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02-17-2006, 10:05 AM | #9 | |
A Dude
Join Date: Feb 2005
Location: Newtown Square, PA
Age: 45
Posts: 12,421
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Re: Salary Cap Analysis
Quote:
In 2006, this is what the current situation looks like: Players get 64.5% of DGR (Designated Gross Revenues). Included in DGR is TV Revenue, ticket sales etc., but not local revenues like stadium naming revenues. This amounts to $93 million in salary cap space for each team. But now, owners at this point have agreed to share more than just DGR, they've agreed to share Total Football Revenues (TFR), which amounted to $5.8 billion in 2005. If the two sides settle on a percentage somewhere between the 59% and 65% impasse, here will be the salary cap limits: 65% of TFR: (65% x $5.8 billion) / 32 Teams = $117.8 64% of TFR: (64% x $5.8 billion) / 32 Teams = $116.0 63% of TFR: (63% x $5.8 billion) / 32 Teams = $114.2 62% of TFR: (62% x $5.8 billion) / 32 Teams = $112.4 61% of TFR: (61% x $5.8 billion) / 32 Teams = $110.5 60% of TFR: (60% x $5.8 billion) / 32 Teams = $108.7 59% of TFR: (59% x $5.8 billion) / 32 Teams = $107.0 Now, what I don't know is whether or not those numbers would go into effect for 2006, or if they'd go into effect for 2007. If they don't go into effect until 2007, then the $5.8 billion used in the calculation would be a higher number (because the NFL's total revenue grows each year). That would mean the cap limits would be even higher than what's projected here.
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