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YardRat
08-22-2010, 05:26 AM
http://www.buffalonews.com/sports/bills-nfl/article169008.ece



The Bills stand eighth from the bottom in the 32-team league in terms of the overall value of the contracts of all the players on the current roster, according to league financial data obtained by The Buffalo News.


The current contracts of all the Bills players add up to about $458 million, according to The News' analysis. The NFL average is $535 million. Minnesota is at the top at $728 million and Carolina is at the bottom at $353 million. The NFL average is $535 million.



The Bills do not have many marquee players. They only have five players on contracts that average more than $5 million a year -- Lee Evans ($8.2 million), Marcus Stroud ($8.2 million), C.J. Spiller ($7.4 million), Terrence McGee ($6 million) and Chris Kelsay ($5.75 million). They also have not had to pay out the biggest rookie contracts, of $50 million or more, that go to the top five. At least 16 quarterbacks in the NFL make $10 million a year or more.



The key salary data for each team is how much cash is being paid out to players each fiscal year. This often is referred to as "cash to cap," meaning spending in real dollars versus the NFL salary cap total for a given year. Last year the salary cap for each team was $128 million. This year, the last of the league's collective bargaining agreement with the players, there is no salary cap, meaning teams can spend as much or as little as they want.


The Bills will be under the cap in terms of cash for a third straight year. (They were slightly over the cap in cash spending in 2007). In 2008, they were about $15 million under the cap with cash spending of about $100 million, according to News figures. In 2009 they were at about $116.5 million in cash spending, again according to News figures. That was roughly $11 million under the cap.
The Bills ranked 20th in the NFL in cash spending last year





The teams with the greatest spending, in terms of the total value of the current contracts of all the players in camp are: 1. Minnesota. 2. Atlanta. 3. Dallas. 4. New York Giants. 5. San Francisco. 6. Seattle. 7. Green Bay. 8. Chicago. 9. Pittsburgh. 10. Philadelphia.


The teams with the lowest spending were: 32. Carolina. 31. Kansas City. 30. Tampa Bay. 29. St. Louis. 28. Cleveland.

better days
08-22-2010, 08:59 AM
Every player in the NFL should fire their agent tomorrow & hire Kelsey's agent. How in the hell did he get that contract for Kelsey?

psubills62
08-22-2010, 09:52 AM
Kelsay will be on his way out in a season or two (wish it was sooner). Stroud may be as well, though he's actually played well in the 3-4 so far. Not good enough to justify that salary, but better than most of what we have.

Carolina is a full 105 million below the Bills and 182 million below the average? Crazy.

feldspar
08-22-2010, 10:14 AM
The Giants had the lowest payroll in the league in 2007, when they won the Super Bowl. In 2008, the Colts and Patriots had the 29th and 30th lowest payroll, while the Raiders had the highest. The Bills had the 12th highest payroll last year. A few years back, they had the 4th highest. These things tend to fluctuate a bit, but the Bills are hardly the cheapest team historically or close to it. I'd say we are generally about average. Don't know where that perception came from.

I really don't know if it would be a good idea to start signing huge contracts with next year's uncertainty looming.

Joe Fo Sho
08-22-2010, 10:22 AM
With the players on this team, I would be furious if we were any higher in terms of total money invested in current contracts.

NextbillsQB
08-22-2010, 12:36 PM
HTF did the Jets not make top 10

BuffaloBeliever
08-22-2010, 12:41 PM
The Bills are only being smart about the future economically; it makes no sense for a team like the Bills to go on a spending-spree when we're clearly in need of a thorough rebuilding process here. Once we get the right QB in here (either Trent or hopefully Locker/Mallett next year) and a legitimate starting LT, those salary numbers will suddenly start soaring (and add that with re-signing one of or both of Whitner and Poz and the salary situation is going to have a different look)

TMu11
08-23-2010, 06:04 AM
The teams with the lowest spending were: 32. Carolina. 31. Kansas City. 30. Tampa Bay. 29. St. Louis. 28. Cleveland.

Imagine that... all the league's superteams....

psubills62
08-23-2010, 08:39 AM
HTF did the Jets not make top 10

Because the numbers represent the TOTAL contract value for each player. The Jets aren't on it because, from what I remember, they have a bunch of players with 1-2 years left on their contracts.

dannyek71
08-23-2010, 10:54 AM
I have furious the combined salary of this team is over 3 paperclips and a roll of toilet paper.

more cowbell
08-23-2010, 01:08 PM
Kelsay will be on his way out in a season or two (wish it was sooner). Stroud may be as well, though he's actually played well in the 3-4 so far. Not good enough to justify that salary, but better than most of what we have.

Carolina is a full 105 million below the Bills and 182 million below the average? Crazy.


Isn't this Kelsays last year on that hilarious deal he signed?

psubills62
08-23-2010, 01:14 PM
Isn't this Kelsays last year on that hilarious deal he signed?

You're right, it's his last year.

billsburgh
08-23-2010, 02:35 PM
I have furious the combined salary of this team is over 3 paperclips and a roll of toilet paper.
translation?

TacklingDummy
08-23-2010, 04:46 PM
Ralph is cheap.

Stewie
08-24-2010, 07:50 AM
I don't think Mark Gaughan knows much about NFL contracts. He leads the entire article with a worthless statistic.

To just add up all remaining player years and salaries and then compare them as some sort of meaningful metric is just stupid. Anyone who pays attention knows that most contracts have fluff years and players contracts are not guaranteed. You and Bill gates have an average net worth of 20 billion.. and that statistic is equally as meaningless.

For the same reason, to look at "average per year" is also worthless. Guaranteed bonuses and base salaries for this year are about all you can compare. Things change too quickly.

Mark Gaughan, FAIL.