Just Wondering...with Norm Hitzges

Robbing Peter to Pay Paul — and Making a Career Out of College Football | Just Wondering with Norm

February 4, 2026 15:45

In this episode of Just Wondering with Norm Hitzges, Norm examines two modern sports realities that feel completely different — but are driven by the same idea: pushing systems beyond what they were designed to handle.
Norm starts with the Dallas Cowboys’ looming 2026 salary cap crisis. With the NFL cap projected to exceed $300 million, the Cowboys are already $30 million over, before accounting for key players they want to keep. Norm walks through the uncomfortable math surrounding contract restructures, deferred money, and why the Cowboys’ familiar strategy of “robbing Peter to pay Paul” makes today easier — and tomorrow much harder. From Dak Prescott’s ballooning cap numbers to the impossible situation surrounding defensive tackle Kenny Clark, this is a clear-eyed look at how Dallas keeps betting on the future while borrowing against it.
Then the episode shifts to college football, where the definition of a “career” is quietly being rewritten. Norm breaks down the unprecedented case of Miami linebacker Mohamed Ture, who is returning for an eighth season of college football at age 25. Thanks to redshirts, injury waivers, COVID eligibility, and NIL deals, Norm explains why some players can now make more money staying in college than entering the NFL — and why this trend may only accelerate.
It’s a thoughtful, numbers-driven episode about consequences, incentives, and what happens when leagues solve today’s problems by moving them into tomorrow.
JWw-NH SL Ep 95
⏱️ Chapters
00:00 – Just wondering about another Cowboys salary cap mess
01:27 – The 2026 NFL salary cap: $300M and Dallas is already over
02:08 – “Robbing Peter to pay Paul” explained
02:53 – Cutting players to create cap space
03:38 – Why Kenny Clark’s $21M cap hit can’t happen
04:29 – The backlash if Dallas lets Clark walk
05:11 – Nine players, $259M, and nowhere to go
06:01 – Why the math simply doesn’t work
06:40 – March 11: the real NFL deadline
07:21 – How Dak Prescott’s cap hit ballooned to $74M
08:04 – Zach Martin, retirement, and dead money
08:55 – “Busting the budget” for a Super Bowl run
09:41 – Sponsor break
11:39 – College football’s newest oddity
12:26 – Mohamed Ture returns for an eighth season
13:26 – ACL injuries, NFL risk, and NIL math
14:13 – Making a career out of college football
14:53 – Final thoughts and sign-off
Check us out: https://patreon.com/sunsetloungedfw
Instagram: sunsetloungedfw
Tiktok: sunsetloungedfw
X: SunsetLoungeDFW
FB: Sunset Lounge DFW
#JustWondering #NormHitzges #DallasCowboys
#NFLSalaryCap #CowboysNation
#CollegeFootball #NIL #TransferPortal
#SportsPodcast #SportsEconomics

