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View Full Version : Was the last CBA really so bad for the players?



Patler
03-20-2014, 05:10 AM
A lot has been made of the players being taken to the cleaners by the owners in the last CBA, in part because from a highest ever salary cap of $127.997 million in 2009, the subsequent caps have been:

2011 - $120.375 million
2012 - $120.6 million
2013 - $123 million.

But now, 2014 has been set at $133 million, and internally the league offices are said to be projecting that 2015 will exceed $140 million and in 2016 it will surpass $150 million.

Looks like the spigot leading to the players' money trough has been re-opened.

run pMc
03-20-2014, 08:01 AM
Promising news for re-signing Cobb/Nelson.
I think this will result in a new round of record QB contracts and do little to help most free agents and RBs. The vet minimum will continue to be commonly offered.

mraynrand
03-20-2014, 08:08 AM
When a pathetic excuse for a football player like Marshmallow Outhouse can make 2.6 million in four years of soul-killing horrible play (1.3 mil in 2013 alone), the players have nothing to complain about...except that a worthless hunk of meat like Outhouse is grossly overpaid. The hotdog vendor should get more - at least that guy keeps a player like Ezra Johnson happy in the preseason.

mraynrand
03-20-2014, 08:09 AM
Promising news for re-signing Cobb/Nelson.
I think this will result in a new round of record QB contracts and do little to help most free agents and RBs. The vet minimum will continue to be commonly offered.


More likely it will create general dissatisfaction and hold-outs, as guys getting contracts now will dramatically top contracts of far better players signed in the last year or two!

Patler
03-20-2014, 08:40 AM
When a pathetic excuse for a football player like Marshmallow Outhouse can make 2.6 million in four years of soul-killing horrible play (1.3 mil in 2013 alone), the players have nothing to complain about...except that a worthless hunk of meat like Outhouse is grossly overpaid. The hotdog vendor should get more - at least that guy keeps a player like Ezra Johnson happy in the preseason.

Newhouse received the significant bump in 2013 income due to achieving playing time requirements in 2011 and 2012. Like it or not, he was the starter during those years, and logged a heck of a lot of playing time. Perhaps he wasn't as good as fans wanted, but apparently during those years he was better than any alternatives on the roster.

He filled the job and was paid because of it.

3irty1
03-20-2014, 09:03 AM
It's certainly a lot worse for players on rookie contracts. I think its underestimated what contrast of an always cheap 5 year contract in the first round does to the market for NFL talent as well. By that I mean when a top 5 pick represented a very significant risk, free agency looked a LOT more attractive as a way to gather high profile talent.

Kiwon
03-20-2014, 09:11 AM
A lot has been made of the players being taken to the cleaners by the owners in the last CBA.....

Those poor dears. Where are the cleaners located - Zurich or Dubai?

KYPack
03-20-2014, 09:23 AM
The money is there in the new contract, but I still think D Smith did a shit job for the players in one aspect. The NFLPA failed to rid themselves of the tags. That was the big line in the sand, the tags were going to be history. When it got down to the settling of the deal, Smith fell on his sword and BOTH tags survived in the new deal. In fact, the transition tag was used several times this off-season. That was a point that could have been compromised and the owner totally got their way on that one.

This negotiation had a weird focus, too. Both the owners and the players united on getting the "windfall rookie" contract eliminated. Those crazy rookie deals were bullshit, but I think the NFLPA mgt team focused way too much on them. It looks like the pendulum swung too much the other way and now you have 2nd and 3rd year players that are way underpaid in their deals.

pbmax
03-20-2014, 09:32 AM
Previous CBA: 52.? % of Total Revenues
Current CBA: 47-48% of Total Revenues

Cleaners, meet the players.

The totals mean nothing. Their percentage of the increased revenue is the important marker. You could say this: I do believe they went to a tiered system to determine which revenues would count toward calculation, so the bigger TV deals could swing the percentage higher. However, it was designed to keep the player revenue total below 49% for the life of the deal.

