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!

     

Our Cap Isn't In Good Shape For 2013


fieryprophet

Recommended Posts

Guest Tom Cat

We atleast have to look what teams are willing to pay for Gamble in a trade.. He very well could be our best trading item. One of the better CB with only 2 years left on his contract.

3/4 is not out of the picture and then we just have to hit a homerun in the draft.

Its a risky move, but we are cornered with all those shitty contracts.

You realize this is a 30 year old corner back in not the best of health right? What do you think we will get for him?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest Tom Cat

Its obvious that we have un necessary monetary baggage on this team - I think any cap guy worth his salt in conjunction with a gm and head coach will free up plenty of money to do what has to be done in the off season to improve this team

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest Tom Cat

The third round pick we lost. The big deal is the money we save not the pick we receive.

Im not argueing to keep him - I think we should dump him.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Name the year it was in "Good" shape.

Same story, same dance, same outcome. The more things change, the more they stay the same. We will be no worse than any other team in the league regarding salary cap.

Please tell me the story of team "X" in year "X" that because of salary cap issues sucked so bad that the team went out of business and all of their fans became John Kilgo groupies.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

FWIW Dallas and Philly are in cap hell too.

That Grantland article were it was speculated that the only rational reasoning for the contracts of 2010 was Hurney remaining the only person willing to have the GM job seems pretty damning now.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The Panthers aren't going to add any major free agents, but all they have to do is restructure a few contracts to be under the cap. Yes, it will push money into future years, but the cap is going to go up dramatically in 2014 when the new TV money kicks in.

Look at the contracts Mickey Loomis (and other GM's) have done with contracts. Especially Drew Brees- his cap hits escalate big time in 2014, when the cap is going up. You don't get to be an NFL GM by being stupid, regardless of what some mouth-breathing fans want to believe.

Marty Hurney may not have been a great personnel GM, but he came up through the ranks as a cap specialist. The Panthers have never "had" to cut anyone to get under the cap. They dumped players after 2009 to get dead weight off the books during the uncapped lock-out year. The cap hits were all taken during 2010 so they didn't affect future years. This was available to every team in the league to "get rid of money from past mistakes."

Where the Redskins and Cowboys screwed up (at least in the eyes of the other owners who thought it gave them an unfair advantage and broke an unspoken rule) was to use 2010 to pay extreme amounts of money to current players during that uncapped year and then still have a lot of money to spend going forward.

Watch the Redskins- they always sign free agents (and will find a way this year), and they have to take a $36M dollar hit imposed by the other owners over the next couple of years. The salary cap is made to be manipulated, and a GM and his staff is a lot better equipped to do that than an NFL blogger or fans.

I could personally care less- As a paying PSL owner, I expect Richardson to spend money. This article is sensationlistic. Come March 1st, there is nothing to worry about. I imagine a self-made billionaire is better at business than you, I, or Pat Yasinskas.

All of those players listed are going to be on the Panthers next year. The only exception could be Chris Gamble. It's fodder for January, nothing more. Even Yasinskas knows this

Link to comment
Share on other sites

There may be additional options. That article does not say how many millions will be saved by restructering Gross & Beasons contracts. Could it be 1 million each in savings or 4 million each? If closer to the latter then keeping Gamble may be possible. Hangman, Jason Williams, Armanti & Graham Gano could all be released & that would free up another 3-4 million combined. In the end I think Gamble is still gone which I hate.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Cutting Gamble is a no-brainer. Saving so much money on one player who did not see the field much this year makes it likely to happen. Combine that with the solid play of our younger corners, and Gamble is as good as gone.

Combine that with the solid play of our younger corners, and Gamble is as good as gone.

Combine that with the solid play of our younger corners

the solid play of our younger corners

Josh Norman showed that he might, might, have what it takes to start in this league, but all Josh Thomas showed was that he can consistently get beat. Not saying we keep Gamble, who is getting older, on his massive contract, but we either need to: 1. restructure Gamble, 2. draft a stud CB by at least the 4th, or 3. Sign a FA CB.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Archived

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


×
×
  • Create New...