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Richard Sherman CB
Mar 11, 2018 at 8:02 PM
- Fanaticofnfl
- Veteran
- Posts: 18,609
Mar 11, 2018 at 8:03 PM
- MOEMONEY87
- Veteran
- Posts: 131
New break down of Richard Sherman deal
http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2018/03/11/the-real-richard-sherman-numbers/
http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2018/03/11/the-real-richard-sherman-numbers/
Mar 11, 2018 at 8:04 PM
- Dr_Bill_Walsh
- Veteran
- Posts: 20,259
- NFL Pick 'em
Originally posted by wysiwyg:Originally posted by VaBeachNiner:Originally posted by Niners99:A cocky Dick will stiffen up our D, and make it very hard to penetrate.
And this was after having vd with crabs
And Puki and Bunz
Fixed for the Pnoys
Mar 11, 2018 at 8:04 PM
- GNS1310
- Veteran
- Posts: 3,658
Here are the real Richard Sherman contract numbers . . . the signing bonus is only $3 million https://t.co/IW3qTqy0OR
— ProFootballTalk (@ProFootballTalk) March 12, 2018
Mar 11, 2018 at 8:07 PM
- Dr_Bill_Walsh
- Veteran
- Posts: 20,259
- NFL Pick 'em
Gist:
1. The signing bonus is $3 million, not $5 million.
2. Sherman gets a $2 million roster bonus on the first day of training camp, if he passes a physical. (In other words, if he starts camp on the physically unable to perform list or the non-football illness/injury list, the payment won't be earned.)
3. The base salary for 2018 is, as previously reported, $2 million.
4. As previously reported, Sherman has $2 million in per-game roster bonuses for 2018.
5. His $1 million playing-time incentive requires 90-percent participate in the 2018 defensive snaps.
6. For 2018, there's a $1 million incentive for making it to the Pro Bowl.
7. There's a $2 million incentive for being named to the Associated Press All-Pro team, which is harder to qualify for than the Pro Bowl, since it covers the full league, not one conference.
8. For 2019, the base salary is $7 million. The base salary becomes $8 million is he makes it to the Pro Bowl in 2018.
9. For 2019, the per-game roster bonuses are once again $2 million. If he makes it to the Pro Bowl, the per-game roster bonuses drop to $1 million.
10. Making the Pro Bowl in 2018 makes the 2019 salary of $8 million guaranteed for injury as of the third day of the league year. It becomes fully guaranteed on April 1, 2019. (In other words, the Seahawks can cut Sherman after the 2018 season even if he's injured during the 2018 season; the injury protection doesn't kick in until the middle of March.)
11. The incentive package for 2019 is the same as 2018: $1 million for 90-percent playing time, $1 million for Pro Bowl, and $2 million for All-Pro team.
12. For 2020, the same base salary structure applies as in 2019. If Sherman doesn't make it to the Pro Bowl in 2018, the salary remains a non-guaranteed $7 million, along with per-game roster bonuses of $2 million. Making the Pro Bowl in 2018 bumps the salary to $8 million in 2020, drops the per-game roster bonuses to $1 million, and guarantees the salary for injury only as of the third day of the 2019 league year. It becomes fully guaranteed on April 1, 2020.
13. For 2020, the same incentive package applies as in 2018 and 2019: $1 million for 90-percent playing time, $1 million for Pro Bowl, and $2 million for All-Pro team.
14. There's a $50,000 workout bonus each year.
The full guarantee at signing is $3 million, and only $3 million. Another $4 million should be earned in 2018, if he passes the preseason physical. After that, it's up to the 49ers as to whether the deal continues into 2019.
The full base value of the deal is $21.15 million, with another $18 million tied to per-game roster bonuses, annual 90-percent playing-time incentives, an annual Pro Bowl incentive, and an annual All-Pro incentive.
To get the full $39.15 million, Sherman will need to play all 48 regular-season games over the next three years, be on the field for at least 90 percent of the snaps, make it to the Pro Bowl every year, and qualify for the All-Pro team every year.
Translation:
Seahawks fans (what's left of them) will ballot stuff Sherman into Pro Bowl so Niners have to pay him $$$
1. The signing bonus is $3 million, not $5 million.
2. Sherman gets a $2 million roster bonus on the first day of training camp, if he passes a physical. (In other words, if he starts camp on the physically unable to perform list or the non-football illness/injury list, the payment won't be earned.)
3. The base salary for 2018 is, as previously reported, $2 million.
4. As previously reported, Sherman has $2 million in per-game roster bonuses for 2018.
5. His $1 million playing-time incentive requires 90-percent participate in the 2018 defensive snaps.
6. For 2018, there's a $1 million incentive for making it to the Pro Bowl.
7. There's a $2 million incentive for being named to the Associated Press All-Pro team, which is harder to qualify for than the Pro Bowl, since it covers the full league, not one conference.
