cuppacoffee
Resident Grouch
I hope that Caserio is reading/understanding all this. It is his thread after all. 



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Exactly. Luck, injuries, matchups, home field. There are so many factors that go into winning a Super Bowl, I have a hard time laying it all on QB salary percentage. I don't care how much money Nate Peterman is making, you're not going to win a Super Bowl with him.![]()
It stands to reason that the 14%, hell 15% or higher barrier will be broken sooner than later as more and more QB's are earning that amount or greater.
The last decade was a different story as there were generally 1-3 who earned greater than 13% in any given season.
Just curious, how does the percentage change if you include all Super Bowl QBs, regardless if they won or lost the game? Does it alter anything significantly?
You're stuck on a % which is not suitable to your ridiculous argument. Qb % on the cap is escalating because of the sheer value of erasers. See how you try to wordplay it. So, it doesn't matter that the qbs are top 5 in their position as long as it doesn't hit your magical 14%. So Mahomes will never win another ring because he's taking up 14% of the cap, correct? Your mythical 14% isn't the reason, its the simple fact teams haven't built teams to withstand losses of personel when your elite players are taking up the chunk of your cap.
It stands to reason that the 14%, hell 15% or higher barrier will be broken sooner than later as more and more QB's are earning that amount or greater.
The last decade was a different story as there were generally 1-3 who earned greater than 13% in any given season.
That was a joke and nod to the fans of Nate Peterman.Sort of a strawman argument when nobody is ever going to pay Nate Peterman anything near these numbers.
Just curious, how does the percentage change if you include all Super Bowl QBs, regardless if they won or lost the game? Does it alter anything significantly?
I gave 3 examples in the same post you got this from, but it does look like the Brady in 2016 number might be a mistake. I got it here, but cannot corroborate.I saw you gave one flawed example as OTC showed different than your claimed 15% unspent.
NE had 2.8% or 4.29m unspent out of a cap of 152.2m.
That's the only example I saw .... and again , the figures were flawed.
Then there's the fact that the CBA requires teams to spend at least 90% of the cap so acting as if teams are leaving huge chunks of unspent money just doesn't jive with the facts.
That was a joke and nod to the fans of Nate Peterman.
Sort of a strawman argument when nobody is ever going to pay Nate Peterman anything near these numbers.
I don't think the debate is about laying it all on one position's responsibility. It's a zero sum game with salary cap management, and if you rob Peter to pay Paul the starting QB, then it is simple logic to realize that the pie gets smaller for everyone else on the team. Bench players matter, too, which is where a lot of sacrifices get made due to lack of funds. Think of how many teams every year either never get off the ground or fail in the playoffs due to injuries and lack of good backups to make up the loss of talent.
Just curious, how does the percentage change if you include all Super Bowl QBs, regardless if they won or lost the game? Does it alter anything significantly?
lol I gotcha'. And I assume the joke continues with 'fans of Nate Peterman'.![]()
Who is Nate Peterman?
I gave 3 examples in the same post you got this from, but it does look like the Brady in 2016 number might be a mistake. I got it here, but cannot corroborate.
Redirect Notice
www.google.com
The Manning number varies from site to site and is between 17 and 19% of active roster cap hit
Really we're splitting hairs here.
The concept is validated by history .... this is the ultimate team sport.
You can draw the line wherever you want but the fact is that you can't pay one guy a massive percentage of the cap and expect to win at a high level , you got 54 other guys to pay.
Not only this, if your team makes it to the conference title game, its good enough to win a superbowl.SB losing QB's salary cap % since 2010:
2021: Patrick Mahomes: 2.4%
2020: Jimmy G: 10.6%
2019: Jared Goff: 4.3%
2018: Tom Brady: 8.4%
2017: Matt Ryan: 15.3%
2016: Cam Newton: 9.1%
2015: Russell Wilson: 0.6%
2014: Peyton Manning: 14.2%
2013: Colin Kaepernick: 1.0%
2012: Tom Brady: 11.0%
2011: Ben Roethlisberger: Uncapped season
2010: Peyton Manning: 17.2%
Qb driven league. If you don't have one, you dont stand a chance. If you have one not on a rookie contract, chances are he's taking up a substantial piece of your cap if he's top 10 quality. No gm will look at a % of the cap whe negotiating a franchise qb/eraser type of qb. Some qbs are qbs of the franchise, not franchise caliber/eraser types. Having that dude is the only sustainable constant in the NFL.Really we're splitting hairs here.
