02-01-2006, 03:09 PM | #76 | |
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Re: Salary Cap Analysis
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See, right there - Bam - banned just for calling it as i see it. |
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02-01-2006, 03:11 PM | #77 |
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Re: Salary Cap Analysis
Football season is over. My drinking at noon days are done until fall.
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02-01-2006, 03:52 PM | #78 | |
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Re: Salary Cap Analysis
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If you don't make the playoffs I think you can, during the uncapped year, sign the huge SB/one year salaries and have trailing years of vet min... |
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02-15-2006, 04:13 PM | #79 | |
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Re: Salary Cap Analysis
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02-15-2006, 04:14 PM | #80 | |
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Re: Salary Cap Analysis
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not if they decertify the union. then there would be no lockout. the league does not want a work stoppage for certain |
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02-15-2006, 04:15 PM | #81 | |
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Re: Salary Cap Analysis
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that is it for certain. you will not see snyder and jerry jones giving up money if they can help it |
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02-16-2006, 04:00 PM | #82 |
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Re: Salary Cap Analysis
Another salary cap discussion, man this is dangerous territory. Everyone keeps going down the restructure road, thats fine for a year or two, but you still have to pay the original signing bonuses too. I know the skins have done a great job of circumventing this cap for a while, I just dont see how they are going to be able to keep doing things this way. They are eventually going to either have to start cutting really good players or bite the cap figures.They are just putting it off by restructuring, plus they keep having roster turnover because they have to cut 10 to 15 people every year. I found this about restructing deals.
If a player decides to renegotiate his contract, how does the bonus money he received in the original contract count against the cap? Answer:If a player renegotiates his contract and gets a new signing bonus, the new signing bonus is prorated over the remaining years of the original contract AND over the extension. The allocation of the original signing bonus remains unchanged. For example, Player X is currently in the third year of a four-year deal (2000–2003) that paid him a $1 million signing bonus. In 2002, Player X renegotiates his deal extending his contract to the 2005 season while getting a $2 million signing bonus. The original $1 million signing bonus is allocated at $250,000 per year over 2002 and 2003 just as it would be if there were no renegotiations. However, the new $2 million signing bonus is allocated at $500,000 per year over the remaining two years of the original contract (2002–2003) and the extended two years (2004–2005). |
02-16-2006, 04:12 PM | #83 |
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Re: Salary Cap Analysis
ugh here we go again
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02-16-2006, 04:28 PM | #84 | |
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Re: Salary Cap Analysis
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For example, Portis originally signed for a bonus of $11.6 million over 8 years. This year, he's due a $3 million roster bonus. If you renegotiate that into a signing bonus, here's the bonus allocation: 2004: $1.45 million 2005: $1.45 million 2006: $1.45 million + $0.5 million = $1.95 million total 2007: $1.45 million + $0.5 million = $1.95 million total 2008: $1.45 million + $0.5 million = $1.95 million total 2009: $1.45 million + $0.5 million = $1.95 million total 2010: $1.45 million + $0.5 million = $1.95 million total 2011: $1.45 million + $0.5 million = $1.95 million total That's adding half a million per year, very manageable. In 2007, he's due another roster bonus in the amount of $1 million. Renegotiating that would add another $0.2 million to each year from 2007 onwards. It's not an extraordinary amount. You can keep a core group of players together in this manner. We can go through the next five years (assuming the CBA gets resigned) and not have to ditch any of our core 15-20 guys. The problem with running your cap in this manner is that if you try to add a high-priced free agent to the mix, you're talking about having the cap blow up in your face.
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02-16-2006, 04:31 PM | #85 |
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Re: Salary Cap Analysis
PS - 56fanatic, I don't want to rehash this entire argument again. I think it's great that you have a general understanding of how the salary cap works, but the important thing is to understand how those principles apply to the Redskins. The only way this discussion gets anywhere is if we take a look at the Redskins cap projections. If you want them to stop renegotiating bonuses, you must have an idea of when the cap consequences will come due. When?
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02-16-2006, 08:54 PM | #86 | ||
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Re: Salary Cap Analysis
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So Portis' $3M bonus would be spread out over the next 4 years at a hit of $750K per year. If a new CBA is signed, I'd assume the max proration would go back to 7 years. |
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02-17-2006, 03:17 AM | #87 |
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Re: Salary Cap Analysis
A few thoughts on the Sportsline article about the cap.
First, it seems to me to be shoddy reportage to rely on other teams' cap people to comment, without giving the Redskins a chance to reply. As usual, these sources are anonymous. Que Cosell's rant about the de plor a bull state of sports jour na lism. Second, if there is no new CBA, my understanding is that a number of teams will have to make radical cutbacks in 2006-not just the Skins. After 2006 it's Katey bar the door (as Ken Beatrice used to say) and we can spend as much as we like. Third, if there is a new CBA and I realize the clock is ticking, the overall revenue pool will go up because of the demand from smaller teams to include more revenue streams. In addition, the players share of that overall pie will be higher because this is Upshaw's central demand and he cannot face his members without some victory on this front. Therefore isn't it likely that a renewed CBA means that the cap will spike way up and save the Redskins from the article's hellish scenario? Would this increase the 2006 cap or would the affect/effect be delayed? I would like to hear from our resident experts, Schneed and Canuck. Their projections are a little more crowd pleasing. Am I right in my basic asessment? No CBA = bad news for us and all other teams over the cap in 2006 and, Renewed CBA = much higher caps bail us out. I know we've been over this but the article makes it seem that we are screwed regardless and I don't see it that way.
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02-17-2006, 03:46 AM | #88 |
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Re: Salary Cap Analysis
new cba would only spike if lots of new revenue came in (new tv contract etc, a couple luxury boxes aren't the same thing). and post 2006 in a capless NFL you WOULD have limits on getting players and spending if you ever made the playoffs.
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02-17-2006, 09:20 AM | #89 | |
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Re: Salary Cap Analysis
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02-17-2006, 09:41 AM | #90 |
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Re: Salary Cap Analysis
You mean where the beer flows like wine and the women instinctively flock like the salmon of Capistrano.
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