The Palm Beach Post

Sherman ready to show West he still has it

Star cornerback negotiates own deal to join rival 49ers.

- By Josh Dubow

ALAMEDA, CALIF. — Richard Sherman spent seven years tormenting the San Francisco 49ers with his lockdown coverage, colorful trash talk and celebrator­y turkey eating at midfield.

Now he has decided to join the enemy, signing a threeyear contract with the 49ers almost immediatel­y after being let go by the Seattle Seahawks last Friday.

“It’s a little odd to put on a different jersey. I’m sure it will take some getting used to for me,” Sherman said Monday. “I’ve spent a lot of time wearing a red jersey in the Bay so I’m sure I’ll be able to figure it out.”

The former Stanford star has returned to the Bay Area, since he wanted to stay on the West Coast to be close to his parents in Los Angeles and his soon-to-be wife’s family in Seattle. Getting the chance to stay in the NFC West and play the Seahawks twice each year was an added bonus.

“It definitely had a part of it,” he said. “I’d love to get to play in that stadium again in different colors. I’m going to try my best to ruin their day. I do want a chance to show what I can do out there.”

Sherman, who turns 30 later this month, is coming off an Achilles tendon injury that cost him half of the 2017 season. Sherman also had a cleanup surgery on his opposite ankle during the offseason. That led to Seattle’s decision that he wasn’t worth his $13 million salary for 2018.

Sherman became a star in Seattle, bringing a brash attitude and willingnes­s to speak out on any topic to go along with his stellar play. His best seasons came in 2013 and 2014 when Seattle made two Super Bowl appearance­s.

Sherman still was one of the better cornerback­s the past three seasons, ranking second in the NFL by allowing just 49.2 percent of passes against him to be caught, according to Pro Football Focus. Getting cut only adds fuel to Sherman.

“It kind of reignited that gasoline fire that I always had burning,” he said. “It just threw a lot more gas on it and I appreciate that and I’m thankful for this motivation and inspiratio­n. I have a lot of people to show. I’m excited about those prospects.”

That fire was always evident against the 49ers, most notably when he went on a postgame interview tirade after sealing the NFC championsh­ip in January 2014 by deflecting a pass that turned a potential game-winning touchdown for the 49ers into an intercepti­on for the Seahawks. The following season Sherman celebrated a Thanksgivi­ng night win at Levi’s Stadium by eating a turkey leg at midfield, although he said that was prompted by NBC producers who told him to “eat the turkey” during the interview.

“You’re excited after the game. You’re winning. We weren’t thinking anything else honestly. We were just enjoying the moment,” he said. “I honestly didn’t think it was disrespect­ful.”

Sherman, who negotiated his own contract, described the few days after being released by Seattle as “chaos.” He was at the NFLPA meetings in Las Vegas when the Seahawks gave him the news and he heard from 49ers general manager John Lynch and coach Kyle Shanahan almost as soon as the transactio­n hit the waiver wire. Sherman then flew to the Bay Area, where he had dinner with Shanahan on Friday and met with defensive coordinato­r Robert Saleh, a former assistant in Seattle.

He underwent medical tests Saturday before going to the 49ers facility for five hours of negotiatio­ns. After coming to an agreement, Sherman called Seahawks general manager John Schneider to give him a chance to match. Schneider declined but told him it was a solid deal, although he might want to tinker with the roster bonuses.

“Neither side wanted to walk away without a deal because we felt like there was a great relationsh­ip and great understand­ing and something both sides could benefit from,” he said. “We came to an agreement and it was awesome.”

Pro Football Talk reported that Sherman will get a $3 million signing bonus, a $2 million roster bonus if he passes a physical the first day of training camp and a $2 million salary for 2018. He also has $2 million in per-game roster bonuses, a $1 million bonus if he plays 90 percent of the defensive snaps, a $1 million incentive for making the Pro Bowl, and $2 million for being an AP All-Pro.

 ?? STEPHEN BRASHEAR / AP ?? Now-former Seattle Seahawks cornerback Richard Sherman has signed a three-year deal with the San Francisco 49ers, staying in the NFC West and returning to the area where he played in college.
STEPHEN BRASHEAR / AP Now-former Seattle Seahawks cornerback Richard Sherman has signed a three-year deal with the San Francisco 49ers, staying in the NFC West and returning to the area where he played in college.

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