Woodridge Ryan wrote:
Can someone enlighten me on the Bears cap space? If I remember correctly Angelo decided to not use about 16 million of it last year. If, and if, that's the case going into this year then I guess I ask why not spend the money on Jones then? Why change the team when you're this close to a superbowl. Now if they are a lot closer then I understand, but the team has as much cap space as anyone in the league if memory serves me correct. I understand a lot of arguements on here againt keeping jones, but if anyone is going to say because of cap space I laugh considering their recent history of not spending close to the full cap amount.
They went into this off-season with about $16-$17 million in cap space (according to John Clayton), but I believe that is not counting Lance Briggs 1 year deal for $7.2 million because he hasn't actually signed the contract yet. I could be wrong on when Briggs' contract actually counts, so please correct me if I am wrong.
Regardless of the cap room they may have, when you have so much money locked into Benson, can you give another $12 million to Jones ? Not only would you be giving almost $30 million in signing bonuses to the RB position, but you would also not be able to get the retrun on the huge investment made on Benson.
He's really the key to this whole deal - either he plays like a great player or he doesn't. Moving up in the draft is great and all (though I'd love to move down from #31, and pick up a mid 2nd and mid 3rd), but Benson is the key.
By the way, according to the NFL trade chart used by most NFL teams, the Bears trade for Thomas Jones (basically moving from the bottom of round 2 to the top of round 2, is the equivalent to picking up a high 3rd round pick.
http://www.nfldraftcountdown.com/featur ... chart.html
And here's the math:
According to the chart, a high 2nd round pick is worth about 520 points. A low 2nd round pick is worth about 276 points. The difference is 244 points. The Bears gained 244 points in this trade. The draft pick equivalence to picking up 244 points is the 5th pick in the 3rd round of the draft. That is how NFL front office executives look at this deal.
If you don't think Thomas Jones was worth a high 3rd round pick in this market, and felt we should've kept him for another year with Benson on the bench and get no compensation for him next year, that's another story. But I think most of us agreed that the Bears needed to go into this looking to acquire a mid 3rd rounder for the guy and according to the draft chart, the actually did better than that.