Why backloading contracts is a significant advantage! Same $230m but you can save 12.7% on the cap based on structure 4 scenarios in photo: - Cash = Cap - No more restructures - Restructure it all - Restructures, dummy year, post June 1st Read more: 247sports.com/nfl/cleveland-…
@JackDuffin This presumably means he's due a new contract in the 2028 season, which would then push that number way up, right? Unless we're just moving on at that point.
@JackDuffin Hey jack. Why does the second year always have a higher cap hit after the post Kune 1st cut? Why isn't the first year higher or it isn't split equally?
@JackDuffin This is such a bad strategy when not done strategically, as we’ve seen with the Saints. It’s a big boost when doing it during your SB window. Last year was the best chance and they weren’t close. Now it gets harder each year… could be spending 10-15% on a guy not on the team.
@JackDuffin It makes sense. You're losing some of the advantage of the growing cap number down the road, but if you continue to do this indefinitely you will in theory always have more spending power than those who do not follow this strategy. That is, assuming another 2020 doesn't happen