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!

     

CMC and Shaq restructured


NAS
 Share

Recommended Posts

5 hours ago, Pup McBarky said:

Didn't Verge practically guarantee that neither Teddy nor Shaq would be on the roster this year? Or am I misremembering?

Yep. The restructure is odd, I will give you that. I was told he was "on the block"

Edited by Verge
  • Pie 3
  • Beer 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

5 minutes ago, kungfoodude said:

In fairness, we could end up being wrong on our takes of this....but this just seems so disturbingly familiar. 

Good news, though. The GM who made the "mediocre moves" agrees that this is not something he likes to do.

Fitterer said that between the unusual circumstances of the virus and the team's current cap status, it was necessary to do some things that would be otherwise out of character for him.

So while it might look bad for this season, that's reason to be encouraged about the future.

  • Pie 3
Link to comment
Share on other sites

5 minutes ago, Mr. Scot said:

Well then the GM that wrote it must be an absolute moron, right? 🙂

Yeah? It was a stupid fuging contract, I said it then, I'm saying it now.

It's weird how being objective is a sin in this shithole of a forum.

That contract along with Shaqs will be remembered as some of Tepper/Rhules worst moves early on. They're what needs to be done to rebuild the Panthers. Throw Hurney under a bus all you want, it's not changing the dumb moves that those two keep piling on. The Panthers should have bottomed out last year and had the 1-2nd pick in the draft along with 2 third comp picks + a 4/5 + 2 6ths, and a fuging load of cap space. Instead they're doing everything thing they can to shoot for 8-8.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 minute ago, SmartyHurney3 said:

Yeah? It was a stupid fuging contract, I said it then, I'm saying it now.

It's weird how being objective is a sin in this shithole of a forum.

That contract along with Shaqs will be remembered as some of Tepper/Rhules worst moves early on. They're what needs to be done to rebuild the Panthers. Throw Hurney under a bus all you want, it's not changing the dumb moves that those two keep piling on. The Panthers should have bottomed out last year and had the 1-2nd pick in the draft along with 2 third comp picks + a 4/5 + 2 6ths, and a fuging load of cap space. Instead they're doing everything thing they can to shoot for 8-8.

*They're not doing what needs to be redone

Since this shithole doesn't allow edits.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 minute ago, SmartyHurney3 said:

Yeah? It was a stupid fuging contract, I said it then, I'm saying it now.

It's weird how being objective is a sin in this shithole of a forum.

That contract along with Shaqs will be remembered as some of Tepper/Rhules worst moves early on. They're what needs to be done to rebuild the Panthers. Throw Hurney under a bus all you want, it's not changing the dumb moves that those two keep piling on. The Panthers should have bottomed out last year and had the 1-2nd pick in the draft along with 2 third comp picks + a 4/5 + 2 6ths, and a fuging load of cap space. Instead they're doing everything thing they can to shoot for 8-8.

We like to call it "rebuilding".

  • Pie 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 minutes ago, ForJimmy said:

Any chance it’s a way of trading him while eating some of his salary because it was too high to move him?

Nah I'm not sure why people are saying it makes it more tradeable, it's the actually opposite. This signifies they will 100% be here for this season. Since we know they'll be here for 2021, we've agreed to lock in all of their 2021 money to count against the cap ahead of time. This creates more potentially dead money, so you are giving up the flexibility to cut or trade the player in exchange for the ability to spread that cap charge out over the life of the contract. And given this is the first time the cap has ever dropped, it's a smart move. Every $1 saved this year is worth more than a $1 paid in the future as you're saving a higher percentage of the cap today than what it'll end up being in 2022, 2023, etc.  

