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Thread: Restructuring

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    Junior Member trbearsfan's Avatar
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    Chicago Bears Restructuring

    Read an article on ESPN questioning how the Bears were able to spend as much as they did on Bennett and Bushrod. Was curious if anyone has heard any rumors of restructuring of contracts. I have no idea how the cap works and how the move money around to make room. Gets very confusing.

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    Senior Member Riczaj01's Avatar
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    First and foremost, wellcome aboard.

    The score stated that no restructures had happened over the weekend, nor were there any cuts. The score did say to expect cuts, emphasising the plural. But nothing has happened as of yet.

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    Member Coolhandluke's Avatar
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    kelleen davis is imminent, as his 2.5 mil savings will almost pay for bennetts 2013 cap hit. This would leave them with enough money to sign someone right now.
    Last edited by Coolhandluke; 03-13-2013 at 08:50 AM.

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    We don't need to be officially under the cap until the beginning of the season. Stay tuned.


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    Read yesterday that we have to be under the Cap and it's not allowed to go over the Cap anymore.

    Davis is gone and if we need, we can restructure

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    Member Coolhandluke's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by GermansbombedPH View Post
    Read yesterday that we have to be under the Cap and it's not allowed to go over the Cap anymore.

    Davis is gone and if we need, we can restructure
    Thats what I've always assumed, I dont know how people think otherwise.

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    Senior Member JustAnotherBearsFan99's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by GermansbombedPH View Post
    Read yesterday that we have to be under the Cap and it's not allowed to go over the Cap anymore.

    Davis is gone and if we need, we can restructure


    Yes, under the present CBA, teams have to stay under cap at all times.


    LINK

    Salary cap in the NFL

    The new collective bargaining agreement formulated in 2011 had an initial salary cap of $120 million. While the previous CBA had a salary floor, the new CBA did not have one until 2013. Starting with that season, each team is required to spend a minimum of 88.8% of the cap in cash on player compensation,[8] and 90% in future years.

    The NFL's cap is a hard cap that the teams have to stay under at all times, and the salary floor is also a hard floor; penalties for violating or circumventing the cap and floor regulations include fines of up to $5 million for each violation, cancellation of contracts and/or loss of draft picks.

    The cap was first introduced for the 1994 season and was initially $34.6 million. Both the cap and the floor are adjusted annually based on the league's revenues, and they have increased each year. In 2009, the final capped year under that agreement, the cap was $128 million per team, while the floor was 87.6% of the cap. Using the formula provided in the league's collective bargaining agreement, the floor in 2009 was $112.1 million. Under the NFL's agreement with the NFLPA, the effect on the salary cap of guaranteed payments (such as signing bonuses) are, with a few rare exceptions, prorated evenly over the term of the contract.

    In transitions, if a player retires, is traded, or is cut before June 1, all remaining bonus is applied to the salary cap for the current season. If the payroll change occurs after June 1, the current season's bonus proration is unchanged, and the next year's cap must absorb the entire remaining bonus.

    Because of this setup, NFL contracts almost always include the right to cut a player before the beginning of a season. If a player is cut, his salary for the remainder of his contract is neither paid nor counted against the salary cap for that team. A highly sought-after player signing a long term contract will usually receive a signing bonus, thus providing him with financial security even if he is cut before the end of his contract.

    Incentive bonuses require a team to pay a player additional money if he achieves a certain goal. For the purposes of the salary cap, bonuses are classified as either "likely to be earned", which requires the amount of the bonus to count against the team's salary cap, or "not likely to be earned", which is not counted. A team's salary cap is adjusted downward for NLTBE bonuses that were earned in the previous year but not counted against that year's cap. It is adjusted upward for LTBE bonuses that were not earned in the previous year but were counted against that year's cap.

    One effect of the salary cap was the release of many higher-salaried veteran players to other teams once their production started to decline from the elite level. On the other hand, many teams have made a practice of using free agents to restock with better personnel more suited to the team. The salary cap prevented teams with superior finances from engaging in the formerly widespread practice of stocking as much talent on the roster as possible by placing younger players on reserve lists with false injuries while they develop into NFL-capable players. In this respect, the cap functions as a supplement to the 55-man roster limit and practice squad limits.

    Generally, the practice of retaining veteran players who had contributed to the team in the past, but whose abilities have declined, became less common in the era of the salary cap.[9] A veteran's minimum salary was required to be higher than a player with lesser experience. This means teams tended to favor cheaper, less experienced prospects with growth potential, with an aim to having a group of players who quickly develop into their prime while still being on cheaper contracts than their peers. To offset this tendency which pushed out veteran players, including those who became fan favorites, the players' association accepted an arrangement where a veteran player who receives no bonuses in his contract may be paid the veteran minimum of up to $810,000, while only accounting for only $425,000 in salary-cap space (a 47.5% discount).

    The salary cap also served to limit the rate of increase of the cost of operating a team. This has accrued to the owners' benefit, and while the initial cap of $34.6 million has increased to $123 million (maximum in 2009), this is due to large growths of revenue, including merchandising revenues and web enterprises which ownership is sharing with players as well.

    The owners opted out of the CBA in 2008, leading to an uncapped season in 2010.[10] During the season, most NFL teams spent as if there was a cap in place anyway, with the league warning against teams front-loading contracts during the season. The Dallas Cowboys, New Orleans Saints, Oakland Raiders, and Washington Redskins all ignored the warning, and in 2012 the Cowboys and Redskins (the top two NFL teams by revenue in 2011)[11] were docked $10 million and $36 million respectively from their salary caps, to be spread over the next two seasons. This $46 million would subsequently be divided up among the remaining 26 NFL teams ($1.77 million each) as added cap space (this excludes the Raiders and Saints, the latter of which was also dealing with their ongoing bounty scandal, as both teams were over the cap, though to a lesser degree than the Cowboys and Redskins).[12]
    Last edited by JustAnotherBearsFan99; 03-13-2013 at 10:06 AM.
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  • #8
    Junior Member trbearsfan's Avatar
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    Well so far Davis, Spaeth, and Toeina are gone. From what I've gathered savings there are probably around 4.5-5 million or so. I know Peppers cap hit is huge this year but not sure what they can do there unless he is willing. Trying to think of anyone else that might get cut.

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    Senior Member MPBears68's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Coolhandluke View Post
    Thats what I've always assumed, I dont know how people think otherwise.
    I read that too (that you have to be under the cap whenever a new contract is submitted for league approval, no going over temporarily) and stand corrected in a different thread. I was wrong in thinking you only had be back under by certain dates. I think that changed or was skirted too many times before and is now being closely enforced. Believe that is what Wash and Dallas got in trouble for last year (cap funny business).

    Anyway what we know so far of B & B is that these appear to be two very favorable contracts cap-wise, this year anyway. Bushrod's cap hit is only $3 million this year and Bennett's can't be very high either if its a 4yr/$20m deal with only $2m guaranteed. Must have squeezed them both under the approx $7m cap space we had. With Davis and Toe now released that adds back about $3.5m I believe and cutting Spaeth (an all but forgone conclusion IMO) will add back another $2m or so. Without a single restructure or extension yet. Stein is God.
    Last edited by MPBears68; 03-13-2013 at 02:04 PM.

  • #10
    Member Coolhandluke's Avatar
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    seems like they added another 5mil or so with the toe,spaeth,davis cuts so they probably stand aroud 6mil under the ca now.

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