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02-17-2006, 10:05 AM | #91 | |
A Dude
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Re: Salary Cap Analysis
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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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02-17-2006, 01:22 PM | #92 |
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Re: Salary Cap Analysis
I need to clarify my last post because I just realized I misread some things. The $5.8 billion actually represents all NFL revenues. The owners have agreed to share all football-related revenues, but that does not necessarily include some of the local business revenues that teams currently bring in. So the owners have not yet agreed how much of the $5.8 billion they're willing to share. Owners like Snyder and Jones want to share less, and these high revenue clubs are holding firm in their belief that local revenues should belong to them.
Sounds like not all of the $5.8 will be eligible for sharing with the players. The projections in my prior post will not likely come out that high. Tough to say what it will look like.
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02-17-2006, 02:29 PM | #93 |
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Re: Salary Cap Analysis
My understanding is that they're arguing on 2 points:
1. Which revenues should be included in total football revenues, AND what % of these should go to the players. 2. Which revenues should be shared between teams. While #2 seems more of an internal matter, #1 will have a more direct effect on the cap. I don't see the players agreeing to anything unless they get a real raise in dollar terms. So simply increasing the pie won't be enough. The new % of the new pie will have to represent a raise over the current % of the current pie. So under this assumption, I'd expect a new CBA to allocate more dollars directly to the players, which in turn would raise the salary cap. |
02-17-2006, 02:32 PM | #94 | |
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Re: Salary Cap Analysis
Celts posted the CBS article in the newswire, figured I'd include it here.
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02-17-2006, 02:43 PM | #95 |
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Re: Salary Cap Analysis
As for the article, it's pretty much your run-of-the-mill Snyder bashing piece. But it does make some valid points. Without a new CBA we will be in trouble, but we won't be the only ones. If there is a new CBA we should be able to clean up our cap and be ok for 2006 and the future, but the writer doesn't spend much time discussing this.
I guess you can chalk this one up as more anti-Skins rhetoric, with a hint of credibility. |
02-17-2006, 02:45 PM | #96 |
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Re: Salary Cap Analysis
And if Mr. Schaffer needs some help with his cap sheets, please don't hesitate to ask. Schneed and I can be there by 9am.
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02-17-2006, 02:57 PM | #97 |
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Re: Salary Cap Analysis
When I first read the article, it concerned me. Then I realized that these outside people don't realize that we have been doing this cap dance every off-season for five years. There are some NFL fans who never have to give this a thought because their owners will never put them over the cap. How boring. And yes, I still think the Redskins will be contenders next year.
Canuck: If I were Snyder, Redskin 1 would be headed for the Great White North post haste.
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02-17-2006, 03:14 PM | #98 | |
A Dude
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Re: Salary Cap Analysis
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It's your typical Chicken Little piece. OMG THE SKY IS FALLING!!!
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02-17-2006, 03:16 PM | #99 | |
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Re: Salary Cap Analysis
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02-17-2006, 03:26 PM | #100 | |
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Re: Salary Cap Analysis
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02-17-2006, 06:06 PM | #101 |
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Re: Salary Cap Analysis
http://sports.espn.go.com/nfl/column...ohn&id=2332991
Another article about why getting under the cap in 06 is different from any other year. |
02-17-2006, 10:25 PM | #102 |
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Re: Salary Cap Analysis
Here's the cap situation for each team in the league
http://www.askthecommish.com/salarycap/numbers.asp |
02-17-2006, 10:31 PM | #103 | |
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Re: Salary Cap Analysis
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The cap rules for '06 are dependent upon whether the CBA gets extended or not. If we go with the assumption that the CBA will not get extended, the Redskins are in serious trouble, along with a number of other teams. But if the CBA does get extended, the Redskins should be able to fit under the cap right nicely. I'm betting that the CBA gets extended. When push comes to shove, I see free agency getting postponed, and a CBA extension getting signed by mid-March as all interested parties begin to give ground to preserve their best interests.
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02-17-2006, 10:55 PM | #104 |
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Re: Salary Cap Analysis
Matty's link demonstrates that we will not be the only team blowing the bridge if there is no CBA. (How could the awful Raiders be so far over?) I agree with Schneed that a CBA will be worked out although not necessarily by 3/3. Both sides have too much to lose to allow this thing to spiral away.
The interesting thing to watch is how much Snyder, Jones, Kraft et al have to give up on the revenue side before the other owners get serious with the CBA. The worst scenario for the Skins, IMHO, would be broad revenue sharing with a player's percentage at say 60% rather than 64%. If Snyder shares his coffee cake, he should insist on the 64% (or higher). Since the point of the revenue sharing is a level playing field, as much of that shared money should go to the players as possible. To me, it seems silly for clubs to demand more revenue when they are not spending the money they get now for players. From the looks of the list, several teams payroll is below the TV alottment alone.
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02-18-2006, 12:40 AM | #105 | |
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Re: Salary Cap Analysis
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The number Snyder should be concerned about is the 56% min cap not the 64% max cap. Let's say the 64% max cap for 2006 is $95M. That means the min cap would be about $83M. So assuming the Skins max out (which they always do), that means the other teams can pocket an extra $12M. Why would Snyder want to share his money so it can go into the other owners' pockets? But it brings up an interesting debate. If you're Snyder, do you want a large discrepency between the min cap and the max cap? If the gap is large, Snyder would stand to gain a bigger competitve advantage on the playing field, since many teams would not max out and some would be at the min. But this would also mean that the other teams could pocket more of his money. And another thing... when they all bash Snyder for his free spending ways, what are they really bashing him for? If you want to curse his choice of coaches, free agents, etc., fine. But they bash him for spending his own money??? The guy maxes out the cap every year, and tries every trick within the rules to gain a competitive advantage - and that's a bad thing??? THAT'S WHAT HE'S SUPPOSED TO DO! Where are all the articles about the greedy owners who only spend the min cap and pocket an extra $12M every year? Even pocketing a few extra million off the cap is shortchanging the fans imo. It's not like these guys are losing money. Plus they were all rich before they became owners, that's how they can afford to buy an NFL team in the first place. |
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