New York Giants waive Chris Myarick from injured reserve


New York Giants waive Chris Myarick from injured reserve

3 comments
  1. I wish he didn’t get hurt this preseason. He would have been huge asset. He is a good blocker and an okay TE reciever. He would have been huge for us. DJ probably doesn’t get hurt if he was blocking that dude during the Raiders game.

  2. If they’re releasing him now it is probably because he is now healthy enough to play from his fractured hand. If that’s the case he could sign with another team or the Giants are eligible to re-sign him in 3 weeks. We don’t have all the details but that is on the table. It is a weird quirk in the rules, but does happen.

    > Injury Settlement – In the NFL, an injured player cannot be released. Often a team and player will reach an Injury Settlement in lieu of putting, or keeping, the player on IR for the rest of the season. Once an Injury Settlement is reached, the player is released. This is done when the player has a chance to recover from injury and play again in that season. However, if the player is still under contract for future seasons and the team wants to retain the player’s rights for the future, the team will not agree to an Injury Settlement and instead decide to continue to carry the player on Injured Reserve (IR).

    > An Injury Settlement is usually based on the amount of time that the team and player agree the player will be unable to play. So, for example, if the player is only expected to miss the first month of the season, the team and player will usually agree to a settlement of 4/17ths of the player’s scheduled base salary. The team then receives a Salary Cap credit of 13/17th of that salary. An Injury Settlement is attractive to both the team and player because it allows the team to create additional Salary Cap space and allows the player an opportunity to catch on with another team and not have to sit out the entire season on IR.

    > If a player is released with an Injury Settlement, he can not be re-signed by that team until after the term of the Injury Settlement (the number of weeks used to calculate the Injury Settlement), plus three (3) additional weeks (in 2016, this was changed from 6 weeks to 3 weeks).

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