Every player that contributes to Tampa Bay’s dead cap in 2023

The Bucs have the highest dead cap in the NFL for 2023, and these are the players that make up the total.

The Tampa Bay Buccaneers have a lot of dead cap in 2023 — the most of any team, in fact.

Tampa Bay has $75,323,702 in dead cap coming into the season according to Over the Cap, and no other NFL team has more. 11 players make up the Bucs’ dead cap woes, and of the 11, only one player is currently still on Tampa Bay’s roster. The biggest offender is former Bucs QB Tom Brady, but the team and fans are likely fine with that given his contributions to the team’s three-straight playoff appearances and a Super Bowl win.

Here is every player involved in the Bucs’ dead cap total heading into the 2023 season:

Breaking down the Lions dead salary cap room for 2022

A year after spending over $67 million on over 50 players no longer in Detroit — both of which led the NFL in 2021 — the Lions are in much better financial shape entering training camp of 2022.

One sure sign of progress for the Detroit Lions as they enter the second season of the radical franchise rebuild is the dead salary cap the team is carrying into 2022.

A year after spending over $67 million on over 30 players no longer in Detroit — both of which led the NFL in 2021 — the Lions are in much better financial shape entering training camp of 2022.

The Lions currently have just four players who are no longer on the roster who remain on the salary cap ledger for the coming season. The dead cap figure of just over $20.3 million ranks 15th in the league, another significant improvement in the second season of GM Brad Holmes running the show.

As a reference, the Atlanta Falcons are on the hook for the most dead money in 2022 at $63.2 million. The New York Jets have the lowest dead cap figure at $2.1 million.

Chiefs dead cap: 4 players account for nearly $8 million

Only six NFL teams have less dead salary cap space than the #Chiefs in 2022.

Gone are the days of paying for past contract sins for the Kansas City Chiefs.

Right now, the Chiefs rank near the top of the NFL in effective salary cap space, with $14,755,982 available per Over The Cap. One of the reasons that their cap space is in such a good spot is because they’re not paying out a ton of dead money to players who are no longer on the team. For instance, Kansas City stopped paying for the contract handed out to Eric Berry just last season.

The Chiefs actually rank seventh in the NFL with just over $7.9 million in dead cap space according to Over The Cap. Only six NFL teams have less dead cap owed than Kansas City. They’re paying dead money on just four contracts right now, though, that number could increase as we get closer to the season.

Here’s a breakdown of those four players and how much dead cap they account for with numbers courtesy of Over The Cap:

Lions will be without 12 of their 15 highest-paid players in Week 15

The Lions will be without 12 of their 15 highest-compensated players in Week 15 due to injuries or dead cap

With tight end T.J. Hockenson the latest addition to the injured reserve, the Detroit Lions are now missing a major portion of the team’s 2021 salary cap. Whether it’s dead cap for players no longer on the team or guys who are sidelined with injuries, the Lions are paying a whole lot of salary cap obligation to players who cannot help them on the field in Week 15.

How much?

The Lions will be without players whose cap obligations total $120.8 million when they face the Arizona Cardinals in Ford Field in Week 15. The total NFL salary cap for 2021 is $182.5 million.

Dead cap: $65.084 million

Injured reserve: $49.007 million

Reserve/COVID-19: $6.795 million

Based on the figures from Over The Cap, the Lions will be without 12 of their 15 highest-compensated players. Only QB Jared Goff, RG Halapoulivaati Vaitai and LT Taylor Decker will be in uniform.

The players on the payroll the Lions will be without in Week 15, in order of 2021 salary cap commitment:

Rebuilding progress is clear for the Dolphins in one financial area

Rebuilding progress is clear for the Dolphins in one financial area

The Miami Dolphins are just about done flushing the system. Entering Year 3 of the Brian Flores & Chris Grier regime in South Florida, the team appears to be finished with the painstaking task of ridding their roster of the sins of the past: the team is completely remade and the financial weight of past decisions no longer lingers over this team like a black cloud on the horizon. Miami’s rebuilding effort may or may not net the team an elusive championship in the coming years — that will be the ultimate judge of whether or not it “worked”.

But at the very least we can say with confidence that the rebuild is working in more ways than one.

The Dolphins’ salary cap outlook is a terrific example of this — and we’re not talking about the spending power or room to sign players. Rather, we’re looking at the Dolphins’ dead cap: salary cap space that has been reserved for terminated contracts and players no longer on the team. NFL contracts can be tricky business, but the long and the short of it is that teams can pay players guaranteed money up front in the form of signing bonuses — that money can then be split up over several years of salary cap so long as that player remains on the roster. But if a team trades or cuts a player that they’ve paid more money to than they’ve had accounted against their past salary caps, the remaining balance gets advanced into the current season’s cap as “dead money”.

