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Salary cap

In sports, a salary cap is a limit on the amount of money a team can spend on player salaries, either as a per-player limit or a total limit for the team's roster (or both). Several sports leagues have made salary caps mandatory, both as a method of keeping overall costs down, and in order to balance the league so a wealthy team cannot become dominant simply by buying all the top players. Salary caps are often the major issue in negotiations between management and players' unionss. Salary caps are mostly used by North American sports leagues: the National Football League and the National Basketball Association and minor leagues in various sports. In England, the top-level leagues in both rugby codes—the Zurich Premiership in Rugby Union and the Super League in Rugby League—have salary caps. Recently, several European football (soccer) leagues have also discussed introducing salary caps.

Table of contents
1 History of salary caps
2 Salary cap in NFL
3 Salary cap in NBA
4 Salary caps in other leagues in North America
5 Salary caps in Europe
6 External links

History of salary caps

Salary caps were largely unnecessary in the era of the reserve clause, which was long a standard clause in professional sports player contracts and which forbade a player from negotiations with another team without the permission of the team holding that player's rights even after the contract's term was completed. This system began to unravel in the 1970's due largely to the activism of players' unions, and the threat of anti-trust legal actions. (Anti-trust actions were not a threat to baseball, which has long been exempt from these laws.) By the 1990's most players with several years' professional experience became free agents upon the expiry of their contracts and were free to negotiate a new contract their previous team or with any other team. This situation led to "bidding wars", which were generally (although not always) won by more affluent teams in larger media markets. In a response to this and as a way of limiting the damage this did to the competitive balance necessary to maintain fan interest in their sports, in the 1990's both the National Football League and the National Basketball Association negotiated salary cap arrangements with their respective players' unions.

Salary cap in NFL

The NFL cap is a so-called "hard cap", which no team can exceed for any reason under penalty from the league. This figure is increased annually based on growth of the league's revenues.
As of 2004, NFL salary cap is 80.5 million US dollars per team. The player salary which counts towards the salary cap is not necessarily the same as the amount which he is actually paid in the current year. For example, if a player signs a multi-year contract and is paid a signing bonus, only a part of the bonus counts towards the salary cap in the first season. (The rest is divided over the next years of contract.) The full relationship between a player's actual annualized salary and his so-called "cap number" is quite complex and beyond the scope of this article. Teams often design contracts so that some of money paid in the first years does not count towards cap until later. This effectively results in real salaries being slightly higher than the cap. The effect of the salary cap has been the release of many higher-salaried veteran players and their replacement by lower-salaried younger players. Salary cap prevents teams from formerly widespread practices such as keeping a one-time stellar quarterback whose skills are beginning to decline with age around to train a new, highly-touted but "raw" rookie, or generally keeping older players who had contributed much to the team on the playing roster until they were ready to retire on their own terms. It has also served to limit the rate of increase of the cost of operating a team. This has accrued to the owners' benefit, and is widely regarded as being responsible for the National Football League being overall the most financially stable of the major North American sports organizations.

Salary cap in NBA

Similarly to NFL, NBA's salary cap is calculated as a percentage of league's revenues. As of 2001/2002 season, the number was 42 million US dollars per team.\nThe NBA's salary cap is a so-called "soft cap", meaning that teams are allowed to exceed the cap number in order to retain the rights to a player who has already been on the team. This provision is known as the
Larry Bird rule after the former Boston Celtics great who was retained by that team until his retirement under the provisions of this rule. The provision resulted in all but two teams exceeding the cap in 2001/2002 season. NBA also has a luxury tax system which is triggered if average team payroll exceeds a certain number higher than the cap. In this case, the teams with payrolls exceeding a certain threshold have to pay a tax to league which is divided among the teams with lower payrolls. In the NBA, the salary cap has not had quite the effect of breaking up championship teams that it has had in the NFL. Repeat championship winners have been far more likely to occur in the NBA than in the NFL in the salary cap era. Of course, the converse effect of this has been to make the overall rate of salaries paid and hence the expense to operate a team rise more rapidly in the NBA than in the NFL.

Salary caps in other leagues in North America

It is widely anticipated that the negotiations for the next
National Hockey League collective bargaining agreement to take effect prior to the 2004-05 season will contain some sort of salary cap provision as well.\nMajor League Baseball has instead implemented the so-called luxury tax, an arrangement by which teams whose aggregate payroll exceeds a certain figure (annually revised) must pay into a pool designed to help the less affluent teams pay higher salaries. Salary caps are common in North American minor leagues in many sports.

Salary caps in Europe

Several European football (soccer) leagues are considering salary caps. In 2002, BBC reported
[1] that the G14 group of 18 leading European football teams has decided to cap the payrolls at 70% of team's income, starting from the 2005/2006 season. Serie A, the leading Italian football league and The Football League in England have also considered salary caps. As noted in the beginning of this article, the top English rugby competitions, the Zurich Premiership (Union) and the Super League (League), have caps in place.

External links

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NBA salary cap FAQ

"We're going to turn this team around 360 degrees." - Jason Kidd, upon his drafting to the Dallas Mavericks