- Jun 10, 2014
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Ok, if we use the Jarvis contract as an example....pretty sizeable deal and at the end of the day, there is only a cap saving of less than $500K per year year....close to nothing.
I know you suggest there is no way Jarvis gets the same total dollars without the deferral, which may be true, but it doesn't benefit him in any way whatsoever. Example....if someone is willing to give me $10 day, but no more, but offers me $14 in 10 years instead...I would say, yes, there is no way I'm getting that $14 today, but I'd prefer to get the $10 today and wait 10 years and get $14. I could take the $10 today, invest it and get a modest 5% return and it would be worth $16 in 10 years.
My main point on this has always been this:
1 - there is literally ZERO benefit to the player. I haven't seen a reasonable scenario yet as to why it benefits the player to defer. Tax situation has been thrown out there, but there isn't really any validity to that. I think some might suggests it protects them from themselves, forced savings as example, but they can easily get paid now, buy a Canada savings bond or someone other GIC that matures in 10 years and you'll be further ahead.
2 - there really isn't any meaningful cap savings. The Jarvis example you can show the $3.8M, but you can't look at it on a total contract, people only care about the cap on a year to year basis, so it's less than $500K per year, which gets even less significant as the cap increases
I disagree. 1. If there is ZERO benefit to the player then he doesn't do it. The benefit is simple. He gets more money than he would be offered without the deferral. Enough more to persuade him to sign the deal. We can only speculate on the specific alternatives but we can safely assume that both parties benefit in some way.
2. It looks to me like Canes consider the 500k to be meaningful. Why else do you think they did this?