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Posted
3 minutes ago, chris heff said:

I don’t understand what any of this means can someone explain it to me like I’m twelve?

 

I'll try.

 

A player's cap hit consists of yearly cash (salary and per-year bonuses like roster and workout).  The player also gets a signing bonus fully paid to him when he signs his contract, but amortized over the years of the contract.  For example, a $10.4M signing bonus on a 4 year contract would be transferred to Star's bank account immediately when he signs. but for salary cap bookkeeping, it can be divided into 4 chunks to count against the salary cap at $2.6M/year.  

 

The player can also have all or part of his yearly cash (salary and roster and option bonuses) guaranteed.  In Star's case, he had $2.5M of his 2022 salary guaranteed. 

 

When the player is cut, the guaranteed part of his yearly cash counts against the cap ($2.5M for Star), as does the chunk of his signing bonus that counts against this year's cap ($2.6M for Star).  The team gets credit for any non-guaranteed salary or bonuses.  So that's $5.1M guaranteed for this year against Star's yearly cap hit of $9.2M, resulting in $4.1M cap savings.  BUT WAIT!

 

Now we get to the decision point: when a player is cut, any guaranteed money or amortized signing bonus from future years ALSO get charged against the cap savings.  So in Star's case, he has another chunk of $2.6M signing bonus on the books for next season.  That counts against the savings - so $4.1M - $2.6M means we only save $1.5M this season

 

UNLESS - the NFL allows the team to designate two players cut during FA as "post-June 1 cuts".  What that does, is allow the team to defer next year's guaranteed money or remaining chunks of amortized signing bonus to count against NEXT year's cap.  It's "good for the player" because it encourages teams to release players early when they have a better chance to be signed by other teams; it's "good for the team" because they can spread out the cap hit from cutting a player over two seasons.

 

The drawback is, the team does not realize the cap savings until after June 1.

 

So with Star:

Cut pre-June 1, $9.2M cap - $2.5M guaranteed salary - $2.6Mx2 amortized signing bonus for this year and next = $1.5M cap savings applicable NOW

Cut post-June 1, $9.2M cap - $2.5M guaranteed salary - $2.6M amortized signing bonus for this year and next = $4.1M cap savings applicable June 1 AND $2.6M amortized signing bonus charged against the 2023 cap.

 

image.thumb.png.3c3373c14ad62f8ec365b1c478333185.png

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Posted
10 minutes ago, Bangarang said:

Guess Beane couldn’t convince him to retire instead.

 

Easily the worst contract he’s given out so far.

 

 

In fairness I think Covid completely derailed him.  

 

I don't have the hate for the guy a lot of others do.

 

Something went wrong with him in 2020 and then coming back in 2021 could have been all things pandemic related.  He was good in 2019.  

Posted
9 minutes ago, GunnerBill said:

 

He isn't even close to the worst FA signing. He was an average to touch above average starting 1 tech for 3 seasons and opted out of another season. He was overpaid, sure. But worst FA signing? Not close for me.

Ok then who was Beane’s worst free signing?  

Posted
11 minutes ago, ndirish1978 said:

Was not done as a post June 1 so we eat the hit this year and only save 1.5 - Beane trying to pump the brakes on kicking the can down the road on dead cap. 

 

Source?  Do we know that for sure?  Edit: I see that's been reported by Joe Buscaglia

Posted

Hallelujah!!!!!   I no longer have to listen to morons on this board try to stand logic on its head to defend him anymore.   No more, its his job to not make plays or you don't know his assignment because I played HS football.

 

Happy Days!!!!!!

 

Now dear lord, just do the same in about 365 days when we let Tre walk.

Posted
13 minutes ago, NewEra said:

Lol…..were there a lot of people that opposed this when you wrote this the first time?  I thought it was close to a given he was gone.  The only reservation I had was that McB loves certain guys and want them around.  

Yes there were many who still regard him as a decent player and assumed that they would keep him because the cal savings wasn’t that big.  

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Posted
Just now, billsfan714 said:

Hallelujah!!!!!   I no longer have to listen to morons on this board try to stand logic on its head to defend him anymore.   No more, its his job to not make plays or you don't know his assignment because I played HS football.

 

Happy Days!!!!!!

 

Now dear lord, just do the same in about 365 days when we let Tre walk.

 

Huh?  Why would we let Tre' walk in 365 days?  Are you thinking he won't come back from his ACL in form?  Most guys  seem to these days

 

(If you mean Tremaine Edmunds, I don't think he goes by Tre.  He has a brother named Trey, so that would be confusing.)

