Minimum salary reimbursement for aged veterans
Posted: Mon Feb 17, 2014 1:15 pm
The rules say that a team gets league welfare to even out the pay for minimum salary players, where one with more than 2 years of experience will get paid much more, but the "extra" is reimbursed by the league, with cap and tax numbers reflecting only what the team pays.
However, I have encountered several conflicting variations on how that is to be applied to players who only play part of that reimbursable season. The issue would be over a partial-season contract paid by a team, either a player who is signed after the season begins, or a player without a fully guaranteed contract who is waived partway through the season.
My question is: is the amount to be reimbursed applied on a per-day basis, or is it due to be applied only after the full 2-year-vet minimum has been paid by the team to that player? (I understand the reimbursement itself would not actually be paid until the end of the season - when it is actually paid is not what I'm asking.)
For example, let's say we're in a season where the 2-year-vet minimum is $900,000. Player X is non-guaranteed on a minimum which pays $1,200,000. Exactly 1/3 of the way through the year, he is waived, after the team has paid him $400,000, one third of the contract. At the end of the year, is that $400,000 going to be reimbursed down to $300,000 (one third of our theoretical 2-year-vet minimum) with a commensurate adjustment applying to cap and tax? Or, since they have paid him less than the 2-year-vet minimum, is the team they going to be on the hook for the whole 400K on cap and tax calculations?
And does the same accounting principle apply to minimum salary contracts signed after the season starts, and 10-day contracts after Jan 5, for the same sort of player?
However, I have encountered several conflicting variations on how that is to be applied to players who only play part of that reimbursable season. The issue would be over a partial-season contract paid by a team, either a player who is signed after the season begins, or a player without a fully guaranteed contract who is waived partway through the season.
My question is: is the amount to be reimbursed applied on a per-day basis, or is it due to be applied only after the full 2-year-vet minimum has been paid by the team to that player? (I understand the reimbursement itself would not actually be paid until the end of the season - when it is actually paid is not what I'm asking.)
For example, let's say we're in a season where the 2-year-vet minimum is $900,000. Player X is non-guaranteed on a minimum which pays $1,200,000. Exactly 1/3 of the way through the year, he is waived, after the team has paid him $400,000, one third of the contract. At the end of the year, is that $400,000 going to be reimbursed down to $300,000 (one third of our theoretical 2-year-vet minimum) with a commensurate adjustment applying to cap and tax? Or, since they have paid him less than the 2-year-vet minimum, is the team they going to be on the hook for the whole 400K on cap and tax calculations?
And does the same accounting principle apply to minimum salary contracts signed after the season starts, and 10-day contracts after Jan 5, for the same sort of player?