From what I understand, there's a chance that Falcons WR Julio Jones' new contract can't be signed until a year after his last contract readjustment, which was made public last July 27th. As it was explained to ESPN in March, Jones and the team can renegotiate before the 12 months are over if it doesn't cause Jones' contract to go above the current $26,359,334 remaining in aggregate cap number over the next two years. Any years beyond '19, '20, don't factor into the equation. So, if the raise Jones gets leads to $27 million in cap over the next two season, the deal can't be signed until a year after the renegotiation that netted Jones an additional $2.9 million last season (July 27, if that's when Jones officially signed the renegotiation). One would think Jones' cap number would decrease, but the uncertainty and the attached rule might be the reason the deal can't get done right now. Jones is confident in owner Arthur Blank keeping his word about the deal.