Feel sorry for them? Nope.

Did they get routed? Yep.

Especially after the concussion settlement, at worst, was in line with some estimates and at its best, beat most estimates of cost.

pbmax
03-20-2014, 09:33 AM
The money is there in the new contract, but I still think D Smith did a shit job for the players in one aspect. The NFLPA failed to rid themselves of the tags. That was the big line in the sand, the tags were going to be history. When it got down to the settling of the deal, Smith fell on his sword and BOTH tags survived in the new deal. In fact, the transition tag was used several times this off-season. That was a point that could have been compromised and the owner totally got their way on that one.

This negotiation had a weird focus, too. Both the owners and the players united on getting the "windfall rookie" contract eliminated. Those crazy rookie deals were bullshit, but I think the NFLPA mgt team focused way too much on them. It looks like the pendulum swung too much the other way and now you have 2nd and 3rd year players that are way underpaid in their deals.

That was the part that would gall me as a player. Other than less workouts and padded practices, they got little in return. Goodell still has no independent review of his Personal Conduct Polucy decisions either. I would be surprised if Smith survives.

denverYooper
03-20-2014, 09:53 AM
Those poor dears. Where are the cleaners located - Zurich or Dubai?

Hilarious.

bobblehead
03-20-2014, 12:13 PM
Previous CBA: 52.? % of Total Revenues
Current CBA: 47-48% of Total Revenues

Cleaners, meet the players.

The totals mean nothing. Their percentage of the increased revenue is the important marker. You could say this: I do believe they went to a tiered system to determine which revenues would count toward calculation, so the bigger TV deals could swing the percentage higher. However, it was designed to keep the player revenue total below 49% for the life of the deal.

Feel sorry for them? Nope.

Did they get routed? Yep.

Especially after the concussion settlement, at worst, was in line with some estimates and at its best, beat most estimates of cost.

The union did what a union does. They represented their own survival. They got a few meaningless concessions like less offseason mandatory (allowable) work. Less contact in practices. They tried to sell a loss as a win, and survived to collect more player wages.

bobblehead
03-20-2014, 12:14 PM
That was the part that would gall me as a player. Other than less workouts and padded practices, they got little in return. Goodell still has no independent review of his Personal Conduct Polucy decisions either. I would be surprised if Smith survives.

Hmmm...should have read one post farther.

KYPack
03-20-2014, 12:57 PM
There is another aspect that is still playing out. Some of these guys are now going into their 3rd year with the new deal. They are teammates with guys that helped hose them with the smaller rookie deals. Admittedly, a guy like Sam Bradford got crazy money with the last of the rookie windfall deals. But some guys now have to play 3 and 4 years to get the money commensurate with their production.

There has to be some animosity towards the vet players that really helped the ownership sell them down the old river. The old rookie deals had to go, but the new method is just as goofy in the other direction.

Fritz
03-20-2014, 01:27 PM
There is another aspect that is still playing out. Some of these guys are now going into their 3rd year with the new deal. They are teammates with guys that helped hose them with the smaller rookie deals. Admittedly, a guy like Sam Bradford got crazy money with the last of the rookie windfall deals. But some guys now have to play 3 and 4 years to get the money commensurate with their production.

There has to be some animosity towards the vet players that really helped the ownership sell them down the old river. The old rookie deals had to go, but the new method is just as goofy in the other direction.

In that regard, it's no different than what's happened with a lot of unions the past twenty years: sell out the younger workers at the insistence of ownership, which holds all the cards these days and demands "savings."

The zeitgeist of this country right now is such that unions have no cards to play, and ownership holds all the trump cards.

See Irsay, Jim, regarding what Goodell won't do about his recent arrest. That's just one example.

mraynrand
03-20-2014, 01:37 PM
Newhouse received the significant bump in 2013 income due to achieving playing time requirements in 2011 and 2012. Like it or not, he was the starter during those years, and logged a heck of a lot of playing time. Perhaps he wasn't as good as fans wanted, but apparently during those years he was better than any alternatives on the roster.

