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sedated
03-01-2006, 01:30 PM
Below is the amount of money each team is under or over the $92 million salary cap as of March 1. The current list of cap numbers does not include the salaries of restricted and exclusive-rights players. When teams find out what the value of those tenders will be, the cap number is expected to be adjusted before Thursday, adding $1 million or $2 million to the total number for each team.

Please note, this list will change rapidly as teams begin cutting players over the next day to get under the salary cap by Thursday's 4 p.m. ET deadline (4 ET is the end of the NFL's business day, and no player can be cut after the close of business).


Under the salary cap
Team Cap status (under)
Minnesota Vikings $24 million
Arizona Cardinals $21.8 million
Cleveland Browns $21.5 million
Green Bay Packers $21 million
San Francisco 49ers $17.4 million
San Diego Chargers $17.1 million
Jacksonville Jaguars $14.2 million
Philadelphia Eagles $14.2 million
Baltimore Ravens $11.9 million
Detroit Lions $10.6 million
St. Louis Rams $10.6 million
Seattle Seahawks $9.5 million
Cincinnati Bengals $9 million
New Orleans Saints $8.2 million
Chicago Bears $7.8 million
Houston Texans $4 million
New York Giants $3.3 million
Buffalo Bills $2 million
New England Patriots $1.5 million


Over the salary cap
Team Cap status (over)
Oakland Raiders $26 million
Miami Dolphins $21.9 million
Kansas City Chiefs $20.7 million
Tennessee Titans $18.7 million
Washington Redskins $17 million
Denver Broncos $16.4 million
Carolina Panthers $12.7 million
Atlanta Falcons $11.7 million
New York Jets $11.1 million
Indianapolis Colts $9.4 million
Tampa Bay Buccaneers $8.7 million
Pittsburgh Steelers $7 million
Dallas Cowboys $1.2 million


Courtesy ESPN.com

sedated
03-01-2006, 01:32 PM
Another article from ESPN.com

Most fans couldn't care less about the collective bargaining agreement and, justifiable or not, view any discussions of negotiations aimed at extending labor peace through the 2013 season as just another example of the avaricious nature of already overpaid players.

By Thursday, however, when the real-world ramifications of the failed labor talks become more apparent, fans in a lot of NFL precincts will take notice. With negotiations toward an extension having broken off Tuesday afternoon -- despite earlier optimistic reports that the sides were poised to strike an agreement -- salary cap managers from several franchises are readying themselves for what one general manager suggested late Tuesday will come to be known as "Bloody Thursday."

Translation: Because so many teams are up against the projected cap limit of $95 million to $96 million for 2006, and the lack of a CBA extension means there are few options for relief, some big-name players will be jettisoned by Thursday, when teams must be in compliance with the spending limit.

"In past years, you'd see a lot of guys released who maybe still had some name value but who were really in decline in terms of production," said one AFC team executive who was working late Tuesday, trying to figure out how to pare down a prohibitively bloated cap figure. "This year? People are going to be stunned -- not just by the quantity of players who are cut by Thursday but by the quality, too. It's going to be ugly. There's going to be blood in the streets and, compared to past years, it's going to be from some bluebloods, guys who can still play."

For a few hours into Tuesday night, after word broke that NFL Players Association executive director Gene Upshaw had departed league offices in Manhattan and headed back to Washington -- after declaring the negotiations hopelessly deadlocked -- there was a sense that the union chief was undertaking one last bit of posturing. As the evening wore on, though, it became increasingly obvious that Upshaw and the league were not just practicing brinksmanship and that the NFL could instead be poised on the brink of disaster.

“ People are going to be stunned -- not just by the quantity of players who are cut by Thursday but by the quality, too. It's going to be ugly. There's going to be blood in the streets and, compared to past years, it's going to be from some bluebloods, guys who can still play. ”
— An AFC team executive

The word most often used by teams' staffers, the people charged with crunching the salary cap numbers and who had clearly bought into the notion that a CBA extension would be struck: Stunned.

Said one cap manager: "For months, my owner told me to develop two strategies, one with [an extension] and one without. But nobody, even with all the gloom-and-doom talk of the last few weeks, ever really believed we'd be breaking out Plan B. And then, these last few days, even my owner was telling me he thought it would get done. Unless there's some kind of miracle on Wednesday, our team is going to have to do some drastic things, and I know we're not the only team in that situation."

