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ledge
21-05-2018, 11:28 AM
So I get lost every year on this subject, what is the salary cap for each club and amount of players on the list , do rookie players come under the salary cap?
I know their is a lot of variables as in what you spent last year and how it banks for the next year, front loading , back loading or mid loading contracts.
But I believe you can get away with only spending 97% of your salary cap .
Anyone have any details on this over the next few years seeings a new deal was made last year?

Ozza
21-05-2018, 11:32 AM
It was $12.4m last season - and it gets to $13.54m by 2022 - so somewhere in between there right now. Think it might be 12.55m this season.

Clubs have to pay at least 95%.

ledge
21-05-2018, 12:51 PM
It was $12.4m last season - and it gets to $13.54m by 2022 - so somewhere in between there right now. Think it might be 12.55m this season.

Clubs have to pay at least 95%.

And how many players are on a list ? I'm just trying to figure out the average and would be interesting to know the lowest contract you can be on .

ledge
21-05-2018, 12:59 PM
I had a thought that why couldn't every player be on the same wage and what you get from selling your name is the bonus , eg jumpers sold with your number on , Brownlow or other awards that you get are your plus income. Captain and vice captain get a little more , bit like a true work place.
I think it would solve players chasing money, every ones equal , clubs aren't struggling with the salary cap.
Ok I'm looking at things very simple but it would make it a hell of a lot easier and stop the crap million dollar a year contracts.
Players want to call it a workplace so why should one get more than another when they are employed to do the same thing?

Twodogs
21-05-2018, 01:04 PM
And how many players are on a list ? I'm just trying to figure out the average and would be interesting to know the lowest contract you can be on .

A basic first year draftee contract is $70 grand in the first year going up to $120 in the second, I remember that from the Tom Boyd trade.

ledge
21-05-2018, 01:20 PM
A basic first year draftee contract is $70 grand in the first year going up to $120 in the second, I remember that from the Tom Boyd trade.

That's a couple of years ago , I imagine it would be minimum 100,000 , jumping to 150,000
If there's 40 players a list on average players would be on over 300,000 now. That's a great wage in itself . And all players have a minimum 2 years , that's a fair start on life 600,000 even if you don't get recontracted.

Axe Man
21-05-2018, 01:38 PM
Some of the info you are after in an article from last year:

Players get 20 per cent pay rise in new CBA (http://www.afl.com.au/news/2017-06-20/players-get-20-per-cent-pay-rise-in-new-cba)


AFL PLAYERS will receive a 20 per cent pay rise this year after a new $1.84 billion dollar, six-year pay deal was announced in Adelaide on Tuesday afternoon.

The bumper pay rise lifts the average player wage from $309,000 to $371,000 and the player salary cap from $10.37m to $12.45m.

In 2022, the final year of the agreement, the average player wage will be $389,000 with a salary cap of $13.54m.

The wage for a first-round draft pick has been set at $88,000 in the first year of the deal, while rookies will be paid at least $71,500.

The minimum salary for players beyond their second season has been set at $100,000.

There are 44 on a list (usually 40 primary, 4 rookies). You can have more if you have category B rookies.

ledge
21-05-2018, 03:18 PM
That's a bloody good deal.
How do I get on a list for two years at the age of 54 ? Rekon I might not get on the field much but sure I can be multi skilled , cleaner trainer, hot dog seller, even security at VFL games and score board operater.

Mofra
21-05-2018, 03:44 PM
A basic first year draftee contract is $70 grand in the first year going up to $120 in the second, I remember that from the Tom Boyd trade.
First round picks get a higher base salary, and it's a scale based on their position in the draft.

FrediKanoute
21-05-2018, 03:49 PM
I had a thought that why couldn't every player be on the same wage and what you get from selling your name is the bonus , eg jumpers sold with your number on , Brownlow or other awards that you get are your plus income. Captain and vice captain get a little more , bit like a true work place.
I think it would solve players chasing money, every ones equal , clubs aren't struggling with the salary cap.
Ok I'm looking at things very simple but it would make it a hell of a lot easier and stop the crap million dollar a year contracts.
Players want to call it a workplace so why should one get more than another when they are employed to do the same thing?

Because believe it or not you often have people doing largely the same job being paid vastly different salaries at the same company.

Ozza
21-05-2018, 03:54 PM
I had a thought that why couldn't every player be on the same wage and what you get from selling your name is the bonus , eg jumpers sold with your number on , Brownlow or other awards that you get are your plus income. Captain and vice captain get a little more , bit like a true work place.
I think it would solve players chasing money, every ones equal , clubs aren't struggling with the salary cap.
Ok I'm looking at things very simple but it would make it a hell of a lot easier and stop the crap million dollar a year contracts.
Players want to call it a workplace so why should one get more than another when they are employed to do the same thing?

So you want to pay Jack Macrae and Callum Porter the same?

I'm sorry Ledge, I don't think you're going to get much support on this one.

Greystache
21-05-2018, 04:01 PM
I had a thought that why couldn't every player be on the same wage and what you get from selling your name is the bonus , eg jumpers sold with your number on , Brownlow or other awards that you get are your plus income. Captain and vice captain get a little more , bit like a true work place.
I think it would solve players chasing money, every ones equal , clubs aren't struggling with the salary cap.
Ok I'm looking at things very simple but it would make it a hell of a lot easier and stop the crap million dollar a year contracts.
Players want to call it a workplace so why should one get more than another when they are employed to do the same thing?

Because some do it at a higher standard than others. Equal pay regardless of performance is called communism, it's been an unmitigated failure everywhere it's been tried.

bornadog
21-05-2018, 04:33 PM
Because some do it at a higher standard than others. Equal pay regardless of performance is called communism, it's been an unmitigated failure everywhere it's been tried.

and it failed due to corruption, like paper bags under the desk :D and Visy ambassadors.

Twodogs
21-05-2018, 04:51 PM
Because some do it at a higher standard than others. Equal pay regardless of performance is called communism, it's been an unmitigated failure everywhere it's been tried.


And Collingwood under Jock McHale! Those boys loved the old man and played for the jumper. They all got three quid a week from Syd Coventry down to the 19th man, unless he didn't get on the ground then he only got 30 shillings.

Wren and Madden and those blokes were giving the players houses for wedding presents and wallets stuffed with money at the end of every season. But the club only payed the players their three quid.

hujsh
21-05-2018, 04:54 PM
Because some do it at a higher standard than others. Equal pay regardless of performance is called communism, it's been an unmitigated failure everywhere it's been tried.
...or an award wage.

Twodogs
21-05-2018, 04:58 PM
Maybe when we start the Industrial Relations Board we will talk about thus but until then let's keep the footy in the discussion.


And Greystache lost because he mentioned communism first.:cool: