Jump to content
  • Welcome!

    Register and log in easily with Twitter or Google accounts!

    Or simply create a new Huddle account. 

    Members receive fewer ads , access our dark theme, and the ability to join the discussion!

     

Some Cap/FA Notes


jdpanther5

Recommended Posts

Was just looking at and analyzing our cap situation going forward and thought I'd put some of it down, maybe some will find it interesting. Warning: Math ahead. 

So we currently sit at 68 players under contract with $20,976,231 in cap space (per the NFLPA public cap report). Every year, Gettleman has brought in either 16 or 17 rookies, drafted or otherwise. The rookie pool with our current picks is $4,236,951; however, as it stands now, our 5th, 7th, and any UDFAs won't make enough to count toward the top 51 salaries (and our 3rd and 4th picks could be pushed out also if we make a couple more signings).

So most of our rookies won't impact our cap space aside from any signing bonus they get, which is usually pretty insignificant for UDFAs (if they get one at all). Plus our other picks that do count will push another amount out of the top 51. As a result, the projected net cap hit is actually $1,175,937, rather than the $4,236,951 you'll see thrown around until draft day. 

Assuming those 16-17 rookie signings - and that we keep our pick positions as is - we'll still have $19,800,294 in cap space even with 84-85 players under contract. So we'll have some money for another handful of signings, signing bonuses on any extensions, and of course we'll save some for emergency in-season signings/cap rollover. 

As for those 5-6 FA signings, we all know Dave likes to have every position covered prior to the draft. So I'd expect another OT, a couple D-linemen, plus a safety and maybe a nickel. Although those may be filled gradually/slowly over the next month or so; it's worth noting that 2/3 of last year's UFAs (Tillman/Trusnik) weren't signed until April. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 hours ago, jdpanther5 said:

Was just looking at and analyzing our cap situation going forward and thought I'd put some of it down, maybe some will find it interesting. Warning: Math ahead. 

So we currently sit at 68 players under contract with $20,976,231 in cap space (per the NFLPA public cap report). Every year, Gettleman has brought in either 16 or 17 rookies, drafted or otherwise. The rookie pool with our current picks is $4,236,951; however, as it stands now, our 5th, 7th, and any UDFAs won't make enough to count toward the top 51 salaries (and our 3rd and 4th picks could be pushed out also if we make a couple more signings).

So most of our rookies won't impact our cap space aside from any signing bonus they get, which is usually pretty insignificant for UDFAs (if they get one at all). Plus our other picks that do count will push another amount out of the top 51. As a result, the projected net cap hit is actually $1,175,937, rather than the $4,236,951 you'll see thrown around until draft day. 

Assuming those 16-17 rookie signings - and that we keep our pick positions as is - we'll still have $19,800,294 in cap space even with 84-85 players under contract. So we'll have some money for another handful of signings, signing bonuses on any extensions, and of course we'll save some for emergency in-season signings/cap rollover. 

As for those 5-6 FA signings, we all know Dave likes to have every position covered prior to the draft. So I'd expect another OT, a couple D-linemen, plus a safety and maybe a nickel. Although those may be filled gradually/slowly over the next month or so; it's worth noting that 2/3 of last year's UFAs (Tillman/Trusnik) weren't signed until April. 

I apprecite posts like this, as the intracies of contracts and numbers, and all of the contractual slight of hand, is not my forte‘.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.


  • PMH4OWPW7JD2TDGWZKTOYL2T3E.jpg

  • Topics

  • Posts

    • Is Canales really a “QB whisperer” or is Bryce just not that guy. I’m giving him a little bit of a break due to injuries around him and some questionable play designs. I don’t know, maybe this team is just cursed and we will never replace Cam. We still haven’t replaced Gross, Kalil, Smitty, Luke…
    • This was the risk with spending what $150 million in free agency on two OL? We should have been focused on the draft. Now whether the OL is terrible bad or mid we still have the highest amount of salary cap dedicated to the position group by far. And it's only going to go up when we sign Icky to an extension. Instead of trading up for injured running backs maybe we should have been drafting OL.
    • The Panthers are a bad football franchise. We have young receivers who are imperfect. We have had injuries along the OL. But Bryce Young is a downgrade from every single QB that has started for this team since Cam Newton's throwing arm died back in late 2018. And we have invested an absurd amount of resources in order to improve this offense. Multiple things can be true at one time.
×
×
  • Create New...