Evil Ash
Henchman Supreme
http://www.azcentral.com/sports/cardinals/articles/0302cards0302.html
Thrifty Cards primed to splurge
Stadium, cap room could bring changes
Kent Somers
The Arizona Republic
Mar. 2, 2006 12:00 AM
For years, the Cardinals promised that a new stadium would allow them to become major players in free agency, competing with rich owners like Washington's Daniel Snyder, who has deep pockets for a short guy.
It's time for the Cardinals to make good on their vows. If team officials don't understand that, the folks in the lobby waiting to buy season tickets will be happy to tell them.
Events have converged to create a unique opportunity for the Cardinals to improve, provided they are willing to spend.
The new stadium is set to open in August. The team is about $22 million under the salary cap. And there's impending doom on the labor front, which will weaken the Cardinals' competition in free agency and could put an unexpected number of quality players on the market.
The NFL and the NFL Players Association have been negotiating an extension of the collective bargaining agreement for more than a year but have yet to reach a deal. Without an extension, teams face severe restrictions if free agency begins tonight at 10, Arizona time, as scheduled.
Signing bonuses can be prorated over just four years. Salaries can't increase by more than 30 percent a year. All incentives earned this year must be counted on the 2006 cap. Those changes will make it nearly impossible for teams with little or no cap space to sign free agents.
Without an extension, the salary cap this year is expected to be around $95 million for each team. With an extension, it could be around $108 million. That difference of $13 million is huge to teams such as Washington, Oakland and the New York Jets, all of which entered this week well over the cap.
Enter the Cardinals, one of a handful of teams in position to sign multiple free agents.
Team officials deny they have $23 million of cap space available, but they declined to reveal a different number. They point out that the $23 million figure doesn't include what they must spend on keeping their restricted free agents and signing rookies.
But even if those costs are deducted, the Cardinals have ample room to sign several top free agents. That's an unusual advantage that might not come again.
Say the team needs a center, which it does. Say LeCharles Bentley of the Saints is an unrestricted free agent, which he is. With their cap space, the Cardinals could offer Bentley a higher signing bonus than many teams, because they have the room to accommodate such a contract.
Or they could include a hefty roster bonus, which would count against the 2006 salary cap. That gives them an advantage that most other teams don't have.
The cap space also gives the team an edge with restricted free agents. That market has traditionally been small, because the player's current team has the right to match the offer.
With their cap space, however, the Cardinals could easily structure a contract that would make it difficult for a team to match.
But it's one thing to have salary-cap room and quite another to use it, as the Cardinals have proven in recent years.
In 2003, they entered the season with a weak roster and $12.5 million of cap space, yet they hesitated to add veterans who could help them win.
Fans won't tolerate the same philosophy this year, not with a shiny, new, taxpayer-approved stadium rising out of Glendale cotton fields.
Last time we checked, no one handed out rings for finishing first in salary-cap space.