South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

Herbert provides hope for Tua

Chargers QB’s big deal could be benchmark if there’s good health

- Dave Hyde

Leigh Steinberg studied Justin Herbert’s new $262.5 million contract, just as he has NFL quarterbac­k contracts since negotiatin­g Steve Bartkowski’s deal in 1975.

The veteran agent highlighte­d the Los Angeles Chargers quarterbac­k’s signing bonus in the first year and the option bonus in the second year as a “means to keep the salary-cap number down, showing a sensitivit­y that, yes, the quarterbac­k wants to be maximally contracted, but the goal is to win the Super Bowl. If he can get there, he’ll be properly rewarded.”

Steinberg knows the coming domino.

“Joe Burrow’s next,” he said of the Cincinnati Bengals quarterbac­k. “His contract will be another bump in the market.”

Then it’ll be Tua Tagovailoa’s time next offseason as the other top quarterbac­k in the 2020 draft?

“I’ve got to be careful here,” Steinberg said.

He was Tagovailoa’s agent when the Miami Dolphins quarterbac­k came in the league. He’s not now.

“First of all, he had his best year last year,” Steinberg said. “Second of all, in any scenario for any team, if not that quarterbac­k, if they don’t sign him, then who?”

Third of all, which is really first of all this season, is Tagovailoa’s health.

“I don’t want to get into all that,” Steinberg says.

Does anyone? Doesn’t everyone wish this becomes a non-issue across the rest of Tagovailoa’s career?

This is the $269 million question that holds sway over the franchise’s future. The Dolphins threw every dollar and draft pick into this season without looking too hard at what’s coming next year. The moment is now.

Still, the Tua question, starting with his health, sets the course of the next several years.

There’s no sense thinking this or that will happen to him this year, to cite this doctor saying one thing or a study about the repetitive effects of concussion­s. This will decide itself over this season.

Tagovailoa spent the offseason trying to prevent the concussion­s that were as much his story last year as his breakout play. He gained 20 pounds and looks noticeably, uh, thicker on the

field. He practiced jiu-jitsu to learn how to fall to the ground better. He no doubt was coached again to throw the ball away, as he can be hesitant to do, and go to the next play.

How much all that helps is anyone’s guess. All you know is if he gets through this year healthy, if the concussion concern goes to the back burner, he’ll probably be looking at the kind of contract Herbert got this week.

Probably, because the Dolphins haven’t shown any inclinatio­n to play hardball with him. It’s been just the opposite since coach Mike McDaniel came in the door.

Probably too because this assumes his play continues last year’s upward arc. The question that takes on importance is whether the Dolphins win because of Tagovailoa or with him. His leadership, his attitude always have been first class. He’s always said and done the right things.

His big season last year doesn’t make him a finished product. For instance, he was the second-rated passer between the numbers last year, according Warren Sharp’s analytics.

He ranked 22nd passing outside the numbers. Starting in the December game against the Chargers last season, teams began taking away the middle of the field. McDaniel and Tagovailoa surely spent the offseason plotting how to counteract that.

As Steinberg says, the concern for every team is the “Kirk Cousins problem,” when a quarterbac­k is good but paid like a franchise quarterbac­k. That’s Minnesota and Cousins. It’s where the New York Giants will find themselves after giving Daniel Jones a big contract this offseason.

The Dolphins spent lavishly in bringing on Tyreek Hill, Terron Armstead and Bradley Chubb the past couple of seasons. That time is done.

Christian Wilkins and Zach Sieler are negotiatin­g deals in a defensive-tackle market that’s skyrockete­d. Players like Jaylen Waddle and Jevon Holland will be moving off rookie-friendly contracts next winter.

Not everyone can get paid coming up. Tua’s contract hangs over all that. Kansas City traded Hill to the Dolphins after signing Patrick Mahomes to a massive deal. Buffalo general manager Brandon Beane has talked of the “constraint­s,” that Josh Allen’s contract put on the roster.

Those are the constraint­s every team wants. It means they have the player every team needs.

Steinberg notes the NFL rule changes and mega-TV deals have led to quarterbac­ks’ values moving off the charts. Look at Herbert’s deal. Tagovailoa said in the wake of the Chargers quarterbac­k’s contract there’s been no negotiatio­n toward his deal. There can’t be.

“I hope he has a great year,” Steinberg said.

Everyone does. Everyone hopes he gets the happy ending Herbert got this past week.

Everyone will just hold their breath over Tua’s health as this season plays out.

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 ?? MIKE STOCKER/SOUTH FLORIDA SUN SENTINEL ?? Quarterbac­k Tua Tagovailoa stands on field during the last day of Dolphins minicamp practice June 8 at the Hard Rock Stadium in Miami Gardens.
MIKE STOCKER/SOUTH FLORIDA SUN SENTINEL Quarterbac­k Tua Tagovailoa stands on field during the last day of Dolphins minicamp practice June 8 at the Hard Rock Stadium in Miami Gardens.

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