05-23-2019, 02:24 AM
i'm using overthecap as a source.
So i'm putzing with their Dead Money and Cap Savings calculator and I noticed something that struck me, being he just redid his deal...
I flip to Post-June 1st Dead Money/Savings and notice Everson Griffen would only account for $400k in dead money and $7,687,500 in cap savings in 2019.
huh?
In 2020 and 2021, again, $400k in dead money each year. Savings of $13.5 and $14 million. A final year, 2022, shows $0 dead money and a savings of $15.5 million. It's also showing nothing as guaranteed '19-'22.
I guess what i'm getting at is even with the renegotiation: does releasing Everson Griffen post June 1st (say 53 man cuts at training camp) amount to clearing up $7.687 million in cap space with $1.2 million in dead money? After his renegotiation I completely stopped considering him as a potential cap casualty, but if these numbers are right... you almost could leave Rudolph hanging on his current deal through camp and make a better decision on who to release in August.
So i'm putzing with their Dead Money and Cap Savings calculator and I noticed something that struck me, being he just redid his deal...
I flip to Post-June 1st Dead Money/Savings and notice Everson Griffen would only account for $400k in dead money and $7,687,500 in cap savings in 2019.
huh?
In 2020 and 2021, again, $400k in dead money each year. Savings of $13.5 and $14 million. A final year, 2022, shows $0 dead money and a savings of $15.5 million. It's also showing nothing as guaranteed '19-'22.
I guess what i'm getting at is even with the renegotiation: does releasing Everson Griffen post June 1st (say 53 man cuts at training camp) amount to clearing up $7.687 million in cap space with $1.2 million in dead money? After his renegotiation I completely stopped considering him as a potential cap casualty, but if these numbers are right... you almost could leave Rudolph hanging on his current deal through camp and make a better decision on who to release in August.