The concept is validated by history .... this is the ultimate team sport.
You can draw the line wherever you want but the fact is that you can't pay one guy a massive percentage of the cap and expect to win at a high level , you got 54 other guys to pay.
How many QBs occupied more than 13.2% of their respective team cap space in any given year?Really we're splitting hairs here.
The concept is validated by history .... this is the ultimate team sport.
You can draw the line wherever you want but the fact is that you can't pay one guy a massive percentage of the cap and expect to win at a high level , you got 54 other guys to pay.
How many QBs occupied more than 13.2% of their respective team cap space in any given year?
Is it possible that since there are so many that were paid under that figure (maybe even none in a particular year) that the odds simply tilt toward that end?
Let's say that in a certain year, no QB occupied that much cap space.
Well, it's simple, any QB that won the SB that year would have occupied less than that 13.2% figure, right?
The concept is well understood.Look , stop arguing the X% and realize the concept ..... If you can't comprehend that you got no business in the conversation.
The concept is well understood.
No we're not.Then we're done here.
Who is Nate Peterman?
No we're not.
Nobody is arguing. They just don’t agree with your concept.
Take my bet then.Everyone agrees with the concept ... they just want to argue over where the line in the sand is ... how much is to much.
That's just impossible to nail down , there's too many moving parts to a football team.
So if you're referring to me, yes I said I thought NP was worth a 3rd pick back in 2017. He went in the 5th rd. He is still in the league 5 years later so I guess he was worth a middle round pick. This year I have posted I am beginning to like Mac Jones so I guess five years from now someone is going to accuse me of being high on Jones. LOLA quarterback in which one member was very high on. Lol
Does this Peterman happen to wear an Urban Sombrero?I assumed that he was talking about Nathan Peterman, now backup QB for the Raiders, after being drafted by the Bills.
Because those articles are the genesis of this bogus argument. Based upon random observation and not actual statistical analysis. What you would expect from a writer with no mathematics background.I note none of arguing against this bothered to reply to the many articles I posted on the topic or the one DB added.
High on Jones? Is that what they're calling it now? I can't keep up anymore.I guess five years from now someone is going to accuse me of being high on Jones. LOL
So if you're referring to me, yes I said I thought NP was worth a 3rd pick back in 2017. He went in the 5th rd. He is still in the league 5 years later so I guess he was worth a middle round pick. This year I have posted I am beginning to like Mac Jones so I guess five years from now someone is going to accuse me of being high on Jones. LOL
It makes more sense to consider top 5 QB pay in a given year not named Brady; otherwise, the simple odds of the large number of QBs under the figure can easily tilt the favor.I note none of arguing against this bothered to reply to the many articles I posted on the topic or the one DB added. At this point I don’t even know what point you people are trying to prove is.
Take my bet then.
I say one of the 11 QBs on the top of that list will win the SB this year.
Because those articles are the genesis of this bogus argument. Based upon random observation and not actual statistical analysis. What you would expect from a writer with no mathematics background.
So you're moving the goal post from the first time you introduced the subject?If you followed the thread , I stated that it would likely happen sooner than later .... why the hell would I take your bet ?
Bottom line is that there is a point where too much is too much .... that's simply undeniable.
Where you want to put that figure is debatable depending upon what set of facts you want to apply or how you interpret them.
Everyone agrees with the concept ... they just want to argue over where the line in the sand is ... how much is to much.
That's just impossible to nail down , there's too many moving parts to a football team.
So you're moving the goal post from the first time you introduced the subject?
In one of his very first posts regarding the matter, he specifically brought up the 13.2%, claiming that by paying a QB that much, the team lacks the money to field a team that can win a Superbowl.
In one of his very first posts regarding the matter, he specifically brought up the 13.2%, claiming that by paying a QB that much, the team lacks the money to field a team that can win a Superbowl.
In one of his very first posts regarding the matter, he specifically brought up the 13.2%, claiming that by paying a QB that much, the team lacks the money to field a team that can win a Superbowl.