Illegal Pants Downfield
Footballguy
Let me preface this by saying our league has a pretty complex set of rules, so I will generalize this question so its useful to as many leagues as possible.
Simplified, we are a long-running 16-team IDP salary cap dynasty league with 53-man active rosters and 5-man development/practice squad (from here I'll refer to it as the d-squad).
Any players on the 5-man d-squad in our league do not count against the salary cap, which means many franchises tend to stash some high-priced rookies/young players on their d-squads in order to keep a high salary off of their cap while the player is young and not a fantasy starter/contributor. Alot of rookie QBs and WRs/TEs tend to wind up on the d-squad because the general perception is that they often take a few years to develop. For example, guys like Aaron Rodgers and Santonio Holmes have spent seasons on the D-Squad in recent years.
Our league strives to mimic the NFL as much as possible, so in this year's annual rules review, it was suggested that we allow franchises to be able to make claims on other teams' d-squad players, similar to how NFL franchises can claim players off of other teams' practice squads.
Does anyone have a dynasty league that uses a development squad or similar? Do you have rules that allow a franchise to somehow try to claim players off other teams' development squads? How does your league handle it?
At first blush, I'm thinking of all of the possible rules & conditions that have to be written to enable this (including, but not limited to):
How are claims initiated? How do we notify the current owner that there is another franchise making a claim for one of his d-squad players? [Note]: Does MFL have built-in capabilities to handle this or does it need to be managed 'manually' by message board/email?
How much time does the player's current franchise have to claim right of first refusal (i.e. we have to allow some way for a team to keep their player)?
If the current franchise matches the offer in the initial claim attempt, can the claiming team attempt to raise again, or does the claiming team only have one shot at it? Is there a 'waiting period' in between attempts? 1 week? 2 weeks? 4 weeks? Next season? Or, does it just become an open bidding process back and forth until one team or the other decides they aren't willing to match?
If the player's current franchise decides not to match the claiming team's offer, is there any compensation (draft picks?) for losing a player off your d-squad? [FWIW: the NFL gives no compensation for teams who lose practice squad players]
Do the picks come as a sort of 'trade' from the claiming franchise, or are they 'compensatory picks', tacked on at the end of a round?
How is the level of compensation determined?
Is it based somehow on how the player was originally acquired? (i.e. if you took Aaron Rodgers in the 1st round of the rookie draft, and another team claimed him, you get a compensatory 1st round rookie pick in return; if you picked up RB Chauncey Washington as a free agent, and another team claimed him, you get a compensatory 5th round rookie pick in return)
Is it based on the salary required to acquire him? (i.e. if I put a $2MM/year claim on a player, the other franchise gets a 1st round pick as compensation; if I put a $500K claim on a player, the other franchise gets a 4th round pick).
Or, is it universal (i.e. no matter how a player was acquired or what his salary is, you receive a 3rd round pick as compensation if someone else claims him)?
If the claiming team wins the player, do they have to move him to their active roster or can they place the player on their own d-squad?
If the current owner matches the bid, and keeps the player, do they have to move him to their active roster?
My league obviously will also have to consider a long list of issues surrounding the player's salary and how that is handled throughout the claim, but as I mentioned, I want to keep the discussion applicable to more leagues than just mine...It's a rather daunting list of considerations, and that's just at first glance - I'm wondering if anyone has any existing rules that are similar that might help us to consider things we may be overlooking/close any loopholes before they become issues, etc.?
Thanks in advance,
IPD
Simplified, we are a long-running 16-team IDP salary cap dynasty league with 53-man active rosters and 5-man development/practice squad (from here I'll refer to it as the d-squad).
Any players on the 5-man d-squad in our league do not count against the salary cap, which means many franchises tend to stash some high-priced rookies/young players on their d-squads in order to keep a high salary off of their cap while the player is young and not a fantasy starter/contributor. Alot of rookie QBs and WRs/TEs tend to wind up on the d-squad because the general perception is that they often take a few years to develop. For example, guys like Aaron Rodgers and Santonio Holmes have spent seasons on the D-Squad in recent years.
Our league strives to mimic the NFL as much as possible, so in this year's annual rules review, it was suggested that we allow franchises to be able to make claims on other teams' d-squad players, similar to how NFL franchises can claim players off of other teams' practice squads.
Does anyone have a dynasty league that uses a development squad or similar? Do you have rules that allow a franchise to somehow try to claim players off other teams' development squads? How does your league handle it?
At first blush, I'm thinking of all of the possible rules & conditions that have to be written to enable this (including, but not limited to):
How are claims initiated? How do we notify the current owner that there is another franchise making a claim for one of his d-squad players? [Note]: Does MFL have built-in capabilities to handle this or does it need to be managed 'manually' by message board/email?
How much time does the player's current franchise have to claim right of first refusal (i.e. we have to allow some way for a team to keep their player)?
If the current franchise matches the offer in the initial claim attempt, can the claiming team attempt to raise again, or does the claiming team only have one shot at it? Is there a 'waiting period' in between attempts? 1 week? 2 weeks? 4 weeks? Next season? Or, does it just become an open bidding process back and forth until one team or the other decides they aren't willing to match?
If the player's current franchise decides not to match the claiming team's offer, is there any compensation (draft picks?) for losing a player off your d-squad? [FWIW: the NFL gives no compensation for teams who lose practice squad players]
Do the picks come as a sort of 'trade' from the claiming franchise, or are they 'compensatory picks', tacked on at the end of a round?
How is the level of compensation determined?
Is it based somehow on how the player was originally acquired? (i.e. if you took Aaron Rodgers in the 1st round of the rookie draft, and another team claimed him, you get a compensatory 1st round rookie pick in return; if you picked up RB Chauncey Washington as a free agent, and another team claimed him, you get a compensatory 5th round rookie pick in return)
Is it based on the salary required to acquire him? (i.e. if I put a $2MM/year claim on a player, the other franchise gets a 1st round pick as compensation; if I put a $500K claim on a player, the other franchise gets a 4th round pick).
Or, is it universal (i.e. no matter how a player was acquired or what his salary is, you receive a 3rd round pick as compensation if someone else claims him)?
If the claiming team wins the player, do they have to move him to their active roster or can they place the player on their own d-squad?
If the current owner matches the bid, and keeps the player, do they have to move him to their active roster?
My league obviously will also have to consider a long list of issues surrounding the player's salary and how that is handled throughout the claim, but as I mentioned, I want to keep the discussion applicable to more leagues than just mine...It's a rather daunting list of considerations, and that's just at first glance - I'm wondering if anyone has any existing rules that are similar that might help us to consider things we may be overlooking/close any loopholes before they become issues, etc.?
Thanks in advance,
IPD