06-10-2023, 08:13 PM
17,809,972
Effective Cap Space: the cap space a team will have after signing at least 51 players and its projected rookie class to its roster.
https://overthecap.com/salary-cap-space
Vikings are now #8 in available cap space
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06-10-2023, 08:13 PM
17,809,972 Effective Cap Space: the cap space a team will have after signing at least 51 players and its projected rookie class to its roster. https://overthecap.com/salary-cap-space
06-10-2023, 11:33 PM
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06-11-2023, 03:11 AM
Bears #1 32 mil
Lions #4 23 mil Packers #9 16 mil
06-12-2023, 05:17 AM
Justin Jefferson: "Gimme that" :p
06-12-2023, 11:36 AM
Vikings projected to have three times that in 2024.
Considering this, I wonder if the Vikings might forego the typical contract structure for Jefferson, and put more money up front.
06-12-2023, 01:32 PM
Quote: @MaroonBells said: Depends if they think they're bringing in anyone else, or if our roster is our roster by and large. But does it really matter? I thought unused cap rolls over now days?
06-12-2023, 02:21 PM
Front loading cash is dangerous. You get to the point late in the deal where the player does not see much cash coming next year. He will forget about the mega cash he received up front and focus on the mini cash he is expected to play for next season. Then comes the holdout and everyone agreeing that he is underpaid.
06-12-2023, 07:59 PM
Quote: @dadevike said:I'm not going to pretend to know everything about contracts, but I'm pretty sure teams can structure the cap hits any way they want without it impacting the amount of money going to the player. For example, Tyreek Hill signed a 4-year, $120M contract. His yearly cash and average annual salary is roughly the same through the term, but the Dolphins chose to have only $6M hit the cap in the first year and only $12M hit the cap the second year, with $31M hitting the cap in 2024. Most big contracts are structured in a similar way. I'm just saying maybe don't do that. Maybe spread it out evenly, or if you have extra cap space this year, have more money hit the cap the 1st year, so there isn't a huge acceleration down the road (or AS huge anyway)....especially when you're trying to fit his money in with TJH, Hunter, etc. You could maybe even stagger the accelerated years so they don't all hit at once.
06-12-2023, 09:23 PM
Quote: @MaroonBells said:
06-13-2023, 04:58 PM
I think I’m somewhere in between. I think a lot of guys are ok with not getting
their full value in cash every year, assuming they got it in the past, but I think it’s a tough situation for guys when their paycheck is going to be relatively tiny, especially when some of these guys are bad with money and got it all up front and burned through it quickly and now need a big salary to pay for their big lifestyle. I think the NFL could really use some cleaning up of the way contracts are allowed to get structured. It sort of feels like everything is as complicated as possible in an attempt to give players the illusion that they’ll get more money, when in actuality it’s going to be pulled away before that happens. From a fans perspective it’s almost impossible to make heads or tails of how the teams doing cap-wise, when at any point in time a player could be cut, traded, renegotiated, etc. all leading to a wide variety of different cap outcomes. I think they really need to do away with void years, especially in this world where the cap increases like crazy every year. We should never have an environment, where the cap is a myth, because at that point why have a cap at all? I think the cap rules we have right now increase how much players move around between teams, causing fans to not really want to put too much emotional investment into the players anymore, because at any moment a GM could just wipe their favorite player away. |
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