How drastic? There continue to be rumors the Washington Redskins, who extended numerous contracts in the past to deal with previous cap crunches, could have to play with 20 rookies on the roster in 2006. On Tuesday night in Atlanta, there were rumblings the Falcons, who aren't in nearly the dire straits some other franchises are, might be forced to release tailback Warrick Dunn, who rushed for a career-best 1,416 yards in 2005. The Kansas City Chiefs could part ways with perennial Pro Bowl guard Will Shields if he doesn't agree to adjust his contract and reduce a $6.67 million cap charge. And that is just the start of the many examples of potential attrition cited by team officials Tuesday evening.

Certainly the positive vibes of Monday had spiraled into disbelief -- and in some instances, it seems, desperation -- by Tuesday night.

Less than 24 hours earlier, key owners such as Dallas' Jerry Jones and Pittsburgh's Dan Rooney and high-ranking club officials such as New England vice chairman Jonathan Kraft had offered public optimism about a CBA extension. But in the five-hour bargaining session in New York, things went bad, and they could be far worse by Wednesday's 4 p.m. deadline for reaching an accord that now seems unreachable.

The league was represented Tuesday by commissioner Paul Tagliabue, vice president of labor relations Harold Henderson, members of the management council and team presidents John Shaw of St. Louis and Atlanta's Rich McKay. In addition to Upshaw, it's believed the NFLPA representatives included attorneys Richard Berthelsen and Jeffrey Kessler.

"We're deadlocked," Upshaw said after the session. "There's nowhere to go."

The two sides remain about 4 percent apart in negotiations. A league source confirmed that the NFL is offering 56.2 percent of revenues, while the NFLPA is seeking a 60 percent share of the pie. The difference translates into approximately $300 million to $350 million per year. In a statement released Tuesday night, the NFL accused the NFLPA of "overreaching." And, rather predictably, the union, which has remained firm in its conviction that the old revenue-sharing models have become obsolete, charged that the optimism of Monday, that a deal would be completed, had been fabricated by the league in an attempt to pressure the NFLPA into a deal.

After essentially claiming the sides had run out of time and that the league will play the 2007 season as a so-called "uncapped" year, Upshaw did leave some wiggle room by acknowledging that one phone call could change things. But it's not likely that call will be made. ESPN.com has confirmed that a meeting of the powerful management council executive committee, made up of eight owners and high-ranking club officials, is still set for Wednesday. But the session is not scheduled to begin until late afternoon, and, with a 4 p.m. deadline looming, it doesn't appear a last-minute accord is possible.

Tagliabue will convene a Thursday meeting of all owners. By that point, though, the mechanisms for an uncapped season in 2007 will already be in place. And Upshaw has reiterated throughout the talks that if the NFL ever plays without a salary cap for one season, players will never permit one to be reinstituted.

There also exists the possibility that players could be locked out before the 2008 season, by which point the current collective bargaining agreement will have expired.

For instance, players would now need six accrued seasons, not four, to qualify for unrestricted free agent status. So a standout young player such as Chicago Bears three-year veteran linebacker Lance Briggs, who is coming off a Pro Bowl season and whose contract expires after the 2006 season, would have to wait two additional seasons before being unrestricted. The league would also, in an uncapped year, quit funding 401(k) plans (it currently matches player investments on a 2-1 basis) and most other fringe benefits, meaning players would be responsible for those things.

And there would be difficulties, even for the most innovative teams and creative player agents, in meeting financial expectations on most contracts. Players in free agency and high-round draft picks will have trouble approximating the fat deals of the past, and player agents face problems in trying to explain why expectations might have to be lowered.

As of Tuesday, there were a dozen teams in the league with more than $10 million apiece in 2006 salary cap room. It seems logical that those teams, which include four franchises with more than $20 million each in cap space, would benefit from the problems of cap-strapped clubs, especially if the free-agent rolls are swelled Thursday with the anticipated cap casualties. But because of the quirks of the pending uncapped year in 2007, even those teams will have to move with great caution in crafting contracts.

One player agent suggested that it will be a "nuclear winter" at the outset of free agency, with few teams jumping out and completing early deals because of the uncharted landscape in which the NFL will be operating.

Some other lesser-known implications: Without an extension to the CBA, teams will be able to amortize signing bonuses over just four seasons, instead of the maximum seven years. Because of the 30 percent rule, which essentially stipulates that a player's basic compensation (his base salary plus the prorated share of his signing bonus for 2006) cannot be increased by more than 30 percent, teams can't make up the difference in smaller signing bonus with fatter base salaries.

