Please, Fade, show us your math because all you've done is explain to me why I am correct, then rationalize your judgement through a "purge year".Fade":2aforwgk said:A handful of years? Lol. Long run cap? Lol. Ask the Saints, they laugh at the notion.knownone":2aforwgk said:It's a good thing none of you are accountants. Yes. You can create short-term cap space and stretch it for a handful of years, but you are constricting your long-run cap flexibility because the space is still finite. Now, I doubt the average fan is going to notice that difference. Still, its effects will be fairly dramatic for the teams because it minimizes room for error and stretches that risk out over multiple seasons.
As for Wilson, he's getting paid whether he restructures or not, so let's not pretend this is some grand display of kindness. This hurts the front office's leverage in those contract negotiations, and with Wilson's uncertain future, restructuring is probably not something Seattle wants to do.
Mathematically you can always kick the can down the road. And when you finally have a bad year, you can turn it into a purge year, eat all the dead money and reset your cap.
The salary cap only exists at this juncture to keep player salaries down.
The NFL has a hard cap; therefore, resources are finite, with some variability as the cap increases. You can make a long-run cap projection by adding a given period together and adjusting for the increase in cap space over that length of time. In doing so, you'll quickly realize that guaranteed money is still guaranteed money regardless of where you schedule it.
So yeah, you can be fiscally irresponsible and kick the can down the road, but that toll will come due, and it makes no sense for a team with a large competitive window to do that.