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Micah Parsons Trade Fallout: Financials, Cowboys, Packers

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When the Micah Parsons trade from Dallas to Green Bay was reported, we had a good number of details concerning the new contract Parsons would sign with the Packers. To reiterate, we listed it as a four-year, $188MM deal with $136MM in total guarantees ($120MM guaranteed at signing). Per Tom Pelissero of NFL Network, $44MM of those guarantees will be in the form of his signing bonus.

Pelissero continued his breakdown of the deal. Base salaries for the next two years of $1.17MM in 2025 and $2.39MM in 2026 are fully guaranteed, while the base salary of 2027 ($3.11MM) is guaranteed for injury. Option bonuses in 2026 ($38MM) and 2027 ($34.44MM) are fully guaranteed at signing, as well. Any remaining guarantees (approximately $12.89MM) would be partially guaranteed from his 2028 base salary of $40.55MM. In 2029, the final year of the deal, Parsons would have a base salary of $43.55MM and a $1MM 90-man bonus.

Parsons will also receive per game active roster bonuses of $11,764 which could total and additional $200K in each season. Every year from 2027-29 offers $250K Pro Bowl and All-Pro escalators, and 2029 holds additional $250K incentives for making the Pro Bowl and All-Pro teams.

Packers general manager Brian Gutekunst expressed how he “really likes” Parsons’ salary cap numbers for the next three years, according to Matt Schneidman of The Athletic, and it makes sense that he drew the line at three. Those cap hits are $9.97MM in 2025, $19.24MM in 2026, and $26.85MM in 2027. Once you jump into Year 4, though, Parsons’ cap hit goes to $64.29MM in 2028 and $68.29MM in 2029.

ESPN’s Adam Schefter points out that Parsons will be subject to Wisconsin’s state income tax on games played in Green Bay, whereas Texas has no state income tax, so that portion was not withheld for Cowboys home games. Schefter’s crude calculation removing 7.65 percent from Parsons’ annual value may be a bit understated; regardless, it still leaves Parsons with more money after taxes than the deal Dallas had offered to him.

Here are a few more fallout items coming out of the monumental trade from two days ago:

  • On the Cowboys’ side of things, this week’s trade freed up $19MM of 2025 cap space. Now with an estimated $42MM in free salary cap space, Dallas is second in the NFL in that regard, behind only the Patriots ($52MM), according to Michael Ginnitti of Spotrac.
  • The Cowboys may end up using that cap space, too. Pelissero quoted team owner/president/general manager Jerry Jones saying, “Nothing says we can’t use some of those picks right now to go get somebody right now.” The team has four first-round picks in the next two years, but if both teams remain playoff contenders, how much value does the draft capital hold? It may make more sense to bring in some immediate contributors by trading the first-rounders and absorbing their extra cap hits with the team’s ample cap space.
  • Pelissero also noted, in an appearance on the Rich Eisen Show, that this move is out of character for the Packers. He notes that, for decades, Green Bay has been reportedly close to deals for players like wide receiver Randy Moss or tight end Tony Gonzalez, but the deals have always fallen just short as the Packers balk at giving up more compensation than they’re comfortable with. He also notes that they haven’t traded a first-round pick (let alone two first-round picks) since they acquired quarterback Brett Favre in 1992. The reason they’re willing to do so now? We’ve seen recent Super Bowl champions be extremely active in the trade market. The Eagles, Chiefs, and, most notably, the Rams have all made ambitious win-now moves when they felt they were closest to contention. While there’s certainly an art to building a team through the draft and developing a culture and roster, once you get to a certain point, one or two big moves for impact players could be the factor that wins a Super Bowl, and a player like Parsons is definitely of that caliber.





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Billionaire family offices bet on drones, nuclear energy in August

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Key Points

  • Billionaire family offices inked high-profile investments in an otherwise slow month for deal-making, according to Fintrx.
  • Four billionaires’ private investment firms joined an $863 million fundraise for a nuclear fusion startup.
  • Peter Thiel, a longtime investor in defense tech, backed a German drone maker as other high-net-worth investors flock to the sector.



