The introduction of the salary cap's initial strategy was likely a move to minimize dead money. However, the more recent approach of using void years to reduce the current cap, while it allows for higher contracts, also significantly increases the risk of accumulating dead money. This intricate balance between potential reward and the risk of more dead money poses a thought-provoking question: Is the possible reward of higher contract values using void years worth the risk of more dead money?
The Eagles' and Patriots' approaches to salary cap management are not just different; they are starkly contrasting. The numbers reveal a stark contrast in their strategies. I meticulously examined the highest 53-player cap charges over five seasons (2019-2023), and the differences are striking.
Upon analyzing the data, a clear pattern emerges. The Eagles' player contracts averaged $47M more than the Patriots, and their dead cap write-offs almost doubled. Is the ability to write contracts of $47M/season higher using void years a more favorable strategy than having fewer dead cap write-offs?
As of June 22, 2024, the current status shows the Patriots with $218M in contract value and a cap charge of 92%. The Eagles have $307M in adjusted APY and a cap charge of 60%. The Eagles have 18 contracts with $409M of cap assigned to void years. The Patriots have one contract with $2M assigned to void years.
The Eagles' and Patriots' approaches to salary cap management are not just different; they are starkly contrasting. The numbers reveal a stark contrast in their strategies. I meticulously examined the highest 53-player cap charges over five seasons (2019-2023), and the differences are striking.
- The Patriots averaged $10M/season of dead money lower than the Eagles.
- The Eagle's player contract value averaged $47M/season higher than the Patriots.
- In the 2023 season just ended, the Eagle's cap charge to contract value was 59%, the Patriots 98%.
Upon analyzing the data, a clear pattern emerges. The Eagles' player contracts averaged $47M more than the Patriots, and their dead cap write-offs almost doubled. Is the ability to write contracts of $47M/season higher using void years a more favorable strategy than having fewer dead cap write-offs?
As of June 22, 2024, the current status shows the Patriots with $218M in contract value and a cap charge of 92%. The Eagles have $307M in adjusted APY and a cap charge of 60%. The Eagles have 18 contracts with $409M of cap assigned to void years. The Patriots have one contract with $2M assigned to void years.











