Bears' Gould could cash in on new rules
By Brad Biggs Tribune reporter 11:53 a.m. CDT, April 25, 2011
New special teams rules adopted by the NFL at the owners meeting last month will not help the Chicago Bears. The kickoff line has been moved up from the 30- to the 35-yard line, and special teams coordinator Dave Toub said he expects touchbacks to rise from 16.7 percent last season to close to 50 percent in 2011.
One player the new rules will benefit is Bears kicker Robbie Gould. He has an escalator in his contract that rewards him for touchbacks. However, Gould also had no problem reaching the threshold the last three seasons with kickoffs at the 30-yard line.
The clause in Gould’s contract pays him $62,500 more in his 2012 base salary for each season from 2008 through 2011 that he has at least eight touchbacks. Gould had a career-high 16 last season. He had eight touchbacks in 2009 and nine in 2008 after making only three in 2007 before signing his six-year extension in May 2008. The maximum value for the deal is $15.5 million, and at the time it made him the highest-paid kicker in the NFL.
Suffice to say, hitting eight touchbacks shouldn’t be an issue for Gould now and it will pay off for him in 2013 too as the escalator is also tied to his base salary for that season.
Gould can trigger a maximum of $950,000 in escalators for 2012 and he can tack on as much as $1.1 million in 2013 to his base salary. Gould receives an additional $37,500 in base pay in 2012 for each season from 2008 through 2011 that his field goal percentage is 83 percent or better. He has been above that mark every year but his rookie season of 2005.
There is a $125,000 escalator for each season in which his field goal percentage is 88 percent or better. He hit that in 2008 when he had a career-best 89.7 percent mark, converting 26 of 29 field goals.
bmbiggs@tribune.com





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