Bonus money is how rich owners can get a leg up on the less financially powerful franchises. Not everyone can afford to pay out massive percentages of the contract value at signing. The league balances this is by saying "every penny that you give a player in signing bonus must count against your cap eventually." Otherwise the cash-rich teams would massively front-load huge bonuses and then trade these players to poorer teams who wouldn't have to pay the actual cash to the players, effectively circumventing the salary cap. That's the reasoning for "dead money" existing, it's all a competitive balance measure. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

9 minutes ago, electricbluecats said:

Nah I'm not sure why people are saying it makes it more tradeable, it's the actually opposite. This signifies they will 100% be here for this season. Since we know they'll be here for 2021, we've agreed to lock in all of their 2021 money to count against the cap ahead of time. This creates more potentially dead money, so you are giving up the flexibility to cut or trade the player in exchange for the ability to spread that cap charge out over the life of the contract. And given this is the first time the cap has ever dropped, it's a smart move. Every $1 saved this year is worth more than a $1 paid in the future as you're saving a higher percentage of the cap today than what it'll end up being in 2022, 2023, etc.  

Bonus money is how rich owners can get a leg up on the less financially powerful franchises. Not everyone can afford to pay out massive percentages of the contract value at signing. The league balances this is by saying "every penny that you give a player in signing bonus must count against your cap eventually." Otherwise the cash-rich teams would massively front-load huge bonuses and then trade these players to poorer teams who wouldn't have to pay the actual cash to the players, effectively circumventing the salary cap. That's the reasoning for "dead money" existing, it's all a competitive balance measure. 

I guess my thought process (though now proven wrong) was he isn’t making any more total and we would be eating dead money if he is traded which means the team taking him would be responsible for his salary minus the dead money we are eating. This would be assuming a team wanted to give up capital for him, but stated his salary was too high.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 minute ago, ForJimmy said:

I guess my thought process (though now proven wrong) was he isn’t making any more total and we would be eating dead money if he is traded which means the team taking him would be responsible for his salary minus the dead money we are eating. This would be assuming a team wanted to give up capital for him, but stated his salary was too high.

I agree in general, that thought process isn't wrong and was definitely the case before the restructure. Today's move made it $9m more expensive to cut or trade so the team has decided not to go in that direction. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

 Share


  • PMH4OWPW7JD2TDGWZKTOYL2T3E.jpg

  • Topics

  • Posts

    • I know it's only been training camp and one preseason game, but I think T-Mac has already shown his floor to be exactly what I said about him in the pre-draft process. That his floor if he never improves his game, is as one of the best #2 WRs in the NFL, if not even still a low end #1 (i.e. a 25th-ish best WR in the league). I think it's safe to say he's already established himself as our #1, and there are only a small handful of teams in the league where I don't think he'd be their starting #2 WR in Week 1. Bengals (Higgins), Dolphins (Waddle), Eagles (Smith), Bucs (Godwin if healthy), Rams (Adams) are really the only teams where I think he'd be the #3 as a rookie in Week 1.  A few others like the Lions (Williams), Bears (Odunze), Seahawks (Kupp), Commanders (Deebo), where he'd be the 2b to start the season, just because they're vets and/or already have a year or two of experience with their team/QB. And even having said that, I think by year 2, he's better than every one of those players (And no, I'm not saying he's already going to be better than a prime version of Adams, just whatever he'll be at 33 next year), and same goes for Kupp, but that's more because it seems like his body might be quitting on him in a way that hasn't happened to Adams (yet).
    • Well to be fair, Horn not practicing right now to let his stitches heal up from a car accident isn't something that should be concerning.  Sure, you don't want him missing practice leading into the season, but it's one that once healed, won't have lingering affects or fear of re-injuring it, it was just bad luck.
    • Quality backups are absolutely important. This franchise has been plagued with depth problems. That said, there is a little bit of dismay that Mays can't beat out a 1-legged man, and all the talk going into the off-season was how BC would certainly be gone since he had position versatility.  In the end, it doesn't matter too awfully much, as I would be shocked to no end if Corbett makes it through the season. We know what we have in reserve, and that should surely be better than trying to sign random fat guys mid season to try and take over.
×
×
  • Create New...