Safety Logan Ryan was signed by the Buccaneers in March, one day after being released by the Giants. Per Dan Duggan of The Athletic, Ryan has filed a grievance against Big Blue (Twitter link).
The Ryan release was not necessarily part of new Giants GM Joe Schoen‘s efforts to shed payroll and make his club cap-compliant; the transaction was only expected to net about $775K of cap space for 2022, since Ryan was not designated a post-June 1 cut. Instead, parting ways with Ryan had more to do with the fact that he is 31 and was deemed to be an imperfect fit in New York’s new defensive regime (and it did clear $12.25MM off the books for 2023).
Ryan was due an $8.5MM salary in 2022, and $5.5MM of that figure was fully-guaranteed. The remaining $3MM, which is at issue in the grievance, was guaranteed for injury. As Duggan reports in a separate tweet, Ryan underwent postseason finger surgery, so his position is that the injury guarantee should kick in and that he is entitled to an additional $3MM. Until the matter is resolved, 40% of the disputed amount, or $1.2MM, will remain on the Giants’ cap.
Schoen has just two safeties on the roster at the moment (2019 fourth-rounder Julian Love and 2020 second-rounder Xavier McKinney). The Giants currently hold the Nos. 5 and 7 overall picks and will therefore have a good chance to draft star Notre Dame safety/do-it-all weapon Kyle Hamilton, but with plenty of other holes at more valuable positions, the club may choose to pass on the former Golden Domer and address its safety needs with later picks or in post-draft free agency.
Ryan, meanwhile, went from a rebuilding team to a championship contender. By reuniting with former Patriots teammate Tom Brady in Tampa, Ryan will have a chance to add a third Super Bowl ring to his collection as part of a safety group that includes Antoine Winfield Jr., Mike Edwards, and fellow free agent acquisition Keanu Neal.
Is this saying that he was entitled to a 3 million dollar bonus for getting injured? You’re damn right, I hurt my finger. He probably slammed in the car door for 3 mil.
I was under the impression if you couldnt play then the injury guaranee comes into play or if you are released with an injury designation maybe but it doesnt say if he was or not in the prior articles. Also if he was injured, would the buccaneers have signed him if he was injured?
I’m betting he gets his money. If it’s truly owed to him he deserves it. Man what I could do with 3 mil.
Kind of ironic that if you ‘can’ play/work/perform then the money isn’t guaranteed, however if you can’t, then the money ‘is’ guaranteed.
What a train wreck of a franchise. Holes everywhere, salary cap issues, rampant confusion everywhere.
Hopefully the new regime can get it straightened out sometimes in the next 5 years.
Make that train wreck on its way to collide with a dumpster fire.
Where are George Young and the Tuna when you need them. Oh……(well at least the Tuna’s around).