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!

     

So i got drunk and dreamed that...


Gipetto

Recommended Posts

fox fell ill and we hired chris weinke to be our head coach and we won the superbowl with stefan lefors after trading clausen and moore to the cfl (if thats even possible) and and eric shelton became our star back after kidnapping double trouble and hiding them in his dungeon "it puts the eye black on its skin or else it gets the hose again".

Im going crazy.....

fetchavatarphp.gif

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I also was drinking all day yesterday, ended up waking up sprawled out on my front porch; my roomate woke up in laying in his shower with the water running, using a shampoo bottle as a pillow.

Anyways I dreamed that we were kicking the Falcons ass. Matt Moore was chucking the ball everywhere and Steve Smith was burning everyone. J. Stew was absolutely dominating but then I look at the score and we are down 24-22. Then I realized it was only a preseason game and got pissed off.

I'm not sure what that means but I felt like this was the right place to share it.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Last Panthers dream was right before the start of last season's Training Camp. I was watching a game in some room somewhere on a tiny ass TV. Steve Smith broke his right forearm, and I got pissed and threw the TV through the window.

It wasn't a prediction cause Smitty broke his left arm in real life and he was wearing the black and blue uniform in my dream, not the white and blue.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Archived

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


  • PMH4OWPW7JD2TDGWZKTOYL2T3E.jpg

  • Topics

  • Posts

    • In my opinion Fitterer was probably right about not paying McCaffrey. Now not wanting to "pay RBs" in my opinion isn't something you want to set in stone, to me it all comes down to the individual.
    • Maybe I'm just not understanding, but everywhere that I have read says that signing bonuses go against the cap prorated by as much as five years. The following example uses Andrew Luck's rookie contract as an example. "Take Andrew Luck, the first overall pick in the 2012 NFL draft. Luck signed a four-year contract with the Colts worth $22.1 million and included a $14.5 million signing bonus. Rather than a $14.5 million cap hit in 2012, the Colts spread out his signing bonus over the life of his contract. The hit against the cap would be $3.625 million per year over four years instead of a direct cap hit of $14.5 million directly in 2012. This gave the Colts more leverage and cap flexibility in signing other players." https://www.the33rdteam.com/nfl-signing-bonuses-explained/ I don't know why some of you think that signing bonuses aren't counted against the cap over the length of the contract, but whatever.   "The bonus with a signing is usually the most garish aspect of a rookie contract. Bonus is the immediate cash players receive when they ink a deal. It factors into the cap, but only for the whole contract duration, in terms of salary cap calculations. In the case of Bryce Young’s $24.6 million signing bonus, that’s prorated to approximately $6.15 million per season over a four-year deal. This format allows teams to handle the cap and provides rookies with some short-term fiscal stability, which is important given the high injury risk in this league." https://collegefootballnetwork.com/how-rookie-contracts-work-in-the-nfl/ I understand how signing bonuses can be a useful tool in order to manage the cap, and as one of the article suggests, signing bonuses may become important if you have a tight cap, but the bill is always going to come due. I'm not necessarily referring to you Tuka, but it seems to me that others simply don't want to understand that fact which is why they're reacting to what I'm saying negatively. How odd. In any event, I have a better general understanding of why signing bonuses are used now, and it's generally to fit salaries under the cap. Surely players, whether they be rookies or not, love a signing bonus because they get a good portion of their money up front. This in turn gives them more security and probably amounts to tax benefits as well. I also understand why teams would not want to use signing bonuses, particularly for players or draftees who have a higher probability of being gone before a contract even ends.
    • Get any shot you can at humane society, so much cheaper
×
×
  • Create New...