Carolina Panthers 2017 Salary Cap Outlook

Carolina Panthers 2017 Salary Cap Outlook

As free agency approaches, Panthers fans are wondering just how Dave Gettleman will work to address team needs this offseason. Gettleman has stated, in the past, that he uses free agency to set up the draft. He’s also been a perennial cheapskate in free agency. To be fair, Gettleman hasn’t had

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Salary Cap Problems On The Horizon In Carolina??

Salary Cap Problems On The Horizon In Carolina??

So you think the Panthers are flush with cap space huh?  First place team, $30M in cap space. MVP QB and All-World LB both locked down for the long term?  Life is good, no?  Well, tamper your enthusiasm just a bit and see what it is going to take to keep this team together and improving for the long-haul. They could actually be up against the cap going into next year.  Here's how...

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Panthers Draft Shows Long-Term Vision

Panthers Draft Shows Long-Term Vision

Once again, an NFL Draft is in the books and it doesn't take too long for the "grades" to come in. Carolina often gets low marks from most pundits year in and year out for not addressing enough needs or something. These same guys say you can't grade a draft class for at least several years. Carolina Panthers GM David Gettleman has his own ideas.

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Panthers Select Vernon Butler in First Round

Panthers Select Vernon Butler in First Round

The long wait is over...somewhat. The first round of the NFL's Annual Selection Metting AKA the NFL Draft is in the books, and DT Vernon Butler found his way to Charlotte. Although the team already has two outstanding defensive tackles and is the one position (other than linebacker) where the team is set. So why the pick? 

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Panthers Nowhere to be Seen in Early Free Agency

Panthers Nowhere to be Seen in Early Free Agency

The NFL "league year" officially began yesterday and a handful of players just got a whole lot richer. It happens every year as teams either look to the start of free agency for plugging a hole or two to the other end of the spectrum: throwing good money after bad management.

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What David Gettleman Said And Someone Feed The Man Some Grits

What David Gettleman Said And Someone Feed The Man Some Grits

General Manager David Gettleman is a rare breed in today’s NFL.  He speaks his mind, and is surprisingly honest.  If you didn’t read the Professor’s article earlier this week about how to read what he says, check it out here. Here are a few things that he said today in Indianapolis.

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Will Luke Kuechly Break Carolina's Salary Cap?

Will Luke Kuechly Break Carolina's Salary Cap?

One of the first things I heard Carolina Panthers General Manager David Gettleman say, not long after he was hired, was about his long-term strategy of player management.

He said basically that you hate to draft a kid who turns out great and not be able to keep him over money

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Gettleman Smartly Keeps Carolina's Draft Targets Murky

Gettleman Smartly Keeps Carolina's Draft Targets Murky

Coming out of 2014, the Carolina Panthers had a few easily-identifiable "problem areas" on their team that needed immediate attention: a new left tackle, a safety to replace Roman Harper, a speedy outside wideout, and depth at running back. With off-season free agency addressing many of these areas, the other 31 NFL teams would be hard-pressed to figure out whom, if anyone, Dave "Downpour Man" Gettleman has in his virtual crosshairs.

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Does Gettleman have Todd Gurley in the Crosshairs?

Does Gettleman have Todd Gurley in the Crosshairs?

Speculation has been widespread in recent weeks regarding the possibility of the Carolina Panthers drafting Georgia running back Todd Gurley in the first round. Since others have so much to say about it, I thought I'd add my own two cents worth and attempt to quantify their chances of winding up with him in the 2015 NFL draft.

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Panthers May be in for Long Contract Negotiations with Cam Newton

Cam Newton Several quarterbacks have gotten supposedly large contracts in the past few months, and Cam Newton is on record for not liking the deals....at all.

Yes, people like Colin Kaepernick and Andy Dalton get the headlines - 5 years $96 million dollars, or whatever the individual case may be. It sound like a ton of money, but as we all know headlines are simply sound bites to get you to read or listen as "teasers."


Take Dalton's contract for instance. Only $17 million in guaranteed money, which is far less than a guy like, say, Miami's WR Mike Wallace. He got about double that in guarantees, and he's not even a quarterback!