8. For 2019, the base salary is $7 million. The base salary becomes $8 million is he makes it to the Pro Bowl in 2018.
9. For 2019, the per-game roster bonuses are once again $2 million. If he makes it to the Pro Bowl, the per-game roster bonuses drop to $1 million.
10. Making the Pro Bowl in 2018 makes the 2019 salary of $8 million guaranteed for injury as of the third day of the league year. It becomes fully guaranteed on April 1, 2019. (In other words, the Seahawks can cut Sherman after the 2018 season even if he's injured during the 2018 season; the injury protection doesn't kick in until the middle of March.)
11. The incentive package for 2019 is the same as 2018: $1 million for 90-percent playing time, $1 million for Pro Bowl, and $2 million for All-Pro team.
12. For 2020, the same base salary structure applies as in 2019. If Sherman doesn't make it to the Pro Bowl in 2018, the salary remains a non-guaranteed $7 million, along with per-game roster bonuses of $2 million. Making the Pro Bowl in 2018 bumps the salary to $8 million in 2020, drops the per-game roster bonuses to $1 million, and guarantees the salary for injury only as of the third day of the 2019 league year. It becomes fully guaranteed on April 1, 2020.
13. For 2020, the same incentive package applies as in 2018 and 2019: $1 million for 90-percent playing time, $1 million for Pro Bowl, and $2 million for All-Pro team.
14. There's a $50,000 workout bonus each year.
The full guarantee at signing is $3 million, and only $3 million. Another $4 million should be earned in 2018, if he passes the preseason physical. After that, it's up to the 49ers as to whether the deal continues into 2019.
The full base value of the deal is $21.15 million, with another $18 million tied to per-game roster bonuses, annual 90-percent playing-time incentives, an annual Pro Bowl incentive, and an annual All-Pro incentive.
To get the full $39.15 million, Sherman will need to play all 48 regular-season games over the next three years, be on the field for at least 90 percent of the snaps, make it to the Pro Bowl every year, and qualify for the All-Pro team every year.
Translation:
Seahawks fans (what's left of them) will ballot stuff Sherman into Pro Bowl so Niners have to pay him $$$
Mar 11, 2018 at 8:11 PM
- AXEGRINDER
- Veteran
- Posts: 25,671
He must have really wanted to be here because imo he could have got a better contract elsewhere.
Mar 11, 2018 at 8:12 PM
- jrg
- Veteran
- Posts: 166,549
Originally posted by Fanaticofnfl:
http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2018/03/11/the-real-richard-sherman-numbers/
Nice!
Mar 11, 2018 at 8:12 PM
- Sourball
- Veteran
- Posts: 2,279
Originally posted by Dr_Bill_Walsh:For the teams sake of W's. I hope he does it.
Gist:
1. The signing bonus is $3 million, not $5 million.
2. Sherman gets a $2 million roster bonus on the first day of training camp, if he passes a physical. (In other words, if he starts camp on the physically unable to perform list or the non-football illness/injury list, the payment won't be earned.)
3. The base salary for 2018 is, as previously reported, $2 million.
4. As previously reported, Sherman has $2 million in per-game roster bonuses for 2018.
5. His $1 million playing-time incentive requires 90-percent participate in the 2018 defensive snaps.
6. For 2018, there's a $1 million incentive for making it to the Pro Bowl.
7. There's a $2 million incentive for being named to the Associated Press All-Pro team, which is harder to qualify for than the Pro Bowl, since it covers the full league, not one conference.
8. For 2019, the base salary is $7 million. The base salary becomes $8 million is he makes it to the Pro Bowl in 2018.
9. For 2019, the per-game roster bonuses are once again $2 million. If he makes it to the Pro Bowl, the per-game roster bonuses drop to $1 million.
10. Making the Pro Bowl in 2018 makes the 2019 salary of $8 million guaranteed for injury as of the third day of the league year. It becomes fully guaranteed on April 1, 2019. (In other words, the Seahawks can cut Sherman after the 2018 season even if he's injured during the 2018 season; the injury protection doesn't kick in until the middle of March.)
11. The incentive package for 2019 is the same as 2018: $1 million for 90-percent playing time, $1 million for Pro Bowl, and $2 million for All-Pro team.
