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Agent’s Take: Five players held back from receiving early contract extension due to rookie wage scale

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The 2011 Collective Bargaining Agreement drastically reduced salaries for early first-round picks by implementing a rookie wage scale. It also changed the timing for when draft picks could sign contract extensions. Draft pick contracts can’t be renegotiated until the conclusion of a player’s third NFL regular season. This means 2019 draftees like Cardinals quarterback Kyler Murray, who was the first overall pick, aren’t eligible to sign new deals until Jan. 10, 2022.

Prior to the 2011 CBA, draft picks could sign extensions after two NFL seasons. The 2010 draftees were the last group to get extremely early deals before the rule change. In 2012, the Patriots made 2010 second-round pick Rob Gronkowski and 2010 fourth-round pick Aaron Hernandez the NFL’s two highest-paid tight ends. Gronkowski and Hernandez signed six- and five-year extensions, respectively. Cardinals inside linebacker Daryl Washington, a 2010 second-round pick, signed a four-year extension right before the start of the 2012 regular season.

Antonio Brown, a 2010 sixth-round pick, was the beneficiary of the Steelers and restricted free agent Mike Wallace’s contract stalemate. Once there was a contract impasse with Wallace, the Steelers gave Brown a five-year extension. Brown had his first 1,000-receiving-yard season in 2010 as a second-year player.

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The 49ers made NaVorro Bowman, a 2010 third-round pick, one of the NFL’s five highest-paid inside linebackers during the middle of his third NFL season. Bowman signed a five-year extension.

Four-year deals in the first round, before the rookie wage scale was implemented, were virtually nonexistent. Most first-rounders got five-year deals, except quarterbacks selected early in the draft, such as Matthew Stafford in 2009 and Sam Bradford in 2010, who signed six-year contracts.

Several 2019 draftees who may have already gotten paid if still allowed have been identified based on team conventions and circumstances. First-round picks wouldn’t have reaped the benefit of the earlier paydays.

There wouldn’t have been any urgency for the Cardinals to reward Murray like Washington. Early first-round picks used to be paid like Pro Bowlers before playing a down in the NFL.

Bradford’s six-year contract as 2010’s first overall pick had a base value of $78 million where $50 million was fully guaranteed. He was the NFL’s 10th-highest-paid quarterback as a rookie. Stafford, 2009’s top pick, was the league’s eighth-highest-paid quarterback as a first-year player.

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A continuation of this trend where Murray had a similar place in the quarterback salary hierarchy would have put his six-year rookie contract in the $25-million to $27-million-per-year range. Instead, Murray signed a fully guaranteed four-year, $35,158,644 contract with the Cardinals having a fifth-year option for 2023, which surely will be exercised in the upcoming offseason.

The Raiders selected a player in the 2019 NFL Draft to consistently put pressure on opposing quarterbacks. It was expected to be fourth overall pick Clelin Ferrell instead of a fourth-round pick.

Crosby easily leads the NFL with 66 quarterback pressures (combined sacks, quarterback hurries and quarterback hits), according to Pro Football Focus. Browns defensive end Myles Garrett, the NFL’s third-highest-paid defensive player at $25 million per year, is second in the league with 54. Steelers edge rusher T.J. Watt is the NFL’s highest-paid non-quarterback with the four-year, $112.011 million extension averaging $28,002,750 per year he signed as the regular season was about to begin. He has 28 quarterback pressures this season.

The Raiders demonstrated a willingness to pay highly productive younger players early in 2019. Tight end Darren Waller was given a new deal during that season when he had two years of service for free agency. He was going to be a restricted free agent in 2020. A second-round tender would have been likely. Waller signed through the 2023 season in which he gave up three unrestricted free agent years valued at $9,013,668 per year. 

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Similar contract timing, middle of the third season, may have occurred with Crosby because he has been a nightmare for opposing quarterbacks this year. There are 10 pass-rushers with contracts averaging at least $20 million per year. It may just be a matter of time before Crosby joins that club with the type of season he is having.

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The Seahawks gave wide receiver Tyler Lockett a four-year, $69.2 million extension averaging $17.3 million per year in early April. The deal has $37 million in guarantees, of which $21 million was fully guaranteed at signing. It may have been prudent for Seattle to address the contract inequity between Lockett and Metcalf sooner rather than later in a similar fashion since it would have been permissible. The 2019 second-round pick emerged as one of the NFL’s most dangerous receiving threats last season. Metcalf caught 83 passes for a franchise-record 1,303 yards with 10 touchdowns in 2020.

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Jenkins might have been the beneficiary of Green Bay’s contract stalemate with All-Pro wide receiver Davante Adams, who is in a contract year, and losing All-Pro center Corey Linsley in free agency. A new Jenkins deal might have also been a way to demonstrate offensive continuity to reigning NFL MVP Aaron Rodgers during his offseason rift with the Packers.

