The NFL and Players association broke off labor talks. They're saying that there could be some major MAJOR cuts in the next 24-48 hours. The cap is gonna be ~$95 mil this year and most teams are up against it. Will Shields and Warrick Dunn are some names mentioned.The difference is over ~$320 million in revenue sharing for the size of the cap. The players want 60%, the owners are offering just over 56%.Other things I've heard without a deal today (Thanks, Mike&Mike):- 07 is an uncapped year, so its a spending spree for Jerry Jones, etc. Upshaw says if they go uncapped, they will never play capped again- 08 Lockout-This year the Redskins may have to play with 20 rookies because they're so far over the cap nowLinks:http://msn.foxsports.com/nfl/story/5369020http://sports.espn.go.com/nfl/news/story?id=2348417http://cbs.sportsline.com/nfl/story/9273774
3/1/2006 6:29:28 AM
Another issue driving the impasse is that the owners cannot agree on revenue sharing. The owners say that is a non-issue when it comes to negotiating with the union, but it's a part of it. If there is no revenue sharing, you're going to see some teams self-impose a lower cap on themselves probably, which concerns the union.The owners are idiots if they let go of their cap. Although, I think some teams would rather there be no cap (Cowboys, Patriots, Giants, Jets, Redskins, Texans, any future L.A. team)."But there are also disputes among groups of owners on that issue, too. Tagliabue has called a league meeting in New York for Thursday to explain to NFL clubs why the sides have been unable to come to an agreement..Teams with lower revenues -- mostly small-market clubs -- say that if the contributions to the players' fund are equally apportioned among 32 franchises, they will have to pay a substantially larger proportion of their nontelevision and ticket money because they have less. Owners of high-revenue teams, like Dallas' Jerry Jones, claim spreading the load equally would force some teams to work harder to generate new sources of money.Another high-revenue owner, New England's Robert Kraft, says the formula does not take stadium debt into account, as he has on Gillette Stadium in Foxborough, Mass."It's easy to see both sides of the argument. The rich owners are being capitalist and the less rich owners are being socialist. "Redskins may have to sign 20 rookies due to their cap situation."Poor Redskins... [Edited on March 1, 2006 at 7:19 AM. Reason : .]
3/1/2006 7:08:17 AM
I think we can see a lot of 2 year deals for big names like this:2006: League Min2007: $20 Million
3/1/2006 7:14:22 AM
FYI, no way 2008 is a lockout. There are too many TV networks paying too much money and basing programming around NFL telecasts that they will allow the NFL to lockout the players.
3/1/2006 7:21:17 AM
I'm not arguing with that, just saying what they've been talking about all morning on ESPN. Programming and such is nice, but the CBA expires after 2007 and they won't play without one. Or they'll bring back scabs.
3/1/2006 7:34:36 AM
sweet, a sick pass from shane falco to brian murphy would be hot
3/1/2006 9:15:43 AM
if the skins have to play 20 rookies we're screwed because we traded all our picks already i kind of doubt that though, because IIRC len pasquarelli is the one who came up with that, and he's a complete idiotbut once we go uncapped, the skins and cowboys will be in an arms race, cause they both have tons of moneyalso the texans will suddenly be really good
3/1/2006 10:00:38 AM
^^^^ i dont think that can happen... there are rules for how much a deal can escalate from year to year.... thats why they have signing bonus appropriation rules in the first place
3/1/2006 10:01:12 AM
^I think the rule is 30% from year to year
3/1/2006 10:11:46 AM
^,^^That rule doesn't count for the first year in a deal. That rule is only for 2nd & additional years. (Think about Steve McNair's rediculous 50Mil bonus clause)There certainly could be deals of that fashion, but there would be a significant signing bonus. So that basically you could get a guy for 1 year at a good cap price by just giving him a nice signing bonus & minimum 1st year salary. And since it's a 2yr. deal, you would only take a cap hit of half that, & you can cut him next year with no salary cap hit. You may see many deals like this.For example:Player X is worth about 4Mil a year. Give him a 2 yr. deal with a 4Mil signing bonus, with a minimum first year salary. Your cap hit would only be say 2.5 Mil & you can cut him next year. The player is happy still because he got the up front money. Not to mention, you can spend that other 1.5 Mil elsewhere now.[Edited on March 1, 2006 at 11:02 AM. Reason : ]
3/1/2006 10:56:25 AM
Bring in the Replacements^ Starting at QB for the Detroit Lions
3/1/2006 11:03:49 AM
I heard that even if they can't get a deal done there probably won't be a lockout in '08. Not because of tv deals, but because the players might vote to decertify the union. The owners can't lock out the players if there isn't a union. This would most likely result in no salary cap, among other things, until the union re-certifies and there is a new labor agreement.
