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Originally Posted by Ruhskins
I can see us having to bite the bullet in terms of the 18 mil we lost this year, but possibly having the rest of the penalty lifted. Although, I wouldn't mind having the entire 36 mil lifted, it would allow us to get some FAs late in the offseason or even during the season if there is a need.
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I can see your point only because we spent the half that was left with us already but I really think we have a really good legal arguement and could see the full punishment being dropped.
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The league contends that the Cowboys and Redskins violated the “spirit” of the salary cap during the uncapped year of 2010, even though the NFL approved all contracts submitted by the teams containing payments in 2010. The circumstances suggest that the NFL tried to impose restrictions on spending that didn’t exist in the labor deal, which would constitute collusion in the uncapped year.
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The issue is over the spirit part. If there was no rule or law against it then there really should be no punishment. The other owners might not be able to trust DS or JJ anymore with any agreements but that was the risk all the owners forced to accept.
and the NFL approved the contracts. If the NFL didn't like the contracts or it fell outside of the "spirit" of their salary cap then the NFL should have and did have the opportunity to deny them or tell the teams to rework the contracts. They didn't. Their mistake not ours. But there was no mistake. Had the NFL used their right to deny or tell teams to rework the contracts at that point the NFLPA would have had an arguement and evidence of the owners colluding. So to keep from getting into trouble the NFL approved the contracts and moved forward with their talks with the NFLPA over a new CBA. Now after the fact the NFL wants to say "oh we didn't like what you did and didn't like having to agree to those contracts and now that we have a new CBA and an agreement with the NFLPA over not coming after us we will punish you for not following the "spirit" of what we all wanted everyone to follow."