Spagnola: Sorry, But Salary Cap Precludes Putting A Steak On Every Place

boozeman

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Spagnola: Sorry, But Salary Cap Precludes Putting A Steak On Every Plate


By Mickey Spagnola
DallasCowboys.com Columnist

Friday, March 17, 2017 5:23 PM CDT

FRISCO, Texas – And now we bear witness to the continuing exodus of the 13-3 Dallas Cowboys.

One by one, piece by piece, already nine players contributing this past season to the Cowboys’ best record in the NFC and second NFC East title in the past three years are being swept away by the riches of free agency.

Let’s pause for a second before we continue, while wondering how many out there were supportive of the NFL embracing this free agency/salary cap system back in 1993, hailing the right-to-work movement that was going on. You know, players should have the right to work where they want like the rest of us.

Well, here you go.

Ronald Leary, gone, but then we anticipated that. Can’t afford a steak on every offensive line plate.

Barry Church, the defensive co-captain, gone.

Brandon Carr, having started every game the past five years, gone.

J.J. Wilcox, the backup safety/special teams dude, gone, eroding the safety depth.

Terrell McClain, one of the more consistent defensive linemen during the 2016 season, gone.

Jack Crawford, a, uh, Jack of all trades on the defensive front, gone.

Lance Dunbar, that offensive backfield toy, though somewhat of a luxury, gone.

Ryan Davis, hey, the guy actually started two games, gone.

Doug Free, reportedly retiring with one year left on his contract, going.

Morris Claiborne, coming off the best seven-game stretch of his career, reportedly going, wiping out three-fourths of the original starting secondary.

And last but certainly not least, Tony Romo, in no better than roster limbo – at least his name is still above his locker – TBD.

Now, not including Romo, the 2017 season-opening age of the nine departing players will be 29, assuming Claiborne signs with the Jets. There is a longtime NFL adage that cautions against paying age. Six of the Leaving Nine will be at least 28 by September. One- to three-year deals, OK fine. But four- to five-year deals, no can do, unless QB or pass-rushing DE. Plus, guaranteed money becomes dangerous.

See dead money over the years.

Now, none of these departures come as a total surprise to the Cowboys. They knew it was going to be impossible to retain all 17 of their 20 unrestricted free agents who at least somewhat contributed to their success this past season. There has to be a budget.

But until the March 9 start of free agency, the Cowboys couldn’t accurately predict just what fair market value was going to be for their own players. Teams with beaucoup salary cap dollars could afford to spend lavishly, as agent Leigh Steinberg once said, by paying “B” players as if they are “A” players. Or this, by possibly overpaying players who were on successful teams. (See departing Cowboys, mid-1990s).

This is what happens when so many players become unrestricted free agents at the same time, and the nine the Cowboys already seemingly have lost is the most since 11 players departed during free agency in 1995, the likes of Alvin Harper, James Washington, Mark Stepnoski, Jim Jeffcoat, Kenny Gant and Rodney Peete. Bet they all would have loved to hang around to win another Super Bowl that year.

Ah, the lure of money.

So the Cowboys, with limited cap dollars, just like in 1995, had to set priorities. The first was to preserve the strength of the team. And what might that have been?

Why, an offense averaging 27.2 points over the first 15 games, only twice scoring fewer than the 19 points of the season opener with a rookie starting at quarterback.

And they have so far, with the notable exception of losing Leary, though with knowledge of La’el Collins returning, and assuming Free will retire. Again, hard to afford five Pro Bowlers on one offensive line, especially one with arguably four first-round talents.

Remember, owner Jerry Jones, from the outset of free agency, proclaimed two positions that concerned him the most, and we discerned those to be wide receiver and cornerback. The Cowboys managed to survive at wide receiver, re-signing Terrance Williams to a reasonable contract while retaining Brice Butler on a one-year, prove-it contract ($1.1 million) for barely more than his fifth-year minimum ($775,000).

So the offense remains intact, aside from Free’s seemingly impending retirement, but aided by the re-signing of Darren McFadden and taking a one-year flier on guard Jonathan Cooper, a former top-10 draft choice. And wouldn’t it be something if the Cowboys could convince – and afford – Romo to happily stay put as the backup quarterback. Also, if he doesn’t, they needed to budget dollars for a backup, even if they decide on Kellen Moore.

