Cowboysrule122

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BRANDON GEORGE Staff Writer



MOBILE, Ala. — This might not sit well with some Cowboys fans. Stephen Jones is no different from his father.
Well, at least when it comes to his aggressive mentality.


Jones, who as Cowboys executive vice president is in charge of the club’s contracts and managing the salary cap, said Wednesday that he believes in the same “go-for-it” approach that Jerry Jones has had in place since he bought the team.

“Absolutely, I totally support it,” Stephen Jones said from Senior Bowl practices before the Cowboys staff headed back to Dallas. “Obviously, we’re trying to win. When you get these good quarterbacks, you want to fire at it … to give you an opportunity to win a championship. Obviously that’s what we want to get done.”

The Cowboys, however, have mostly fired blanks in trying to recapture their mid-1990s glory. Often they’ve shot themselves in the foot in giving aging players big money in long-term contracts, crippling the club in its pursuit of free agents with little salary-cap space to utilize.

This season is no different. The Cowboys are at least a league-high $25 million over the salary cap. Stephen Jones said, however, the team will have no problem getting under the cap by the March 11 deadline.

“We’ll always manage through it,” he said. “It limits you. It’s tight. At the same time, we can get done what we need to get done and get better.”

Cowboys contracts are structured with built-in triggers to turn base salary into signing bonuses. That automatically reduces players’ cap hits and means that getting under the cap really won’t be an obstacle. The Cowboys will continue to restructure the contracts of their stars and push their problems down the road.

The Cowboys’ tight cap situation, however, will keep the club from using its franchise tag again this season on one of its unrestricted free agents, such as defensive linemen Jason Hatcher or Anthony Spencer.
“I don’t think the tag is going to be in play for us this year,” Stephen Jones said. “I just don’t see it where we need it this year.”

Jones did say, however, he’s open to re-signing Spencer, who played in only one game last season before having to undergo microfracture surgery on his left knee on Oct. 1.

“He’s the type of player you want on your team,” Jones said. “We’ve got our fingers crossed, and I know he does, too, that his injury comes along in the proper way.”

Earlier this week, Jerry Jones said he doesn’t ever see a time when the Cowboys won’t be “under some serious challenges on the salary cap.”

“That’ll always be there for us because we’re that aggressive with our dollars,” the owner said.
Stephen Jones sees the same future for the Cowboys.

“Anytime you’re paying a quarterback that type of money, which you hope you are because that means you’ve got a good one, it immediately means that you’re going to be tight,” Stephen Jones said.

The Cowboys made quarterback Tony Romo the highest-paid player in franchise history last off-season when they signed him to a six-year, $108 million contract extension. Since then, he’s had two back surgeries.
Win or lose, Romo isn’t going anywhere for at least a few more seasons. But other aging Cowboys face a more uncertain future.

Defensive end DeMarcus Ware, who again fought injuries last season and finished with a career-low six sacks, is scheduled to make $12.2 million in 2014 and count $16 million against the cap.

The Cowboys could ask Ware to take a pay cut this off-season. Ware said after the season he’s fine with restructuring his contract again but not OK with a pay cut.

Stephen Jones declined to comment on Ware on Wednesday, adding, “We’re all in the middle of evaluating what we’re going to do.”

The Cowboys also face a tough decision on what to do with veteran wide receiver Miles Austin. He again couldn’t stay on the field, because of a hamstring injury, and had his worst season as a starter last year with only 24 catches for 244 yards and no touchdowns.
The Cowboys would save $5.5 million against the cap if they make Austin a post-June 1 cut. They could also ask him to take a pay cut.

“Miles is another one of those guys who has had a great career with us, no different from any of our other guys,” Stephen Jones said. “We have to evaluate it, what resources he takes up and then make decisions from there.”
Tough decisions still await the Cowboys. Father and son Jones won’t back down. They never do.
 

Cowboysrule122

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This might not sit well with some Cowboys fans. Stephen Jones is no different from his father.
Well, at least when it comes to his aggressive mentality.

As if we didn't already know.
 

GloryDaysRBack

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stephen says the cowboys are tight against the cap

the fans say the cap is bullshit and we can do whatever we want
 

junk

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Goof Son said:
“Anytime you’re paying a quarterback that type of money, which you hope you are because that means you’ve got a good one, it immediately means that you’re going to be tight,” Stephen Jones said.

I posted this over at DCC too.

Broncos have $18 million in cap space. Packers have $28 million. Panthers have $15 million. Ravens have $11 million.

Even the Patriots have almost $7 million.

Dallas is sitting pretty at -$21 million
 

dbair1967

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I posted this over at DCC too.

Broncos have $18 million in cap space. Packers have $28 million. Panthers have $15 million. Ravens have $11 million.

Even the Patriots have almost $7 million.

Dallas is sitting pretty at -$21 million

They don't have the process we have.
 

boozeman

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stephen says the cowboys are tight against the cap

the fans say the cap is bullshit and we can do whatever we want

Of course.

I guess there is some misconception that cap hell is like it used to be where you literally could not do anything.

And each time there is a huge negative to the cap, people think it is some sort of chore to get it under. Thing is, teams HAVE to get it under. They don't have a choice. It is not optional. So it is not some miracle feat that Stephen manages to do it.

All in all, what you do after cooking the books is what matters. If you choose to kick the can further down the street, then you are doing what the Cowboys are doing.

