Having no fans in the stands was always going to hit the NFL pocketbooks hard in 2021. Another crummy side effect of the COVID-19 pandemic. This meant a substantial drop in the salary cap was anticipated. Enough to where several teams could be sitting far into the red before the offseason could even begin. The Chicago Bears stood to be among them.
With the initial floor set at $175 million, that would've put them upwards of $8 million over the cap. All of this with 30 pending free agents on the roster including star receiver Allen Robinson. Not to mention the obvious need to find a new quarterback. Far from ideal. Luckily it seems the winds of fortune may be starting to gust in their direction. Adam Schefter reported on Thursday that the NFL has decided to raise the floor by $5 million.
Remember that this is just the minimum.
There is a growing belief that it could end up considerably higher than that. The NFL is in the midst of discussing new television deals with the top networks. Those contracts will garner billions of dollars. This combined with optimism about having fans back in 2021 is starting a groundswell about raising the cap a bit higher by borrowing from future years. Pro Football Focus cap expert has it on good authority about where the numbers could end up.If things play out that way, then the Bears stand to benefit. Rather than being over the cap by anywhere from $7-8 million, this new configuration would put them around $3-4 million. Far more manageable for GM Ryan Pace in order to get the payroll in some semblance of order before the offseason proper begins in March. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PvOmzU-8rQE&ab_channel=NBCSports







