Perhaps we need to make this simpler. At any time in your career, was your company actively and deliberately trying to go bankrupt? If so, had you decided to tell your boss that you are concerned about the future with said company, and the only answer the boss can give you is that once the bankruptcy is complete, they will be hiring the most talented manager they have ever seen to turn the company around, is that good enough to keep you 100% loyal to your company? Oh yeah, the new manager as it turns out, has never managed anything outside of college. Still feeling secure? And BTW, you will need to spend your tenure on this sinking ship out of your normal position.
Turns out that there are 31 other companies out there, many of which would love to hire you and are even willing to compensate your old company while doing it. As a bonus, they intend to use your strengths, pay you more, and offer you a chance to accomplish the highest level achievement possible in your career. That is quite a promotion.
Would anyone in their right mind not move to the new company? Would anyone blame them for doing so? I dare say, your intelligence would be questioned for staying at the old company. Saying other employees who lack enough skill to be hired at other companies are staying an being loyal so you should too just isn’t a valid reason for you to stay,because your situations couldn’t be less equivalent.
Nobody tried to bankrupt our whole company as that would be impossible for one person and pointless, but that is irrelevant to our conversation as I'm sure nobody in the Dolphins organization is trying to bankrupt the NFL or even the Dolphins. They are trying to improve by gathering draft picks because building through the draft gives you a chance. It may or may not work depending on the picks made but at least it's a chance. FTR I should clarify, I am one of the people losing my mind that he is being used in too many positions and in the box. He is right about that IMO and Flores is wrong. I think he needs to handle not getting what he wants better. He needs to continue to appeal to his buffoon coach and hope he evnatually gets it. If not, he is still compensated very well and wioll evnatually have more opportunities that he covets. The more he disciplines himself, the more opportunities he will have IMO.
I have worked for 13 different bosses and 11 of them came in with their own strong vision of what would make us successful after a period of adjustment and temporary pain. I believed in maybe half of them, but I kept doing my best regardless because that is all I can control and I like my career. But I have worked for 2 bosses, for a total of 5 years, who were actively hurting the company to get what they wanted at the time. Parasites. Sadly it worked for them in both cases and they were promoted (then those of us who were left worked hard to rebuild after they were gone).
I moved when I was able to move to a better position knowing that with my skill set and just as importantly, my work ethic, I would be welcome anywhere when one of the 2 or 3 opportunities I coveted presented itself. In the meantime, no, I didn't complain or have my mother complain for me. You said "compensation" but you weren't able to say "good compensation". Hardly anyone is going to invest a 1st and get back 3rd the next year. Who is offering good compensation for Minkah? I'm not in this to win an argument with anyone, I'm just sticking to facts I know of and giving my opinion. The only facts are that Minkah is in a tough situation and he is not tough enough to handle it at this point. 1 game in and he's looking like he's weak. I do not sympathize with him because his biggest problem is his own lack of mental toughness, not the situation. There are far worse things that could happen than to be given $16 million up front to play for a very bad football team for a few years, knowing you are then free to seek a better position. Very worst case, you get hurt and try to survive on your $16+ M and I think many disciplined people could probably do that. I think he should make it known that he wants a trade after the season if he is not mentally tough enough to be rebuild material. I'm not saying he has to like playing for the Dolphins, I'm just saying he needs to better handle not immediately getting what he wants.
Now if he got pissed after a crap performance and tore the locker room apart once the press left I'd say he's a competitor. Much like a certain coach did to his office under Philbin. But Minkah's showing he is the opposite of a competitor. So far he is being a quitter.
Can he turn it around with improved performance this year? Because that is what he should be thinking about even if he were to be selfish and didn't care about the team, as that would raise his value. Anybody looking at him would consider that he played on garbage teams or garbage defenses if he's worried about looking bad and hurting his value, so that excuse holds no water. People will most likely eventually know that Flores is just another rotten branch of the belicheat coaching tree if this is all his fault, or that Grier is a horrible GM if it turns out he was the one who ran us into the ground and couldn't rebuild. That's why I kept plugging along, because I knew it would probably pay off later. I'm nobody special. I think many people can see that even at age 23 or at least see that being financially set for life at 23 is a nice thing so you take some bad with teh good. He may not be mature enough to do that and that's okay too, I just can't feel bad for him because his life is not perfect yet.
I think the only people who deserve to complain about this season are the fans, especially those who invested in tickets. They are paying, not getting paid to go through this.