Last updated on January 5, 2008 9:15 AM EDT
Here are some of the sources I have used to create my salary cap page.
- Signing status of AFC 2004 draft picks (from ESPN.Com)
- Signing status of NFC 2004 draft picks (from ESPN.Com)
- Signing status of AFC 2003 draft picks (from ESPN.Com)
- Signing status of NFC 2003 draft picks (from ESPN.Com)
- The Redzone.Org lists the 2002 team payrolls
- Signing status of AFC 2002 draft picks (from ESPN.Com)
- Signing status of NFC 2002 draft picks (from ESPN.Com)
- USA Today's compilation of the 2000 salary cap figures for all NFL players
- USA Today's compilation of the 2000 salary cap figures for the Patriots, presented in a printer-friendlier format on FootballGuys.Com
- USA Today's compilation of the 1999 salary cap figures for AFC players
- USA Today's compilation of the 1998 salary cap figures for AFC players
- USA Today's compilation of the 1997 salary cap figures for AFC East players
- USA Today's compilation of the 1996 salary cap figures
- Signing status of AFC 2001 draft picks (from ESPN.Com)
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1999 complete NFL rookie contract details (from CBS Sportsline)
- Pats39's post to the Patriots Usenet newsgroup
- The HomePage of the NFL Players Association
- The NFL's Collective Bargaining Agreement
- ESPN explains what a capologist is.
- John Clayton explains what happens to a team when it goes over the salary cap cliff.
- A Boston Herald article lists cap figures for several defensive players.
- Michael Felger projects how the Pats could clear 10 to 15 million in cap space from the 2001 roster
- Peter King lists the future prorated signing bonus money for Ty Law, Willie McGinest, and Ted Johnson
- Mike Fegler explains the cap consequences of releasing McGinest and/or Ted Johnson
- "Pats39" aka SamBam00 explains the cap effects of a contract restructure and a contract extension A must read for all capologists
- CBS Sportline's report on the 2001 franchise and transistion figures
- The NFLPA reveals the 2003 franchise and transition figures by listings the top 10 salary cap figures by position for the 2002 season
- The NFLPA's player salary search figure
- I had asked Terry O'Neil, the cap guru for RealTeam.Com this question:
"When the NFL raises the minimum salaries, does it mean that the players who signed prior contracts get a salary raise?? For example, it was reported that Damien Woody's salary was scheduled to be $325K. Is it now $389K because $389K is now the minimum salary for players with 2 credited seasons??
He answered:
"That's right. Many contracts are signed with both sides knowing that future years at minimum salary will inevitably rise 8-to-10% each year. My Ricky Williams deal in New Orleans was such a case. He signed for eight years of minimum salary, including the option year. Both sides knew that his minimum would rise each season.
Any contracted player whose salary is below the minimum for his number of credited seasons is automatically raised to the correct minimum at the start of each League year -- March 2, this year. T."
- I had asked Terry O'Neil, the cap guru for RealTeam.Com this question:
"Are released players counted among the Top 51 players?? For example, do Todd Rucci, Hank Thomas, Larry Whigham, and Chris Slade take up slots among the Top 51 players for the Patriots??" He answered:
"Their "dead money" counts against the total, but the players, themselves, do not occupy positions in the Top 51. Those must be 51 active or tendered players. Happy to help you in this
area -- it's complicated. T."
- ESPN' John Clayton explains how the new salary minimum system for veterans will work beginning in 2002
- The Football Corner provides definitions for some free agency terms. such as exclusive rights free agent and "Exclusive" Franchise Player
- AsktheCommish.Com provides answers to frequently asked questions about the salary cap.
- ESPN.Com's Len Pasqarelli explains the CBA's role in the delay of so many first-round signings.
- The details of the CBA extension explained
- 2002 Highest Paid Players By Position
- 2001 Renumeration for the AFC East as reported by USAToday
- The NFLPA's mid-2003 salary cap report
- ESPN.Com's Len Pasquarelli's report on the 2003 UDFA signings
- USAToday USA TODAY's football salaries database which contains year-by-year listings of salaries for National Football League players, from the 2000 season through the most recently-completed season
- Pat Kirwin on NFL.com lists 17 tips for personnel decisions and salary cap management
- On January 22nd the Boston Globe had in their print edition but not in the online edition a chart that gave a snapshot of the Patriots' offseason (listing cap numbers, Patriots free agents, and Patriots draft picks). This link is my scan of the chart.
