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Jets have favorable salary-cap situation for next GM
January, 9, 2015
JAN 9
2:30
PM ET
By Rich Cimini | ESPNNewYork.com
01COMMENTS0EMAILPRINT
Perhaps the most attractive aspect of the New York Jets' general-manager vacancy is the team's salary-cap situation. The Jets are well-positioned to spend a lot of money to fix the roster. We're talking about roughly $40 million in projected cap space.
The Jets have $98.75 million committed to the 2015 cap, according to ESPN Stats & Information. Right now, the league projects the cap to be $138.6 million to $141.8 million -- and it could go even higher.
By rule, they're not allowed to be cheap, as they were under former GM John Idzik. The collective bargaining agreement requires teams to spend 89 percent of the salary cap in cash over four-year periods, from 2013 to 2016 and 2017 to 2020. In 2014, the Jets were 30th in spending ($106.295 million) and below the 89-percent threshold since 2013 at 84.56 percent, according to CBSSports.com.
A look at the Jets' 10 highest cap charges for 2015
LT D'Brickashaw Ferguson -- $11.7 million
WR Percy Harvin -- $10.5 million
C Nick Mangold -- $10.4 million
DE Muhammad Wilkerson -- $6.97 million
WR Eric Decker -- $6.5 million
RT Breno Giacomini -- $5.1 million
CB Dee Milliner -- $3.45 million
LB Quinton Coples -- $2.8 million
RB Chris Ivory -- $2.75 million
DT Sheldon Richardson -- $2.74 million
January, 9, 2015
JAN 9
2:30
PM ET
By Rich Cimini | ESPNNewYork.com
01COMMENTS0EMAILPRINT
Perhaps the most attractive aspect of the New York Jets' general-manager vacancy is the team's salary-cap situation. The Jets are well-positioned to spend a lot of money to fix the roster. We're talking about roughly $40 million in projected cap space.
The Jets have $98.75 million committed to the 2015 cap, according to ESPN Stats & Information. Right now, the league projects the cap to be $138.6 million to $141.8 million -- and it could go even higher.
By rule, they're not allowed to be cheap, as they were under former GM John Idzik. The collective bargaining agreement requires teams to spend 89 percent of the salary cap in cash over four-year periods, from 2013 to 2016 and 2017 to 2020. In 2014, the Jets were 30th in spending ($106.295 million) and below the 89-percent threshold since 2013 at 84.56 percent, according to CBSSports.com.
A look at the Jets' 10 highest cap charges for 2015
LT D'Brickashaw Ferguson -- $11.7 million
WR Percy Harvin -- $10.5 million
C Nick Mangold -- $10.4 million
DE Muhammad Wilkerson -- $6.97 million
WR Eric Decker -- $6.5 million
RT Breno Giacomini -- $5.1 million
CB Dee Milliner -- $3.45 million
LB Quinton Coples -- $2.8 million
RB Chris Ivory -- $2.75 million
DT Sheldon Richardson -- $2.74 million