Originally Posted by duncan_idaho:
It’s probably one of those veteran exception deals where he gets more than minimum salary but only counts for the minimum against the cap.
Whatever. He was better this year and knows the system. They could do worse, I guess.
But why do it? Draft a guy to develop and move on from him.
Lol at the bed wetters moaning about a man who has been with this team FOR ALL THREE SUPERBOWL WINS and clearly has the trust of Spags aswell as being a guy who can uphold the culture he has helped create during this run. So please grow the feck up fgs :-) [Reply]
Originally Posted by UChieffyBugger:
Lol at the bed wetters moaning about a man who has been with this team FOR ALL THREE SUPERBOWL WINS and clearly has the trust of Spags aswell as being a guy who can uphold the culture he has helped create during this run. So please grow the feck up fgs :-)
I bet MahomesMagic sure is glad you pop up from time to time to remind us all he's not QUITE the dumbest poster on the entire site. [Reply]
Originally Posted by duncan_idaho:
It’s probably one of those veteran exception deals where he gets more than minimum salary but only counts for the minimum against the cap.
Whatever. He was better this year and knows the system. They could do worse, I guess.
I presume they used that on Wharton already since that deal was noted as guaranteed (the 4 year VSB is fully guaranteed money, IIRC) [Reply]
Originally Posted by DJ's left nut:
I presume they used that on Wharton already since that deal was noted as guaranteed (the 4 year VSB is fully guaranteed money, IIRC)
Originally Posted by Sassy Squatch:
I bet MahomesMagic sure is glad you pop up from time to time to remind us all he's not QUITE the dumbest poster on the entire site.
Four-year qualifying contract: Another type of veteran salary benefit, it can be offered to a player with at least four credited seasons whose contract with a team has expired after being on said team for four or more consecutive, uninterrupted league years prior to his contract expiring. Such a player must have been on the team's 90-man active/inactive list for said seasons (and every regular-season and postseason game). Teams can sign a maximum of two eligible players to this type of salary benefit. [Reply]
Originally Posted by KCChiefsFan88:
Please, your receipts sucking off the likes of Skyy Less and Toney are hilariously Reeruned. :-)
And you reading my statement that it is reasonable to expect the Chiefs to come away with at least two impact WR’s in an ultra-deep WR draft… as me supposedly saying that I am “smarter than Veach”… makes no sense.
Veach knows better than anyone how deep this WR draft is.
What are your picks? Let's see your genius, as you've clearly never been wrong. [Reply]
Originally Posted by Sassy Squatch:
I bet MahomesMagic sure is glad you pop up from time to time to remind us all he's not QUITE the dumbest poster on the entire site.
You’re absolutely lost when it comes to football.
But it’s good to know YOU know more about these players than the NFL teams and scouts.
Originally Posted by Sassy Squatch:
Four-year qualifying contract: Another type of veteran salary benefit, it can be offered to a player with at least four credited seasons whose contract with a team has expired after being on said team for four or more consecutive, uninterrupted league years prior to his contract expiring. Such a player must have been on the team's 90-man active/inactive list for said seasons (and every regular-season and postseason game). Teams can sign a maximum of two eligible players to this type of salary benefit.
Correct but you get an aggregate benefit that can be split among two players or allocated to a single player. Wharton's deal was large enough (usually needs to be about $3.2 million) to use the whole aggregate amount.
So they would have used the max benefit on Wharton's deal. [Reply]