That's a tall order, even for a player as talented as Haynesworth. The 27-year-old All-Pro defensive tackle has to live up to the $100 million, seven-year contract he signed Friday with the Washington Redskins, a team that reverted to form by snagging the biggest name available with a blockbuster deal within hours of the midnight start of free agency.
"With the contract, it's going to be all on me," Haynesworth said. "My goal is to be the best player on the field and to eventually get to that Hall of Fame status and be mentioned with Reggie White and Bruce Smith and all the greats."
At least he can claim membership in a championship team - as in champions of the offseason. The Redskins also spent the wee hours re-signing cornerback DeAngelo Hall to a $54 million, six-year deal that includes $22.5 million guaranteed.
"We're not done yet," added coach Jim Zorn a few hours before the Redskins agreed to terms with left guard Derrick Dockery on a deal. Dockery played his first four seasons with Washington before leaving for Buffalo as a free agent after the 2006 season.
All this from a team that has laid off at least 30 people since the start of the year in two rounds of cutbacks. The Redskins are among an estimated 10 to 12 teams that have cut staff during the economic downturn.
But marquee free agents appear to be recession-proof. Haynesworth's guaranteed payout tops the $37 million the Atlanta Falcons gave Michael Vick in 2004. He'll receive $32 million of the guaranteed money in the next 13 months.
"I think this is similar to what baseball was," executive vice president for football operations Vinny Cerrato said. "You saw early on, (Mark) Teixeira and CC Sabathia and then after that first wave
- nothing. And I think it's going to be similar here (in the NFL). I think after the draft you'll see a lot of veteran guys still out there. There'll be no middle area. It's the top and then it's the bottom."
Asked if he felt sheepish dishing out so much money to a football player during tough times, Cerrato said: "I understand the economy and I watch it every day. We had a budget, and we owe it to the fans to improve the football team."
Haynesworth said his reaction to the money was a loud and astounded "What?" when informed by his agent in a phone call at 3:45 a.m.
"All the years of my mom making me run around the house when I was getting too big, waking me up at about 6 o'clock in the morning to get ready of the season, it guess it's a recouping or something like that," said Haynesworth, whose mother traveled with him to Washington for the news conference.
Meanwhile, the Redskins added another name to the unemployment rolls by cutting expensive, oft-injured cornerback Shawn Springs, deemed expendable after Hall was re-signed.
Still, the theme of the day was the Redskins were back as the first-day free-agent newsmakers. From Smith in 2000 to London Fletcher in 2007, Dan Snyder made his NFL name as the owner who always got the player he wanted, even if it meant overpaying for players who didn't pan out. Snyder's deep pockets have produced only one playoff win this decade.
Last year, the team was uncharacteristically quiet, making no major signings during the entire free-agency period. An 8-8 season with an aging roster
- along with the fact that the Redskins have only four picks in upcoming draft
- prompted the owner to revert to his old ways.
"I got caffeinated up because I knew that Mr. Snyder was going to be oh-so-ready," Zorn said. "We had a big entourage last night at 12:01, and that phone started humming."
Whatever the money, the Redskins get credit for targeting two deficiencies from last season: sacks and turnovers.