Posted
Just now, Buffalo_Stampede said:

Trent Murphy. His worst roster decision was also keeping Trent Murphy as a 3rd-4th DE at nealy $10 million cap hit in 2020.

This is actually a pretty good nominee.

  • Agree 1
Posted
10 minutes ago, Malazan said:

 

For a team that talks about depth all the time we are getting perilously thing at whipping boy. 

 

And if we score less than 40 in game 1, the offensive coordinator always sucks.

  • Haha (+1) 1
Posted
4 minutes ago, Hapless Bills Fan said:

 

I'll try.

 

A player's cap hit consists of yearly cash (salary and per-year bonuses like roster and workout).  The player also gets a signing bonus fully paid to him when he signs his contract, but amortized over the years of the contract.  For example, a $10.4M signing bonus on a 4 year contract would be transferred to Star's bank account immediately when he signs. but for salary cap bookkeeping, it can be divided into 4 chunks to count against the salary cap at $2.6M/year.  

 

The player can also have all or part of his yearly cash (salary and roster and option bonuses) guaranteed.  In Star's case, he had $2.5M of his 2022 salary guaranteed. 

 

When the player is cut, the guaranteed part of his yearly cash counts against the cap ($2.5M for Star), as does the chunk of his signing bonus that counts against this year's cap ($2.6M for Star).  The team gets credit for any non-guaranteed salary or bonuses.  So that's $5.1M guaranteed for this year against Star's yearly cap hit of $9.2M, resulting in $4.1M cap savings.  BUT WAIT!

 

Now we get to the decision point: when a player is cut, any guaranteed money or amortized signing bonus from future years ALSO get charged against the cap savings.  So in Star's case, he has another chunk of $2.6M signing bonus on the books for next season.  That counts against the savings - so $4.1M - $2.6M means we only save $1.5M this season

 

UNLESS - the NFL allows the team to designate two players cut during FA as "post-June 1 cuts".  What that does, is allow the team to defer next year's guaranteed money or remaining chunks of amortized signing bonus to count against NEXT year's cap.  It's "good for the player" because it encourages teams to release players early when they have a better chance to be signed by other teams; it's "good for the team" because they can spread out the cap hit from cutting a player over two seasons.

 

The drawback is, the team does not realize the cap savings until after June 1.

 

So with Star:

Cut pre-June 1, $9.2M cap - $2.5M guaranteed salary - $2.6Mx2 amortized signing bonus for this year and next = $1.5M cap savings applicable NOW

Cut post-June 1, $9.2M cap - $2.5M guaranteed salary - $2.6M amortized signing bonus for this year and next = $4.1M cap savings applicable June 1 AND $2.6M amortized signing bonus charged against the 2023 cap.

 

image.thumb.png.3c3373c14ad62f8ec365b1c478333185.png

 

 

 

 

 

 

There should be a sticky post on the forum, at least in the offseason, that generalizes this and uses this and other contracts as examples. Very helpful. 

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Posted
1 minute ago, JohnNord said:

Yes there were many who still regard him as a decent player and assumed that they would keep him because the cal savings wasn’t that big.  

Gotcha. My bad, I must have missed it.  

Posted
1 minute ago, JohnNord said:

Yes there were many who still regard him as a decent player and assumed that they would keep him because the cal savings wasn’t that big.  

 

I'll own it.  I thought he played very well at the start of the season before he caught Covid, that Jones is the only natural fit they've signed at 1TDT, and that McDermott's love of the DT rotation would lead him to hang on to Star at least through the draft because the cap savings aren't big

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Posted
1 minute ago, Buffalo_Stampede said:

Trent Murphy. His worst roster decision was also keeping Trent Murphy as a 3rd-4th DE at nealy $10 million cap hit in 2020.


Yes…another bad signing but I would argue that Star was worse considering how much they relied on him. Plus Murphy was an injury risk.  They didn’t completely rely on him and had contract outs unlike Star.  Still Murphy and Star are close for worst contracts 

Posted
2 minutes ago, Hapless Bills Fan said:

 

Huh?  Why would we let Tre' walk in 365 days?  Are you thinking he won't come back from his ACL in form?  Most guys  seem to these days

 

(If you mean Tremaine Edmunds, I don't think he goes by Tre.  He has a brother named Trey, so that would be confusing.)

I meant Edmunds sparky

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