Jump to content
  • Welcome!

    Register and log in easily with Twitter or Google accounts!

    Or simply create a new Huddle account. 

    Members receive fewer ads , access our dark theme, and the ability to join the discussion!

     

Jake Delhomme WON'T be earning almost $20 mil next season.


Rhys

Recommended Posts

Delhomme has no offset in his Panthers contract. He'll receive the entire amount owed by the Panthers ($12.68 million), no matter what he might receive from the Browns.

http://www.fannation.com/truth_and_rumors/view/167270-another-windfall-coming-for-delhomme

same thing in this one...

http://sports.yahoo.com/nfl/blog/shutdown_corner/post/Browns-sign-Delhomme-to-a-two-year-contract?urn=nfl,227807

20 mil.

wow.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2010/03/14/the-real-story-on-the-delhomme-deal/

As it turns out, Panthers owner Jerry Richardson shouldn't send Browns owner Randy Lerner a ham.

But Richardson also shouldn't send G.M. Marty Hurney a dead fish.

When we saw last night that the Browns had signed quarterback Jake Delhomme to a contract that will pay him $7 million in 2010, we assumed that Hurney had protected the franchise for which he works by ensuring that an offset would apply as to any money Delhomme earns elsewhere this year. When we thereafter saw that Delhomme possibly gets to double dip, earning nearly $20 million in 2010, we assumed that Hurney had committed an apparent blunder even more egregious than, say, understanding that a cap hit still applies to players cut before the start of the uncapped year.

Annnnnnd that's why they're called assumptions.

We've spoken with Delhomme's agent, Rick Smith. (It was what other media types would call an "exclusive" interview, if only because Smith was talking "exclusively" to us at that specific time.) And Smith explained to us in detail the realities of the deal.

Smith said that Delhomme's 2009 contract extension included $12.7 million in guaranteed money due and payable in future years as an alternative to a large signing bonus earned at the time the deal was finalized. The Panthers were facing serious cap issues last year, given the franchise tag applied to defensive end Julius Peppers and long-term deal given to tackle Jordan Gross as the Panthers faced the possibility of letting Peppers or Gross hit the open market due to the availability of only one franchise tag.

So the present and future guarantees of $12.7 million were part of a $19 million signing bonus on a five-year deal -- numbers that aren't all that out of line given the overall quarterback market. Smith worked with the Panthers to structure the deal in a manner that gave the team maximum cap space in 2009, and that ensured Delhomme would definitely get the money, in the same way he would have definitely gotten the money if he had received a $19 million signing bonus in 2009 with payments deferred into future years.

The concept is simple. With teams using exotic structures to save cap space, the players should not be penalized for cooperating.

Thus, the contract was negotiated to simulate a $19 million signing bonus. Hurney and Smith intentionally placed the guarantees into future years, and they intentionally added and omitted terms aimed at ensuring that the money will be paid. For example, the contract guaranteed the future payments for injury, skill, and cap, unlike the Julius Peppers deal. And the contract did not include a term allowing the Panthers to derive an offset based on the money he makes elsewhere in 2010 or beyond.

So that's the story. And it's honorable, in our view, for Smith to take the high road by publicly defending Hurney's role in the process. Though the Panthers fairly can be criticized for giving Delhomme what amounted to a $19 million signing bonus on a five-year deal only weeks after he coughed up six turnovers in a playoff game the Panthers were supposed to win, the $12.7 million that Delhomme will make from the Panthers in 2010 is money that, but for cap issues in Carolina, Delhomme would have earned upon signing the deal in 2009.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Thats pretty much what DGantt said last week. The Panthers felt like Jake was underpaid in his early years and performed very well. This deal was a make up deal of sorts to get Jake what they felt he had earned previously.

Any way you cut it Jake gets all his money.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Now that Jakes Carolina Panthers contract is being devulged,Hurney and company gave him a contract that was even worse on their part from a business standpoint than we first realized.

Seems as if "Dumb and Dumber" worked up Jakes contract for the Panthers.

And some people wonder why the fans have little faith and a lack of doubt in the Panthers front office procedures.What a bunch of dumb azzes!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.


  • PMH4OWPW7JD2TDGWZKTOYL2T3E.jpg

  • Topics

  • Posts

    • Tetairoa McMillan.   The last 28 1st overall picks were either a QB, DE, or OT. Seeing as I don't think we'd take an OT in the 1st and give up on Ickey as an LT yet and there doesn't seem to be a clear overall #1 type of QB or DE pick this year, it very well could be a non conventional #1 overall this year, at least in regards from the last almost 3 decades of drafts. If we didn't have Horn, I'd be more open to Hunter as a CB at #1, but we have him so another CB wouldn't be how I'd use a #1 pick.  And as much as I love Legette, if we have SB contending aspirations, I don't think Legette is a #1 on a team like that, but he damn sure is an elite #2 on a team like that.  He's more of the Smith/Higgins/Waddle to Brown/Chase/Hill (in terms of role/impact, not style of play of course). T-Mac is going to be the top ranked WR on every team's board in the end.  He is going to be a true outside #1 WR who is viewed as a consensus Top 5 WR in the game by his second contract in the same way guys like Jefferson and Chase have done.  His height combined with his speed, athleticism, and hands are near impossible to find all in one player, there is a reason his generally used comp is Mike Evans (although as he's not as thick, I personally see him more as an AJ Green). Yes, as an Arizona alum I've admitted to having bias towards the player to begin with.  But he's also someone very widely being put into the Top 5 in mock drafts lately and most of them have him as the first non QB offensive player being taken, so it's not really THAT much of a homer pick on my part anyways. If a QB or DE truly separate themselves as being a can't miss prospect come draft day, I'm open to that discussion, but until then, or if it doesn't happen, T-Mac is my pick 100 times out of 100.
    • Logjam, indeed! Makes me nervous.
×
×
  • Create New...