3/1/2006 1:38:38 PM
from espn:"While some owners still contend they could push through an accord with the union, and then worry about resolving their own intramural bickering over revenue sharing after hammering out an extension to the collective bargaining agreement, NFLPA executive director Gene Upshaw continues to insist he will not strike a deal without the owners reaching internal accord on how they will split local revenues. And, in a strange twist, Upshaw has allies among many of the owners in that regard. The irony is that it is now a group of steadfast owners from lower-revenue franchises who would block any attempt to extend the CBA without a revenue sharing plan that accommodates their needs. There has actually been more softening by the alliance of eight to nine high-revenue teams, several league sources allowed Wednesday night, than by the lower-revenue clubs.According to several sources, nine to 10 owners from some of the league's lowest revenue-producing franchises are adamant that any CBA extension must be accompanied by an amenable revenue-sharing plan, one that addresses their concerns about the ever-increasing disparity between the NFL "haves" and "have nots." It takes only nine votes to veto most important league proposals, and the contingent of low-revenue teams has sufficient votes to shoot down a CBA extension."Haha, as payback, the rich owners should just let it continue and threaten the less rich owners with no cap at all.
3/2/2006 7:33:07 AM
^ but they know that the rich owners dont want to go for that because they dont really want to pay everyone $Texas$, but at the same time having no cap would kill the small market teams. So its not a good bargaining chip to say no cap. I dont think either side of the owners really wants that
3/2/2006 9:42:31 AM
man they really need to keep the salary cap.Look at what its done for the NFL over the past ~13 years. THe level of growth the NFL has had has been outstanding.Do we really want to go back to the days of 49ers-Cowboys in the NFC championship EVERY year?Look at why baseball sucks and why hockey was sucking.
3/2/2006 9:50:11 AM
They have said Dan Snyder would make the Skins the Yankees of the NFL if the cap is lifted...
3/2/2006 9:54:55 AM
3/2/2006 10:08:15 AM
3/2/2006 10:10:55 AM
No Agreement reached
3/2/2006 10:30:00 AM
lol >>>>>>>>>
3/2/2006 11:06:38 AM
my point exactly
3/2/2006 11:10:56 AM
3/2/2006 11:24:59 AM
Free Agency has beeen delayed now by 3 days
3/2/2006 5:32:16 PM
^^don't forget the brewers
3/2/2006 5:41:04 PM
^^^ The Braves are not a big spending team. Look at the numbers. They are a middle of the pack team in terms of revenue. By 4 playoff spots, I meant by league (national and american). Sorry I messed up. The point is that it is more difficult to make the playoffs in baseball so it always seem like less teams are doing better (i.e. improving teams like the Blue Jays, Indians, and Brewers get overlooked because they don't make the playoffs) and thus there is perceived less parity.Florida and Washington were in the race for most of the season. Exactly what I said. They both faded late, but were competitive. The NL West sucked much like the NFC West.My point is with the Patriots-Yankee comparison is that NE is now considered the favorite each year much like the Yankees are always the odds-on favorites in MLB. Actually the Pats success in the last 5 years has made the NFL seem like it has less parity IMO. The Arizona Cardinals might make the playoffs next year, but people were hyping them last year and they sucked. Texans suck, Browns suck, Saints suck, Lions suck. Each sport has its losers that annually are horrible regardless of the salary cap.Oakland is a small market team and can't generate revenue because of their ballpark. The Colts have a strong fanbase and can afford to re-sign their players[Edited on March 2, 2006 at 5:56 PM. Reason : ^]
3/2/2006 5:55:20 PM
