|
Post by Buschworker(Steelers) on Apr 11, 2013 18:13:55 GMT -5
I have a question. I read somewhere that there will not be conditional drops. However when I looked more into this quote "Overall Contract Length The total length of all contract terms shall be no more 125 years, while the maximum contract term for any individual player (veteran or rookie) shall be 5 years." If you have 124 years of contracts and want to make a trade with someone to pick get another player and because of their contract it puts you at 126 could you post that you want to drop player X if the trade is accepted?
|
|
|
Post by Oakland Raiders (Andrew) on Apr 11, 2013 19:31:21 GMT -5
I believe you'd have to drop the player first. My understanding is that the contract years are like the salary cap in that you cannot exceed the limit.
|
|
|
Post by Buschworker(Steelers) on Apr 11, 2013 20:23:07 GMT -5
I think it should be allowed because player X would be drop when accepting the trade, but having to wait for TAB to approve the trade is where I see the problem. Even if TAB said that trade would be approved when and if player X was dropped.
|
|
|
Post by Dawgs GM (Hud) on Apr 11, 2013 23:16:58 GMT -5
I think it should be allowed because player X would be drop when accepting the trade, but having to wait for TAB to approve the trade is where I see the problem. Even if TAB said that trade would be approved when and if player X was dropped. I would agree. A conditional drop should be allowed assuming a trade is approved. You can't make a GM drop a player just to have the TAB shoot down the trade. Then you'd be without a player for no good reason.
|
|
|
Post by Crestmount (Colts) on Apr 12, 2013 2:30:00 GMT -5
If you intend to make a trade that will see your contracts go above 125yrs you need to advise at the time, the player you will be waiving. If the trade is then approved you need to post a waiver thread here, while I will process the waiver on MFL before I process the trade there. Importantly, you must advise the potential waiver at the time you post the intended trade--whether the TAB take that into account is up to the individual.
|
|