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Houston player wins $2M in Powerball drawing – KHOU

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  1. Houston player wins $2M in Powerball drawing  KHOU
  2. Powerball jackpot increases to $1.7B, third-largest prize in game’s history  Fox Business
  3. $2 million Powerball runner-up ticket purchased in Detroit, Michigan Lottery officials say  CBS News
  4. Powerball winning numbers for $1.44 billion jackpot on Wednesday, Sept. 3  USA Today
  5. 4 Powerball tickets sold in Mass. win prizes in Wednesday night’s drawing as jackpot surges to $1.7B  yahoo.com



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Witnesses describe fatal Lisbon funicular crash

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EPA Several men inspect the mangled metal of a crashed train carriage. One man is wearing hi-vis, the others jeans and work gear. They look solemn. EPA

It was just after 18:00 on Wednesday when a carriage on Lisbon’s famous Gloria funicular careened around the bend of a steep cobblestoned street, crashed into a building, and crumpled, eyewitnesses said.

The carriage “lost control”, descending at full speed and crashing on its side, Helen Chow, who was at the base of the hill, told the BBC.

It sounded like a bomb, she said, followed by “complete scary silence…There was pitch black smoke. Once it dissipated, you saw exactly what happened.”

People were frantic and crying, with others running to help, she described.

“It was awful,” she said. “I am shaken.”

Police are still investigating the cause of the crash, which killed at least 17 people and injured 20 more, some critically, near Lisbon’s Avenida da Liberdade in the Portuguese capital.

Video verified by the BBC shows the crashed yellow-and-white train against the building on the bend of a hill, with another train stopped at the bottom. People are running up the incline towards the scene of the crash.

People seen running after funicular derails in Lisbon

The two carriages of the 140-year-old funicular, which runs on electric motors, are attached to a cable that enables one to travel downhill while the other goes uphill, passing each other briefly along the three-minute one-way journey.

Witnesses described how the carriage near the bottom of the hill, which was starting to ascend, crashed a short distance backwards just before the upper carriage raced down the incline and into the building.

Around a minute before the crash, Ms Chow, who is originally from Canada but was visiting Lisbon, said she heard a loud screech.

She saw the bottom carriage fall back, past the white line where it usually halted, and make “a hard stop” at the end of the tracks.

A passenger on that carriage told Portuguese news outlet Sic Notícias it only went up a few metres before a “big bang” and “black smoke”.

“People fell to the ground and everyone was screaming inside,” they said.

Ms Chow also saw black debris and heard screaming, as the driver rushed to open the gates to the entrance.

“People jumped out of the window of that tram,” she said. “Just as this happened, I saw the incident tram crash over into the building next to the Subway restaurant.”

Another witness said they ran to help after the lower carriage dropped – before seeing the other coming down “out of control”.

“We only had time to escape, turn our backs and run,” they said. “It came down and struck the building at high speed.”

Teresa d’Avó said the carriage “hit a building with brutal force and collapsed like a cardboard box,” telling television channel SIC it seemed like it “had no brakes”.

She also told newspaper Observador the vehicle was “out of control, without brakes”.

“We all started running away because we thought [the carriage] was going to hit the one below,” she said. “But it fell around the bend and crashed into a building.”

Farid Shovro, owner of a nearby store who ran to the scene, told Observador: “I’ve never seen so many people dead together.”

A map shows Lisbon on the coast of Portugal and a closer view of the Gloria funicular line, and its derailment at a bend crashing into a building near Restauradores square.

Some tourists told the BBC they had almost taken the funicular at the time of the crash.

Eric Packer, from the US but visiting Lisbon on holiday, told the BBC he had discussed with his friends taking the cable car and took pictures at 18:00 and 18:01, but decided to walk back to their hotel instead.

They walked about 60 metres and heard a loud crash noise “like a rock falling, like a dump truck had dropped a load of rocks” at 18:02.

They turned around to see dust coming out of the alley about 45 metres behind them and walked back to see what happened. At first, he thought it was the train at the bottom that fell, until he turned and saw the other train that was above it, and realised “the magnitude of what had taken place”.

His photograph shows the yellow-and-white train, a tangle of metal, on the corner of the narrow alley under a Subway restaurant sign, with the other train at the bottom of the hill below it.

“People (were) walking up and running up to try and help,” he said. “Horrible tragedy and our thoughts and prayers go out to the families and survivors.”

Additional reporting by Alex Akhurst, Bernadette McCague and Marina Costa



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