The Facts: Following up on the ongoing story. ... As the Saints launch their OTAs without the man who organized the team’s lockout activities a year ago, league insiders and observers continue to scratch their heads regarding the failure of the Saints and quarterback Drew Brees to work out the details of a long-term deal. For now, a source with knowledge of the situation tells PFT that the two sides are talking, but that they are making no real progress.
Diehards Line:As PFT's Mike Florio explained it, the current impasse seems to come from one fundamental disagreement: The Saints believe that Brees eventually will sign the one-year, $16.371 million exclusive franchise tender and Brees currently has no plan to do so. Florio went on to suggest the problem could be that the Saints underestimate Brees’ resolve. It’s easy to assume that, once the July 16 deadline for signing franchise players to long-term deals comes and goes, Brees will take the money and report for camp. Though Brees’ specific demands remain unclear, Florio pointed out the break-even point for the Saints when it comes to simply using the franchise tag in 2012 ($16.371 million), 2013 ($19.645 million), and 2014 ($28.289 million) is a long-term deal with a three-year average of $21.435 million. And if Brees wants more than guaranteed money than the combined franchise tenders for 2012 and 2013 (i.e., $36.016 million), it’s all the more reason for the team to take it year to year. That, of course, assumes Brees will eventually sign the one-year tender rather than launching a holdout that extends into the regular season. … At this point, we can't help but remember when Brees and HC Sean Payton couldn't have imagined it coming to this. ... Stay tuned.