Some assorted contract details from around the NFL:
- Dee Ford, LB (49ers): Five years, $87.5MM, $45MM guaranteed. Base value: $85MM. $19.75 of guaranteed money due by next week, rest of guarantee is for injury only ($13.65MM “rolling guarantee” on April 1st, 2020). Base salaries: $4.75MM (2019), $13.65MM (2020), $15.15MM (2021), $16.15MM (2022), $16.15MM (2023). Deal can turn into one-year, $20.5MM contract; team can cut Ford after season for $6.4MM dead money. Twitter links via NFL.com’s Tom Pelissero and NBC Sports Bay Area’s Matt Maiocco.
- C.J. Mosley, LB (Jets): Five years, $85MM, $51MM guaranteed. $35MM over first two years, then team has full control. Twitter link via Albert Breer.
- Jamison Crowder, WR (Jets): Three years, $28.5MM. $10.5MM option for 2021. Twitter link via Breer.
- Raheem Mostert, RB (49ers): Three years. $8.7MM, $3MM guaranteed. $1MM in playing time, rushing incentives. Twitter link via NFL.com’s Ian Rapoport.
- Max Garcia, OG (Broncos): One year, $2MM (original story). Could be worth up to $3MM. Twitter link via Adam Caplan.
After all the first wave of signings I would love to see a list of current cap space for teams. All I’ve seen on Twitter is people taking guesses lol
Me too. I’d like to get a gauge of what the 49ers are working with.
Thronson5
link to overthecap.com
Wow the Colts are still sitting there with $77m in space. I can see them trying to pluck some high risk-high reward type of players on 1 year prove-it deals.
Thank you!
So if this is correct
Rob Lowder
The 49ers began free agency with roughly $65 million in salary cap space. Since then, they’ve signed or re-signed 15 players, released 7, and have $42 million remaining, per OTC – the 4th-most in the NFL.
I have to say the 49ers have done really well with managing money, they can still have their money for draft picks and sign other players off needed or roll over cap space to next year or have money to take on a contract or contracts at the trade deadline. Really smart.