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Espn insider:do not cut deangelo williams


micnificent28

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Be more specific on the cap impications. This might be the thing the helps a club trade for him.

What happens if a player is traded or retires?

Answer: We already know that if a player is waived on or before June 1, the remaining signing bonus that has not been included in salary “accelerates” and is included in that year’s team salary. Acceleration also occurs when a player is traded or waived and picked up by another team. The new team is not responsible for any of the original signing bonus. The team that waived or traded the player is responsible for the accelerated signing bonus (in the same manner as described above).

In most cases, if a player retires, the remaining signing bonus that has not been included in salary “accelerates” and is included in that year’s team salary. Thus, the team will take an immediate salary cap hit of the remaining signing bonus.

http://www.spotrac.com/nfl/carolina-panthers/jonathan-stewart/

Stewart still has about 20 million guaranteed on his cap so the remaining balance of that would go against the cap. Which would be bad.

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Be more specific on the cap impications. This might be the thing the helps a club trade for him.

I am no cap genius by a long stretch of the imagination, but Stew's contract offers more value in that he is only guaranteed 23 mil over 5 years, with another 6 mil or so in bonuses depending on his production (all-purpose yards). Cutting Stew now would create a little more dead cap money (that must be paid) than D-Will's contract. Stew is the younger, stronger and faster back whose time is now, and when it comes time to resign him in five years, we can sign him to a reasonable contract in fitting with that time, or we let him go.

Someone who knows this stuff better, feel free to chime in.

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I wouldnt cut DeAngelo either unless we really had to. Seems like we can get rid of Gamble and Gross and will be under the cap. It all depends on how the draft goes and who Gettleman targets in free agency.

I love DeAngelo, but I wouldnt be opposed to releasing him if it means signing a safety or a #2 WR. Stewart and Tolbert could handle the backfield, but if this happens..Id pick up a scat back to go along with these 2.

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I am no cap genius by a long stretch of the imagination, but Stew's contract offers more value in that he is only guaranteed 23 mil over 5 years, with another 6 mil or so in bonuses depending on his production (all-purpose yards). Cutting Stew now would create a little more dead cap money (that must be paid) than D-Will's contract. Stew is the younger, stronger and faster back whose time is now, and when it comes time to resign him in five years, we can sign him to a reasonable contract in fitting with that time, or we let him go.

Someone who knows this stuff better, feel free to chime in.

I was not speaking of him retiring or being cut. Just looking at him from a trade standpoint.

What specifically would happen if someone wanted him in a trade?

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I was not speaking of him retiring or being cut. Just looking at him from a trade standpoint.

What specifically would happen if someone wanted him in a trade?

Same thing as him being cut, all guaranteed money would hit the cap. So it's really bad and his contract is horrible. It's such a bad contract it's funny.

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Same thing as him being cut, all guaranteed money would hit the cap. So it's really bad and his contract is horrible. It's such a bad contract it's funny.

It's not that bad, you just can't straight up trade him or cut him a year after he signs. It's like if you had a reasonable monthly loan payment and you decided "fug it" and tried to pay the whole thing off at once with credit cards. Which is pretty stupid.

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I was not speaking of him retiring or being cut. Just looking at him from a trade standpoint.

What specifically would happen if someone wanted him in a trade?

Well, I suppose in theory they could take over the responsibility if all sides agreed, but then we'd have no Stew and an aging D-Will. It's a gamble, but could work.

Same thing as him being cut, all guaranteed money would hit the cap. So it's really bad and his contract is horrible. It's such a bad contract it's funny.

I don't know how Stew for 5-6 mil a year is such a horrible contract. There are backs of his caliber getting much more.

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Before this season he missed two games in his entire career

Then he had both a high ankle and regular ankle sprain on the same play that essentially finished his season due to our record, I'm sure he would have been able to play had we been in the playoff hunt.

Don't get me wrong, I love Stewart. But the fact remains he has never had a season with us where there was not some nagging injury that he was dealing with. I just hate the thought of losing Deangelo. He has been an exemplary player and team mate, and having him in the queue with Stewart and Tolbert gives us a flexibility at the position that makes it easy to adjust to the injuries that seem to inevitably pop up.

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I don't think anyone would argue with keeping him if it was at the right price. But the sad truth is, he can probably get paid at least close to the salary he is getting now on a RB desperate team. Darkhorse team I see taking a run at him should he be cut....Atlanta.

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Well, I suppose in theory they could take over the responsibility if all sides agreed, but then we'd have no Stew and an aging D-Will. It's a gamble, but could work.

I don't know how Stew for 5-6 mil a year is such a horrible contract. There are backs of his caliber getting much more.

Other team cant take on the sb's and so forth just base salary.

Also as I said in my other post its how its setup. His deal is high. Paid as a top 10 rb. His deal is pretty bad.

http://m.nfl.com/news/0ap1000000051054/

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We need OL no doubt, but we still need every play maker we can keep!

My main problem is that since the contract it take DeAngelo 6 games to get into shape it seems.. He breaks zero tackles, accelerates slowly but then is a different guy toward the end. I just think he is a guy who naturally lays back too much and tou have to get on him early to get him to focus..hopefully(if he is on the roster) he does that from the start in 2013.

If we can keep DWill, I say keep him. He is still a homerun threat. You keep homerun threats. The team with the most/best playmakers usually wins.

And I do believe you are underestimating DWill. That's okay, most folks do. He is fast so folks don't see the power. Not run you over power. The power to run through arm tackles. The power to run away from hand grabs. The power to run up the middle and still break one off.

You need playmakers and DWill is still a playmaker.

And if quality RBs are so easy to find? Why are so many teams needing them? Everyone wants two, but most are lucky to have one.

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