Oh, it does.I don’t think soft cap means what you think it means…
Oh, it does.I don’t think soft cap means what you think it means…
Well, it is obviously a fair point, but I guess it depends on how much you value a backup quarterback. Certainly in a situation where your starter is injury prone, having a good replacement can be the difference between success and failure longterm.That was my "if" statement. If you do have confidence in Murray, spending a 3rd on Fields doesn't really make sense (and gives me the impression that confidence in Murray is lacking).
I don’t know, Cardiac. They had structured the contracts in a way so that it affected their salary cap to the point where they were over the allowed number, and you cannot do that. You cannot break the rules – it is just easy to get around them. Yesterday I heard a longtime general manager say that “outside the NFL people talk about cap. Inside the NFL people talk about cash.” This way, the Bills save cash, and I am sure that makes the owner happy.Your take on the CAP is not entirely accurate IMHO. Explain why the Bills are gutting their roster to get under the CAP.
It has not been a soft cap for that long, Oaken, but the most important is how you use your money.Yeah if the cap was as irrelevant as some people try to convince everybody Jerry Jones would have 20 Lombardi trophies
Bingo.I don’t know, Cardiac. They had structured the contracts in a way so that it affected their salary cap to the point where they were over the allowed number, and you cannot do that. You cannot break the rules – it is just easy to get around them. Yesterday I heard a longtime general manager say that “outside the NFL people talk about cap. Inside the NFL people talk about cash.” This way, the Bills save cash, and I am sure that makes the owner happy.
I should also add that the point about the salary cap, and how it is meaningless, is not mine. I mean, I do think there is some logic to it, but overall it is based on numerous articles and interviews with longtime NFL executives and analysts.
Nfl has a hard cap, the nba and mlb have a soft cap. A cap going up on a yearly basis does not make it a “soft cap”.Oh, it does.
I agree that this is true, but the guarantees for a contract have to be put in an escrow account. Owners with lots of cash can put more money aside for these contracts, while more cash poor owners just don't have the cash.I don’t know, Cardiac. They had structured the contracts in a way so that it affected their salary cap to the point where they were over the allowed number, and you cannot do that. You cannot break the rules – it is just easy to get around them. Yesterday I heard a longtime general manager say that “outside the NFL people talk about cap. Inside the NFL people talk about cash.” This way, the Bills save cash, and I am sure that makes the owner happy.
I should also add that the point about the salary cap, and how it is meaningless, is not mine. I mean, I do think there is some logic to it, but overall it is based on numerous articles and interviews with longtime NFL executives and analysts.
Nfl has a hard cap, the nba and mlb have a soft cap. A cap going up on a yearly basis does not make it a “soft cap”.
"Myth: Unlike the NBA, the NFL has a “hard cap”
No. The NFL does not have a hard cap; it has a soft cap (a yarmulke, if you will). To clarify, no team can go “over the cap” in terms of cap accounting. However, teams can and do go over the cap in terms of cash spending due to the feature of the NFL cap that differentiates it from all other sports leagues: proration."
You are absolutely right, Krang, and I think it is a much overlooked aspect. That was why I mentioned it in the original post, because it is very important. I don't think that Michael Bidwill can easily throw around with major checks like other owners can, and thus, I think other teams have an advantage on the Cards in that regard. For example, if the Cards and Cowboys wants the same player, Jerry Jones will win every single time.I agree that this is true, but the guarantees for a contract have to be put in an escrow account. Owners with lots of cash can put more money aside for these contracts, while more cash poor owners just don't have the cash.
This isn't speculation, it was said about the Cardinals alot during the Bill Bidwill days. Granted it's probably a lot better than it once was, but he still can't compete with the really rich owners.
Dude is expressing his opinion on the definition of hard cap.Business of Football: Understanding Salary Cap, Dead Money
With NFL teams about to open their wallets, here's a refresher course on the salary cap and an explanation of why we've seen bigger dead-money cap hits lately.www.si.com
Andrew Brandt was vice president for the Packers for nine years where he, among other things, negotiatied all player contracts and handled all salary cap-things. Since then he has been an alalyst- and councellor on business and legal aspects in sport for ESPN and Sports Illustrated.
