Heard this today on the NFL channel (88) on xm radio. The competition committee is recommending that compensation picks become tradeable starting in 2016 draft. Owners/league expected to approve.
This will create a flow of cash so wheelers and dealers like Ozzie Newsome can go out and buy a roster.conspiracy theory - this is Goodell's way to help Kraft get his picks back.
I think it devalues the ability to award a team for losing a FA starter. But if your FO is superior, and you can utilize that pick to move up and grab a blue chip, it may not be a bad idea. I just hope we don't trade back and take another team's 3rd comp pick...
Get rid of comp picks completely.
This will create a flow of cash so wheelers and dealers like Ozzie Newsome can go out and buy a roster.
Why? That would add fuel to free agency and the Steelers tend to be poachees and not poachers.
Because the best you can get is something at the bottom of the 3rd. It makes no sense to me that you get picks for losing a player. What sense does that make. A better system would be to give you a credit to your salary cap based on the contract signed. I'd also like to see teams get a salary cap discount when they keep a long term player. Had a guy for 7-8 years? When you sign him to a new contract you don't take the full capost hit.
The problem with that is you're creating a soft cap and increasing salary expenditures. Comp picks are meant to offset the overall impact of FA losses and maintain competitive balance.
Not sure how increasing salary expenditures is a "problem" other than to a few rich owners, and the owner doesn't have to retain the player and increase his expenditure.
No it would be a problem to the small market owners (Steelers) as Daniel Snyder would get a cap break retaining his own players, and therefor have more cap space to poach other teams.
I think you are assuming a lot about what the cap break would be. If the comp pick would have been a 6th or 7th rounder, what kind of cap break would you expect. I'd assume pretty small, but it might be enough to help you retain a good back up instead of a, mostly, useless late pick.
It would allow small market teams to retain longer term players with smaller cap impacts and be able to compete better with Snyder and Jones.
No it would be a problem to the small market owners (Steelers) as Daniel Snyder would get a cap break retaining his own players, and therefor have more cap space to poach other teams.
They also do not own the team outright as there is deep pocket investors...Trust me the Rooney family makes plenty of money, the Steelers make them boatloads...they aren't hurting for cash and would be able to retain their players with a soft cap. The Steelers are always right up against the current cap and yet still make very significant profits. If the goal is to cry poor maybe a team like the Jaguars would get "poached" more frequently, but name the NFL teams that are losing money and those would be the ones with beef against a soft cap...are there any?
Just did some quick research and the last team I could find that operated at a loss was the 2012 Lions who lost 3.5 million, but had just massively invested in Ford field to the tune of 350 million. With the 226 million and change from just shared TV revenue I think teams could afford to retain desired players. Having a soft cap would help with players staying put in most situations if the team desired to keep them as they would be able to pay the say bonus 10-20% which poachers could not match.
Trust me the Rooney family makes plenty of money, the Steelers make them boatloads...they aren't hurting for cash and would be able to retain their players with a soft cap. The Steelers are always right up against the current cap and yet still make very significant profits. If the goal is to cry poor maybe a team like the Jaguars would get "poached" more frequently, but name the NFL teams that are losing money and those would be the ones with beef against a soft cap...are there any?
Just did some quick research and the last team I could find that operated at a loss was the 2012 Lions who lost 3.5 million, but had just massively invested in Ford field to the tune of 350 million. With the 226 million and change from just shared TV revenue I think teams could afford to retain desired players. Having a soft cap would help with players staying put in most situations if the team desired to keep them as they would be able to pay the say bonus 10-20% which poachers could not match.
They also do not own the team outright as there is deep pocket investors...
this team can spend as much as the cap allows...
I'm assuming the salary of the long term player would be more than that of the comp pick. I don't think that's a stretch.
I don't understand how a soft cap could possibly benefit a small market team more than a hard cap.
Trust me the Rooney family makes plenty of money, the Steelers make them boatloads...they aren't hurting for cash and would be able to retain their players with a soft cap. The Steelers are always right up against the current cap and yet still make very significant profits. If the goal is to cry poor maybe a team like the Jaguars would get "poached" more frequently, but name the NFL teams that are losing money and those would be the ones with beef against a soft cap...are there any?
Just did some quick research and the last team I could find that operated at a loss was the 2012 Lions who lost 3.5 million, but had just massively invested in Ford field to the tune of 350 million. With the 226 million and change from just shared TV revenue I think teams could afford to retain desired players. Having a soft cap would help with players staying put in most situations if the team desired to keep them as they would be able to pay the say bonus 10-20% which poachers could not match.
I'm not sure how the first sentence relates to what I said. Of course, the long term players salary would be higher. Do you think the discount to the salary cap would be the full salary? Why would you think that when the comp pic lk would be, at best, a very late 3rd rounder? I'd expect the discount would be pretty modest.
As a wild example, let's say it is $1m. Now, the small market team can offer a second contact worth $9m per year, but only take a $8m cap hit. Would the player go to redskins for $9m if they could stay with the same team? I would guess not. How much more Snyder have to offer the player to leave?
The Steelers are the Rooney's livelihood, Daniel Snyder and Jerry Jones bought themselves a hobby with money from their existing fortunes. You're confusing NFL profits with the wealth of NFL owners.
The cap is a mechanism for keeping the (relatively) poor teams competitive with the wealthy teams. What your are arguing is that by allowing (all) teams a way to circumvent that mechanism, you would help the poor teams. That doesn't make sense.