Texarkana Gazette

Tight end contracts could be next to see significan­t increase

- By Rob Maaddi

Several tight ends in the NFL are centerpiec­es of the offense.

Now, it’s time they get paid like it.

Guys such as George Kittle, Travis Kelce, Zach Ertz and Rob Gronkowski — before he sat out a year — are more productive than many wide receivers but make far less money.

The franchise tag for tight ends is $10.6 million. By comparison, it’s $17.9 million for wide receivers. Only running backs, at $10.3 million, have a lower number among non-specialist­s.

According to overthecap.com, 24 wide receivers have an average annual salary above $10 million while only two tight ends — Hunter Henry and Austin Hooper — make that much.

Kittle, Kelce, Ertz, Darren Waller and Mark Andrews led their teams in catches and yards receiving last season. They also play a position that requires them to block in pass protection and on running plays. Some, like Kittle, excel at it.

“In many cases, the tight end is much more critical to the offense than the wide receivers and in the case of Ertz, Kelce, Kittle and Gronk, those are franchise-type players who are arguably one of the best three players on the team,” agent Leigh Steinberg told The Associated Press.

The Los Angeles Chargers gave Henry the franchise tag in March. Hooper left Atlanta for Cleveland, signing a four-year contract worth $42 million with $23 million guaranteed.

Meanwhile, the Dallas Cowboys gave wide receiver Amari Cooper a five-year, $100 million contract with $40 million guaranteed.

Cooper caught 79 passes for 1,189 yards and eight touchdowns last season. But he was on the sideline, subbed out for Tavon Austin, on a fourth-down play with the NFC East title on the line in a loss at Philadelph­ia in December.

Kittle, Kelce, Ertz and Gronkowski, when he played in New England, would be go-to guys in a critical spot such as that.

Kittle had 85 catches for 1,053 yards and five TDs in 2019. He played more than 90 percent of San Francisco’s offensive snaps in 14 games, and 97 percent in the playoffs when the 49ers lost to Kelce and the Kansas City Chiefs in the Super Bowl.

Kelce (97 catches, 1,229 yards, five touchdowns) played a whopping 92.5 percent of offensive snaps.

Ertz (88 catches, 916 yards and six TDs) played 80.5 percent of offensive snaps while missing one game for the NFC East champion Eagles.

Waller (90 catches 1,145 yards, three touchdowns) played 90.6 percent of offensive snaps for the Raiders.

Agent Jack Bechta, who represents Kittle, pointed to three reasons tight ends were left behind while other positions saw significan­t salary increases.

“One, none of the top tight ends rarely ever make it to free agency because teams won’t them let go and, thus, as a position group, they lost the chance of resetting the market with their true value,” Bechta said.

“Two, the premium tight ends did contract extensions with anywhere from a year or two years left on their rookie deals. Because of that, they were forced to take steep discounts to their true value. Three, they used to be valued as a safety valve or a third option in the passing game but they’re not an accessory or complement­s to the playbook anymore.

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