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NFLPA's Proven Performance Plan Would Shorten Rookie Contracts, Distribute Savings

Earlier this week NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell called the implementation of a rookie salary cap a "critical" part of the CBA negotiations with the NFLPA.

From the NFLPA perspective, they would argue that it's the team's decision to pay this money -- not the players. They would also point out that first round picks are guaranteed an average of $11 million. The other picks are hardly that lucrative. Second round picks are guaranteed an average of $2 million and all other picks are guaranteed a max of $668,000.

It seems as if both sides are willing to change the current system which currently pays the top 12 picks an disproportional amount of guaranteed money and often traps late round rookies into contracts which they outperform.

The NFLPA's answer is the Proven Performance Plan.

In a nutshell, it would shorten the life of rookie contracts and create savings for underpaid players as well as retired players.

Here's how it would work:

First, it entails shortening rookie contracts to a max of three years. This takes care of the problem that clubs often face of paying a player picked high in the draft a lot of money when he ultimately ends up as a bust. It would also allow players who have outperformed their contracts to negotiate market friendly deals sooner.

Second, the NFLPA says this would save clubs approximately $200 million.

$150 million of this would go to a Proven Performance Fund which would award rookies and veterans who signed contracts that are below what their market value is. The NFLPA also proposes the remaining $50 million in savings be devoted to retired players with NFL owners matching that each year to create an extra $100 million per year for retired players.

Commissioner Goodell has previously said that if rookie contracts are leveled out, the savings could then go to veteran players. However, the NFLPA would point to the over $400 million in unused cap space as evidence that the owners won't necessarily use any savings on the veteran players.

The NFLPA's plan is similar to the performance-based pay system that was in place before the salary cap went away. The difference is that the total money would be more (last year the performance based-pay system was just over $100 million) and a portion of it would go to retired players.

It's an interesting plan and, even though the league has rejected it, it's a good start for both sides because, at the very least, it's a proposal, which means they're talking. The only way a new CBA will get done is if both sides continue to talk.

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Proven Performance Plan

This sounds like a fair plan. Make it happen NFL and Union.

by DaveMillerUSA on Jul 1, 2010 8:02 PM EDT reply actions  

TRY AGAIN

Anyone who reads the article can see that the NFLPA is full of it. Let me rephrase what Joel Thorman wrote for those of you who did not catch it in the story.

THE NFL teams set aside money a certain amount of money for rookies. The NFLPA suggestion:

Shorten rookie contracts – (that means rookies get into Restricted free agency earlier which makes players more expensive in year 4-6)

Saved money – The teams do not see any money saved from signing the Ryan Leafs & Jamarcus Russell of the world. Instead the money that would have went to them is pooled together and given to players based on performance.

In that proposal NFL teams do not save one dime from rookie salaries the money is simply put into a different pot for players. “Second, the NFLPA says this would save clubs approximately $200 million…. $150 Proven Performance Fund… $50 retired players”

WAIT THERE IS MORE!!!!!!

The NFLPA not only want the money that NFL teams pay rookies to be split into three pools (rookies, performance pool, retirees) but they also want the NFL to kick in another $50 million for the retirees to MATCH THE $50 million of Rookie Savings that was kindly donated to retirees.

THERE IS ZERO SAVINGS FOR THE LEAGUE IN THIS DEAL. IN FACT IT COST $50 Million more than keeping the status quo.

Huge signing bonuses for the top 10-12 impacts a third of the league a year. The $250 that is being suggested would be spread around the entire league.

Unless there is stronger protection on restricted free agents put in place 3 year contracts for first rounders is going to raise salaries even more.

by dscot399 on Jul 15, 2010 12:30 PM EDT reply actions  

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