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An uncapped year....


Kevin Greene

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Also means there is no floor on what teams must spend. What if the Panthers don't re-up Peppers and just decide to pocket $20 million next year.

And what about notoriously cheap teams like Cincinnati?

This could be the most frugal off season in years as opposed to wild spending. Well, except in Big D and DC.

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Also means there is no floor on what teams must spend. What if the Panthers don't re-up Peppers and just decide to pocket $20 million next year.

And what about notoriously cheap teams like Cincinnati?

This could be the most frugal off season in years as opposed to wild spending. Well, except in Big D and DC.

Add teams like Tampa, Buffalo and anyone else hurting in this economy. That is a big reason that the uncapped year won't be a big bonanza for players as they originally thought.

There are several teams that will likely trim payroll. I don't know if we will be one of them.

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I think we can assume the Jags fall in the lower cap number bracket in 2010:

Jags cut ticket prices

Posted by Mike Florio on January 12, 2010 12:35 PM ET

In an effort to reduce the number of blackouts from nine, the Jacksonville Jaguars have cut ticket prices for 2010.

Per the Associated Press, two sections in the upper deck (the non-tarped sections, we assume) will have season tickets reduced by $90, which equates to $9 per game, assuming eight regular-season games and two preseason games.

Four sections in the lower bowl will have season tickets cut by $100, and two club sections (which don't count toward the blackout determination) will see a $300 drop.

Though it remains to be seen whether the price cuts result in greater ticket sales, basic concepts of economics like "supply" and "demand" make this change long overdue.

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