C.B. agreement | FinHeaven - Miami Dolphins Forums

C.B. agreement

finsruleurlife

Starter
Joined
Jan 15, 2006
Messages
149
Reaction score
0
I was reading an article about the whole C.B. agreement and how it could badly effect the dolphins cap. They said that the dolphins could have to restructure contracts. Does anybody have a clue to which would be restructured, like Z.T., or J.T.
 
Zach Thomas has said he would restructure if needed. Im not sure about Jason Taylor but I know he might as well, he loves the Dolphins plus he has a heavy cap hit (11 Million Dollars), and he isin't getting any younger.
 
They both said they would restructure if needed.

Frerotte, Madison, and Tebuckey Jones should as well.

I hope this CBA gets cleared up soon, looked like they were commited to getting it done but seems to be going slow. I just hope it gets done by the draft.
 
Yeah, I agree. Without a CBA done, it should really effect how agressively we can go after players in FA.
 
Zack, Taylor, Frerrote have all said they would restructure, but Frerrote could just be cut. Madison has said that he will not restructure or take a pay cut. T. Jones i have no clue about.
 
Its not all about restructuring high contracts but about restructuring roster bonuses, 2007s bonuses will be applied to this years cap, its not about restructuring salaries or taking paycuts, but switching from bonuses to salary, we all know thats very hard to do since the bonus is guaranteed money while the salary isnt paid until games are played, so most players wont want to restructure their bonuses. Its a way to punish those teams who where working the cap around, we where one of the teams that made the weirdest contracts.
 
ZolarZ_GoPhins said:
I hope this CBA gets cleared up soon, looked like they were commited to getting it done but seems to be going slow. I just hope it gets done by the draft.

Actually, it would have to happen before the draft, because the draft process is included as part of the CBA.
 
JT for sure, he's scheduled to make over 11 mil. He'll need to re-structure regardless.
 
Joey 22 said:
Its not all about restructuring high contracts but about restructuring roster bonuses, 2007s bonuses will be applied to this years cap, its not about restructuring salaries or taking paycuts, but switching from bonuses to salary, we all know thats very hard to do since the bonus is guaranteed money while the salary isnt paid until games are played, so most players wont want to restructure their bonuses. Its a way to punish those teams who where working the cap around, we where one of the teams that made the weirdest contracts.

You would think all teams would be in deep crap with this and the owners would want to get something done.. Maybe some of the big money teams think this would be a way to buy a Superbowl championship in 2007.
 
Actually we are a big money team, Wayne being the 4th richest owner on the league, but that would work for 2007, on 2006 we would be in trouble if this isnt fixed. Plus in 2008 the cap would still be back surely, and teams would have to make massive cuts after spending big time in 2007, getting them into cap hell again due to the cap penaltys involved with cutting or trading a player. Plus I think Saban isnt Spurrier or Wanny and wouldnt comprise our future over 1 successfull season.
 
Joey 22 said:
Its not all about restructuring high contracts but about restructuring roster bonuses, 2007s bonuses will be applied to this years cap, its not about restructuring salaries or taking paycuts, but switching from bonuses to salary, we all know thats very hard to do since the bonus is guaranteed money while the salary isnt paid until games are played, so most players wont want to restructure their bonuses. Its a way to punish those teams who where working the cap around, we where one of the teams that made the weirdest contracts.


Remember reading somewhere (no link, from memory unfortunately) there could be 30% or more of current players under contract added to this years free agency because of those bonuses and teams still having to meet the 2006 salary cap. And many of those players will end up sitting out 2006 rather than possibly taking lower than market deals in a capped year compared to next years uncapped year.
 
The Gang of Nine Revealed from PFT

NFLPA executive director Gene Upshaw recently said that nine NFL franchises are resisting the expansion of revenue sharing by the league's 32 teams. Upshaw also told Mark Maske of The Washington Post that the nine teams are planning to file suit if they are forced to share revenues that currently are not distributed evenly among all teams.

A league source has identified for us the members of this modern-day Mudville nine: the Redskins, Eagles, Cowboys, Giants, Jets, Panthers, Broncos, Patriots, and Texans.

We'd previously heard that the NFL and the union tentatively have agreed to expand the components of so-called "Defined Gross Revenue" (which is the basis for the team-by-team salary cap) to include money not currently shared by the various franchises. The proponents of enhanced revenue argue that, if any currently unshared revenue streams are to be included in the determination of DGR, the corresponding revenue should be shared equally -- and that, if the revenue is not to be shared, it should be excluded from the DGR calculation.

The source also confirmed that the Mudville nine plan to sue if they are forced to accept expanded revenue sharing by the other 23 organizations. Frankly, we still don't understand how it would ever come to that, since nine votes are sufficient to block any changes to the way the NFL does business, given that 24 "yes" votes would be required to, for example, impose expanded revenue sharing.

NFL spokesman Greg Aiello tells us that, under the current system, teams share all national broadcast revenues, all sponsorship revenues, all licensing revenues, and the visiting team's share of ticket revenues. The following revenues aren't shared: the home team's share of the box-office revenue, local radio revenue, local TV revenue, local sponsorship revenue, and stadium-generated revenues from signage, concessions, parking, luxury suites, etc.

__________________
 
I got an idea

How about we look at the old agreement, realize it was doing perfectly fine, there was food on every players table, Owners were seemingly doing ok, then we write up a new CBA that looks EXACTLY like the old one
 
Alex22 said:
I got an idea

How about we look at the old agreement, realize it was doing perfectly fine, there was food on every players table, Owners were seemingly doing ok, then we write up a new CBA that looks EXACTLY like the old one

I bet the owners would take it but the NFLPA also plays a part on this, they are outright against the salary cap, so either you send to hell the 2000 players that are a part of the NFLPA and bring the CFL players or you have to please them as well.
 
Joey 22 said:
I bet the owners would take it but the NFLPA also plays a part on this, they are outright against the salary cap, so either you send to hell the 2000 players that are a part of the NFLPA and bring the CFL players or you have to please them as well.


I know but my logic is that the players are being VERY greedy

I mean come on its not like they were poor under the last agreement
 
Back
Top Bottom