12. For 2020, the same base salary structure applies as in 2019. If Sherman doesn't make it to the Pro Bowl in 2018, the salary remains a non-guaranteed $7 million, along with per-game roster bonuses of $2 million. Making the Pro Bowl in 2018 bumps the salary to $8 million in 2020, drops the per-game roster bonuses to $1 million, and guarantees the salary for injury only as of the third day of the 2019 league year. It becomes fully guaranteed on April 1, 2020.
13. For 2020, the same incentive package applies as in 2018 and 2019: $1 million for 90-percent playing time, $1 million for Pro Bowl, and $2 million for All-Pro team.
14. There's a $50,000 workout bonus each year.
The full guarantee at signing is $3 million, and only $3 million. Another $4 million should be earned in 2018, if he passes the preseason physical. After that, it's up to the 49ers as to whether the deal continues into 2019.
The full base value of the deal is $21.15 million, with another $18 million tied to per-game roster bonuses, annual 90-percent playing-time incentives, an annual Pro Bowl incentive, and an annual All-Pro incentive.
To get the full $39.15 million, Sherman will need to play all 48 regular-season games over the next three years, be on the field for at least 90 percent of the snaps, make it to the Pro Bowl every year, and qualify for the All-Pro team every year.
Translation:
Seahawks fans (what's left of them) will ballot stuff Sherman into Pro Bowl so Niners have to pay him $$$
Mar 11, 2018 at 8:14 PM
- gold49digger
- Veteran
- Posts: 17,527
damn for all of our sake we want him to earn that whole contract.
Mar 11, 2018 at 8:15 PM
- Fanaticofnfl
- Veteran
- Posts: 18,609
Originally posted by Sourball:
For the teams sake of W's. I hope he does it.
Exactly! If we're paying him the full $39M, that means we have a consistent All-Pro who plays 90% of the snaps every game. He'd be worth it!
If he never gets selected as an All-Pro, he'll only get $11M per year, which I think is less than what he would have gotten with Seattle this year.
Mar 11, 2018 at 8:18 PM
- AB81Rules
- Veteran
- Posts: 33,107
Cap Numbers are, $6.175M(2018), $10.05M(2019-2020).
Mar 11, 2018 at 8:22 PM
- Fanaticofnfl
- Veteran
- Posts: 18,609
Originally posted by Dr_Bill_Walsh:
Gist:
10. Making the Pro Bowl in 2018 makes the 2019 salary of $8 million guaranteed for injury as of the third day of the league year. It becomes fully guaranteed on April 1, 2019. (In other words, the Seahawks can cut Sherman after the 2018 season even if he's injured during the 2018 season; the injury protection doesn't kick in until the middle of March.)
Translation:
Seahawks fans (what's left of them) will ballot stuff Sherman into Pro Bowl so Niners have to pay him $$$
Point 10 makes it sound like that's not necessarily the case (also it has a typo lol).
Mar 11, 2018 at 8:26 PM
- AB81Rules
- Veteran
- Posts: 33,107
Originally posted by DonnieDarko:
Originally posted by AB81Rules:
Cap Numbers are, $6.175M(2018), $10.05M(2019-2020).
How much cap room do we have right now?
$67,644,954
Mar 11, 2018 at 8:26 PM
- 49AllTheTime
- Veteran
- Posts: 68,234
Originally posted by AB81Rules:not sure, it's why i asked. Sort of like how Kap couldn't could get cut for being injured in 2015/2016 i think ?
Originally posted by 49AllTheTime:
Originally posted by Fanaticofnfl:i wonder whats the injury clause and if he gets paid the full amount if he gets IR'd
Originally posted by Sourball:
For the teams sake of W's. I hope he does it.
Exactly! If we're paying him the full $39M, that means we have a consistent All-Pro who plays 90% of the snaps every game. He'd be worth it!
If he never gets selected as an All-Pro, he'll only get $11M per year, which I think is less than what he would have gotten with Seattle this year.
What full amount his base salary?
Mar 11, 2018 at 8:26 PM
- AB81Rules
- Veteran
- Posts: 33,107
Originally posted by Fanaticofnfl:
Originally posted by Dr_Bill_Walsh:
Gist:
10. Making the Pro Bowl in 2018 makes the 2019 salary of $8 million guaranteed for injury as of the third day of the league year. It becomes fully guaranteed on April 1, 2019. (In other words, the Seahawks can cut Sherman after the 2018 season even if he's injured during the 2018 season; the injury protection doesn't kick in until the middle of March.)
Translation:
Seahawks fans (what's left of them) will ballot stuff Sherman into Pro Bowl so Niners have to pay him $$$
Point 10 makes it sound like that's not necessarily the case (also it has a typo lol).
Wait a minute
[ Edited by AB81Rules on Mar 11, 2018 at 8:28 PM ]