Baltimore Sun

QB Jackson’s contract could set a standard

Guaranteed money a hang-up as negotiatio­ns have sputtered

- By Jonas Shaffer

With Ravens quarterbac­k Lamar Jackson declining to talk Wednesday about his suspended contract talks — “I’m focused on the Dolphins now,” he told reporters — his last public comments on the matter this year could, appropriat­ely enough, be about the issue of guaranteed money.

After Sunday’s season-opening win over the New York Jets, a reporter asked Jackson whether he’d turned down an offer of a “$250 million guaranteed contract.”

“Fully guaranteed?” Jackson asked, grinning. “No. No, there’s no truth to that.” His postgame news conference ended there, and Jackson returned to the Ravens’ locker room.

Guaranteed money proved an intractabl­e issue during the last round of negotiatio­ns, which were halted Friday. According to a team source who wasn’t authorized to speak publicly on the matter, Jackson was seeking a fully guaranteed deal as he entered the final year of his rookie contract.

Jackson told ESPN after Sunday’s game that he turned down an extension that had $160 million to $180 million guaranteed. The total value of the reported fiveyear offer was more than $250 million, a higher average annual value than the extensions signed this summer by two Pro Bowl quarterbac­ks, the Denver Broncos’ Russell

Wilson and Arizona Cardinals’ Kyler Murray.

Both megadeals establishe­d new benchmarks for contract value behind the Green Bay Packers’ Aaron Rodgers, whose $50.3 million-per-year deal leads all quarterbac­ks. In July, Murray agreed to a five-year, $230.5 million extension ($46.1 million annually). On Sept. 1, Wilson finalized a

five-year, $245 million extension ($49.5 million annually).

Perhaps just as important as the size of the market-setting contracts was the size of their guarantees. Murray got $160 million in guaranteed money. Wilson, whom the Broncos had traded away significan­t draft capital to acquire in March, affording them little leverage in contract talks, got $165 million guaranteed.

A lot of guaranteed money, yes, but not

fully guaranteed. In the four-plus years since Minnesota Vikings quarterbac­k Kirk Cousins signed the NFL’s first lucrative, fully guaranteed contract, a three-year, $84 million deal, only one quarterbac­k has signed a top-of-the-market deal with total financial security. If Jackson doesn’t ultimately sign a similar long-term contract, the five-year, $230 million deal that quarterbac­k Deshaun Wilson received from the Cleveland Broncos in March could prove anomalous.

“If you just look at it, we’ve got a large number of deals done over the last, say, three years,” former Philadelph­ia Eagles team president and Cleveland Browns CEO Joe Banner said in an interview. “There’s been a large number of deals done in the last few months. And we only have one deal that’s fully guaranteed.

“Now, you can fight for it if you want, but you’re obviously the one not kind of accepting the market as a whole. It’s just cherry-picking one deal that reflects what you would like to get. Which you have every right to do. You can’t really argue that, ‘I’m just waiting for what the market is.’ No, the market had a lot of large number of deals over a few years, and even a group of deals over a few months, that tells us what the current market is. And they say: Deshaun Watson is the exception when it comes to guaranteed money, not the rule.”

Banner, a co-founder of The 33rd Team, a “football think tank” featuring former league executives, coaches and players, said the percentage of contracts that teams are willing to guarantee has increased in recent years. All 32 first-round picks in April’s draft reportedly received fully guaranteed fouryear deals.

But unlike in the NBA, where most deals are fully guaranteed, NFL veterans without long-term contract security can be released before their contract expires. When the Ravens cut safety Tony Jefferson after the 2019 season, for instance, they did not owe him the final $7 million in salary left on his four-year, $34 million contract. Their only penalty was the $4.7 million charge they incurred in “dead money.”

Jackson has shrugged off suggestion­s that he’s taking a financial risk by playing this season without an extension secured.

Barring a calamitous injury, the Ravens are expected to designate Jackson with a franchise tag next offseason — the exclusive tag would be worth about $45 million in 2023 — if they can’t agree on a deal when talks resume.

But Banner said the threat of injuries in a sport as violent as football is a persistent obstacle to guaranteed contracts.

“If you have players in a very physical sport that get hurt, that naturally descend [in performanc­e] with age, and the effect on the quality of play can be further affected by frequency of injuries in the sport, then it’s totally different than baseball and basketball,” Banner said. “And that needs to be accounted for in how the deals are done and structured.”

While Jackson is representi­ng himself in contract negotiatio­ns, a rarity for a player of his stature, the NFL Players Associatio­n has reportedly advised Jackson that, given his performanc­e (two Pro Bowl appearance­s and 2019 NFL Most Valuable Player honors) and age (25), he is justified to demand a fully guaranteed contract.

Jackson declined to comment Wednesday on his discussion­s with the players’ union, but his negotiatio­ns could have outsize ramificati­ons. Banner said another fully guaranteed deal could “nudge” the market for player contracts forward, helping future generation­s of players earn a higher share of guaranteed money.

Ravens defensive lineman Calais Campbell, a member of the NFLPA’s executive committee, said Jackson could help “pave the way” for NFL contracts, as Larry Bird and Magic Johnson did for the NBA.

“Every [NBA] contract’s guaranteed because of the people that came before them,” Campbell said Wednesday. “That’s kind of a really cool setup when you learn the history. It’s like, ‘Yo, it really came down to star players demanding guaranteed contracts, and then everybody else kind of followed suit. That became the norm.’ And same thing in baseball.

“So I think that it does take the quarterbac­ks to kind of create that environmen­t where everything is fully guaranteed. And Kirk Cousins has done it. And so I think the more people that do it ... with [Deshaun] Watson getting it done, I think that’s impressive. So if Lamar can get it done, that’d be even better for the overall concept of athletes and guaranteed contracts.”

 ?? KIM HAIRSTON/BALTIMORE SUN ?? Baltimore Ravens QB Lamar Jackson answers questions after practice at the Under Armour Performanc­e Center on Wednesday afternoon.
KIM HAIRSTON/BALTIMORE SUN Baltimore Ravens QB Lamar Jackson answers questions after practice at the Under Armour Performanc­e Center on Wednesday afternoon.

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