Jenkins is one of the rare offensive linemen who can play any position on the offensive line. He earned Pro Bowl honors last season at left guard. Jenkins was playing left tackle at a Pro Bowl level filling in for David Bakhtiari, who has been recovering from reconstructive knee surgery, when he tore the ACL in his left knee during last Sunday’s 34-31 loss to the Vikings. It remains to be seen if the injury will change the actual timing on a new deal since 2022 is a contract year, and he may not return to action until the early to middle part of next season if Bakhtiari is any indication. Bakhtiari’s ACL tear occurred at the end of the 2020 regular season.

Jenkins was at a minimum set to become one of the NFL’s highest-paid offensive guards in the upcoming offseason. Joe Thuney sets this market with the five-year, $80 million contract with $46.89 million of guarantees he received from the Chiefs in free agency this year. The most recent data points in the offensive guard market are the extensions the Browns recently gave Joel Bitonio and Wyatt Teller. Bitonio’s three-year extension ties Thuney as the league’s highest-paid offensive guard at $16 million per year while Teller’s four-year extension is for $14.2 million per year. Jenkins would be justified in insisting on a premium because of his versatility.

Samuel couldn’t build upon an impressive 2019 debut campaign in 2020 because of an offseason left foot fracture and hamstring injuries. Since this season has been a different story, a midseason extension like Bowman’s wouldn’t have been out of the question. Samuel is having an All-Pro-caliber 2021 season. He is second in the NFL with 99.4 receiving yards per game and fourth with 18.1 yards per catch. His 525 yards after catch are the most in the NFL. The most lucrative wide receiver deal signed in 2021 belongs to Kenny Golladay. He received a four-year, $72 million contract worth a maximum of $76 million with incentives from the Giants in free agency. Samuel surely would have been looking to top this deal.

New England’s uncharacteristic free agency spending spree may have extended to one of their 2019 fifth-round picks. Bailey earned All-Pro honors in 2020 after leading the NFL with a 45.6 yard net punting average. The four-year extension averaging $2.9 million per year Colts punter Rigoberto Sanchez, who was undrafted in 2017, signed in 2019 after his second NFL season would seem to be most applicable.

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Raiders Star Calls Out Team After Loss To Chargers

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(Photo by Ethan Miller/Getty Images)

 

The Las Vegas Raiders were in for a tough divisional game.

They didn’t have Jimmy Garoppolo on the field for their matchup vs. the Los Angeles Chargers, and they had plenty of pressure on their shoulders.

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Davante Adams had already called out the team for failing to establish a winning culture, sounding off the alarms about a potential trade.

Notably, it seems like the star wide receiver isn’t the only big name on the team who’s frustrated by the way they’re doing things, as RB Josh Jacobs stated his team played ‘undisciplined football:’

“It’s undisciplined football, and this league is too competitive,” Jacobs said, via Paul Gutierrez of ESPN.com. “It’s too competitive and it’s too many guys that’s good out there to not do the little things right every play. Until we figure that out, this is going to be what it is. It’s frustrating, man. And I mean, I feel like every day I go in there and work my a** off. So, eventually something’s got to give.”

The Raiders also finished the game without Jerry Tillery, who was ejected for a late hit on Justin Herbert.

They turned the ball over twice and also had nine penalties.

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The Raiders trailed by 21 points before making it a seven-point game, even getting a chance to even things up or win the game with the clock running out.

Then, rookie QB Aidan O’Connell was picked off and put an end to their hopes.

The Raiders are now 1-3 after their shocking win in the season opener, and it doesn’t seem like the players are happy about the way things are being handled.

HC Josh McDaniels has drawn plenty of criticism since he took the reins of the team last season, and it’s his job to keep his players in line and prevent those avoidable penalties from happening.

Up next, they have a date with the Green Bay Packers on Monday Night Football, with both teams looking to bounce back from heartbreaking divisional losses.

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The post Raiders Star Calls Out Team After Loss To Chargers appeared first on The Cold Wire.





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Toronto Raptors’ Masai Ujiri has not initiated contract talks with Pascal Siakam

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The Toronto Raptors appear to be taking a wait-and-see approach with Pascal Siakam.

President Masai Ujiri confirmed to reporters that the team has not engaged in contract talks with Siakam. The 29-year-old is in the final year of his deal and is set to be a free agent at the end of the season.

Ujiri said he remains confident in the team’s core and wants to see how they play in newly appointed head coach Darko Rajaković’s system before offering new deals.

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Ujiri says the decision also stems from his comments following the team’s elimination from the play-in round against the Chicago Bulls when he called out players for playing selfishly.

“We do believe in Pascal. We do believe that a lot of our players didn’t play the right way last year, and we want to see them play the right way,” Ujiri explained. “I said that we were selfish. I’m not running away from that. We were selfish and we did not play the right way. So, let us see it when we play the right way.”

Siakam’s name was mentioned in trade rumours during the off-season, with reports suggesting multiple teams were expressing interest in the two-time All-NBA player.

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Michigan's defense more dominant than ever: Who's up, down across Big Ten

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The Wolverines are allowing only 6.0 PPG through their 5-0 start. Check out our latest Big Ten Stock Watch.



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