynesworth's contract and pay Jackson as well. Owner Dan Snyder has never been shy about throwing around money to try and improve his team in the past.
With Haynesworth skulking on the sideline yet again, the Redskins do not need him to continue griping to the media as a way to get out of town. Washington should quickly acquiesce his wishes and try to improve the team with Jackson, who appears to want out of San Diego.
Redskins general manager Bruce Allen made a smart move a few months ago to make this move possible without hurting the defense. He shrewdly grabbed Adam Carriker by swapping draft picks with the Saint Louis Rams in the 2010 NFL Draft. Carriker was the Rams first round draft pick in 2007, and was the 13th overall selection.
Carriker missed the 2009 season because of injury, but the 6'6" 296 player has the ability to play nose tackle or defensive end. He has played well so far this year for Washington, showing why he was drafted as highly as he once was.
The Redskins are fielding the oldest team in the NFL this season. It is obvious the message is to win now, something Bruce Allen learned from his Hall of Fame father, and Redskins legend, George Allen. The Redskins average 28.7 years old on their 2010 roster, while the famous "Over The Hill Gang" roster of 1972 was actually younger by averaging 28.5. The 1972 team, coached by George Allen, made it all the way to Super Bowl VII before losing to the perfect Miami Dolphins.
The best way to win now is to get a locker room together in a single minded mission, something stressed by all winning teams. It is obvious Haynesworth
This FanPost was written by a member of the Bolts From The Blue community and does not necessarily reflect the views of the Bolts From The Blue editors or SB Nation.
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uhhhh...
the title says “news”
the article says “opinion”
i say “wtf?”
by Lenny Suckerpunch on Sep 19, 2010 5:01 PM PDT reply actions
lolwut
Ask any baseball player, any real baseball player. It doesn't matter if you win by an inch or a mile; winning's winning.
by Sam (sdsuaztec4) on Sep 19, 2010 5:17 PM PDT reply actions
The trade doesn't make sense because...
AJ Smith is nothing like Dan Snyder.
Need a hand? Call for help! Superduperboltman is here!
by Superduperboltman on Sep 19, 2010 8:33 PM PDT reply actions
Nope
Haynesworth is poison. Expensive poison. The Chargers are not a team to pick up expensive veterans, and I imagine if they were going to spend money it would be on one of their holdouts, which ain’t happening. The team spent the offseason clearing out the egos in the locker room, and I just can’t imagine taking on one of the biggest around.
"Were such things here as we do speak about?
Or have we eaten on the insane root
That takes the reason prisoner?"
I say yes!
Look I understand the Haynesworth poision perspective but we just went through this ourselves with one of the better RBs in history for the last two years. LT was not happy here in San Diego and his performance proved it. Now with a new lease on life with the Jets he is looking (almost) like the player of old that we all knew and loved. If Albert Haynesworth is in favorable of the move then heck yes because ultimately it is going to come down to the players attitude, especially when playing d-line – especially when playing a d-line in a 3-4. Put him at end though, we have some good players I think at NT with Garay, the draft pick, and Nwangabo (sp?). He also will free up that outside linebacker (and safety) when the blitz is called. Utimately he helps our defense (which looked pretty good against the Jaguars (and KC for that matter) and his ability will also help our defense backfield out too.
If they'd give up Haynesworth
They’d give up a 2nd-rounder.
An autumn Sunday,
Perched in front of the big screen,
Beer in white knuckles.
by Neoplatonist Bolthead on Sep 20, 2010 9:05 AM PDT reply actions
I think they should wait until after the Seattle game
and trade both VJ and MM to the Rams for a 1st and 2nd.
An autumn Sunday,
Perched in front of the big screen,
Beer in white knuckles.
by Neoplatonist Bolthead on Sep 20, 2010 9:05 AM PDT reply actions
Why stop there
Why not trade for four round draft picks?
The problem with draft picks
is the that no matter who you pick you are taking a risk and there is a reasonable chance that you will get nothing back in return. You might also find someone that can play but is not an instant starter or maybe just a role player at best. if you have an opportunity to trade V Jack for someone who has proven performance then I say that is the safer risk. If you talk to the player and the player supports the decision then its even less of a risk.
Yeah well
That problem with draft picks, goes away if you get a good player because you have him cheap. You obviously dont need to hit huge on everyone, just one a draft is good. Of course you also have to find role players but this team seems solid at that
IMO
How else are you going to get a good deal on a pass rusher?
An autumn Sunday,
Perched in front of the big screen,
Beer in white knuckles.
by Neoplatonist Bolthead on Sep 20, 2010 8:46 PM PDT up reply actions
No Way
would I ever want that fatty corpuscle on the breast of the NFL on the Chargers’ defense. It would take a few bad plays to have him all pissed off and sulking.
6/10/2010 - Tra Thomas signs with the Chargers
8/21/2010 - Tra Thomas retires.
That was fast.
id trade VJ
to get Osgood back in a heart beat. In the Kc game, there were 2 punts that bounced into the endzone, slapping them out was his forte, and of course the long run.
ST help is needed MUCH more than DL
"i'm not inclined to resign to maturity"...PSYCH theme
by $#%@ eli and his daddy on Sep 21, 2010 4:32 PM PDT reply actions
So...
They turn down a 2nd round pick (and conditional if he signs long term) for Vincent Jackson because they can get a 3rd if he leaves?
Someone remind me how this makes sense?
I think it is getting ridiculous now...
This is all personnal between AJ and VJ. Its embarrassing to see AJ “take his ball and go home” so no one else can play. VJ didn’t sign the 3.2mil tender and hurt AJs feelings so he dropped it down to 500k and told him to sit for the rest of the season. To suggest that he (or the team) is not getting value for Jackson is ridiculous because after this season he is gone and we ain’t getting nothing for him. We need help on both sides of the ball (WR, CB, SS, FS, LB, RB) and now that we have a chance to help address these positions by getting extra picks so we can take leap at some talented young stud comming out of college Mr. Smith wants to pull out his dingle-berry and show the world how big it is…. well I don’t like it and this can wind up hurting the team as a result.
We'd be trading one pain in the ass for an even bigger pain in the ass

"Since we only live once (that we know of) we should focus on enjoying our lives, not stressing to follow every single thing and trend that society impose upon us." - Thom Yorke of Radiohead
by Jonathan Holmes on Oct 10, 2010 11:04 AM PDT reply actions

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