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Tenders (1 Viewer)

tikitime

Footballguy
Can someone please explain them to me like i'm an idiot (which I am).

I understand that when a player is given a 1st and 3rd round tender, for example, that if another team signs him, that the tendering team would be entitled to those picks.

What I am not clear about however, is whether there is some sort of formula correlating the Draft picks listed as the tender to a particluar salary that the player is entitled to if he were to sign a salary with the tendering team.

 
Below is a breakdown of the tender offers, listed by number of accrued seasons, for Restricted Free Agents in 2010.

Player with THREE Accrued Seasons

Right of First Refusal — $1,101,000

Right of First Refusal + Pick in player’s original draft round — $1,101,000*

Right of First Refusal + Second-Round Draft Pick — $1,684,000*

Right of First Refusal + First-Round Draft Pick — $2,396,000*

Right of First Refusal + First- AND Third-Round Draft Picks — $3,043,000*

*or 110% of player’s 2009 Paragraph 5 Salary, whichever is greater

Player with FOUR Accrued Seasons

Right of First Refusal — $1,176,000

Right of First Refusal + Pick in player’s original draft round — $1,176,000*

Right of First Refusal + Second-Round Draft Pick — $1,759,000*

Right of First Refusal + First-Round Draft Pick — $2,521,000*

Right of First Refusal + First- AND Third-Round Draft Picks — $3,168,000*

*or 110% of player’s 2009 Paragraph 5 Salary, whichever is greater

Player with FIVE Accrued Seasons

Right of First Refusal — $1,226,000

Right of First Refusal + Pick in player’s original draft round — $1,226,000*

Right of First Refusal + Second-Round Draft Pick — $1,809,000*

Right of First Refusal + First-Round Draft Pick — $2,621,000*

Right of First Refusal + First- AND Third-Round Draft Picks — $3,268,000*

*or 110% of player’s 2009 Paragraph 5 Salary, whichever is greater

Courtesy of NFLLabor.com

 
Kleck said:
Below is a breakdown of the tender offers, listed by number of accrued seasons, for Restricted Free Agents in 2010.

Player with THREE Accrued Seasons

Right of First Refusal — $1,101,000

Right of First Refusal + Pick in player’s original draft round — $1,101,000*

Right of First Refusal + Second-Round Draft Pick — $1,684,000*

Right of First Refusal + First-Round Draft Pick — $2,396,000*

Right of First Refusal + First- AND Third-Round Draft Picks — $3,043,000*

*or 110% of player’s 2009 Paragraph 5 Salary, whichever is greater

Player with FOUR Accrued Seasons

Right of First Refusal — $1,176,000

Right of First Refusal + Pick in player’s original draft round — $1,176,000*

Right of First Refusal + Second-Round Draft Pick — $1,759,000*

Right of First Refusal + First-Round Draft Pick — $2,521,000*

Right of First Refusal + First- AND Third-Round Draft Picks — $3,168,000*

*or 110% of player’s 2009 Paragraph 5 Salary, whichever is greater

Player with FIVE Accrued Seasons

Right of First Refusal — $1,226,000

Right of First Refusal + Pick in player’s original draft round — $1,226,000*

Right of First Refusal + Second-Round Draft Pick — $1,809,000*

Right of First Refusal + First-Round Draft Pick — $2,621,000*

Right of First Refusal + First- AND Third-Round Draft Picks — $3,268,000*

*or 110% of player’s 2009 Paragraph 5 Salary, whichever is greater

Courtesy of NFLLabor.com
thanks, that's helpful, but it doesn't jibe with this link-http://sports.espn.go.com/nfl/news/story?id=4966109

"Sproles would earn $7.2897 million in 2010 if he signs the tender. The Chargers would have seven days to match an offer if a team tries to sign him."

 
Kleck said:
Below is a breakdown of the tender offers, listed by number of accrued seasons, for Restricted Free Agents in 2010.

Player with THREE Accrued Seasons

Right of First Refusal — $1,101,000

Right of First Refusal + Pick in player’s original draft round — $1,101,000*

Right of First Refusal + Second-Round Draft Pick — $1,684,000*

Right of First Refusal + First-Round Draft Pick — $2,396,000*

Right of First Refusal + First- AND Third-Round Draft Picks — $3,043,000*

*or 110% of player’s 2009 Paragraph 5 Salary, whichever is greater

Player with FOUR Accrued Seasons

Right of First Refusal — $1,176,000

Right of First Refusal + Pick in player’s original draft round — $1,176,000*

Right of First Refusal + Second-Round Draft Pick — $1,759,000*

Right of First Refusal + First-Round Draft Pick — $2,521,000*

Right of First Refusal + First- AND Third-Round Draft Picks — $3,168,000*

*or 110% of player’s 2009 Paragraph 5 Salary, whichever is greater

Player with FIVE Accrued Seasons

Right of First Refusal — $1,226,000

Right of First Refusal + Pick in player’s original draft round — $1,226,000*

Right of First Refusal + Second-Round Draft Pick — $1,809,000*

Right of First Refusal + First-Round Draft Pick — $2,621,000*

Right of First Refusal + First- AND Third-Round Draft Picks — $3,268,000*

*or 110% of player’s 2009 Paragraph 5 Salary, whichever is greater

Courtesy of NFLLabor.com
thanks, that's helpful, but it doesn't jibe with this link-http://sports.espn.go.com/nfl/news/story?id=4966109

"Sproles would earn $7.2897 million in 2010 if he signs the tender. The Chargers would have seven days to match an offer if a team tries to sign him."
Yes it does. For Sproles, he was franchised last year, so in his case the "or 110% of player's 2009 salary" was used.
 
