Without salary cap this season, NFL teams have resisted the temptation to break the bank in the treatment of players. With a labor dispute looming on the horizon, some courses have even taken advantage of another aspect a little less known: the elimination of wage floor.
The average salary in the league has grown from 109 to $ 116M - all amounts are in U.S. dollars - from 2009 to 2010, according to data transmitted to the media by the Players Association. This modest 6% increase is the same recorded from 2007 to 2008, when the salary cap was in place.
This season, ten grants have a payroll of over $ 125M, compared to only three above the bar in 2009. Twelve teams are in the $ 110M, the same number as last season.
Nineteen of the 32 courses have increased their payroll between 2009 and 2010.
The Washington Redskins have the highest at $ 145M. In 2009, this "distinction" belonged to the New York Giants ($ 138M).
In contrast, the Carolina Panthers spent just under $ 77M in payroll. The Kansas City Chiefs occupied last place in 2009 ($ 78M).
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