Comparing NFL parity to MLB parity last six years. Only using the teams in the final 8 (so cutting out the NFL teams that lose wild card playoff games) so that the number of teams match for each.National Champions2000/01 - Baltimore Ravens...New York Yankees2001/02 - New England Patriots...Arizona Diamondbacks2002/03 - Tampa Bay Buccaneers...Anaheim (Los Angeles) Angels2003/04 - New England Patriots...Florida Marlins2004/05 - New England Patriots...Boston Red Sox2005/06 - Pittsburgh Steelers...Chicago White SoxNational Runners-Up2000/01 - New York Giants...New York Mets2001/02 - St. Louis Rams...New York Yankees2002/03 - Oakland Raiders...San Francisco Giants2003/04 - Carolina Panthers...New York Yankees2004/05 - Philadelphia Eagles...St. Louis Cardinals2005/06 - Seattle Seahawks...Houston AstrosNational Semifinalists2000/01 - Oakland Raiders, Minnesota Vikings...St. Louis Cardinals, Boston Red Sox2001/02 - Pittsburgh Steelers, Philadelphia Eagles...Atlanta Braves, Seattle Mariners2002/03 - Tennessee Titans, Philadelphia Eagles...St. Louis Cardinals, Minnesota Twins2003/04 - Indianapolis Colts, Philadelphia Eagles...Chicago Cubs, Boston Red Sox2004/05 - Pittsburgh Steelers, Atlanta Falcons...New York Yankees, Houston Astros2005/06 - Denver Broncos, Carolina Panthers...St. Louis Cardinals, Los Angeles AngelsNational Quarterfinalists2000/01 - New Orleans Saints, Miami Dolphins, Tennesee Titans, Philadelphia Eagles...Atlanta Braves, San Francisco Giants, Chicago White Sox, Oakland Athletics2001/02 - Chicago Bears, Oakland Raiders, Baltimore Ravens, Green Bay Packers...Houston Astros, St. Louis Cardinals, Oakland Athletics, Cleveland Indians2002/03 - Pittsburgh Steelers, Atlanta Falcons, San Francisco 49ers, New York Jets...Arizona Diamondbacks, Atlanta Braves, Oakland Athletics, New York Yankees2003/04 - St. Louis Rams, Tennessee Titans, Kansas City Chiefs, Green Bay Packers...Atlanta Braves, San Francisco Giants, Minnesota Twins, Oakland Athletics2004/05 - New York Jets, St. Louis Rams, Minnesota Vikings, Indianapolis Colts...Los Angeles Dodgers, Atlanta Braves, Minnesota Twins, Anaheim (Los Angeles) Angels2005/06 - Indianapolis Colts, New England Patriots, Washington Redskins, Chicago Bears...San Diego Padres, Atlanta Braves, Boston Red Sox, New York YankeesNFL - 32 teams, MLB - 30 teamsNumber of teams that were national champions:NFL - 4 MLB - 6Number of teams that were in national finals (champions plus runners-up):NFL - 10MLB - 10Number of teams that reached "final four":NFL - 15MLB - 15Number of teams that reached "final eight":NFL - 24MLB - 20
3/2/2006 6:17:52 PM
Talks just blew up againMore cuts to come, here's the list now:ATLANTA FALCONS---------------Brady Smith, deBUFFALO BILLS-------------Sam Adams, dtMark Campbell, teLawyer Milloy, sCAROLINA PANTHERS-----------------Brentson Buckner, dtStephen Davis, rbBrandon Short, lbRod Smart, krDALLAS COWBOYS--------------La'Roi Glover, dtDENVER BRONCOS--------------Mike Anderson, rbTrevor Pryce, deJeb Putzier, teGREEN BAY PACKERS-----------------Na'il Diggs, lbRyan Dutton, pHOUSTON TEXANS--------------Tony Banks, qbMarcus Coleman, sTony Hollings, rbKANSAS CITY CHIEFS------------------Shawn Barber, lbDexter McCleon, cbGary Stills, lbEric Warfield, cbMIAMI DOLPHINS--------------Damion McIntosh, tTebucky Jones, sReggie Howard, cbSam Madison, cbOAKLAND RAIDERS---------------Ron Stone, gDenard Walker, cbTed Washington, dtPITTSBURGH STEELERS-------------------Tommy Maddox, qbWillie Williams, cbST. LOUIS RAMS--------------Chris Claiborne, lbSEATTLE SEAHAWKS----------------Andre Dyson, cbMichael Harden, cbJamie Sharper, lbTENNESSEE TITANS----------------Brad Hopkins, t
3/4/2006 3:52:05 PM
I am seriously wondering if some teams are purposefully poisoning the deal, thinking that they can take advantage of the situation this coming year, and then get a salary cap later on. Look at these over/under salary cap numbers. If you were someone like the Browns or Cardinals, teams that haven't had a good season in forever, why not? It's not like they're going to feel sorry for the Raiders or Redskins.Under the salary cap Team Cap status (under) Minnesota Vikings $26.5 million Arizona Cardinals $24.3 million Cleveland Browns $24 million Green Bay Packers $23.5 million San Francisco 49ers $19.9 million San Diego Chargers $19.6 million Jacksonville Jaguars $16.7 million Philadelphia Eagles $16.7 million Baltimore Ravens $14.4 million Detroit Lions $13.1 million St. Louis Rams $13.1 million Seattle Seahawks $12 million Cincinnati Bengals $11.5 million Buffalo Bills $11.05 million New Orleans Saints $10.7 million Chicago Bears $10.3 million Houston Texans $8.3 million New York Giants $5.8 million New England Patriots $4 million Dallas Cowboys $1.3 million Denver Broncos $1 million Over the salary cap Team Cap status (over) Oakland Raiders $23.5 million Kansas City Chiefs $18.2 million Tennessee Titans $11.6 million Washington Redskins $14.5 million Atlanta Falcons $9.2 million New York Jets $8.6 million Indianapolis Colts $6.9 million Tampa Bay Buccaneers $6.2 million Miami Dolphins $5.7 million Carolina Panthers $5.6 million Pittsburgh Steelers $4.5 million
3/5/2006 3:43:11 PM
How up to date is this list?