But "whatever we want" is really "what we can afford" after doing this. And if there is 8-10 million in wiggle room, that's what they do.

Unfortunately, this is not cap hell. That doesn't even exist anymore. This is cap purgatory.

And it is self imposed.

And it is not like Shithead Jr. above is implying, because of the QB contract, like Junk pointed out.

It is because we overpay many more players than just the franchise QB.

Everyone on the Cowboys becomes a superstar.

The Joneses are like Oprah giving away cars...."You get a CONTRACT...and YOU get a contract...AND you GET a contract..."

We paid two defensive ends incredible money last year and got dick. We pay an aging TE a lot. We pay a goldbricking frick like Miles Austin a lot. We paid an aging and declining Jay Ratliff a lot to do nothing for three seasons. We even paid schlubs like Ryan Cook, Phil Costa and Danny McCray a million per.

Most teams only have five or six guys getting over $10M in guaranteed money. We had ten last year.
 

Jon88

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This team is screwed now and it will be screwed after Jerry steps down and hands things to his stupid son.
 
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Norm had a great stat today.... he said while Jimmy was coach here we lost 25 players to free agency and signed 7. We simply did not extend age like we do now. Let Norton Jr., Larry Brown, Harper, etc. just walk. Sorry guys, don't have the money to keep you. We don't have the money to keep extending all these guys now, and they don't earn big paydays. We're just afraid to let marginal talent get out of here because it's a crap shoot to see if we can even replace marginal talent.
 

boozeman

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Norm had a great stat today.... he said while Jimmy was coach here we lost 25 players to free agency and signed 7. We simply did not extend age like we do now. Let Norton Jr., Larry Brown, Harper, etc. just walk. Sorry guys, don't have the money to keep you. We don't have the money to keep extending all these guys now, and they don't earn big paydays. We're just afraid to let marginal talent get out of here because it's a crap shoot to see if we can even replace marginal talent.

Norm Hitzges is a dumb ass.

Jimmy Johnson was here only during the infancy of free agency and was gone before it took over the game. Hell, nobody had figured it out yet then, especially Jerry and Stephen. Him being around had nothing to do with it. He was not the money side and never was.

Now, they can extend and fart around with the funny money all they want to, which allows them the opportunity to extend age.

Now I will agree with your last part. Yeah, they pay age because they know they are too stupid to draft to replace the talent they stumble over. So they pay it.

I mean was Miles Austin that MFing good that we had to do what we did with him? How about Spencer...was he truly elite? I won't even get into Ratliff, which was more like Jerry paying him out of guilt for paying him so little when he was a top DT.
 

dbair1967

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Norm had a great stat today.... he said while Jimmy was coach here we lost 25 players to free agency and signed 7. We simply did not extend age like we do now. Let Norton Jr., Larry Brown, Harper, etc. just walk. Sorry guys, don't have the money to keep you. We don't have the money to keep extending all these guys now, and they don't earn big paydays. We're just afraid to let marginal talent get out of here because it's a crap shoot to see if we can even replace marginal talent.

They tried hard to keep Norton, who was a huge loss. Norton reportedly left over something like 100k difference, which was ridiculous.

But we did lose the most players in the 90's to free agency. I think Pittsburgh was 2nd.
 
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Norm Hitzges is a dumb ass.

Jimmy Johnson was here only during the infancy of free agency and was gone before it took over the game. Hell, nobody had figured it out yet then, especially Jerry and Stephen. Him being around had nothing to do with it. He was not the money side and never was.

Now, they can extend and fart around with the funny money all they want to, which allows them the opportunity to extend age.

Now I will agree with your last part. Yeah, they pay age because they know they are too stupid to draft to replace the talent they stumble over. So they pay it.

I mean was Miles Austin that MFing good that we had to do what we did with him? How about Spencer...was he truly elite? I won't even get into Ratliff, which was more like Jerry paying him out of guilt for paying him so little when he was a top DT.



The thing with miles is people lost their minds. Hurr durr yards. Its the nfl records are broken left and right. Yards and stats are gonna occur. Evaluate the talent and find their appropriate value. Like we like Dwayne Harris but if he was a serious wr it would've happened and he's prob not worth the contract hell get
 

Jon88

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They tried hard to keep Norton, who was a huge loss. Norton reportedly left over something like 100k difference, which was ridiculous.

But we did lose the most players in the 90's to free agency. I think Pittsburgh was 2nd.

The 49ers lost a ton of players too.

The only enjoyment I get out of the Deion signing was that we stole him from the 49ers and killed their dynasty.
 

dbair1967

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The 49ers lost a ton of players too.

The only enjoyment I get out of the Deion signing was that we stole him from the 49ers and killed their dynasty.

I dont remember them losing alot of guys. I do remember them cheating like hell on the cap when it was first put in though, and they ended up signing half the probowl defense from 93 for what they said was "peanuts", including the most bogus contract in league history, Deion Sanders' 1yr deal for a reported 1 million. To this day, Deion supposedly wont talk about it or give out more details.
 

Jon88

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They lost quite a few guys after 1995. Their other good corner Eric Davis was in Carolina in 1996. After the they lost to Green Bay in the playoffs of 95 they were done.

I still say they would have beaten us in the playoffs had Green Bay not beaten them. They owned Switzer.
 
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