jsid wrote:
Not all the way. The team is still responsible for bonus money.
Grabbed this off the internet. When a player retires the team loses the rights to him and everything moves to the current year.
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retiring is like being cut, in that bonuses and signing bonuses accelerate.
there is language in contracts about guaranteed money and it pretty much says that if the player retires, then it's not guaranteed anymore.
Teams can go after a player who retires, and get portions back signing bonus and stuff. this happened with barry sanders.
to sum up, a retirement means that both parties agree the contract ends, dead money hits the cap (all pro rated bonuses accelerate to that year - with a possible share into the next year), and the team does have the right to go after some of that bonus money and get it back and get it off the cap.
EDIT: to clarify, that guaranteed money always have a condition on it, it is guaranteed against injury, or guaranteed against skill. That money is never guaranteed against retirement.
So guaranteed against injury means you get that salary if you are injured and cannot play. But the team can cut you if they want (and you are healthy) and you don't get paid. that language is used all the time, and it can be played up as 'guaranteed money'.
What most people think of 'guaranteed' is when it is guaranteed against skill, meaning that if the team cuts you because they replaced you with someone better, then you still get that money.
No where does the contract say the salary is guaranteed and you get that money no matter what even if you get up and just leave the nfl.
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Last edited at 2/16/2016 7:24 pm