Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Garoppolo pleased with quick deal

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Jimmy Garoppolo could have waited and cashed in even more than he did after other quarterbac­ks re-set the market.

The San Francisco 49ers could have used a franchise tag instead of making a long-term commitment to make sure Garoppolo was worth a hefty investment after only seven NFL starts.

But both sides wanted this resolved quickly and did so with a contract that will pay Garoppolo a record $27.5 million per season over the next five years.

“This is where I want to be, honestly,” Garoppolo said at a news conference Friday. “I wanted to get this deal done as fast as possible. It will only help our team going forward going into free agency. … I wanted to be here. I was excited to be here. I’m happy we got it done as fast as we did.”

Garoppolo’s $137.5 million contract has the richest annual value in NFL history, topping the deal Detroit’s Matthew Stafford signed last year by $500,000 a season.

The deal includes nearly $49 million that is fully guaranteed, more than $74 million guaranteed for injury and more than $86 million that will be paid out over the first three seasons.

The franchise tag could have been a safer option for both sides, leading to more money for Garoppolo if he kept playing at the high level he showed this past season and more protection for the 49ers if he didn’t reach that level.

But neither side was eager to go that direction.

“We became convinced we had that as an option, but we didn’t want to use it,” general manager John Lynch said. “We wanted to make Jimmy a 49er for a long, long time. Do you have to have some faith for that? Absolutely. But he earned that faith we had for him. I know it wasn’t a super long time but we felt we had a really good grasp on the talent and that was only confirmed when he got here.”

San Francisco acquired Garoppolo from New England before the trade deadline for a 2018 second-round pick. As soon as he took the field a few weeks later, he immediatel­y turned around a franchise that started the year with a 110 record.

Garoppolo took over as starter and led San Francisco to five straight wins to end the season. He completed 67.4% of his passes this season, averaging 8.8 yards per attempt with seven TDs, five intercepti­ons and a 96.2 rating.

Garoppolo has won all seven starts in his career, including two in New England to start the 2016 season when Tom Brady was suspended for his role in “Deflategat­e.” Only four other quarterbac­ks since the 1970 merger won their first seven starts, with Ben Roethlisbe­rger the most recent to do it with 15 wins in a row in the regular season for Pittsburgh in 2004-’05. Garoppolo’s 2,038 yards passing in his first seven starts are the fourth most among all quarterbac­ks since 1970.

Vikings hire DeFilippo: The Minnesota Vikings hired Philadelph­ia Eagles quarterbac­ks coach John DeFilippo as their offensive coordinato­r.

DeFilippo replaces Pat Shurmur, who became head coach of the New York Giants. The 39-year-old DeFilippo spent two seasons with the Eagles after one year as offensive coordinato­r in Cleveland.

DeFilippo becomes the third offensive coordinato­r Vikings coach Mike Zimmer has had in five seasons on the job.

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