PromoTheRobot Posted February 22, 2012 Posted February 22, 2012 (edited) Projected 2012 caps + 2011 rollover. The Bills have almost $33M in projected cap room for 2012. The Bengals have almost $59M. The Steelers, even with their rollover, are $27M over the cap. PTR Edited February 22, 2012 by PromoTheRobot
section122 Posted February 22, 2012 Posted February 22, 2012 Projected 2012 caps + 2011 rollover. The Bills have almost $33M in projected cap room for 2012. The Bengals have almost $59M. The Steelers, even with their rollover, are $27M over the cap. PTR Finally some factual numbers! My only question is did the Bills roll over their money? It seems like it is/was an option but that teams had to notify the league they were doing it. Is their any evidence that this has been done?
Erik Posted February 22, 2012 Posted February 22, 2012 Projected 2012 caps + 2011 rollover. The Bills have almost $33M in projected cap room for 2012. The Bengals have almost $59M. The Steelers, even with their rollover, are $27M over the cap. PTR How on earth do you get yourself in as bad a situation cap wise as the Steelers have?
auburnbillsbacker Posted February 22, 2012 Posted February 22, 2012 How on earth do you get yourself in as bad a situation cap wise as the Steelers have? You draft a lot of talented players.
The Cincinnati Kid Posted February 22, 2012 Posted February 22, 2012 Well, hopefully they'll be around to spend money this offseason. Especially with the slotted draft picks due to the rookie wage scale. Seems to me resigning our guys and bringing a few from some other teams should be the obvious game plan. But, I'm not sure we'll do any of it.
Just in Atlanta Posted February 22, 2012 Posted February 22, 2012 A breakdown: - Low spenders (Above $30 m cap): 3 playoff teams - Average spenders ($10 m to $30 m): 4 playoff teams, including the AFC champion - High spenders (Below $10 m): 5 playoff teams, including the Superbowl winner Spread of teams in these categories is between 10 and 11 each, so it appears there is most definitely a strong correlation between making the playoffs and spending big and not making the playoffs and not spending big. Also, two of the four teams (50 percent) that spent too much went to the playoffs, including the Superbowl winner. Not shocking, but interesting to see some statistical evidence.
KD in CA Posted February 22, 2012 Posted February 22, 2012 So why is it that I keep hearing that if the Bills resign SJ, they won't have any money left to do anything else? How on earth do you get yourself in as bad a situation cap wise as the Steelers have? At least they have an excellent team. My question is, how do crappy teams like Carolina and Oakland get themselves in that position??
Recommended Posts