Read Transcript

It's Friday, January 28th, and today I'm just wondering about another salary cap situation
for the Cowboys and making a career out of playing college football.
And now a word from our title sponsor.
Buying retirement?
We aim to turn your nest egg into a paycheck with half the amount you've been led to believe.
Fluent Financial combines in-house portfolio design risk management with income generating
investments designed to aid your financial independence.
Our goal is to develop an effective portfolio strategy to help you retire sooner and have
a better lifestyle.
Fluent Financial can also implement a program that allows business owners to install a cash
balance plan, which may potentially reduce income tax payments.
You've worked hard to become successful.
Let us help develop an effective portfolio strategy that works for you.
Learn more today about Fluent Financial.
Retire sooner, better lifestyle.
For more information or to schedule a meeting, visit FluentFinancial.com or call 972-852-4800.
The projected cap in the National Football League for the coming 2026 season is a little
over 300 million.
That's to pay all your players.
Right now the Cowboys are $30 million over that cap.
And that's not counting what they may want to pay George Pickens or Javante Williams
or Brandon Aubrey to stay and they want them all to stay.
And by the way I should note that with all those players, the Cowboys were $79.1 last year.
What this doesn't address also is other free agents they might want to keep.
Javine Clowney, Dante Fowler, Sam Williams.
Okay, so what are the Cowboys do?
Where do they get the money?
Well, they rob Peter to pay Paul.
They take current players' contracts, reduce their cap income this year, but move a lot
of money down the line to put further weight on salary caps in years to come.
And not far down the road, years to come.
Okay, so where else can you get money?
Well, you can cut contracts.
You can cut right tackle, tear and steal.
And linebacker Logan Wilson, I think, is gone.
And why'd we see Virginia's then mingle?
I don't know why he ever got here.
But that will save you just rounding off, I think around $22 million worth of cap
room.
Of course, when you do that, you don't have a starting right tackle.
Which brings us to a salary cap situation.
The Cowboys really need to address.
Next year in the Micah Parsons trade, they said that they had to have defensive tackle
Kenny Clark in the deal.
Then later, they traded for another defensive tackle, Quinn Williams, Clark's contract
calls for him to jump from $2 million last year to $21 million this year.
But that simply can't happen.
Why?
Because if you agree to that contract with Clark, that would mean the tackles, oh, so Diggie
Zua, Quentin Williams and Kenny Clark are costing the Cowboys $64 million, $64 million
at just defensive tackle.
But then if the Cowboys let Clark go to save all that cap money, imagine the criticism
Jerry and the front office would get because they told us they had to have Kenny Clark, had
to have him in the deal for Micah Parsons.
So the question is, how much can they cut Kenny Clark?
If he takes $10 million a year, would he take $10 million a year for two years, totally
guaranteed, $12 million a year for two years, totally guaranteed, I don't know if Clark
will buy that, and that's up to Clark and his agent.
But I don't think the Cowboys can tolerate Kenny Clark, they can $21 million this year.
And that brings us to the way the Dallas Cowboys do salary cap business.
At this point, for the 2026 season, these nine players, Dak Prescott, CDLAM, Tyler Smith,
Brennan Williams, Kenny Clark, Osso O'Diggy-Zoa, Terrence Steel, Doron Blan and Jake Ferguson.
Those nine players count to $59 million toward a $300 million cap.
Let's go back to those three free agents you want to keep.
Against Brandon Aubrey, Javante Williams, they're in a cost of about $40 million between
the three of them.
That would take you to $299 million for 12 players and the cap is $300 million.
That's where we get into it.
You got to reduce Clark, you got to cut these people, you got to do all these things.
Now the rule is, you've got to be under the salary cap by March 11th in the afternoon
of March 11th this year.
Why?
Because that date, March 11th, is the date where players can start signing free agent contracts.
So you get below the figure by that date, then you can jump over.
But you've got to get below it by that date, which means you're probably redoing that
and lamb and Tyler Smith or N. Baby O'Diggy-Zoa all by then.
And you're pushing money down the road.
Let's give an example, two examples of what happens when you do that.
The Cowboys signed Dak Prescott two years ago to a four year, $60 million a year contract.
But last year to create salary cap space, they redid his contract and pushed money forward.
Forward to the point where Dak now, this year and the following two years, counts $74 million
against the cap.
They did this with Zach Martin, the star guard.
And when Zach Martin retired, the Cowboys still had to carry $16 million a year for two
years on their cap because of the money they'd pushed forward redoing Zach Martin.
Imagine what they'll have to carry for Dak's contract a few retires.
But redoing these players is easy.
You know what's not easy?
Dealing with it, two or three years down the road.
The Cowboys this year say they'll bust the budget to keep everything together.
Make a big run, a big run to win the Super Bowl.
Will that make this a Super Bowl team?
I've some pretty grave doubts about that.
But then that's the way the Cowboys have been doing business now for decades and decades and decades.
Next, making a career out of playing college football.
What do you want from your favorite restaurant?
Fantastic personal service, a cheery, welcoming, spotless atmosphere, and of course great food,
the primest of beef, wagoo, and lamb, incredibly fresh seafood, lobster, salmon, shrimp,
hall of fame food from a hall of fame restaurant, two locations of Bob's steak and chop-ups,
the original Bob's Unlimin' Avenue, and the gorgeous new Bob's at Craig Ranch McKinney.
My wife marries the co-creator, a full moon-healing bomb.
And I guess, I'm the reason this terrific cream was developed.
A few years ago, I began getting these huge ugly blood blotches just beneath the skin
of my arms and hands.
The condition is called senile propora, and no, you don't have to be senile to experience
this embarrassment.
This happens as you age, and then to cover it up, we begin wearing long sleeves, even
when it's hot.
It took two years working with a New Jersey lab to refine the all natural ingredients of
full moon-healing, gently massage a very small amount into the skin, and within a day,
the blotches begin to fade.
Senile propora usually takes weeks to disappear, but this bomb cuts the timeline to about a
week, and ordering so easy.
Just go to the website, full moon-healingco.com.
Over the last few months, we've been telling you at length about college football's bizarre
notes, and they're out of control rules and trends.
Now we've got a new one, a fun one.
You know, you used to have four years of eligibility in college football, plus a red shirt here.
And then, just five years.
But now, solid Miami of Florida linebacker Mohamed Ture, good player, good player, their
leading tackler on a team that played for the college championship this year.
He's announced he will return to Miami of Florida for his eighth college football season.
That's eight.
He'll be 25 years old this year, and still playing college football.
He's 25 years old, eight years in college.
He should be close to his doctorate.
He started out playing three years at Rutgers.
Then he torn ACL in spring practice in 2022, and was granted that medical richer year.
He came back in 2023 and was an honorable mention, all big 10 player.
Then in 2024, he tore the same ACL, and in 2025, he transferred to Miami.
He played three seasons at Rutgers, had a richer year at Rutgers.
Everybody got that 2020 year for COVID.
Then he had two injured years, and now Miami is going to be there for his second season.
Why didn't he turn pro if he's just going to play?
Because those multiple ACL injuries worried the NFL a lot, and turning 25 next year would
make him an old recruit.
So what would he get?
Mid-draft pick at best?
Hey, under the NIL, he's better off going back to Miami.
He'll make more money than he'd make in the NFL the next year, or maybe even the next
two years.
But that's what we got now in college football.
It's getting to a point where some players can almost make a career out of just playing
college football.
And now a word from our title sponsor.
Today's episode has been brought to you by Fluent Financial, Retire Earlier Live Better,
and by Bob's Steak and Chop House on Lemon and Dallas and in Craig Ranch in McKinney.
Bob's a Dallas tradition for more than 30 years.
If you've enjoyed just wondering, please hit follow and a fresh new episode will land
in your mailbox early every Monday, Wednesday and Friday morning.
Should you know a sports fan who might like our work, please share our contact information
with that person.
Thanks for listening to today's episode of Just One Ring.
I'm Norm Hitzkes, and know that every day I'll be just wondering about something.
And I'm Mary Hitzkes, and I'll just be wondering too.
This is A Stolen Water Media Production.

Scroll to Top