Steve Hutchinson

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Steve Hutchinson
Date of birth November 1, 1977 (age 29)
Place of birth Flag of United States Fort Lauderdale, Florida
Position(s) Offensive guard
College Michigan
NFL Draft 2001 / Round 1/ Pick 17
Pro Bowls 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007
Statistics
Team(s)
2001-2005
2006-present
Seattle Seahawks
Minnesota Vikings

Steven Hutchinson (born November 1, 1977 in Fort Lauderdale, Florida) is a National Football League offensive lineman for the Minnesota Vikings. He is regarded as the best guard in football.

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[edit] High school and college career

He attended Coral Springs High School and then the University of Michigan, where he excelled as a four year starter, two year captain, four year All-Big Ten selection, 2 year All-American selection, Big Ten Offensive Lineman of the Year winner, and Outland Trophy finalist. As a freshman, he started on the 1997 Michigan team that won the National Championship.

[edit] NFL career

Drafted in the first round of the 2001 NFL Draft by the Seattle Seahawks, Hutchinson spent his first five seasons with that team. In March 2006, Hutchinson, a free agent, was designated as Seattle's transition player. He then signed a controversial offer sheet from the Vikings, for $49 million over seven years, believed to be the richest contract ever offered a guard. The offer sheet, though, contained a poison pill provision that would have guaranteed his entire salary if he was not the highest-paid lineman on the team.

NFL rules require that when a team uses its transition tag on a player, they must either exactly match a competing offer sheet or relinquish their rights to that player. While the tag is unlikely to be triggered during his time with the Vikings (which means he is unlikely to see the entire $49 million), the Seahawks had recently given tackle Walter Jones a contract richer than the one offered to Hutchinson. Thus, they would have triggered the "poison pill" clause immediately, and would have been forced, by NFL rules, to guarantee Hutchinson's entire salary. Since doing so would have destroyed their salary cap, they could not match the offer. Moreover, since they only used their transition tag, rather than naming Hutchinson a franchise player, they received no compensation from Minnesota for their loss. Seattle retaliated, though, by signing Minnesota wide receiver Nate Burleson to an offer sheet containing a similar ploy. These contracts prompted criticism of the legality of this maneuver, but no action has been taken to ban such clauses from contracts.

[edit] External links

[edit] Personal Life