Brandon McManus Contract Details
Over The Cap has the full contract up for Brandon McManus's recent extension, as follows:
Read more...Over The Cap has the full contract up for Brandon McManus's recent extension, as follows:
Read more...With free agency, the draft, and all other major landmarks of the offseason now in the books, it's time to keep me honest and compare how my annual road map did with what John Elway and company decided to do to improve the Broncos.
Read more...Per Mike Klis:
Gordon's contract table can be seen beyond the fold, along with my analysis:
Read more...Last evening, this cheat sheet by the NFLPA was released:
This sheet is crafted in quite the positive manner by the union, which gives off the impression that its leadership would like to convince the players to approve the new CBA. So keeping that in mind, let's step through these bullet points.
Read more...Under John Elway, the Broncos have been one of the most aggressive teams in going after compensatory picks. One tactic they've used as part of that aggression is adding team options to contract years so that if they decline those options, the players that subsequently become free agents also qualify as compensatory free agents in their favor. This paid off the most for Denver when they got a 3rd round comp pick in 2018 for declining Russell Okung's team option.
However, it appears that this edge that the Broncos. among only a few other teams, have used may be coming to an end. We at Over The Cap now believe that the NFL is clamping down on this loophole, and will no longer allow players with declined team options to qualify as CFAs.
Since the Broncos are regular users of this loophole, this could potentially impact several of their contracts. How they will be impacted is still of great question, but before we get there, let's review the four contracts that have options on their 2020 years:
While we at OTC believe that this rule has been changed, there is still some doubt about how the rule's been changed. First, we don't know for sure when the rule was changed. Our most reasonable guess is at the start of the 2019 league year, but that is not yet known for sure. Second, we do not know whether contracts that were signed before the rule change will be granted a grandfather clause by the compensatory formula.
If there is a grandfather clause, then the Broncos should be in the clear Leary's option as far as comp pick credit goes, as his contract was signed way back in March of 2017. Davis, on the other hand, could be more problematic if our guess of the start of the 2019 league year is accurate. That's because Davis was very briefly an unrestricted free agent at the start of the 2019 league year before ultimately agreeing to re-sign with the Broncos.
I would not be surprised if the Broncos have already been aware of this rule change. My speculation on this comes from the fact that of the three major free agents that the Broncos signed in 2019, only Ja'Wuan James's contract had this sort of team option. I recall being surprised that a similar option was not in the final year of the contracts of either Kareem Jackson or Bryce Callahan.
Whatever the case may be, if they have not done so already, Elway and the Broncos should firmly request from the NFL Management Council a clarification on what the compensatory pick rules will be on their existing contracts. If it is true that Leary and Davis will not yield comp picks if their options are declined, then it may chance the Broncos' strategy as to how they want to proceed with them.
For Davis, he is not owed any more guaranteed money. So if the Broncos want to keep him and his $5 million salary on the roster up to at least training camp as some insurance at inside linebacker, they can do so without having to make an earlier comp pick based decision. And as long as he stays healthy through training camp and the preseason, he could be cut as late as before Week 1 before CBA-wide guarantees via termination pay would kick in.
Most of these same rules apply to Leary, except that if his option is exercised, that means that he would get $1.5 million of his base salary fully guaranteed. However, that is not a huge price to pay if they want to keep him as insurance at the position yet ultimately cut him later. The bigger question, of course, is whether or not they deem his total $8.5 million in cash due in 2020 as a wise investment, regardless of comp pick implications.
Read more...2019 was ultimately another season of failure--once again, no playoffs, no winning record. While there is reason to hope that this skid could end in 2020, it's clear that it must end soon. This type of consistent losing is very unusual in Denver, and does not meet the high expectations that the Broncos espouse, something that John Elway should know very well.
Here are my recommendations on how to improve the Broncos for 2020, with my annual offseason road map.
Read more...Last offseason, I advocated a "wait and see" approach for any multiyear extension for Connor McGovern. Well, the Broncos have indeed waited, and what we've seen is someone who is playing every single snap at a high level. There are now calls (such as this emphatic one from Matt McChesney) for him to indeed get that multiyear extension. Let's take a look at what McGovern could expect for his second contract in the NFL.
Read more...