I have my doubts that the league communicates almost entirely verbally especially since we've heard of memos being sent out in the past... It's impossible to prove that something doesn't exist, so if you want to cling to the fact that I don't know for sure that written warnings didn't exist go nuts. However I haven't foundone bit of evidence that there were written warnings and this article
NFL -- League sends signal with penalties for Dallas Cowboys, Washington Redskins - ESPN seems pretty sure that they didn't exist. Not that any of that matters since you've already decided that it's immaterial and that the league operates mostly by word of mouth.
My point has never been that what the league is doing now is collusion. How they're accounting for the money spent during the uncapped season is completely within their rights since the PA has signed off on it.
Maybe if you spent more time forming a singular point rather than breaking every post into single sentences and then arguing completely irrelevant things like verbiage you wouldn't be posting quotes as part of your post. I acted like you posted it because you did...
Since teams were free to spend as much as they wanted during the uncapped season can you please outline a strategy a team could have used to do just that without sabotaging their teams chances of success long term?
Just because you don't like or agree with what I'm saying doesn't mean that I don't understand something. These teams did exactly what you're saying. I'm not arguing that nor denying it. What I'm arguing is that the league's lack of real action at the time seems odd. Why not shoot down the contracts for having the uber salaries during the uncapped season and force them to make them bonuses? Also I may be mistaken, but they aren't amortizing these bonuses over the term of the contract, but charging the teams a one time cap hit either for this season only or over the next two, which is being redistributed to the other teams (well besides two...).
I said retroactively, but the terminology I used wasn't important so I wasn't going to argue with you on that. Apparently you aren't going to let me off that easily and want to argue how I conceded the point?
I've repeatedly explained how I think they held down salaries during the uncapped season, but I'll do it again... The league warned teams that money spent during the uncapped season would be accounted for during future capped seasons. This prevented teams from spending much above and beyond what they expected the future cap to be because doing so would force them to jettison much of their roster in the future. As far as I can tell the teams in question tried to take advantage of the only loophole in how the cap is calculated in order to shift money to the uncapped season. However they were apparently warned repeatedly that this money would be accounted for. I however am still waiting for you to explain how a team could spend freely during the uncapped season.
Yes when there's a cap there are rules in place for how cap hits are calculated. There was no cap in 2010, so no rules on how the cap hit would be calculated. I'm suggesting that the 2012 cap hit for a contract signed in 2010 be calculated based on the rules and the contract. That is not what the league is doing however, hence why this is a story.
Just because there's a CBA doesn't mean the teams can do whatever they want. They're bound to the terms of the CBA except when they and the PA agree to something outside the terms of it. At the time the league was warning teams about spending money during the uncapped season there was nothing in the CBA allowing them to control the salary of individual teams. If you want to misconstrue the concept that the league was going beyond the terms of the CBA without the PA signing off on their actions as there being no CBA in place that's on you.