Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Rodgers lands richest deal

Four-year extension puts QB under contract until age 40

- 1A.

Aaron Rodgers’s four-year contract extension that averages $33.5 million a year and runs through 2023, at which point he’ll be 40 years old,

GREEN BAY - Aaron Rodgers and the Green Bay Packers agreed on a four-year extension that will make the star quarterbac­k the highest-paid player in NFL history and keep him under contract until he is 40.

Rodgers told people in the Packers organizati­on that he was going to let former Packers receiver James Jones of NFL Network break the story on the contract agreement, and he was true to his word. Jones reported Wednesday that the deal was worth a yearly average of $33.5 million in new money plus incentives.

A source confirmed that Rodgers’ deal was imminent, but did not have any further breakdown of the terms.

According to Mike Jones of USA TO DAY, Rodgers and the Packers agreed on a four-year extension worth $134 million with a maximum potential of

The deal includes $103 million guaranteed and $67 million before the end of the calendar year. The yearly average of $33.5 million vaults Rodgers over the $30 million mark, which Atlanta Falcons quarterbac­k Matt Ryan received on a five-year, $150 million extension he signed earlier this year, making him the highest-paid player in the league.

$180 million. The deal includes $103 million guaranteed and $67 million before the end of the calendar year.

The yearly average of $33.5 million vaults Rodgers over the $30 million mark, which Atlanta Falcons quarterbac­k Matt Ryan received on a five-year, $150 million extension he signed earlier this year, making him the highest-paid player in the league.

Ryan’s deal eclipsed the $28 million per year Minnesota gave quarterbac­k Kirk Cousins in a free-agent deal signed in March. All $84 million of Cousins’ contract was guaranteed.

Rodgers, 34, had two years left on a five-year, $110 million extension he signed in April of 2013 and the new agreement extends that through the 2023 season. He will turn 40 on Dec. 2, 2023 and has indicated that he would like to play at least until he is 40.

The Packers are going to have to dig into their reserve fund to deliver the signing bonus and other guaranteed money included in the contract. The most profit the Packers have made in a year is $72.8 million in 2016-17, but that was when they received $27.1 million in relocation fees from the NFL.

This past year, the Packers posted $38.6 million in net profit, which would not cover the entirety of Rodgers’ signing bonus.

Because the Packers must put all guaranteed money not included in the signing bonus in an escrow account, it’s very likely they will have to draw from the reserve fund, which has been reported to contain $380 million. If Rodgers does have $100 million in guarantees, it won’t break them.

From a salary-cap standpoint, the structure of the deal will matter greatly.

The Packers were $11 million under the cap prior to the Rodgers deal.

The $57.5 million signing bonus can be pro-rated over the six remaining years, which means $9.58 million will be part of every year of the deal.

Rodgers was carrying a salary-cap number of $20.56 million this year and had a base salary of $19.8 million this year and $20 million next year. However, the Packers probably dropped Rodgers’ base salary considerab­ly so that they weren’t cleaned out of cap room.

In other words, if they dropped Rodgers’ base salary to $15 million this year, his new cap number would be $24.58 million, an increase of $4 million. That would leave them with $7 million worth of cap room to play with this year or carry over into next year.

If they dropped his base to $10 million, they would have about $2 million worth of cap room left over this year.

Prior to this new deal, eight NFL quarterbac­ks ranked higher in average salary than Rodgers. Only two (New Orleans’ Drew Brees and Baltimore’s Joe Flacco) had won a Super Bowl as Rodgers did (Super Bowl XLV in the 2010 season) and none had won an MVP award, let alone two, like Rodgers (2011 and ‘14).

The ongoing saga of Rodgers’ contract talks took on another twist in early June when NFL Network reported that Rodgers would like some sort of out clause in an extension that would allow him to renegotiat­e a new deal should he again be surpassed as the NFL’s highest-paid quarterbac­k.

Another possible sticking point could have been the question of a potential contract extension for Tom Brady. The New England Patriots quarterbac­k is in the second year of a $41 million contract and is considered vastly underpaid. However, the Patriots probably wouldn’t have signed Brady to a deal as long as Rodgers’ and the per-year average wouldn’t be as big a factor.

Packers general manager Brian Gutekunst said last week he thought Rodgers’ deal could get done soon.

“The perception of when the deal was (possibly) getting done is probably why people are anxious outside of this building,” Gutekunst told Pete Dougherty of PackersNew­s.com during a one-on-one interview in his Lambeau Field office. “Inside the building it’s always one of those things that’s taken its normal course. Again, both sides want the same thing, so we’re all encouraged that it’s moving in the right direction and we’re able to come to a conclusion. From my perception it’s not something that’s dragged on longer than I thought it would. It’s just something that’s taken its normal course.”

Asked whether Rodgers should be the game’s highest-paid player, Gutekunst said: “I think Aaron is one of the more unique players that I’ve ever been around or seen. It’s a tough question, but I think he’s as deserving as anybody.”

Rodgers is looking to rebound from an injurymarr­ed 2016. He missed seven games after suffering a broken right collarbone in a Week 6 loss at Minnesota. Rodgers returned for one game (a loss at Carolina) before being shut down for the final two weeks.

On the season, Rodgers threw for 1,675 yards and 16 touchdown with six intercepti­ons for a passer rating of 97.2.

Over his 13-year career, the 2005 first-round draft choice out of California has completed 3,188 of 4,895 passes (65.1 percent) for 38,502 yards, 313 touchdowns with 78 intercepti­ons for an NFL-record regular-season passer rating of 103.8.

Renowned for his mobility and elusivenes­s, Rodgers also has 525 career rushing attempts for 2,670 yards and 25 touchdowns.

After serving as Brett Favre’s backup for three seasons, Rodgers took over as the Packers’ starter in 2008. He was voted first-team All-Pro in 2011 and ‘14 and has earned six Pro Bowl berths.

 ?? ADAM WESLEY / USA TODAY NETWORK-WISCONSIN ?? Aaron Rodgers missed seven games last year due to a broken collarbone. He threw for 1,675 yards and 16 touchdown with six intercepti­ons.
ADAM WESLEY / USA TODAY NETWORK-WISCONSIN Aaron Rodgers missed seven games last year due to a broken collarbone. He threw for 1,675 yards and 16 touchdown with six intercepti­ons.
 ?? DAN POWERS/USA TODAY NETWORK-WISCONSIN ?? Packers quarterbac­k Aaron Rodgers now is the NFL’s highest-paid player.
DAN POWERS/USA TODAY NETWORK-WISCONSIN Packers quarterbac­k Aaron Rodgers now is the NFL’s highest-paid player.

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