WarEagle wrote:
Actually, the #1 pick in 75 had a signing bonus of $15,026,895.00.
$5,008,965.00 is the cap hit per year (3 years).
This was 12.5% of the total cap.
The #1 pick in the last MFN-1 draft had a signing bonus of $18,203,772.00 (4 years).
This was 7% of the total cap.
In real life Jared Goff signed a 4 year deal with a signing bonus of $18.6 million, 11.9% of the total NFL cap for 2016.
In 2015 #1 pick Jameis Winston got a bonus of $16.7M, 11.7% of the total NFL cap for 2015.
I'm not sure what this shows in relation to your argument, but I found it interesting.
Also, I don't think leagues less than 3 years old can be used as examples for anything salary cap related due to the reasons I mentioned above.
This is the point. Resigns are different, and will use market value. This sets the value before hand.
MFN 1 rookie #1 should be holding an inflated percent of 245 mil. dollar cap.
Not this deflated 7.4 percent. Of the cap. This is the whole point of that formula. My theory is it not inflated at the rate of the cap is each year.
The new code does not account for this. If so that rookie would be making over double.
Year 2000 the cap is 100 mil rooks make 5
The leagues revenue annually increases
Year 2050 the cap is 200 mil and rooks make 10
Simplified, thats how i see it. Sorry, if i think the math is wrong.
This one is more of an opinion, but i know it will help balance alot.
Also, the formula we use does not take in to account all speed is gone early, like the NFL.
Our model it to linear in this regard. I would use more of a distribution that the NFL uses to reflect the desire of speed and how it relates to salary paid to that draftee.
A #1 will garner only 15 mil here. Most likely a grade A player. Very valuable.
A third rounder will garner over half that 15 mil. Almost a bad deal at 8million in comparison for the talent that is obtainable for only double the price.
Finacially a third round miss is worse than 1st. Plain and simple. Add how valuable speed is and even a boom in the third will never be as good as a 1st rounder who stayed the same. This is highlighted for positions that value speed as a core skill.