But perhaps the biggest problem is that so-called "not likely to be earned incentives" (NLTBE) will count immediately against the cap. In normal circumstances, NLTBEs count on the following year's spending limit. So NLTBEs earned in 2005, for instance, count against a team's 2006 cap. But with an uncapped year looming in 2007, such incentives and bonuses that are triggered in 2006 would immediately apply.

Indeed, barring a dramatic and unanticipated turn of events Wednesday, it is not going to be business as usual around the league. And if the ramifications are as catastrophic as predictions Tuesday indicated they might be, fans could be forced to pay more than the usual grudging attention to business matters.

ct
03-01-2006, 01:52 PM
If only we had a chicken little icon...

sedated
03-01-2006, 01:54 PM
Arizona Cardinals
Player Cap number 2006 savings
DE Calvin Pace $1,955,000 $425,000 (charge)

Atlanta Falcons
Player Cap number 2006 savings
CB Kevin Mathis $887,500 $325,000
DE Brady Smith $3,125,000 $2,500,000

Baltimore Ravens
Player Cap number 2006 savings
LB Peter Boulware $2,360,000 $1,320,000
OL Orlando Brown $3,800,000 $900,000
OL Keydrick Vincent $1,666,666 $833,332

Buffalo Bills
Player Cap number 2006 savings
DT Sam Adams $3,875,000 $3,500,000
OL Bennie Anderson $1,900,000 $900,000
S Lawyer Milloy $3,750,000 $2,500,000
WR Eric Moulds $10,855,666 $5,522,332
CB Troy Vincent $3,225,000 $825,000
OL Mike Williams $10,813,764 $5,683,530

Carolina Panthers
Player Cap number 2006 savings
RB Stephen Davis $3,800,000 $2,800,000
K John Kasay $1,700,000 $500,000
LB Jason Kyle $850,000 $610,000
LB Brandon Short $2,050,000 $1,550,000

Chicago Bears
Player Cap number 2006 savings
TE Desmond Clark $1,666,666 $1,166,664
S Mike Green $1,435,000 $1,435,000


Cincinnati Bengals
Player Cap number 2006 savings
DE Duane Clemons $1,616,666 $1,349,998
S Kim Herring $1,600,000 $700,000
TE Reggie Kelly $1,950,000 $1,450,000
DT John Thornton $3,875,000 $2,000,000


Cleveland Browns
Player Cap number 2006 savings
RB William Green $1,517,619 $121,666 (charge)
DT Kenard Lang $5,954,364 $5,133,333
DB Michael Lehan $503,000 417,000
OL Ryan Tucker $4,025,000 $774,996


Dallas Cowboys
Player Cap number 2006 savings
OL Larry Allen $7,558,333 $3,441,663
DT La'Roi Glover $7,200,000 $6,000,000
LB Dat Nguyen (ret.) $2,458,333 $1,791,665


Denver Broncos
Player Cap number 2006 savings
OL Matt Lepsis (O) $6,950,000 $5,050,000
DT Trevor Pryce $10,296,666 $8,529,996
DT Gerard Warren (O) $8,250,000 $7,600,000


Detroit Lions
Player Cap number 2006 savings
CB Fernando Bryant $3,916,666 $2,249,998
QB Joey Harrington $12,043,750 $5,412,500


Green Bay Packers
Player Cap number 2006 savings
LB Na'il Diggs $3,812,500 $2,900,000
QB Brett Favre (might retire) $12,633,333 $7,800,000
OL Adrian Klemm $1,600,000 $1,200,000


Houston Texans
Player Cap number 2006 savings
TE Mark Bruener $1,008,333 $1,008,332
CB Marcus Coleman $3,118,433 $585,299
RB Domanick Davis $3,800,000 $200,000 (charge)
DT Seth Payne $4,225,000 $850,000
OL Todd Wade $5,166,666 $1,500,002 (charge)
DT Gary Walker $5,833,333 $1,500,001 (charge)


Indianapolis Colts
Player Cap number 2006 savings
DT Josh Williams $3,700,000 $1,300,000
QB Travis Brown $630,500 $545,000
DT Joaquin Gonzalez $645,000 $445,000


Jacksonville Jaguars
Player Cap number 2006 savings
TE Kyle Brady $3,346,250 $2,499,500
WR Jimmy Smith $7,224,333 $5,475,000