He filled the job and was paid because of it.

So what? So he 'filled the job' and got paid? Good for him, at least he's somewhat adept at gaming the system. I would hope he's good at something. He's a lousy player and made 2.6 mil for it. There's a crapload of money to be made in the NFL, and a lot of guys are scoring for doing not so much, including owners, agents, announcers (I'm talking about you Matt Millen), and pathetic excuses for football players like Newhouse.

Entertainment industry is flooded with cash, and that means some really poor performers are making way more than they should. Madonna gets millions to screech for an hour an a half, and then gets paid even more to 'sing' on stage and record albums.

Guiness
03-20-2014, 04:42 PM
Previous CBA: 52.? % of Total Revenues
Current CBA: 47-48% of Total Revenues

Cleaners, meet the players.

The totals mean nothing. Their percentage of the increased revenue is the important marker. You could say this: I do believe they went to a tiered system to determine which revenues would count toward calculation, so the bigger TV deals could swing the percentage higher. However, it was designed to keep the player revenue total below 49% for the life of the deal.

Feel sorry for them? Nope.

Did they get routed? Yep.

Especially after the concussion settlement, at worst, was in line with some estimates and at its best, beat most estimates of cost.

I agree with you on this one.

The players are getting a smaller piece of the pie. More than they were getting, but less than they would have under the old deal. It's not like overall revenues went up because of the new CBA, they probably increased by the same amount as they would've regardless.

Guiness
03-20-2014, 04:44 PM
Entertainment industry is flooded with cash, and that means some really poor performers are making way more than they should. Madonna gets millions to screech for an hour an a half, and then gets paid even more to 'sing' on stage and record albums.

Maybe, but MIA is getting sued $16million for their 2 minutes on stage with her
http://abcnews.go.com/Entertainment/nfl-suing-singer-mia-16-million/story?id=22968420

mraynrand
03-20-2014, 05:12 PM
Maybe, but MIA is getting sued $16million for their 2 minutes on stage with her
http://abcnews.go.com/Entertainment/nfl-suing-singer-mia-16-million/story?id=22968420

The NFL should have Kidd Kidd do the next halftime show - and then they could make 32 mil.

http://i1.sndcdn.com/artworks-000065123321-qvlhj0-original.jpg?435a760

Patler
03-20-2014, 08:22 PM
The players did well in a couple aspects; minimum salaries went up immediately by $50K, and that covers about half the players in the league. So, while the top rounds of the draft may have lost money, the bulk of the rookies and younger players generally got very good raises. Even quite a few older vets got raiases.

Secondly, the minimum cash spend went up significantly. Prevents some teams from gaming the system.

A change in the % # is relatively meaningless without a detailed analysis of what it is applied to, and how quickly that might now grow. If the new revenue split enables the owners to increase revenues more quickly, the players might end up with a smaller percentage of a much bigger pie, and end up with a larger $ amount in their pockets.

Guiness
03-20-2014, 10:49 PM
The players did well in a couple aspects; minimum salaries went up immediately by $50K, and that covers about half the players in the league. So, while the top rounds of the draft may have lost money, the bulk of the rookies and younger players generally got very good raises. Even quite a few older vets got raiases.

Secondly, the minimum cash spend went up significantly. Prevents some teams from gaming the system.

A change in the % # is relatively meaningless without a detailed analysis of what it is applied to, and how quickly that might now grow. If the new revenue split enables the owners to increase revenues more quickly, the players might end up with a smaller percentage of a much bigger pie, and end up with a larger $ amount in their pockets.

True that you have to look at what it is applied to. I think the players got a larger % of the TV money and gave up a % of a team's local revenues? So it depends on where the areas of growth are.

