The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

» Antonio Brown’s Raiders deal could affect Jones talks,

- By D. Orlando Ledbetter dledbetter@ajc.com

Pro Bowl wide receiver Antonio Brown was traded Sunday from the Pittsburgh Steelers to the Oakland Raiders, in a deal that can’t become official until the new league’s business year starts at 4 p.m. Wednesday.

The Falcons, like much of the NFL, were closely monitoring the situation. Brown’s renegotiat­ed contract called for $54.1 million with $30.1 million guaranteed, to set a new bar for wide receivers.

Falcons wide receiver Julio Jones did not participat­e in offseason activities last season and settled on a contract adjustment before the start of training camp. The Falcons agreed to improving Jones’ contract after it was adjusted on July 27, 2018.

“Julio Jones, not worried about it, still don’t have a timetable on that,” Falcons GM Thomas Dimitroff said recently at the NFL scouting combine. “We’re in a really good place with Julio. (When the season begins) we’ll be in a good place with him as well, as we have talked about in the offseason.”

Jones’ deal has two years remaining. He is scheduled to make $9.6 million in 2019 and $11.4 million in 2020. With Brown’s new deal averaging $18 million, the Falcons will likely have to double Jones’ base salary and grant a two- or three-year extension to lessen salary cap ramificati­ons.

“You can get money from Julio because he’s kind of self-contained,” CBS Sports NFL business analyst Joel Corry said recently on 92.9 The Game. “Let’s say you make Julio Jones in terms of new money, tack on $60 million of new money over three years. You take his base salary down to the league minimum and give him a $20 million signing bonus. You can probably pick up for $4 million to $5 million in cap room depending on how you precisely structure it. There are ways to get cap room.”

The Chiefs have started negotiatio­ns with wide receiver Tyreek Hill, which could be a “record-setting” deal, according to NFL Network reporter Ian Rapoport. The Falcons may not want to wait until Hill’s deal is completed. “That why you want to do ( Jones’ deal) sooner rather than later,” Corry said. “Jimmy Sexton ( Jones’ agent) is no fool, so he’s probably going to wait until that deal gets done.”

New York Giant Odell Beckham Jr. is the only other receiver averaging $18 million a year.

The Falcons have other pressing financial matters. After placing the franchise tag on DT Grady Jarrett, the Falcons are $6.7 million under the $188.2 million cap and aren’t set to be major players when free agency starts. The Falcons will need $8 million for the incoming nine-member rookie class. Completing Jarrett and Jones’ deals would give them some salary cap relief. The Falcons also could restructur­e some current contracts or cut more players. They’ve already released CB Robert Alford and DE Brooks Reed, told kicker Matt Bryant he would not be re-signed and told CB Brian Poole he won’t receive a tender offer.

“I’m surprised (OL) Ryan Schraeder is still on the roster considerin­g that he got benched at the end of the year,” Corry said. “That may be another way to get cap room.” Schraeder is set to count for $7.7 million against the salary — high for a reserve.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States