It's not a matter of agreement. It's a matter of him having information you do not seem interested in availing yourself to.
No it is a matter of misusing the info. Amount of cash spent does not prove whether teams spent to the cap.
I've backed up my assertions.
No, you havent. You have shown a possible scenario, while leaving out variables.
You are making your own positive assertions regarding the evidence I've provided that you're not backing up. It is possible, but not likely, that the Chiefs' pre-2000 cash-over-cap could be affecting my example. It is possible, but not likely, that the pre-2006 salary floor is throwing off my figure. You say they do. You could back these affirmative statements up; you choose not to.
I am not at all making affirmative statements in that regard.
I am simply saying your evidence is not convincing without all the facts.
You can stop there if you wish, but IMO you are missing facts needed to draw your conclusion.
Refusing to engage with the relevant information and demanding an unreasonable threshold of proof is a cheap form of argument -- "Ok, so the sun has risen in the east every morning for hundreds of years of recorded history, but how do we know it will tomorrow?"
I am not refuse to engage in anything. I am saying that there are flaws in your argument that leave me unconvinced. I have a reasonable level of certainty that if those flaws were exposed you would be wrong. That is enough for me. If you wish to dig deeper, feel free. I dont have the time to chase the fireflies of your argument.
Again, I've shown that under the previous CBA, the Chiefs payed less than what would have been possible under the proposed CBA. The owners could pay less under the previous CBA than would be possible under the proposed CBA. The minimum player expenditure is going up.
How is that not the argument?
You are mixing cash and cap. No matter how many times you want to do it, it is still not correct.
I clearly explained why that is not the argument. Again, I have no doubt that it would be easy to find an example where a team would have been allowed to spend less under the old system than the rumored one. You are vociferously arguing as if my position is that you couldn't.
My position is that a cash floor will not necessarily cause low revenue teams to spend more than a cap floor did.
You're mistaken. I set X as revenue. I showed that given the changes in percentages that the cap floor in the old CBA would have been lower than the cash floor in the proposed CBA.
But the cash spent under a cap floor system is not a percentage of revenue. You cannot compare a percentage of revenue to a percentage of revenue when one system is not based upon that.
I trusted you would understand the really simple fact that because of the way cap considerations balance out, a cap floor of 44% of revenue will, over time, necessarily come out to be lower than a cash floor of 48% of revenue.
Apparently, you did not.
I understnad that simple fact. I also understand that if the Patriots went 19-0 last year they would be the best team ever. That does not mean they were the best team ever.
You made up an argument and then when i disagree with the structure of the argument, you insult my ability to understand the conclusion?
Again, you can. Because the differential between the sum of a team's cap figure and the sum of a team's cash payroll will, over iterated seasons, approach zero. The cap considerations change *when* money from a given contract is counted, but not how much money is counted. The only permanent divergence is created through cap inflation.
That's why cash and cap cannot be interchanged when talking about one or two seasons in isolation, but can be when talking about iterated seasons.
So? You are using one set of team figures, making assumptions for what you don't know, ignoring whether they even operated at the floor, above it or at the cap, pretneded that factors that affect the cap didnt affect it, and when all is said and done, your answer to whether:
A cash floor system will cause low revenue owners to spend more than a cap floor system, the best you can do after inventing what the floor would be is argue that over a long period of time the difference would approach zero.
Why am I not convinced?
Teams wouldn't be obligated to pay more under a cash floor system than a cap floor system if the cash and cap floors were the same.
That is not necessarily true either, because you AGAIN are mixing cash and cap and they are calculated very differently.
Over time, it should be about equal, depending on cap inflation. What I'm saying is that teams would be obligated to pay more under the rumored new CBA than the previous CBA.
If your argument is that if the cap floor is 60mill and the cash floor is 100mill then you would spend more under the 100mill system, well, duh.
That has nothing to do with whether a cash floor would mandate higher spending than a cap floor. It says a cash floor that is higher than the cap floor will end up costing more money.
If that is what your argument has been all along, you need to learn to be more clear and save pages of us talking about 2 different things.
It seems you have been arguing with yourself.
It's not "cheating the equation" to say the league is raising the floor -- that's what Schefter is reporting. That's the compromise the players are getting for the reducing the ceiling.
The discussion isnt whether raising the floor makes teams spend more money, the discussion is whether a cash floor makes teams spend more money than a cap floor.
Ah, the old "Argument from Ignorance" fallacy, again. You like that one, it seems.
Well do you want to continue from an ignorant point of view?
You are writing pages and pages about what happens if a team wants to spend the bare minimum and have yet to show a team spending the bare minimum.
You can't be reasoned with if you require every every known detail of the NFL to be conclusively proven to you.
The pertinent ones are pretty important.
Do you really think whether there are teams skirting the salary floor is not pertinent to what will happen if there is a cash floor? You are speaking in hypotheticals when you can get real facts, but choose not to.
Dont give the facts. I dont care. But if you leave out pertinent information I cannot accept your argument.
You realize that's like saying that someone can pay less for a car by taking out financing because you've proven that will have to pay less money at signing, right?
Not even close. It is saying that if you put down a downpayment you will pay a greater amount of cash in year one, but if you divide the cost over the term it will equal the same every year. Just like cash cost vs cap cost.
Dollar for dollar, cash spent is eventually paid off against the cap.
key word
Outside of the effects of cap inflation, over the course of seasons, cash and cap become the same. You keep trying to pretend as though cap and cash are less related than they are. You say they're apples and oranges, when they're pretty clearly both grown from the same seed -- making them more like plums and prunes?
They are entirely different when looking at the 2 means of counting expenditures on payroll in a season.
Look at the Patriots year by year cash cost, and then their year by year cap cost. You will see the difference.
Just because you can't/won't do the math to compare them doesn't mean nobody else should.
Why bother doing math that isn't real?
Again, just because you don't understand it doesn't mean it's impossible.
Oh I understand it. And I understand your arrogant condescending attitude too. If your point of being on this board is to keep restating your argument, ignore thye actual points in the response, then sling condescending insults and deliver the lame attitude that anyone who disagrees with you doesnt understand you then please feel free to not respond to any of my posts.
I have no interest in explaining things so you can ignore them and write back to feeed your ego.
I have not insulted you one single time in this thread, and you have made personal insults your pattern. If that is who you are, I am done.