Quote:
Originally Posted by CrazyCanuck
Higskin's post seems to confirm the incentive rules haven't changed.
It's not that complicated:
- If an incentive is "likely to be earned' it counts right away against the cap, with a credit the following year if the incentive is unreached.
- If an incentive is "unlikely to be earned" it won't count against the cap in the current year. It will count against the cap the following year if the incentive is reached.
... and any incentive involving the Redskins winning the Super Bowl would definitely be deemed "unlikely". 
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OK, sorry for asking so many questions, but I wanted to make sure I got this right. So a $40 million incentive that was likely to be earned this season but wasn't, is credit back to next season, meaning you're $40 million more under next year's cap simply by an incentive not reached in the prior season?
On the flip side, If that player exceeds all expectations, and looks like he could possibly earn those incentives "unlikely to be earned" - and those incentives were spread out throughout the life of the contract, a team
could possibly turn those incentives into guaranteed money if they wanted to free up salary cap space for a future season?