Kansas City Chiefs
Player Cap number 2006 savings
LB Shawn Barber $4,707,142 $1,278,568
OL Chris Bober $2,175,000 $1,275,000
RB Priest Holmes $5,330,804 $992,412 (charge)
CB Dexter McCleon $2,775,000 $1,600,000
CB Eric Warfield $4,264,285 $2,121,425
OL John Welbourn $1,400,000 $1,400,000
S Greg Wesley $3,766,666 $1,099,998
S Jerome Woods $2,908,333 $25,000 (charge)


Miami Dolphins
Player Cap number 2006 savings
QB Gus Frerotte $1,680,000 $1,430,000
CB Reggie Howard $4,000,000 $1,000,000
OL Jeno James $3,208,333 $374,999
S Tebucky Jones $6,800,000 $6,500,000
CB Sam Madison $6,305,931 $2,625,000
OL Damion McIntosh $4,475,000 $4,275,000
LB Junior Seau $2,923,750 $2,100,000
DT Jeff Zgonina $895,000 $770,000


Minnesota Vikings
Player Cap number 2006 savings
QB Daunte Culpepper $9,421,565 $3,770,290
OL Chris Liwienski $2,365,000 $1,465,000
WR Marcus Robinson $2,500,000 $1,500,000
OL Mike Rosenthal $1,950,000 $21,536 (Charge)


New England Patriots
Player Cap number 2006 savings
LB Chad Brown $1,242,500 $1,000,000
S Rodney Harrison $2,831,763 $1,563,527
CB Tyrone Poole $2,516,668 $2,006,250
CB Duane Starks $5,130,000 $5,130,000


New Orleans Saints
Player Cap number 2006 savings
TE Boo Williams $1,386,666 $1,019,998
S Jay Bellamy $1,150,000 $650,000
QB Todd Bouman $1,443,333 $1,024,999
QB Aaron Brooks $8,483,333 $4,516,665
TE Ernie Conwell $2,095,000 $1,255,000
OL Jermane Mayberry $4,245,000 $120,000
CB Fred Thomas $4,150,000 $1,650,000


New York Giants
Player Cap number 2006 savings
LB Carlos Emmons $3,000,000 $1,000,000
K Jeff Feagles $870,000 $670,000
LB Barrett Green $3,025,000 $1,375,000
DT Fred Robbins $3,251,666 $255,002 (charge)
WR Amani Toomer $6,375,000 $300,000 (charge)
S Shaun Williams $5,807,737 $1,750,000
S Brent Alexander $1,440,000 $1,240,000
OL Jason Whittle $1,821,250 $1,678,750


New York Jets
Player Cap number 2006 savings
LB Eric Barton $3,915,000 $1,170,000
WR Laveranues Coles $10,000,000 $6,000,000
OL Jason Fabini $4,500,000 $3,200,000
QB Jay Fiedler $6,495,000 $6,095,000
OL Pete Kendall $5,187,000 $4,362,000
CB Ty Law $10,060,000 $7,660,000
LB Barry Gardner $815,000 $655,000
DT Lance Legree $1,850,000 $1,450,000
RB Jerald Sowell $922,857 $551,428
OL Kevin Mawae $4,466,666 $633,330
QB Chad Pennington $15,000,000 $3,000,000


Oakland Raiders
Player Cap number 2006 savings
LB Danny Clark $2,712,000 $1,389,000
QB Kerry Collins $12,897,666 $9,196,997
RB Zack Crockett $2,293,571 $2,079,284
S Derrick Gibson (declined option) $10,201,000 $9,397,000
DE Bobby Hamilton $5,320,000 $4,040,000
DT Warren Sapp $6,097,000 $109,000
OL Ron Stone $3,080,000 $2,760,000
CB Denard Walker $4,590,000 $4,290,000
DT Ted Washington $4,747,000 $1,759,000


Philadelphia Eagles
Player Cap number 2006 savings
DT Paul Grasmanis $700,000 $700,000
DE Jerome McDougle $2,001,666 $407,502 (charge)
WR Terrell Owens $6,778,333 $4,544,999


Pittsburgh Steelers
Player Cap number 2006 savings
OL Jeff Hartings $8,129,166 $4,749,997
S Mike Logan $1,758,333 $1,474,999
QB Tommy Maddox $1,700,000 $600,000
OL Chukky Okobi $2,097,500 $1,751,500
RB Duce Staley $4,371,250 $857,500
CB Willie Williams $1,235,000 $985,000


San Diego Chargers
Player Cap number 2006 savings
LB Randall Godfrey $2,500,000 $1,900,000
S Jerry Wilson $1,120,000 $1,020,000