As for the defense, I’d say they lost five guys they would have been glad to retain for the right price – Church, McClain, Claiborne, Carr and Wilcox. But the prices haven’t been close to their “right.” Remember that darn budget? Teams must set priorities, and darn if the Cowboys haven’t been doing a better job of sticking to their priorities and budgets over this decade so far.

Also, let’s consider this: If they so desired, the Cowboys could have created needed cap space – and still can – by restructuring a couple more contracts. But you only do that if you are trying to re-sign, say, a Sean Lee or a Zack Martin or a Dez Bryant. And they always have, right?

Also II, if you really think about it, the Cowboys never have lost a player they absolutely wanted to retain. Now, they’ve lost some good ones, and maybe the best was linebacker Ken Norton Jr. in his prime, but that was back in 1994 when there was this initial adverse philosophy by the team to paying guaranteed money, i.e. big signing bonuses. That changed the next season after the Cowboys failed to win their third consecutive Super Bowl when they found a way to entice free-agent cornerback Deion Sanders to join the good guys.

After that, here would be my, in-no-particular-order, list of the best lost free agents the Cowboys would have re-signed had the money been more reasonable in regards to their available cap space and priorities for spending:

Norton, Stepnoski, kicker Chris Boniol, linebacker Randall Godfrey, running back DeMarco Murray, wide receiver Dwayne Harris and Church. Not an extensive list.

If you think about it, the cap never prevented the Cowboys from keeping, within reason of age and health, an Aikman or Irvin or Novacek or Ware or Emmitt or Romo (and still might not, who knows?). For the proven guys who were integral to the future success of the team, they always managed to find way.

So if you are looking unemotionally at the big picture, of the two positions Jones deemed necessary to somehow replenish in free agency, the secondary remains an issue, especially cornerback, assuming again that Claiborne is leaving for the Jets’ reported one-year, $5 million deal. OK, but the Cowboys still have Orlando Scandrick, and I’m thinking they just might be thinking of last year’s sixth-round pick Anthony Brown as a starter after the rookie season he had. They did sign veteran Nolan Carroll, so right now there is your top three in some form or fashion for at least the nickel defense. The team at least could open the season tomorrow feeling relatively comfortable.

My guess is, with a safety trio of Byron Jones, Jeff Heath and Kavon Frazier, they will keep their eyes open for a safety with some starting experience who won’t break the bank. And there is also this: No team has ever said, “Well, we didn’t win our division because our strong safety wasn’t good enough.” There are certain positions you pay – quarterback, left tackle, wide receiver, running back, defensive end, cornerback, center. Strong safety has never been one unless you happen to land some guy named Darren Woodson who also could play the slot on the nickel.


After that, you need a bunch of those “B” players making “B” money. And let’s not forget the draft, the most inexpensive way to add quality players. The Cowboys added four starters in the 2016 draft, Ezekiel Elliott, Maliek Collins, Dak Prescott and Brown, and conceivably, depending on health, two more in Charles Tapper and Jaylon Smith.

This yearly free agent process is probably no different than how we all budget our households. The ends have to meet, right? And that’s why so far the Cowboys have been very prudent with their dollars, having as of Friday at 3 p.m. signed seven guys for right around $10 million in 2017 cap space. Now that’s some serious stretching of your dollars.

You know, sometimes if you want some Steak Oscar, you splurge on the steak but settle for a little imitation on ol’ Oscar.
 

DLK150

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I hate to say it but he does make some valid points and this team's management, while *somewhat* improved, seems content to settle for cube steak instead of sirloin.

I appreciate trying to manage the cap better but at the same time, the recent trend of waiting for free agent leftovers hasn't exactly been really successful.

Of course, the coaching and questionable play calling hasn't helped either.
 

Cotton

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I hate to say it but he does make some valid points and this team's management, while *somewhat* improved, seems content to settle for cube steak instead of sirloin.

I appreciate trying to manage the cap better but at the same time, the recent trend of waiting for free agent leftovers hasn't exactly been really successful.

Of course, the coaching and questionable play calling hasn't helped either.
I didn't even read the artile, but I would bet money his points are moot since you have a team like the Patriots who just won a Super Bowl and came into this offseason at $60 mill under the cap. There has been some terrible mismanagement of the cap by Stephen and Jerry. And, it is now catching up to us.
 

