WarEagle wrote:
jdavidbakr wrote:
WarEagle wrote:
On the team home page where it says "Cap Used Next Year", does that figure include "Dead Cap Next Year", or is it in addition?
Thanks
There is no intersection between the two - "Cap Used Next Year" only refers to players currently on your team and "Dead Cap Next Year" only refers to players no longer on your team.
So, if the Cap next year was $130 M, and I have Cap Used Next Year of $115 M and Dead Cap Next Year of $15 M, in actuality I have NO cap room next year.
Correct?
That would be correct, you will need to probably do some renegotiation to see if you can lower your cap numbers for your current players if you need to sign more or don't have enough room for your draft picks. The cap increases at a rate of 5% per year if you want to know what the cap will be for the next year. If you are in cap trouble you don't have to carry a full 53-man roster, I think the minimum is 47 (might be 46, I don't recall off the top of my head, the warnings will let you know if you're too low) which can become a challenge with injuries but if you need a season to get your dead cap load off that's one way to do it.
I always look at my roster in early FA and sort by "save if release" - starting at the highest value - to see if any of them will renegotiate. The "save if release" is essentially the amount of the cap that they are using that is not guaranteed, so if you were to cut them that's how much the cap would open, but often times those players will take a pay cut especially if their ratings have declined at all. If you have lots of big bonus contracts, then it can be easy to paint yourself into a corner where it may take a few seasons to get your cap stabilized - those big bonuses can increase your chances of landing a player but if you trade them, cut them, or they retire, you may have to pay the piper.