3/5/2006 3:43:59 PM
^I think the list is up-to-date for the Panthers. I'm not sure about other teams though.
3/5/2006 3:50:52 PM
I think it's up-to-date. The Broncos at one point were like $10 million over the cap. Now they're under (although their cuts were made Wednesday I think).[Edited on March 5, 2006 at 4:31 PM. Reason : .]
3/5/2006 4:14:22 PM
http://sports.espn.go.com/nfl/news/story?id=2355190They extended the waiver deadline by four hours, to 10 PM.
3/5/2006 6:32:27 PM
Posted this in the Offseason 2006 thread, but it's too good not to spread as much as possible.http://sports.espn.go.com/nfl/news/story?id=2355736
3/5/2006 9:04:32 PM
3/5/2006 9:06:46 PM
,[Edited on March 5, 2006 at 9:43 PM. Reason : wrong thread]
3/5/2006 9:43:16 PM
how can the raiders be THAT far over and suck THAT bad
3/5/2006 9:44:15 PM
You don't think it's possible they may be overpaying anyone?
3/5/2006 10:04:37 PM
^ That's what I was thinking.Then again, when you're giving Kerry Collins 9.2 million dollars...
3/5/2006 10:05:30 PM
Like I said, overpaid
3/5/2006 10:07:05 PM
Ronald Curry is also making more than he is worth.
3/5/2006 10:09:01 PM
hahahahathe jets released mawae and restructured penningtonthat's not going to improve their team very much
3/5/2006 10:11:28 PM
^^Don't forget Randy Moss playing once every couple downs on offense makes like 13Mil.
3/5/2006 10:23:02 PM
^I expect better things from him with a new QB and a better coach, though. Unlike the other guys I listed, Randy has performed well enough in the past to warrant such a salary.
3/5/2006 10:24:13 PM
^Of course he has, but still, if he's going to be one of the top paid guys in the leauge, shouldn't he at least act like he's interested?
3/5/2006 10:27:59 PM
Despite all the talk about Randy being a cancer, he was a good teammate this year. Not once did he bash his team or quarterback this season. ESPN made more of that press conference where a reporter asked Moss to give his opinion about Turner because, just like with TO, they stir the fire to create controversy.I never saw him take plays off, but I can understand if he gets discouraged. Collins missed him wide open for six more times than I can remember this year, and Norv Turner on at least several occasions took Moss off the field in red zone situations. I agree with Moss. If he's getting paid like a top receiver, use him like a top receiver.
3/5/2006 10:35:19 PM
another 72-hour flinch, I'm starting to think this is just the NFL wanting to keep themselves in the news...
3/5/2006 11:24:35 PM
it would be funny if they went on strike for all of next season, and PRIV had to sit for another year!
3/5/2006 11:40:28 PM
Clearly someone hates me and demands that I suffer.http://sports.espn.go.com/nfl/news/story?id=2355736
3/6/2006 1:34:11 AM
ok here it comes^ lololololol[Edited on March 6, 2006 at 2:38 AM. Reason : happy yet lol funny haha lmao rofl dead]
3/6/2006 2:38:13 AM
there's obviously no real need for a deal, just keep fucking postponing deadlines
3/6/2006 2:41:33 AM