No, Cam's looking for a lot more guaranteed money than the contracts Kaepernick and Dalton are getting. In fact, the Bengals can actually CUT Dalton after two years and not really be hit financially because of the way the contract is structured.

Kaepernick's is similar in many ways.

What this tells me is that their respective clubs want to keep these guys - and pay them well for the next couple of years - but it's not "elite QB" money. They seem to be combinations of a "prove it" contract with several long "option-type" years at the end. 

I think it's fair to say Kaepernick and Dalton are above-average QBs, but their lack of playoff success makes their respective GMs and owners reluctant to give that full-out huge contract such as say a Tom Brady, Peyton Manning, or Drew Brees enjoys. A million or more per game in their cases, or close to it in Tom's case.

The reason? All are Super Bowl-winning QBs. Same reason Joe Flacco got his huge-money contract, although I do not believe he is in the same class as the "top three." He did get hot in the playoffs, however, and that is the key.

Problem: Cam knows darned well he falls into that "tweener" category right now, empirically speaking.

He has as much natural TALENT as any QB in the NFL and perhaps even more so when you consider his elite arm strength, size, and overall athleticism. For example, recently other NFL players voted that Cam would make the best NFL linebacker of any current QB, which is actually a compliment.
Cam Newton
One said "Can you imagine seeing Cam rush the QB off the edge? *I* wouldn't wanna block him."

The stumbling block remains, however. Cam Newton is 0-1 in playoff games.

Certainly, he has his team on the upswing with improving records in each of his first three seasons. In his case, Rivera's "Three Year Plan" worked out nearly exactly as drawn up, which is unusual in itself. He's taken the team from 5-11 his rookie season to 12-4 last year...Cam or Ron R. both.

Colin Kaepernick only got $13 million guaranteed which "really scares people who know Cam Newton very well."

Hmm. Click the statement above for more details there.

On the other hand, Cam claims "I'm not terrified of anything." As it stands right now, the Panthers have Cam under contract through the end of next season but have expressed an interest in signing the signal-caller to a long-term deal.

Given GM Dave Gettleman's penny-pinching ways and the hindsight of Marty Hurney's huge guaranteed contracts, Cam's going to REALLY have to earn his way to a big mega-deal of a contract. Negotiations haven't yet begun, but I'm willing to bet the Panthers' organization wants to see him at LEAST win a playoff game and more likely a deeper run into the playoffs - if not a Super Bowl berth.

Here's what the Charlotte Observer has to say about the situation.

If you take Kaepernick's contract as a "starting point," Cam's final contract will likely not bear much resemblance if Cam gets his way with things. 


At least Newton will be making $14.67 million in his 5th year - 2015 - as the Panthers exercised their option on him. In other words, Cam's 5th year is going to be very much like a "Franchise tag" without an actual franchise tag. Such appears to be the contract's structure, at any rate.


According to the Charlotte Observer article, Cam's contract needs to be closer to that of Jay Cutler's new deal. Joel Corry, a former NFL agent, says “I think $18 million (a year) gets you in the game for Cam, with $50 million in guarantees.”


That would seem to be a pretty big ballpark and a pitcher's paradise, so we all need to expect a fairly long, drawn-out process when the two sides DO begin to negotiate. That's getting towards Manning or Brees-type money and Cam doesn't yet even have a single playoff victory, let alone a Super Bowl ring like those two do.


So we fans are going to have to be patient and let the suits do their jobs. When all is said and done, here's what I'm thinking....and I'm just throwing a somewhat educated guess at the length and the numbers:


6 years, $118 million, with $40 million in guaranteed money.


Much less than that, I'm afraid, and the "entertainer and icon" could well test the free-agent market. 


And unfortunately, that's a very real possibility.

Stay tuned.

Follow me on Twitter @Ken_Dye


Read more here: http://www.charlotteobserver.com/2014/06/05/4957258/cam-newtons-next-contract-with.html#.U_DkcfldVVI#storylink=cpy