The 49ers signed Hargrave and found themselves back in the Super Bowl.
The Rams had a fire sale, leading tackler Bobby Wagner, best CB Jalen Ramsey, superweapon they just signed Allen Robinson, leading sacker Leonard Floyd...
"role players" they tried to get rid of Stafford but nobody wanted that contract. This article literally has fire sale in the title:
As someone who fancies himself pretty savvy when it comes to the NFL salary cap, I have no earthly idea how the hell the Los Angeles Rams can expect to trade Matthew Stafford any time soon. Why you wo...
www.barstoolsports.com
But yeah... this is what you cap deniers do every offseason, pretend things like this aren't happening and dismiss All Pros as being no good. Laughable...
I'll listen to the guy with 6 rings who sustained greatness for two decades.
"Cash spending isn't really that relevant. It's cap spending," Belichick said on WEEI's Greg Hill Show. "So teams that spend a lot of cash one year probably don't spend a lot of cash in the next year, because you just can't sustain that. So we've had high years, we've had low years, but our cap spending has always been high. And that's the most competitive position you can be in. So that's really -- the cash spending, there's no cash cap. There's a salary cap and we spend to the salary cap, that's what's important."
When pressed on the Patriots' philosophy of not going "all in" with cash spending, Belichick said such an approach is not sustainable.
"Temporarily you can. You can't sustain it, no. I mean you can't sustain the 20 years of success that we sustained by overspending every year without having to eventually pay those bills and play with a lesser team," he said. "So I think if you look at the teams that have done that, that's kind of where some of them ended up. Jacksonville back in '14, the Rams are going through it, Tampa's going through it now. Not saying there's anything right or wrong with it, it's just a different way of doing things, and there's a result for doing that."
www.cbsnews.com/boston/news/bill-belichick-salary-cap-spending-more-important-than-cash-spending/