Now it seems there may be more emphasis on a higher salary cap floor in the new CBA.
99% of the reported cap would be around $119M, with perhaps our all-encompassing cap (if supported) being the high range of what teams would have to spend with all teams needing to be in that low to high range if the cap floor also brough into our league.Salary floors: Players accepted a relatively low salary cap in exchange for the raising the minimum teams have to spend. This can’t be underestimated. 99% of the salary cap must be spent in cash in aggregate between 2011-2012. The league-wide number falls to 95% after that. Teams must spend at least 89% of the cap from 2013-2016 and 2017-2020.
This helps ensure teams that were way under the cap in recent years like the Bengals and Bucs spend more.
http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/20 ... a-nutshell
How would enforcement of a cap floor be managed? We could have a "cap hit" automatically be added which brings all clubs up to the floor -- not unlike we have default minimum salaries automatically added now for teams with under 53 men on roster. We could also have forced signings (if they don't sign someone, league signs someone for them to bring up to floor). That might really be nothing more than for "show", though, as that figure would change depending upon the balance unless we made it almost like a real player signing and if other moves made later it would be like cutting that imagined player with prorating the added salary, etc. Or rely upon uncompliance with cap floor being part of the overall team management status if needing to replace a GM.