San Francisco 49ers
Player Cap number 2006 savings
DE Andre Carter $3,671,251 $1,349,998
DE Chris Cooper $632,500 $545,000
CB Ahmed Plummer $8,083,569 $3,083,569
WR Johnnie Morton $845,000 $770,000
OL Jeremy Newberry $5,118,583 $1,881,417
WR Rashaun Woods $1,400,666 $50,997


St. Louis Rams
Player Cap number 2006 savings
LB Chris Claiborne $3,900,000 $1,500,000
RB Marshall Faulk $4,027,856 $2,055,719 (charge)


Seattle Seahawks
Player Cap number 2006 savings
LB Jamie Sharper $4,500,000 $3,300,000


Tampa Bay Bucs
Player Cap number 2006 savings
RB Mike Alstott (O) $5,168,000 $4,663,996
LB Derrick Brooks $11,657,083 $5,499,998
LB Jeff Gooch $2,050,000 $1,850,000
QB Brian Griese $7,083,333 $4,549,999
RB Michael Pittman $2,117,000 $1,767,000
DE Simeon Rice $9,200,000 $2,800,000
LB Shelton Quarles $5,075,000 $1,925,000
LB Barrett Ruud $825,750 $822,250 (charge)
OL Matt Stinchcomb $2,225,000 $1,550,000


Tennessee Titans
Player Cap number 2006 savings
OL Eugene Amano $393,833 $384,999
OL Ken Amato $695,002 $204,994
RB Travis Henry $2,142,000 $1,574,000
OL Brad Hopkins $11,160,336 $4,608,990
OL Benji Olson $9,083,250 $5,982,750
QB Billy Volek $3,273,335 $1,953,329


Washington Redskins
Player Cap number 2006 savings
LB LaVar Arrington $12,045,980 $120,308 (charge)
S Matt Bowen $2,400,000 $2,000,000
K John Hall $1,965,000 $1,035,000
CB Walt Harris $2,750,000 $2,000,000
DT Brandon Noble $2,630,000 $1,700,000
QB Patrick Ramsey $2,881,500 $1,688,000
OL Cory Raymer $1,118,333 $984,999


O -- means player has an option bonus that might not be picked up.

FloridaMan88
03-01-2006, 04:40 PM
At least the Raiders and Denver are in cap hell also. It would be unbearable if those 2 were one of the teams with huge amounts of cap space

FloridaMan88
03-01-2006, 04:40 PM
At least the Raiders and Denver are in cap hell also. It would be unbearable if those 2 were one of the teams with huge amounts of cap space

Make that if those 2 were two of the teams with cap space

RickObie
03-01-2006, 04:47 PM
We might be in for a rude awakening!!

I think we'll see a player cut by the Chiefs that will shock us!

Rausch
03-01-2006, 04:50 PM
If only we had a chicken little icon...

JBucc
03-01-2006, 04:52 PM
Looks like we're fooked

BigChiefFan
03-01-2006, 05:01 PM
From the looks of things, I would say Derrick Brooks will be a cap casualty.

oldandslow
03-01-2006, 05:19 PM
sanny eggo is 17 mil under. Damn.

That cannot be good.

BigChiefFan
03-01-2006, 05:22 PM
The Jags, Seahawks, Bengals, and Patriots all made the playoffs and their under the cap. It looks like those teams are in good shape for the upcoming season.

listopencil
03-01-2006, 05:30 PM
At least the Raiders and Denver are in cap hell also. It would be unbearable if those 2 were one of the teams with huge amounts of cap space


We just cut around $15 MIL today with Pryce, Anderson and Putzier.

kcfanXIII
03-01-2006, 05:55 PM
We might be in for a rude awakening!!

I think we'll see a player cut by the Chiefs that will shock us!

nick athan reports

Hydrae
03-01-2006, 06:05 PM
But perhaps the biggest problem is that so-called "not likely to be earned incentives" (NLTBE) will count immediately against the cap. In normal circumstances, NLTBEs count on the following year's spending limit. So NLTBEs earned in 2005, for instance, count against a team's 2006 cap. But with an uncapped year looming in 2007, such incentives and bonuses that are triggered in 2006 would immediately apply.

I would think this little complication throws out most if not all the projected cap numbers. How many of those reported include amounts that would not exist if there had been a new CBA? This probably makes everyone much worse than we have been told lately.

htismaqe
03-01-2006, 06:37 PM
I would think this little complication throws out most if not all the projected cap numbers. How many of those reported include amounts that would not exist if there had been a new CBA? This probably makes everyone much worse than we have been told lately.

Exactly. These numbers aren't worth much at all.