Kleck said:
Below is a breakdown of the tender offers, listed by number of accrued seasons, for Restricted Free Agents in 2010.

Player with THREE Accrued Seasons

Right of First Refusal — $1,101,000

Right of First Refusal + Pick in player’s original draft round — $1,101,000*

Right of First Refusal + Second-Round Draft Pick — $1,684,000*

Right of First Refusal + First-Round Draft Pick — $2,396,000*

Right of First Refusal + First- AND Third-Round Draft Picks — $3,043,000*

*or 110% of player’s 2009 Paragraph 5 Salary, whichever is greater

Player with FOUR Accrued Seasons

Right of First Refusal — $1,176,000

Right of First Refusal + Pick in player’s original draft round — $1,176,000*

Right of First Refusal + Second-Round Draft Pick — $1,759,000*

Right of First Refusal + First-Round Draft Pick — $2,521,000*

Right of First Refusal + First- AND Third-Round Draft Picks — $3,168,000*

*or 110% of player’s 2009 Paragraph 5 Salary, whichever is greater

Player with FIVE Accrued Seasons

Right of First Refusal — $1,226,000

Right of First Refusal + Pick in player’s original draft round — $1,226,000*

Right of First Refusal + Second-Round Draft Pick — $1,809,000*

Right of First Refusal + First-Round Draft Pick — $2,621,000*

Right of First Refusal + First- AND Third-Round Draft Picks — $3,268,000*

*or 110% of player’s 2009 Paragraph 5 Salary, whichever is greater

Courtesy of NFLLabor.com
thanks, that's helpful, but it doesn't jibe with this link-http://sports.espn.go.com/nfl/news/story?id=4966109

"Sproles would earn $7.2897 million in 2010 if he signs the tender. The Chargers would have seven days to match an offer if a team tries to sign him."
Yes it does. For Sproles, he was franchised last year, so in his case the "or 110% of player's 2009 salary" was used.
so if they were franchised the prior year, they would be guaranteed 110% of their salary?
 
Kleck said:
Below is a breakdown of the tender offers, listed by number of accrued seasons, for Restricted Free Agents in 2010.

Player with THREE Accrued Seasons

Right of First Refusal — $1,101,000

Right of First Refusal + Pick in player’s original draft round — $1,101,000*

Right of First Refusal + Second-Round Draft Pick — $1,684,000*

Right of First Refusal + First-Round Draft Pick — $2,396,000*

Right of First Refusal + First- AND Third-Round Draft Picks — $3,043,000*

*or 110% of player’s 2009 Paragraph 5 Salary, whichever is greater

Player with FOUR Accrued Seasons

Right of First Refusal — $1,176,000

Right of First Refusal + Pick in player’s original draft round — $1,176,000*

Right of First Refusal + Second-Round Draft Pick — $1,759,000*

Right of First Refusal + First-Round Draft Pick — $2,521,000*

Right of First Refusal + First- AND Third-Round Draft Picks — $3,168,000*

*or 110% of player’s 2009 Paragraph 5 Salary, whichever is greater

Player with FIVE Accrued Seasons

Right of First Refusal — $1,226,000

Right of First Refusal + Pick in player’s original draft round — $1,226,000*

Right of First Refusal + Second-Round Draft Pick — $1,809,000*

Right of First Refusal + First-Round Draft Pick — $2,621,000*

Right of First Refusal + First- AND Third-Round Draft Picks — $3,268,000*

*or 110% of player’s 2009 Paragraph 5 Salary, whichever is greater

Courtesy of NFLLabor.com
thanks, that's helpful, but it doesn't jibe with this link-http://sports.espn.go.com/nfl/news/story?id=4966109

"Sproles would earn $7.2897 million in 2010 if he signs the tender. The Chargers would have seven days to match an offer if a team tries to sign him."
Yes it does. For Sproles, he was franchised last year, so in his case the "or 110% of player's 2009 salary" was used.
so if they were franchised the prior year, they would be guaranteed 110% of their salary?
The franchising part really has nothing to do with the 110% clause, I only referenced that as that is what got Sproles such a large tender amount for this year.For all the tenders, players have to get offered EITHER the amount listed with the tender (based on the number of years of NFL service and the level of the tender they received) -- OR -- they have to be paid 10% more than they were last season, WHICHEVER IS GREATER.

 
And the picks are compensatory picks that just come out of thin air, right? I would think that the team with the 2.01 would not be to happy getting pushed back several slots due to compensatory 1st round picks.

 
And the picks are compensatory picks that just come out of thin air, right? I would think that the team with the 2.01 would not be to happy getting pushed back several slots due to compensatory 1st round picks.
No. The picks awarded as compensation are the signing teams actual draft picks. They would forfeit the associated picks if the original team did not match the offer within 7 days.And while we are on the subject, compensatory picks don't come into play until after the regular portion of the 3rd round has been completed.
 
And the picks are compensatory picks that just come out of thin air, right? I would think that the team with the 2.01 would not be to happy getting pushed back several slots due to compensatory 1st round picks.
No. The picks awarded as compensation are the signing teams actual draft picks. They would forfeit the associated picks if the original team did not match the offer within 7 days.And while we are on the subject, compensatory picks don't come into play until after the regular portion of the 3rd round has been completed.
Got it. Thanks!
 

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