As mentioned in this space on Wednesday, this is a key week for contract extensions for NFL Players. Monday is the deadline for teams to allocate salary and non-prorated bonus into the 2008 Cap year. In other words, after Monday teams can still negotiate contract extensions through the end of the season but the bonus money in those extensions will necessarily prorate over the life of the contract rather than be contained this year.
With the average team having 7M of Cap room available for the latter half of the season and virtually no players on the street of any value requiring the use of Cap funds, this Cap room is either going to be used by the clubs on existing players for extensions to their current contracts or not used at all. In that case, the clubs will look to “roll over” Cap room into the Adjusted 2009 Team Cap, giving it more cushion next year. The rollover is achieved through various “phony incentives”; for example, giving a third-string quarterback a 5M bonus for 10 touchdown passes in the team’s final game. At the Packers, we used these bonuses with Craig Nall a couple different times, with Craig and I laughing about me coming down to yank him out of the game if he threw a couple touchdown passes in meaningless games.
Regarding extensions, Eagles cornerback Lito Sheppard had some interesting comments this week about the difficulties teams and players face with extending players early in their contracts. The player is signing the deal for security and to eliminate the risk of future injury or downturn in performance prior to his free agent year. A player that continues to ascend in performance will then watch the marketplace pass him by, as it has for so many players who signed long-term deals prior to the last couple of years when the Cap went up significantly.
Sheppard stated the following regarding his advice to teammates who may be approached to sign extensions, to the Philadelphia Inquirer: “It's a dirty game and it's almost like they're forcing you to take the new deal when you come to the table. I don't necessarily feel like that happened to me. But after my [rookie] contract was up in my fifth year [2006], I was coming off my second Pro Bowl and that's when Nate Clements signed that $80 million deal [for eight years, with San Francisco]. I would have been in his boat. That was exactly during my time when I was a free agent. That was the dramatic change from when I took my deal into what it would have been.”
Sheppard made the choice that many players will have to make this weekend. Do they take the security of a new deal and eliminate the injury risk? Or do they roll the dice towards a potentially much bigger payday either at the footsteps of or in free agency? Sheppard obviously feels he made the wrong choice. That is hard to live with, especially with the whisper crew – other agents, friends, teammates, etc, -- telling him he is underpaid.
Teams address these perceived or real inequities in player contracts in differing ways. Some ignore the whining and continue without change, some rip up contracts and reward the player who is making noise, and some look for a middle ground, as we tried to with the Packers to create a solution all sides can live with.
One thing is certain: these situations are never easy for either side. Ask Lito and the Eagles.
Andrew this question was brought up on a message board, and I figured you would know the answer!
Aaron Rodgers this year we know he has escalator clauses in it right?
So does the team take the absolute highest it would be for the year and use that figure for the cap, or is there a different way of doing it?
Nick Collins
Andrew, the language you quote from the Lito Sheppard article makes your point about the marketplace, and is consistent with the article today, referenced by Brad P. about Greg Jennings waiting until after the season to extend. All of which brings into play the balance of Lito's comments which should be addressed. Around Philly, the concept of the early extensions are called "Bannar Discounts" and usually at the time the deals are made, everybody wins. You point out the problems that can occur later very well. BUT what happens if the player does not sign the extension when the club wants him to? Lito charges that the team then makes it harder to reach incentives and has the power to alter the player's role so as to actually diminish his value in the eyes of the rest of the league. I thought that was the true import of what Lito had to say, whether or not he is correct. Either way, it's an interesting point. Not so preposterous either, in a league where you can get suspended for talking about a staph infection.
I am obviously no longer doing the Packer deals, but the players you have mentioned are obvious ones that the team would want to extend. We'll see where that goes.
Andrew
The problem is that players very often forget about the "risk vs. reward" concept about 2-3 years (maybe less) after they sign the extension.
I'm all for contracts with escalators, and I admittedly don't know much about NFL contracts... But I wonder how easy it is to get in cap trouble with these types of contracts. Let's say for the year that the team is $5 Million under the cap, but certain players with escalator-type contracts all earn the incentives, which are worth, say $6 Million... What happens?
Jacob-
It gets complicated depending on the type of escalators or incentives, but the team would have 1M deducted from next year's Cap.
Andrew
ESPN News just reported that Rodgers was extended through 2014. They didn't give contract details.
Andrew - Is it safe to assume the new deal will count as much towards this year's cap as possible?
Matt-
Yes. Very safe to assume.
Andrew
Andrew - great insight as usual. As a Packers fan, I am obviously glad that Aaron signed a new deal. I feared he may not be that interested in playing for the Pack long term since there is still some hostility from certain fans.
Just out of curiosity, if a player is unhappy with the contract since he thinks he "outperformed" it, did you hear that more often from the player himself or his agent? Also, since you have been an agent, were you ever in the situation that you felt the player you were representing was underpaid, or the player felt that and you didn't? I am just curious on how you would handle situations as an agent if you don't feel the player is honest with himself or his production on the field. I guess it is not always easy, as on one hand you are supposed to represent the player and get as much as you can, but on the other hand you have to be honest with him also.
Peter-
You touch on the key issues. Many agents are enablers, telling the player what he wants to hear rather than what he needs to hear. It often takes a player two or three agents to realize they need the latter.
Andrew
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Oct 31, 2008
10:26 AM
Andrew, great work, love this site, and would even if not a diplaced Packer fan. Milwaukee Journal Sentinal reporting Greg Jennings wants to wait - hope not, would be good use of some of the Pack's 20+ mill in cap. Other than Rodgers, other Packers we might see extended before Monday?