dbair1967

Administrator
Messages
58,551
Reaction score
9,046
Official Beasley numbers. We saved 400k this yr on the cap by signing him to a multi year deal. This appears to be a pretty good deal for us to lock him up for a number of seasons.

Cole Beasley's contract numbers are in

March, 4, 2015
By Todd Archer | ESPNDallas.com

IRVING, Texas – The Dallas Cowboys officially announced the Cole Beasley signing Wednesday after he agreed to the four-year deal on Tuesday.

The total numbers we have known: four years, $13.6 million with $7 million effectively guaranteed and a $4 million signing bonus.

The other numbers are in, too.

Beasley will make $1 million in base salary this season, which means he will carry a $2 million salary-cap figure in 2015. The Cowboys had the option of putting the low tender on him as a restricted free agent worth roughly $1.5 million, which could have allowed teams to sign him to an offer sheet because no compensation would have been due the Cowboys, or the second-round tender worth roughly $2.4 million.

With this deal, the Cowboys saved about $400,000 in salary-cap space in 2015.

Beasley will earn $2.356 million in 2016, with the contract becoming fully guaranteed on the fifth day of the league year. For now, $2 million is guaranteed for injury only.

He would earn base salaries of $3 million in 2017 and $3.25 million in 2018.

He also has $500,000 in escalators that can increase his base salaries in the final three years.

The $3.4 million average for Beasley is the same the Cleveland Browns gave Andrew Hawkins last year to sign an offer sheet as a restricted free agent away from the Cincinnati Bengals. Biggest difference? Hawkins makes a little more than $10 million in the first two years of the deal. Beasley could make up to $7.8 million in the first two years if he hits on all of the
 
Messages
2,329
Reaction score
11
Had no idea he was that involved.

I retract my previous comments.

Not only that involved but unlike Terrorance Williams, Beasley's 37 catches based on 49 targets is a wide receiver that makes sense to have playing time in the offense. Terrance was targeted 64 times and caught 37. He doesn't deserve to live in America.
 

overused

Practice Squad
Messages
382
Reaction score
0
so if he catches 30 balls a year

that be a million for each catch

4 years 13 million
 
Messages
6,827
Reaction score
1
Not only that involved but unlike Terrorance Williams, Beasley's 37 catches based on 49 targets is a wide receiver that makes sense to have playing time in the offense. Terrance was targeted 64 times and caught 37. He doesn't deserve to live in America.

Eh, in fairness, I'm sure a lot of Williams targets where on deep balls, unlike the 5 yard patterns Beasly ran
 

NoShame

UDFA
Messages
2,797
Reaction score
0
Official Beasley numbers. We saved 400k this yr on the cap by signing him to a multi year deal. This appears to be a pretty good deal for us to lock him up for a number of seasons.

Cole Beasley's contract numbers are in

March, 4, 2015
By Todd Archer | ESPNDallas.com

IRVING, Texas – The Dallas Cowboys officially announced the Cole Beasley signing Wednesday after he agreed to the four-year deal on Tuesday.

The total numbers we have known: four years, $13.6 million with $7 million effectively guaranteed and a $4 million signing bonus.

The other numbers are in, too.

Beasley will make $1 million in base salary this season, which means he will carry a $2 million salary-cap figure in 2015. The Cowboys had the option of putting the low tender on him as a restricted free agent worth roughly $1.5 million, which could have allowed teams to sign him to an offer sheet because no compensation would have been due the Cowboys, or the second-round tender worth roughly $2.4 million.

With this deal, the Cowboys saved about $400,000 in salary-cap space in 2015.

Beasley will earn $2.356 million in 2016, with the contract becoming fully guaranteed on the fifth day of the league year. For now, $2 million is guaranteed for injury only.

He would earn base salaries of $3 million in 2017 and $3.25 million in 2018.

He also has $500,000 in escalators that can increase his base salaries in the final three years.

The $3.4 million average for Beasley is the same the Cleveland Browns gave Andrew Hawkins last year to sign an offer sheet as a restricted free agent away from the Cincinnati Bengals. Biggest difference? Hawkins makes a little more than $10 million in the first two years of the deal. Beasley could make up to $7.8 million in the first two years if he hits on all of the

Ok that's way better than we were originally thinking... I like that deal.
 
Top Bottom