Don't taunt us with the Christisn Wilkins talk then settle for some third string practice squad reject.Both stories have relevance for this thread.
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Business of Football: Understanding Salary Cap, Dead Money
With NFL teams about to open their wallets, here's a refresher course on the salary cap and an explanation of why we've seen bigger dead-money cap hits lately.www.si.com
Andrew Brandt was vice president for the Packers for nine years where he, among other things, negotiatied all player contracts and handled all salary cap-things. Since then he has been an alalyst- and councellor on business and legal aspects in sport for ESPN and Sports Illustrated.
Okay.Dude is expressing his opinion on the definition of hard cap.
He is wrong. His career experience adds zero authority to his opinion.
Yes, it is. It is complicated stuff. No worries.Basically every source on the internet says NFL is hard cap, you initially said it was “soft” because it increases every year which is wrong. This guy is saying that cash spend can go over the hard cap amount which is correct and also doesn’t make it a soft cap.
It’s fine to be wrong about this.
Sheer delusion ^Yes, it is. It is complicated stuff. No worries.
I think the issue is in the understanding of what a hard cap is, added with the possibility of using cash over cap to spread out signing bonuses, and what that actually makes the cap into. It's fair to be confused.
Eh they’ve been sssbtialky admitted he’s too expensive. Don’t waste your heartache.Don't taunt us with the Christisn Wilkins talk then settle for some third string practice squad reject.
As the old commercial said, "It's not nice to fool Mother Nature" or lie to Josh Weinfuss.
Are you alright?Eh they’ve been sssbtialky admitted he’s too expensive. Don’t waste your heartache.
Oh, he can compete, and he can do so without risking his base wealth. Competing would risk the insane amounts of profits he and his family can pull in year in, year out, so he mostly chooses not to spend the cash.I agree that this is true, but the guarantees for a contract have to be put in an escrow account. Owners with lots of cash can put more money aside for these contracts, while more cash poor owners just don't have the cash.
This isn't speculation, it was said about the Cardinals alot during the Bill Bidwill days. Granted it's probably a lot better than it once was, but he still can't compete with the really rich owners.
Baloney. Can we please stop posting Bidwill excuses right before free agency? It sets up the "Well, I really don't blame them for not signing FAs because Bidwill can't" crap excuses.You are absolutely right, Krang, and I think it is a much overlooked aspect. That was why I mentioned it in the original post, because it is very important. I don't think that Michael Bidwill can easily throw around with major checks like other owners can, and thus, I think other teams have an advantage on the Cards in that regard. For example, if the Cards and Cowboys wants the same player, Jerry Jones will win every single time.
I think the misunderstanding is because you are focusing on the exact definition in the dictionary, while I care more about what it actually means. It is not very reader-friendly to read, so I left it out of the original post, but okay, I can explain it a little.Sheer delusion ^
My autocorrect just speaks some foreign language I no longer recognize.Are you alright?
Covfefe?
Probably why he is no longer employed by a NFL team. For any given year, thats true. But eventually the cap will be a issue, look at the Bills, do you believe they really wanted to release all those good players?Business of Football: Understanding Salary Cap, Dead Money
With NFL teams about to open their wallets, here's a refresher course on the salary cap and an explanation of why we've seen bigger dead-money cap hits lately.www.si.com
Andrew Brandt was vice president for the Packers for nine years where he, among other things, negotiatied all player contracts and handled all salary cap-things. Since then he has been an alalyst- and councellor on business and legal aspects in sport for ESPN and Sports Illustrated.
"This is why Kyler Murray's recent extension with the Cardinals contains a reported $70M less in total guarantees than the (Deshaun) Watson deal: "For Watson," Mike Florio writes, "Browns owner Jimmy Haslam must deposit $169M into an escrow account by March 31, 2023. ... (That's) quite possibly a check that Cardinals owner Michael Bidwill can't afford to write." (https://www.nbcsports.com/nfl/profo...als-from-fully-guaranteeing-kyler-murray-deal)Baloney. Can we please stop posting Bidwill excuses right before free agency? It sets up the "Well, I really don't blame them for not signing FAs because Bidwill can't" crap excuses.