emoney_33
Experienced Starter w/First Big Contract
- Joined
- Nov 8, 2005
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Re: McGinest: "Pats don't take care of thier players that are still productive"
a 4-5 year window of what was spent shows you what exactly? Deus is attempting to use that window to prove the Patriots don't "spend" on their players. The fact of the matter is over the long-term they spend the maximum amount allowed. Now if you want to add in total spending including facility, coaching and all the other costs that aren't salary-cap related that's a different story, not the one Deus has been hammering non-stop though.
They spend wisely, and they do not let cap money die. So some years they dish out less than other years, but that's all football team-building value related. The only argument that they don't "spend" as much as other teams is if you are argue that their long-term goal is to push cap into the future forever and NEVER spend it.
For instance one year you might dish out a ton of signing bonus' which puts you high in "money spent" that year, but then in future years you have less money that you are able to spend because the prorated bonus' are sucking up a lot of cap space. In the end, virtually every dime you spend on players counts against the cap. There is no free spending with regards to the cap.
I wouldn't hesitate to call out Deus if I thought he was spouting BS - but that's not the case here.
The Patriots aren't the highest spending team, and they most certainly are not the cheapest. They try to spend money wisely. That means they tend not to overpay, and sometimes that means they may have been pennywise and pound foolish in hindsight.
The "they spend to the cap" argument doesn't come close to capturing the complexities of the NFL salary structure, nor does a snapshot of what a team spent in a given year in bonus money, due to be stretched out over the course of a contract.
a 4-5 year window of what was spent shows you what exactly? Deus is attempting to use that window to prove the Patriots don't "spend" on their players. The fact of the matter is over the long-term they spend the maximum amount allowed. Now if you want to add in total spending including facility, coaching and all the other costs that aren't salary-cap related that's a different story, not the one Deus has been hammering non-stop though.
They spend wisely, and they do not let cap money die. So some years they dish out less than other years, but that's all football team-building value related. The only argument that they don't "spend" as much as other teams is if you are argue that their long-term goal is to push cap into the future forever and NEVER spend it.
For instance one year you might dish out a ton of signing bonus' which puts you high in "money spent" that year, but then in future years you have less money that you are able to spend because the prorated bonus' are sucking up a lot of cap space. In the end, virtually every dime you spend on players counts against the cap. There is no free spending with regards to the cap.











