A few cap lessons
AntSports Steve said:
Every offseason, I read a post with those words in it. Well, it's not true. It's a lie. In the last 5 years including this year, the Cards have pushed money into the current year to "look" like they are spending to the cap.
For 2005, just for Thompson, Clemment, and Shelton, the team has purposely cut them before June 1st to push money into 2005's cap just to look like they are trying to spend to the cap. How much much cap space could the cards saved? $3.6M just for those 3 players alone.
Cutting them before June 1st cost 2005 and Extra :
Thompson - $625,000
Clemment - $425,000
Shelton - $2,500,000
I would like to figure out a list of the rest of the players under contract for more than 1 year that were cut and figure out how much more money the Cards actually tried not to spend this year.
The Cards should have tried to bring in one more high profile player instead of saving for the future.
In the NFL, the future is always now.
So please post a few player names of 2005 cuts and help my memory.
I don't know why so many people have a hard time understanding how the cap works. Let me explain a couple of things... (gonna work with more managable #'s so this is just an example not the actual cap here)
Lets assume your salary cap is $100 and it stays flat for the next year (meaning no increase from year to year, yes I know the NFL continually increases the cap each year but like I said this is to make following the #'s easier.
So assuming the above is true then I would have:
2005 $100
2006 $100
total $200 for the 2 years to spend.
Now lets also assume I have spent $90 of my cap and have $10 left, and I choose to cut 3 players who's accellerated bonus costs me the extra $10 making my total cap for the year $100 right? Leaving me another $100 to spend the next year since I wont have those bonus's sitting there if I wait until after june 1st.
Means above I actually "spent" $190 not $200 but for cap purposes my #'s are $200.
Now lets go the other way and say I spent $90 of my cap and have $10 left, and I choose to cut the 3 players AFTER JUNE 1st and push that $10 off to next years cap, I use the $10 this year to sign another player, meaning I spent my total cap of $100 this year, HOWEVER next year I only have $90 left to me to spend because I pushed the cap hit to next year, so I spend the $90.
Means above I actually "spent" $190 not $200 but for cap purposes my #'s are $200.
Wow, what do you know in both scenarios I end up "spending" the exact same amount of money, its just a matter of when it counted against my cap.
All teams spend about the same amount of money over the long haul within a million or two each year. Its just a matter of HOW you spent it over that long haul, IE did you do the Titans and SF route and spend over a 5 year period with payrolls of $150, $150, $100, & $50 & $50 of actually money "spent" in each of those 5 years but because of the way the contracts are written/payed they come out to cap hits of $100, $100, $100, $100, $100. or do you do like the Cards do and spend $110, $90, $110, $90, $100 all right around even #'s each year.
Now you can say they are not spending the money in the right way and i have no problem with that argument, but to say they are just trying to make it "look" like they are spending to the cap is off base. They do spend the cap each year just like every team does.