Cowboysrock55

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I didn't even read the artile, but I would bet money his points are moot since you have a team like the Patriots who just won a Super Bowl and came into this offseason at $60 mill under the cap. There has been some terrible mismanagement of the cap by Stephen and Jerry. And, it is now catching up to us.
I don't even think this is true. I'm not sure why people are freaking out. This free agent market sucked and we let go of some shitty older players. If the Patriots do that it's brilliant cap management.

I'm ready for the draft. Free agency has turned into an annual the sky is falling in here and so far it's worked out great for us.
 

Cotton

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I don't even think this is true. I'm not sure why people are freaking out. This free agent market sucked and we let go of some shitty older players. If the Patriots do that it's brilliant cap management.

I'm ready for the draft. Free agency has turned into an annual the sky is falling in here and so far it's worked out great for us.
If we were $60 mill under the cap, we easily could have gone after FAs like Eric Berry, et al. But, we couldn't afford him because of how tight we are to the cap.
 

Cowboysrock55

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If we were $60 mill under the cap, we easily could have gone after FAs like Eric Berry, et al. But, we couldn't afford him because of how tight we are to the cap.
Eric Berry never made it to free agency.

And for all the love Gilmore is getting people forget he was shit last year. Guys I wanted resigned before free agency ever hit. There was some mid level talent I would have liked but the cap didn't stop us from that.
 

Cotton

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Eric Berry never made it to free agency.

And for all the love Gilmore is getting people forget he was shit last year. Guys I wanted resigned before free agency ever hit. There was some mid level talent I would have liked but the cap didn't stop us from that.
I think the cap did stop us from doing stuff. Because we had to keep in mind the ones we needed to re-sign (which we didn't even do that) plus the rookie contracts that are coming. I do think, though, that this is all speculation because we could have had all the cap room in the world and still not done anything in FA. Which with this FA class may have been just as well.
 

Simpleton

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Yea, all the talent pretty much dried up before free agency even began. There are a few mid-level moves I would've liked to see us make just so we don't have to force our hands in the draft, but they were guys like Duron Harmon, DJ Swearinger, Alex Okafor, Captain Munnerlyn, Datone Jones, etc., not true difference-makers who would've moved the needle, just guys to plug holes.

If we nail the draft we should be fine, but we all know they're going to spend a 2nd or 3rd on a guy who won't contribute in 2018 like a bunch of gumps.
 

Cowboysrock55

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I think the cap did stop us from doing stuff. Because we had to keep in mind the ones we needed to re-sign (which we didn't even do that) plus the rookie contracts that are coming. I do think, though, that this is all speculation because we could have had all the cap room in the world and still not done anything in FA. Which with this FA class may have been just as well.
We will see next offseason. From everything I have seen we should have lots of cap then. But our teams strategy has clearly become building through the draft and resigning our own high end guys. Maybe there will ne one or two high end free agenta we can add to the really young defense then.
 

Cotton

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We will see next offseason. From everything I have seen we should have lots of cap then. But our teams strategy has clearly become building through the draft and resigning our own high end guys. Maybe there will ne one or two high end free agenta we can add to the really young defense then.
And, I don't think that's a bad way to build a team. Matter of fact, I think it is probably preferable we do it that way. My point is, the Patriots keep themselves in a comfortable position at all times to be able to take advantage of FA if the opportunity is there. Had there been a big time FA this offseason we wouldn't have been able to capitalize because we didn't have enough room.
 

Cowboysrock55

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And, I don't think that's a bad way to build a team. Matter of fact, I think it is probably preferable we do it that way. My point is, the Patriots keep themselves in a comfortable position at all times to be able to take advantage of FA if the opportunity is there. Had there been a big time FA this offseason we wouldn't have been able to capitalize because we didn't have enough room.
Well and with our window basically just starting I definitely think that strategy is best. We basically have the young stud QB and RB in place. It's no longer a matter of trying to win one with Romo before he retires and things fall apart. Now we are looking at hopefully a new 10 year window, so it's best to build for long term success through the draft as opposed to through free agency. I'm all for trying to hold everything together on offense so that there isn't any regression for a guy like Dak or Zeke.
 

Plan9Misfit

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If we were $60 mill under the cap, we easily could have gone after FAs like Eric Berry, et al. But, we couldn't afford him because of how tight we are to the cap.
Romo's albatross contract is responsible for that. The front office braintrust deliberately wrote that pile of shit with the intent to be restructured every damned year, making it impossible to get rid of him because of all of the guaranteed, backloaded money.
 
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