
Well the other teams certainly can't accuse the Lions of going out to BUY a good showing at a hosted Grey Cup!
Moderator: Team Captains
Doesn't help with the Lions moving him to tackle and then back to defensive end.MexicoLionFan wrote:I hope I am wrong Pauser...but what I have seen from KW over the last 2 years is that he has lost a gear and some of his leverage, making him an undersized DT and perhaps a little too slow to play DE...we will see, but the DLine isn't doing it for me...
Well, the fans were certainly ready. Chomping at the bit. Checking the tweets, the news."Good morning! 10 minutes until the opening of Free Agency, are you ready?"
BCLions.com Staff
It’s tough to throw a party when the guests don’t show up, but the BC Lions chose to put their fans first when CFL free agency began on Tuesday morning.
Letting their followers on Twitter on Facebook know exactly who they were targeting was a decision fully endorsed by Lions VP of football operations and GM Wally Buono. A measured risk for the Lions however, as one by one their invited guests decided to attend parties in other CFL cities.
“It's a new world out there and we wanted our fans to be part of the process this year,” says Buono. “They support this club and they had a right to know what our plans were going to be today. We would have liked to have had a bit more success, but to think we would have signed every player we targeted would have been unrealistic. I don't regret letting them know we tried to sign these players and improve our team.”
Many times, players enter free agency if for no other reason than to ensure they received the best possible offer from their current club and have every intention of returning to that same team. For others, it’s an opportunity to see what their value is on the open market and potentially cash in with teams that have a specific need or feel a need to make a statement with their fans.
“We made very competitive offers to players such as Steve Myddelton, Nick Moore, Josh Bell and Keron Williams before this process started and I don’t blame them for wanting to know what was out there, it’s human nature and it’s also business. We also had the fewest free agents of any CFL team to begin with so at this point we’ll improve on the strong depth we already have here in BC.”
Also a consideration for Buono is to not get caught up in the emotion of the day and start making decisions for the wrong reasons; a philosophy that has served him well as the Lions currently ride a 17-year postseason appearance streak.
“When you go about building your team you do have to maintain a vision of two to three years down the road. We’re not going mortgage long-term competitiveness simply to make a splash in February with one or two players. We owe our fans a team that’s stable over the long haul.”
The Lions have yet to begin their annual trek to the U.S. for their free agent camps meaning there are still a lot of players to be evaluated and CFL free agency doesn’t necessarily guarantee you'll pick up all the ingredients needed for championship team.
“One of our best signings in 2013 was Cord Parks,” notes Buono. “He had no CFL experience and ended up being an all-star while the free agent signing we did make, Julius Williams, didn’t work out well for us in the end. Yes, there are some proven commodities that come available each year, but I believe the best teams I’ve had were built from within so the pressure to find and develop your own talent is greater than making headlines today.”
Sharing info with the fans.“It's a new world out there and we wanted our fans to be part of the process this year,” says Buono. “They support this club and they had a right to know what our plans were going to be today. We would have liked to have had a bit more success, but to think we would have signed every player we targeted would have been unrealistic. I don't regret letting them know we tried to sign these players and improve our team.”
“We made very competitive offers to players such as Steve Myddelton, Nick Moore, Josh Bell and Keron Williams before this process started and I don’t blame them for wanting to know what was out there, it’s human nature and it’s also business. We also had the fewest free agents of any CFL team to begin with so at this point we’ll improve on the strong depth we already have here in BC.”
“When you go about building your team you do have to maintain a vision of two to three years down the road. We’re not going mortgage long-term competitiveness simply to make a splash in February with one or two players. We owe our fans a team that’s stable over the long haul.”
Nothing rash in Wally's decision process.“One of our best signings in 2013 was Cord Parks,” notes Buono. “He had no CFL experience and ended up being an all-star while the free agent signing we did make, Julius Williams, didn’t work out well for us in the end. Yes, there are some proven commodities that come available each year, but I believe the best teams I’ve had were built from within so the pressure to find and develop your own talent is greater than making headlines today.”
I had read how MB said too that they wanted to hype the life here in BC.MexicoLionFan wrote:LU reported yesterday that BC was going to be active in FA Day 1 but with LOTUSLAND offers...meaning, Wally was going to offer decent/average money to the FAs and hope to attract them by the quality of living, the players (Lulay), the team history, and the stadium...it didn't work...Day 1 is pretty much a major failure for Buono and resigning Keron Williams could turn out NOT to be a good thing...I was more than happy to see him go...
But I will leave you with this...I have really noticed an edge to Wally that last couple of years...almost an arrogance...and with the kids of today, in today's market, playing it aloof/laid back doesn't work with them...they want HYPE and an aggressive pursuit...I didn't see this from the Lions at all, save a useless tweet from Wally late in the day...
Now HUGE pressure has fallen onto McEvoy and Shivers to search the heavens for what we need.
"Seven minutes after the free agency period opened at 9 a.m. PST, the Lions conspicuously tweeted that they had made offers to offensive tackle Josh Bourke, defensive back/linebacker Craig Butler, linebacker Shea Emry, offensive lineman Wayne Smith and receiver Nick Moore.lion24 wrote:Looks like we are content on missing the playoffs next season, now Bell may be signed by Ottawa or Calgary. Not sure where people got their info Keron Williams resigned, he hasn't. This is turning the Lions into a jokejoke apparently we have no pressing need to sign our own or other free agents
I agree, the Lions like to build from within rather than overspend on FA. They'll bring in a bunch of import DL and OL to camp to plug some holes. Along with a LB, a DB or two and some receivers. The Lion struggled for many years trying to find 2nd import receiver to bookend Geroy....ever since Chris Brazelle left, going through a dozen prospects before developing Arseneux and Moore. Unfortunately neither of them is a Geroy Simon. (Arland Bruce might become available? )korey&dante4ever wrote:Wally knows his price points and stays disciplined to them. I commend him for that. It's a lot easier to just throw around money and make things copacetic from an optics standpoint.
Moore, in my opinion is easily replaceable. Would've felt real greasy to throw 170k+ at him. I also think he lacks competitiveness/heart. IMO.
Anyways, hopefully we get Ted Laurent after he's done his NFL tryouts.