Playoffs
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Time for Russell Wilson to have his own thread...
...and for the Seahawks to start paying:
Agent's Take: What Russell Wilson's blockbuster deal will look like
By Joel Corry | Former Sports Agent
...and for the Seahawks to start paying:
Agent's Take: What Russell Wilson's blockbuster deal will look like
By Joel Corry | Former Sports Agent
...
Objectively, the data suggests that a contract averaging in the $24 million per year neighborhood with $65 million in guarantees and slightly over $73 million in the first three new years is appropriate for Wilson. Seattle has preferred four-year deals or extensions in recent years. Cliff Avril, Bennett, Kam Chancellor, Lynch, Sherman, Thomas, Max Unger and K.J. Wright signed for this length of time. A five- or six-year extension may be in order for Wilson to mirror the length of most lucrative quarterback deals.
Thomas and Sherman's structure suggests that Wilson should receive a $20 million to $25 million signing bonus. Wilson earned the fourth year "proven performance" escalator for third- through seventh-round picks under the 2011 Collective Bargaining Agreement's rookie wage scale. His 2015 salary increases to the lowest restricted free agent tender since he hit the 35 percent offensive playtime mark in two of his first three seasons. If the 2015 salary cap is $142 million, the lowest restricted free agent tender will be $1.528 million. Wilson's 2015 base salary will likely equal whatever the final number is because that would be consistent with their deals.
The effect on Seattle's salary cap
Schneider acknowledged Jan. 28 at Super Bowl media day that a new Wilson pact would present roster challenges the team hasn't faced before with Wilson under his rookie contract. Wilson's 2015 cap number shouldn't be more than $6.75 million with the new deal. The bigger impact will begin taking place in 2016 when Wilson starts having large cap numbers...