Zool, pft disagrees with you.
So if there is a stipulation against playing for another team as part of the deal, odds are that it would count against the cap. This certainly supports JSO's angle that the deal has no relation to Favre's retirement discussion. I think zool is more likely right than PFT.
FAVRE MARKETING DEAL COULD COUNT AGAINST CAP
Posted by Michael David Smith on August 1, 2008, 11:13 a.m.
If Brett Favre does, in fact, take the $20 million deal that some call a marketing agreement and others call a bribe, the money the Packers pay Favre could count against the team’s salary cap.
Adam Schefter of NFL Network reports that while the case is so unusual that there’s no definitive rule governing it, mutliple NFL executives believe that the money paid to Favre would have to be considered in salary cap calculations. The reason is that the Packers would be deriving a football benefit, namely, keeping Favre off both their own team and other teams.
It is so far unknown how, exactly, such a deal would be structured. If the deal is, as reported, a 10-year, $20 million contract, would Favre count $2 million year against the Packers’ cap until 2017 — assuming that there is a salary cap in 2017? Or would part of the deal consist of the Packers paying Favre his base salary this season, and counting that $12 million against the cap this year’s cap?
We don’t know, because there’s never been a case quite like this one. But it’s an issue that NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell would have to resolve before any deal could be finalized. http://www.profootballtalk.com/2008/...t-against-cap/
Posted by Michael David Smith on August 1, 2008, 11:13 a.m.
If Brett Favre does, in fact, take the $20 million deal that some call a marketing agreement and others call a bribe, the money the Packers pay Favre could count against the team’s salary cap.
Adam Schefter of NFL Network reports that while the case is so unusual that there’s no definitive rule governing it, mutliple NFL executives believe that the money paid to Favre would have to be considered in salary cap calculations. The reason is that the Packers would be deriving a football benefit, namely, keeping Favre off both their own team and other teams.
It is so far unknown how, exactly, such a deal would be structured. If the deal is, as reported, a 10-year, $20 million contract, would Favre count $2 million year against the Packers’ cap until 2017 — assuming that there is a salary cap in 2017? Or would part of the deal consist of the Packers paying Favre his base salary this season, and counting that $12 million against the cap this year’s cap?
We don’t know, because there’s never been a case quite like this one. But it’s an issue that NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell would have to resolve before any deal could be finalized. http://www.profootballtalk.com/2008/...t-against-cap/


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