The following are links to cap pages for other NFL teams.

Click to join the Yahoo Group - AmCapNFL; a group of amateur capologists - NFL fans that are compiling NFL salary cap data for the specific team they follow and sharing that info with their team's fan-base.
Salary Cap Definition
The salary cap is the absolute maximum each club may spend on player salaries in a capped year. For 2004, that amounts to 64.75 percent of leaguewide "Defined Gross Revenues" (divided by 32 teams), made up of preseason, regular-season and postseason gate receipts and radio and television rights. The cap is in effect throughout a year. A team can never go over the current year's cap figure. From March 1 to September 7 (the day before the season begins), the Patriots's top 51 salaried players count towards the cap, plus pro-rated signing bonuses, incentives, etc., but not base salaries of other players on the roster up to 88. Once the season begins, all salaries on the Patriots's roster (the 53 players on the regular roster, the 8 practice squad players, players on the IR, players on the PUP) count towards the cap. With the 52nd and the 53rd players usually making the rookie minimum of $230,000 and a practice squad player making the minimum of $4,350 a week for 17 weeks, the Patriots must have be under the cap by at least $1,051,600 in order to have a 53-man roster and a 8-man practice squad. Please note that there is no requirement to have a practice squad. The Patriots must spend no more than $80,522,846 The minimum salary cap is $67,337,000. Player benefits are $12,865,000 per club above the salary cap number.Please also note that if a veteran is on the Week 10 roster he will get his entire salary for the year even if he is released after Week 10. For a short overview on the salary cap and free agency please visit NFL.Com's Free Agency Q&A page. For a more complete examination of the salary cap please visit The Complete Collective Bargaining Agreement
From ESPN.Com's Len Pasquarelli:
"The rookie pool is, essentially, a cap within a salary cap. It represents the maximum in aggregate salary cap value that a team is permitted to invest in its draft choices and also the undrafted free agents it signs. It is included in, not exclusive of, the team's overall spending limit of $71.101 million for the 2002 campaign." .."Because of the so-called "rule of 51" -- which stipulates that only the 51 highest-paid players on a team's roster count against its salary cap during the offseason -- clubs will not have to carve out the entire difference between their available cap space and rookie pool allocation. For the most part, teams' middle- and low-round draft choices don't rate among the 51 highest-paid players on the roster and make no dent in the salary cap." This year the Patriots' rookie pool allocation is $2.9629 million.
Quoting Section 7 of Article 38 of the CBA, " For purposes of calculating Credited Seasons under this Article only, a player shall earn one Credited Season for each season during which he was on, or should have been on, full pay status for a total of three or more regular season games, but which, irrespective of the player's pay status, shall not include games for which this player was on: (i) the Exempt Commissioner Permission List; (ii) the Reserve PUP List as a result of a non-football injury; (iii) a Club's Practice or Developmental Squad; or (iv) a Club's Injured Reserve List."
Quoting Section 1 of Article 18 of the CBA,
"(a) For the purposes of calculating Accrued Seasons under this Agreement
a player shall receive one Accrued Season for each season during which he was on, or should have been on, full pay status for a total of six or more regular season games, but which, irrespective of the player's pay status, shall not include games for which the player was on: (i) the Exempt Commissioner Permission List, (ii) the Reserve PUP List as a result of a nonfootball injury, or (iii) a Club's Practice or Development Squad."
How many accrued seasons a player has also affects his eligibility for the practice squad. According to the CBA, "the practice squad shall consist of the following players, provided that they have not served more than one previous season on a Practice Squad: (i) players who do not have an Accrued Season of NFL experience; and (ii) free agent players who were on the Active List for fewer than nine regular season games during their only Accrued Season(s). No player may be a practice squad player for more than two seasons.
If you have any corrections, suggestion, question, and/or comments, please feel free to ask me a question on the PatsFans.Com message board
Please take me back to Unofficial Patriots Salary Cap Page or please take me to the front Page of PatsFans.com.