As far as the minimum spent, I'm not sure we've seen that in play yet. As pointed out, it doesn't apply to a given year, but over several (5?) years. The Bills and Browns were quite a bit under in 2013. Buccaneers and Chargers reportedly $10M under. Supposedly they have to make it up in later years? If the cap continues to climb, spending $10M in 4 or 5 years is not the same as spending it now.

Also worth watching will be what happens when the first wave of players from the 2011 draft as the rookie contracts as they come up. Not the first rounders that aren't busts, but the mid-rounders. Do they see their second contract, or are the new crop of cheaper rookies ever more attractive?

aside: I was looking a Carolina's 2011 draft. The only player they have left is Newton, all the others were released! Their other picks are with, in order, Cowboys, Broncos, out of league, out of league, Bears, Orlando Predators and Colts! Sweet Jesus, and we complain about some of the Packers poor picks!

Noodle
03-20-2014, 11:01 PM
Previous CBA: 52.? % of Total Revenues
Current CBA: 47-48% of Total Revenues


Given the no-risk proposition that is an NFL franchise for an owner, I have always found it hard to understand why the players should receive anything less than 50% of revenues. If just for symbolic reasons, it should be no less than players 50.1, owners 49.9.

The pool of money is what it is. Would you rather see the money going to guys like Dan Snyder, Jerry Jones, Malcolm Glazer, Bob Kraft, and Jim Irsay (average period of all NFL owners is north of 20 years), or the players with their average career-span of 6 to 7 years?

smuggler
03-20-2014, 11:42 PM
Depends. Some owners actually contribute to society and charity. Most players do not. Would be nice if it were Players 45, Owners 45, Charity 10 though

denverYooper
03-21-2014, 10:14 AM
Depends. Some owners actually contribute to society and charity. Most players do not. Would be nice if it were Players 45, Owners 45, Charity 10 though


That's some fuzzy math.

Some is not exclusive of many.
Many is not exclusive of some.
Most is a different kettle of fish.

You could also say that "some" players contribute to charity and society or that "many" players do so, and even that "many" more players than owners contribute. Woodson and Rodgers are prime examples of the "some", or even the "many", depending on how you slice that one.

I'd be willing to bet that proportionately more owners contribute to "charity" and "society" and that it is "often" more a function of better wealth management than most players.

smuggler
03-21-2014, 11:49 PM
That's what I was getting at. In that vein, from an outsider's perspective, it might be better if the owners won in the CBA. But I admit it's pretty damn vague.

woodbuck27
03-22-2014, 05:57 AM
The players did well in a couple aspects; minimum salaries went up immediately by $50K, and that covers about half the players in the league. So, while the top rounds of the draft may have lost money, the bulk of the rookies and younger players generally got very good raises. Even quite a few older vets got raiases.

Secondly, the minimum cash spend went up significantly. Prevents some teams from gaming the system.

A change in the % # is relatively meaningless without a detailed analysis of what it is applied to, and how quickly that might now grow. If the new revenue split enables the owners to increase revenues more quickly, the players might end up with a smaller percentage of a much bigger pie, and end up with a larger $ amount in their pockets.

Did anyone here ever receive a $50 K$ raise in any year of their career?

Ok then ..... put it into a proper perspective.

NFL players suffering? They are if they cannot bank their money or use the windfall from playing days for their future.

Look at the divorce rate for retired NFL players; that's telling.

mraynrand
03-22-2014, 08:01 AM
That's some fuzzy math.

Some is not exclusive of many.
Many is not exclusive of some.
Most is a different kettle of fish.

You could also say that "some" players contribute to charity and society or that "many" players do so, and even that "many" more players than owners contribute. Woodson and Rodgers are prime examples of the "some", or even the "many", depending on how you slice that one.

I'd be willing to bet that proportionately more owners contribute to "charity" and "society" and that it is "often" more a function of better wealth management than most players.


Whu?
http://twonateshow.files.wordpress.com/2010/08/manny-ramirez-drugs-suspended1.jpg