All cap. Salary cap,FinLogic that is.
With NFL free agency right around the corner, all 32 teams in the league will be checking their ledgers, balancing their checkbooks and scrounging up pennies from the couch to make sure they have every last dollar to spend.
This year, some big dominoes have fallen before free agency (or the tampering period) has yet to open. Kansas City Chiefs defensive tackle Chris Jones and quarterback Baker Mayfield are two of the free agents to come off the board before other teams had a chance to pursue them.
Still, there will be plenty of big names on the market who could be headed elsewhere: Russell Wilson, Calvin Ridley, Saquon Barkley and Tyron Smith are four potential roster-altering pickups who could be had in the coming days and weeks; that is, if your team has the money to spend on them.
Here's what to know about each squad's salary cap situation ahead of the NFL tampering window and free agency this week:
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Here's how much money each team has to work with entering the NFL's legal tampering period, as of March 10, sorted by most space to least space (top 51 contracts):
The Washington Commanders are sitting pretty entering NFL free agency. They hold more than $96 million in cap space, while also set to pick No. 2 overall in the 2024 NFL draft in April. That means Washington and new head coach Dan Quinn could be poised for a massive offseason.
Jim Harbaugh has his work cut out for him. The Los Angeles Chargers are expected to make big moves to shed salary this offseason, which makes sense: They're currently $20 million over the cap, per Spotrac.
On Feb. 23, the NFL announced that the salary cap would be set at at a whopping $255.4 million per club. That's an increase of roughly $30 million per team; the cap was set at $224.8 million in 2023.
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