Warren Sharp of Sharp Football offered an eye-opening assessment of the Dolphins’ trajectory with the dead cap since the start of the Flores/Grier regime in 2019:

2019 was all about one thing for the Dolphins: clearing out bad contracts that were signed by the previous regime to older players who would not be a part of the team’s long-term forecast. It resulted in the highest figure in the league.

2020 was more of the same, only to a lesser degree. Miami, in 2020, still owed dead cap for the past contracts due to safety Reshad Jones ($10.1M), safety Minkah Fitzpatrick ($5M), linebacker Kiko Alonso ($2.2M) and many others — all signings or selections from a past regime under Adam Gase, Mike Tannenbaum and (to a degree that is debated) Grier.

Over the last two seasons, the Dolphins accounted for over $100M in cap space that went to players no longer on the team. So when you hear the Dolphins talk about attacking building a team with a “sustainable winner” in mind, this is why they operate they way they do. Paying big money up front and then deferring the balance to years down the road and having to foot the bill only part-way through the original financed window can create crippling backlogs of salary cap space that you can’t spend.

These Dolphins don’t do that. And now, entering year three of a new era, the team is finally free of the restrictions that bad habits of the past.

Dwayne Haskins due $4.26 million over next two seasons; Washington takes $8.5 million dead-cap hit

Washington will take an $8.5 million dead-cap hit from the release of former first-round pick Dwayne Haskins, with the QB still owed $4.26 million.

With the news that Washington has released former first-round quarterback Dwayne Haskins, the question of money and dead-cap now comes into play. According to NFL Network’s Tom Pelissero, Haskins is owed $4.266 million over the next two seasons, and whichever team picks him up off of waivers — if anyone — will be on the hook for that cash.

Washington is not free of Haskins financially going forward, as they will be on the hook for $8.5 million in dead-cap for the 2021 season, according to Spotrac. However, it does free up a roster spot for the rest of the season and will allow the team to focus on football, rather than all of the drama that seemed to follow Haskins throughout his first two years in the NFL.

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Chiefs have fourth-most dead cap for 2020 because of Eric Berry’s contract

Without Berry’s contract, the Kansas City Chiefs would have less than $175,000 in dead cap for 2020.

The Kansas City Chiefs had a great 2019 season, ending on the highest possible note by winning Super Bowl LIV.

As we inch closer to the 2020 league year, there’s at least one glaring reminder of the past mistakes that the franchise made. In addition to being tight up against the salary cap, with a projected $16.5 million in space, the Chiefs currently have the fourth-most dead cap space the 2020 season according to Spotrac.

They’re a far cry away from the Carolina Panthers, who have over $19 million more in dead cap for the upcoming season. Still, Kansas City is wasting a big chunk of money for the 2020 season and it’s all thanks to the contract of former Chiefs safety Eric Berry.

Former Chiefs GM John Dorsey signed Berry to a monster six-year, $78 million dollar contract in 2017. The contract made him the highest-paid safety in football. He played in exactly four games after signing that contract, all due to an Achilles injury in 2017 and a mysterious heel injury the following season. Berry was released ahead of the 2019 season and Kansas City still has $8 million on the books in 2020 for Berry’s contract.

If the Chiefs weren’t paying for Berry, they would have less than $175,000 in dead cap for players like Tremon Smith, Kahlil McKenzie, Kyle Shurmur, Byron Pringle, Cody Thompson and Jack Fox. With some more cap casualties likely in the coming weeks leading up to he 2020 free agency period, the Chiefs could end up in the No. 2 spot with relative ease. If they decide to move on from receiver Sammy Watkins, they’ll be on the hook for $7 million in dead cap space.

Luckily for Kansas City, current GM Brett Veach doesn’t seem doomed to make the same mistakes with contracts as his predecessor did. Even with some tough decisions ahead, he should be capable of keeping the team protected long-term.

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Browns carrying just over $5 million in dead cap room into 2020

Cleveland ranks 7th in the league in dead cap obligations

Dead salary cap room is what happens when a team is still obligated to allocate a portion of its cap figure to players no longer on the team. The Cleveland Browns will pay just over $5 million in 2020 salary cap space to players who are now ex-Browns.

It’s the cost of doing business to subtract players, whether via trades or simply cutting ties with the players.

The two biggest dead cap hits come from traded players. Offensive lineman Austin Corbett and running back Duke Johnson account for over half of the dead cap, from bonuses they got as Browns and the team is obligated to count.

  • Austin Corbett $1,773,962
  • Duke Johnson $1,500,000
  • Chris Smith $1,166,668
  • Antonio Callaway $358,928
  • Genard Avery $144,474
  • Donnie Lewis $76,443
  • David Blough $13,337

Several other players count as hits under $10,000 to raise the exact total, per Over The Cap, to $5,087,312 in dead money. That figure ranks seventh in the NFL. The Carolina Panthers carry the most dead money at $15.6 million. Tampa Bay sits with the lowest dead cap figure at just $130,412.