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OK, now that NFL rosters are down to 53, let's talk about dead money

Posted on 8/31/13 at 5:51 pm
Posted by Sophandros
Victoria Concordia Crescit
Member since Feb 2005
45218 posts
Posted on 8/31/13 at 5:51 pm
The basic premise is this: The more dead money you have, the less you have to spend under the cap in order to sign better players. You get dead money by signing players to bad contracts and having those players leave your team.

From the link:

quote:

Sure, there are exceptions and surprises along the way, but no big surprise that the two most egregious victims of "dead money" and their own poor decision making are the 2-14 Jaguars and the 4-12 Raiders, while the two most efficient teams in managing the cap and avoiding "dead money" are the defending NFC champion 49ers and the Packers (36-12 and a Super Bowl title in the last three years).


LINK
Posted by KosmoCramer
Member since Dec 2007
76445 posts
Posted on 8/31/13 at 5:55 pm to
The Raiders front office sucks; water is wet.
Posted by wildtigercat93
Member since Jul 2011
112179 posts
Posted on 8/31/13 at 5:55 pm to
So basically Semi professional football players are not the only things killed by Aaron Hernandez
Posted by Sophandros
Victoria Concordia Crescit
Member since Feb 2005
45218 posts
Posted on 8/31/13 at 6:21 pm to
Because some of you are lazy:

quote:

1. OAKLAND: $26,601,452
Richard Seymour represents half of that number at $13,714,000, and the recently released Darrius Heyward-Bey is a healthy chunk at $5,260,000. If you're wondering why the Raiders are in the state they're in, consider they drafted Heyward-Bey with their 2009 first round pick and they traded their 2011 first round pick for Seymour. (Also, that little thing about drafting JaMarcus Russell first overall in 2007. That, too.)
2. JACKSONVILLE: $24,012,892
The Jags "dead money" ledger reads like a "Who's who" in shitty Jaguar business decisions: wide receiver Laurent Robinson (cut after one season, $9,000,000 hit), safety Dawan Landry (cut after two sesaons $3,900,000 hit), linebacker Clint Session (cut after two seasons $3,600,000 hit), Mike Thomas (traded to Detroit one season into a long term extension, $3,600,000 hit). There's a reason they're so terrible. Actually, there are a thousand reasons, this just happens to be one of them.

3. KANSAS CITY: $13,326,323
Two biggest "dead money" hits here are quarterback Matt Cassel ($3,950,000) and tackle Eric Winston ($3,000,000), who were both at the center of the whole "cheering for Cassel getting hurt" controversy. I guess they don't have to worry about that anymore.

4. ARIZONA: $12,410,450
Quarterback Kevin Kolb represents about half of this number at $6,000,000 in "dead money." Moving along...

5. ATLANTA: $11,513,432
Ray Edwards was released in November due to a poor attitude. At a "dead money" hit of $4,650,000, he must have been a total fricking a-hole. The great purge of March 2013 hits their cap this fall, too, in cornerback Dunta Robinson ($3,000,000), running back Michael Turner ($2,000,000), and defensive end John Abraham ($1,500,000).

6. ST. LOUIS: $10,312,806
Tackle Jason Smith $4,022,000 is the big hit here, although props to safety Quentin Mikell for counting as two separate "dead money" hits of $4,000,000 and $2,000,000. Nice!

7. BUFFALO: $9,500,035
Another desperation quarterback signing gone awry (Ryan Fitzpatrick, $3,333,333).

8. CAROLINA: $9,754,796
9. BALTIMORE: $8,136,837
Retirement "dead money" hits are painful and no one knows this better than Ravens GM Ozzie Newsome (linebacker Ray Lewis $2,950,000, center Matt Birk $1,400,000). Also, Billy Cundiff's missed field goal against New England in the AFC title game two seasons ago continues to cost, "dead money" value of $1,800,000.

10. DETROIT: $7,567,505
11. DENVER: $7,335,301
Over half of this number is courtesy of the Elvis Dumervil Fiasco ($4,869,000).

12. CLEVELAND: $7,262,779
13. NEW YORK JETS: $7,130,453
14. NEW YORK GIANTS: $6,771,306
15. NEW ENGLAND: $6,637,523
The quest to find a downfield threat post-Randy Moss continues to cost New England in "dead money" in 2013 (Brandon Lloyd for $2,000,000, and Chad Ochocinco for $1,583,333).

16. DALLAS: $5,986,584
17. PHILADELPHIA: $5,906,313
Nnamdi Asomugha for $4,000,000, Jason Babin for $900,000. Dream team.

Posted by craigbiggio
Member since Dec 2009
31805 posts
Posted on 8/31/13 at 6:43 pm to
quote:

5. Atlanta


quote:

28. New Orleans


Lol
Posted by jacks40
Baton Rouge
Member since Oct 2007
11877 posts
Posted on 8/31/13 at 6:53 pm to
quote:

quote: 28. New Orleans


Somewhat misleading

Saints refuse to ever acknowledge a bad contract/draft choice and play them out till the end of the deal.

Harper, Bush, Smith, Grant, Ingram.
Posted by CunningLinguist
Dallas, TX
Member since Mar 2006
18756 posts
Posted on 8/31/13 at 6:54 pm to
Will Smith is dead money he just hasn't been cut
Posted by St Augustine
The Pauper of the Surf
Member since Mar 2006
64028 posts
Posted on 8/31/13 at 6:56 pm to
Valid point. I wish we had some more dead money to be honest.
Posted by tigerpimpbot
Chairman of the Pool Board
Member since Nov 2011
66870 posts
Posted on 8/31/13 at 7:04 pm to
I wonder what the cap hit is, but
quote:

Report: Chargers release WR Meachem, still owe him $5 million



LINK
Posted by wildtigercat93
Member since Jul 2011
112179 posts
Posted on 8/31/13 at 7:07 pm to
That 5 mil was guaranteed, so i dont think its going to be a cap hit that they werent already going to pay

I think next year its a 6 mil cap hit though
Posted by tigerpimpbot
Chairman of the Pool Board
Member since Nov 2011
66870 posts
Posted on 8/31/13 at 7:20 pm to
quote:

He still counts $6.875 million against the 2013 salary cap and additional dead money in 2014.


Yep. Just found it.

LINK
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