Carson Palmer is far too expensive for the Oakland Raiders in 2013, and the business will be better off in the long run to simply generate the experienced quarterback before the time starts. ESPN's Adam Schefter reported on Monday that Palmer is "highly unlikely" to rebuild his present, expensive deal: As Schefter stories, Palmer's base wage in 2013 is set to be $13 million. Should the team choose to relieve him, $9.34 million would count as "dead money" contrary to the cap, per Spotrac.com. While $9.34 million isn't any touch, the team would be allowed by cutting Palmer to truly save $4.66 million, that the team could truly use. His base salary makes him the next highest paid player in the NFL, right behind Chris Long, Jared Allen and Peyton Manning. No offense to Mr. Palmer, but he is nowhere near worth that kind of income. h/t Spotrac.com Judging purely by the numbers, Palmer was an average quarterback a year ago. He has also which may be just an above-average quarterback all through his career. Palmer's most readily useful year as a pro came all the long ago in 2005, his 2nd period in the category. He used for 3,836 yards with 32 touchdowns and just 12 interceptions, completing 67.8 percent of his passes for a rating of 101.1. If he created figures like that year in and year out, Palmer could be worth the total amount of money he is owed. But he does not produce numbers like this every yeara'not even close. In other words, he's not worth $13 million per year. The $4.66 million the group would save by reducing Palmer shed would give it the salary cap space to do 1 of 2 things: Palmer isn't the team's potential quarterback, and holding onto him now doesn't make any economic sense. Should Palmer won't make an offer, the only sensible move basic director Reggie McKenzie can make is always to simply let Palmer walk. Follow me on Twitter @JesseReed78
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