That's a very good breakdown.Like many others, I believe that Mark Rodgers had a negative effect on Russ and his career. This is purely speculation, but it seems to me that Rodgers didn't give Russ good advice about how to handle his relationships with teams he played on.
From pretty early on, Russ presented himself as being antagonistic during contract negotiations, setting tight deadlines and leaking information (or misinformation) about teams he wanted to be traded to. Who is to blame? The common wisdom is that the client sets the tone, and the agent just carries out his client's wishes, but I find it hard to believe that Russ, who tried so hard to develop a "good guy" persona wanted that.
We'll never know what their relationship was, but by all accounts, they were very close. Maybe too close. Of course, that can only happen when you have just one NFL client. (By contrast, Wilson's new agent, David Mulugheta, represents 70 current NFL players.)
All we know is that through Rodgers' representation of Wilson from 2022 to 2024, he managed to alienate two fan bases and piss off several different coaching staffs and front offices. Maybe a better agent could have given Russ better advice about how to handle himself?
Before the trade to Denver in 2022, Matt Calkins of the Seattle Times wrote an article in which he opined that there was no way that Russ would force his way out of Seattle:
Calkiins can't believe that Russ really would turn his back on the Seattle fanbase and take the step that would turn him into a bad guy, lol. He concludes that Russ wouldn't force his way out of Seattle because no one is that crazy. Well, it turns out Russ was that crazy. Or was it his agent?
As the article in the OP stated, Mark Rogers was able to aggressively pursue the best possible deal for Russell because with just the one NFL client, he didn't have to worry about pissing off a GM like agents who represent multiple clients do. So what if John Schneider won't talk to him? It's no sweat off Rogers' ass, because he doesn't have to do business with him again.
But that was when Russell's market value was much higher, when teams actually wanted him. Now, the conditions have changed. Russell needs an agent who can beat the bushes and find a job for him, perhaps call in a few owed favors, etc, because his value is such that he and his agent can't afford to use the aggressive tactics that Rogers once did.
I'm as puzzled about this as everyone else appears to be. Why now? Russell doesn't have to worry where his next meal is going to come from. He has a potential career in broadcasting that he could be pursuing rather than chasing this snowball's chance in hell of being a starting NFL quarterback. Is he that delusional? Wait! Don't answer that.