Hoofbite
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Just something that kind of came up at random and I'm not sure if the numbers at Spotrac are right or if I understand what a "cash floor" actually means but if Spotrac is anywhere close and a "cash floor" is what it sounds like, Dallas could be in for an aspect of salary cap hell that nobody has even mentioned yet.
For the years 2013 to 2016 (then from 2017 to 2020) teams will have to spend 89% of the total cap dollars in cash paid as base salaries, roster bonus, workout bonus and signing bonuses with signing bonuses likely only counting for the year the contract was signed.
If you think of a simple equation: A + B = $125M
Any increase in prorated bonus money will reduce the amount paid as base salary for that season. Pretty simple. You have a set cap number and if you have lots of fake money on it, you can't actually spend real money.
So here's the thought:
If Dallas is constantly loading bonus money onto future years and reducing their amount of actual cash that can be spent for that year, is there a point at which Dallas fucks itself and can no longer become cap compliant simply because they cannot spend enough REAL CASH to meet that cash floor?
If you look at Spotrac,
http://www.spotrac.com/nfl/dallas-cowboys/cap-hit/
Dallas has only $49.5M in base salary money that they are paying out. They have $4.9M going to injured reserve and another 800K going to the practice squad. (The numbers are weird because Spencer is on IR and he should double their slotted IR money. Maybe that severance money or some shit. I added all the active players and IR players up and they come out to $54.5M)
That totals $54.5M in cash spending. They signed Romo and gave him $25M in bonus money up front. They signed Lee and gave him $10M in bonus money up front.
That's $89.5M in cash spending for this season, which totals 72.7% of the cash floor. ($19.9M under the cutoff for 89%)
Next year they have about $26M in signing bonus money on the cap, $16.6M in "other bonus" money which is basically all the restructuring they have done, and they have $11M in dead money.
If the cap is $125M that would leave their current "free cash" to spend at about $71M.....which is like 57%. ($40.5M under the 89% cut off)
That would leave only the 2015 and 2016 seasons for Dallas to meet the 89% cutoff and then cover an additional $60M in cash spending that they did not meet for this year and 2014.
Restructuring does nothing to solve this problem because base salaries would have been paid and counted anyway. The only real way you can cut down on that problem is if you were to sign a big name free agent and give him a huge signing bonus that you can spread over the next 4-5 years. Problem is, that's just eating into future "free cash" and you can't possibly get a blockbuster free agent every single year just to get you cap compliant with the cash floor.
In 2015 they currently have $33.5M in various bonuses and a projected cap of $127M puts them at 73.6%.
In 2016 they currently have $20M in carious bonuses and a projected cap of $130M puts them at 84.6%.
Bonus money for 2015 and 2016 will increase with Dez and Tyron signing which will probably lower their cash spending by a total of $5M to $6M for each year.
And the best part........people at CZ are STILL talking about a massive restructuring offseason in 2014.
How is Dallas ever going to meet that cash floor when their bonus money as it stands right now is already greater than the 11% of the cap every single year?
What's the penalty going to be for this shit? Draft picks?
So the team will not only have limited ability to even acquire FAs simply because they have to restructure every single year just to get under the cap ceiling but is there actually a possibility that the team loses fucking draft picks because they won't be spending enough real cash for the 4 year period, let alone in any single season?
I gotta think about this some more. These numbers can't actually be correct or the definition of "cash floor" is much different than it sounds.
For the years 2013 to 2016 (then from 2017 to 2020) teams will have to spend 89% of the total cap dollars in cash paid as base salaries, roster bonus, workout bonus and signing bonuses with signing bonuses likely only counting for the year the contract was signed.
If you think of a simple equation: A + B = $125M
A = Base Salary
B = Prorated Bonus
Any increase in prorated bonus money will reduce the amount paid as base salary for that season. Pretty simple. You have a set cap number and if you have lots of fake money on it, you can't actually spend real money.
So here's the thought:
If Dallas is constantly loading bonus money onto future years and reducing their amount of actual cash that can be spent for that year, is there a point at which Dallas fucks itself and can no longer become cap compliant simply because they cannot spend enough REAL CASH to meet that cash floor?
If you look at Spotrac,
http://www.spotrac.com/nfl/dallas-cowboys/cap-hit/
Dallas has only $49.5M in base salary money that they are paying out. They have $4.9M going to injured reserve and another 800K going to the practice squad. (The numbers are weird because Spencer is on IR and he should double their slotted IR money. Maybe that severance money or some shit. I added all the active players and IR players up and they come out to $54.5M)
That totals $54.5M in cash spending. They signed Romo and gave him $25M in bonus money up front. They signed Lee and gave him $10M in bonus money up front.
That's $89.5M in cash spending for this season, which totals 72.7% of the cash floor. ($19.9M under the cutoff for 89%)
Next year they have about $26M in signing bonus money on the cap, $16.6M in "other bonus" money which is basically all the restructuring they have done, and they have $11M in dead money.
If the cap is $125M that would leave their current "free cash" to spend at about $71M.....which is like 57%. ($40.5M under the 89% cut off)
That would leave only the 2015 and 2016 seasons for Dallas to meet the 89% cutoff and then cover an additional $60M in cash spending that they did not meet for this year and 2014.
Restructuring does nothing to solve this problem because base salaries would have been paid and counted anyway. The only real way you can cut down on that problem is if you were to sign a big name free agent and give him a huge signing bonus that you can spread over the next 4-5 years. Problem is, that's just eating into future "free cash" and you can't possibly get a blockbuster free agent every single year just to get you cap compliant with the cash floor.
In 2015 they currently have $33.5M in various bonuses and a projected cap of $127M puts them at 73.6%.
In 2016 they currently have $20M in carious bonuses and a projected cap of $130M puts them at 84.6%.
Bonus money for 2015 and 2016 will increase with Dez and Tyron signing which will probably lower their cash spending by a total of $5M to $6M for each year.
And the best part........people at CZ are STILL talking about a massive restructuring offseason in 2014.
How is Dallas ever going to meet that cash floor when their bonus money as it stands right now is already greater than the 11% of the cap every single year?
What's the penalty going to be for this shit? Draft picks?
So the team will not only have limited ability to even acquire FAs simply because they have to restructure every single year just to get under the cap ceiling but is there actually a possibility that the team loses fucking draft picks because they won't be spending enough real cash for the 4 year period, let alone in any single season?
I gotta think about this some more. These numbers can't actually be correct or the definition of "cash floor" is much different than it sounds.