Green wants out of K.C. -- fast
Frustration mounts for QB Trent Green, who wants to play for the Dolphins, but the Chiefs won't lower their asking price.
BY JEFF DARLINGTON
jdarlington@MiamiHerald.com
Andy Lyons / Getty Images
Said Kansas City Chiefs QB Trent Green: 'The longer this goes on, the more frustrated I'm going to get.'
Trent Green said he doesn't think he will be wearing a Chiefs jersey next season. He wants to wear a Dolphins jersey instead. And until he does, he said he will feel ''awkward'' and ``strange.''
There's just one problem with all of those recent declarations from this frustrated quarterback: If you haven't yet noticed, it doesn't matter what Green thinks, wants or feels.
Despite continued public pleas to be traded Tuesday after Kansas City's first offseason practice, Green's situation remains the same. The Dolphins want to give less than the Chiefs are willing to accept.
''The longer this goes on,'' Green told reporters in Kansas City, Mo., on Tuesday, ``the more frustrated I'm going to get.''
Nonetheless, Green still arrived to the Chiefs' practice prepared to participate, partly to fulfill his contractual obligations and partly to attempt to force general manager Carl Peterson to trade him.
The Chiefs, who can't restrict Green from participating, are taking a risk by keeping him on the roster. If Green gets injured, the Chiefs would be forced to pay his $7.2 million salary for next season because they couldn't release him.
That's certainly not what Kansas City wants, since coach Herm Edwards has made it publicly clear Brodie Croyle would get a chance to compete for the starting job -- as would Damon Huard, who re-signed with the team this offseason.
''I've been in the league long enough,'' Green said. ``When you see those comments over the course of several months, and you see the way the reps are going to work out, and you see what Brodie's making, what Damon was re-signed for and what I'm making, it's not a fair competition.
``It's a weighted competition.''
For now, however, the Dolphins have remained firm in their efforts to give up no more than a sixth-round pick for Green. And Peterson, who wants a fourth-round pick, isn't budging, either.
''It's not only awkward for me and my family, but it's awkward for the guys in the weight room, in the locker room, on the practice field,'' Green said. 'I'm here every day. People ask, `What's going on?' Guys don't know how to react to me, how to treat me [in terms of leadership].''
Still, as Green has learned, business decisions don't often take personal feelings into account. And even once a team finally budges, Green said he has not been told whether he would immediately take over as the Dolphins' starting quarterback.
''[The Dolphins] haven't said, `You're the guy, come right in,'' Green said. ``They haven't told me one way or another. I just know I would have a much more fair chance, for my mind. Because here, it's obviously weighted.''
Frustration mounts for QB Trent Green, who wants to play for the Dolphins, but the Chiefs won't lower their asking price.
BY JEFF DARLINGTON
jdarlington@MiamiHerald.com
Andy Lyons / Getty Images
Said Kansas City Chiefs QB Trent Green: 'The longer this goes on, the more frustrated I'm going to get.'
Trent Green said he doesn't think he will be wearing a Chiefs jersey next season. He wants to wear a Dolphins jersey instead. And until he does, he said he will feel ''awkward'' and ``strange.''
There's just one problem with all of those recent declarations from this frustrated quarterback: If you haven't yet noticed, it doesn't matter what Green thinks, wants or feels.
Despite continued public pleas to be traded Tuesday after Kansas City's first offseason practice, Green's situation remains the same. The Dolphins want to give less than the Chiefs are willing to accept.
''The longer this goes on,'' Green told reporters in Kansas City, Mo., on Tuesday, ``the more frustrated I'm going to get.''
Nonetheless, Green still arrived to the Chiefs' practice prepared to participate, partly to fulfill his contractual obligations and partly to attempt to force general manager Carl Peterson to trade him.
The Chiefs, who can't restrict Green from participating, are taking a risk by keeping him on the roster. If Green gets injured, the Chiefs would be forced to pay his $7.2 million salary for next season because they couldn't release him.
That's certainly not what Kansas City wants, since coach Herm Edwards has made it publicly clear Brodie Croyle would get a chance to compete for the starting job -- as would Damon Huard, who re-signed with the team this offseason.
''I've been in the league long enough,'' Green said. ``When you see those comments over the course of several months, and you see the way the reps are going to work out, and you see what Brodie's making, what Damon was re-signed for and what I'm making, it's not a fair competition.
``It's a weighted competition.''
For now, however, the Dolphins have remained firm in their efforts to give up no more than a sixth-round pick for Green. And Peterson, who wants a fourth-round pick, isn't budging, either.
''It's not only awkward for me and my family, but it's awkward for the guys in the weight room, in the locker room, on the practice field,'' Green said. 'I'm here every day. People ask, `What's going on?' Guys don't know how to react to me, how to treat me [in terms of leadership].''
Still, as Green has learned, business decisions don't often take personal feelings into account. And even once a team finally budges, Green said he has not been told whether he would immediately take over as the Dolphins' starting quarterback.
''[The Dolphins] haven't said, `You're the guy, come right in,'' Green said. ``They haven't told me one way or another. I just know I would have a much more fair chance, for my mind. Because here, it's obviously weighted.''