Budda Baker strikes for Arizona Cardinals

The Cardinals’ Budda Baker did not spare anything when it came to celebrating his interception in the fourth quarter.

It was all Arizona in Texas on “Monday Night Football.”

The final indignity came when Budda Baker picked off Andy Dalton in the fourth quarter. The 49-yard interception return was negated because the DB was ruled down by contact.

That didn’t prevent the Cardinals from lining up as Baker went into his Pro Bowlers Tour act in the end zone.

Budda Baker expected to return against Jets in Week 5

He will have missed only one game after having surgery to repair torn ligaments in his thumb.

The Arizona Cardinals will get a big boost to the safety position this week. Pro Bowler Budda Baker, who missed Sunday’s game after having surgery to repair ligaments in his right thumb, is expected to be back on the field this weekend against the New York Jets.

“We feel good about Budda playing this week,” head coach Kliff Kingsbury told reporters Wednesday morning.

The Cardinals released safety Curtis Riley on Tuesday, suggesting at least one of their injured safeties (Baker, Jalen Thompson, Chris Banjo) would return.

When Baker had his thumb surgery, the hope was that he would only miss one game. There will be precautions to take care of that hand.

“I know they’ll have some sort of apparatus on his hand to protect him,” Kingsbury said.

As for Thompson and Banjo, Kingsbury is unsure about their return.

“They’re still working through it,” he said. “Kind of a day-to-day situation for them.”

The return of Baker will be a big boost to the secondary, which struggled against the Carolina Panthers.

“Budda being back will definitely make us all feel better,” said Kingsbury.

It certainly will.

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Kliff Kingsbury hopeful safeties can be back against Jets

He hopes at least two can be back in the lineup on Sunday.

The Arizona Cardinals were without their top three safeties on Sunday in their 31-21 loss to the Carolina Panthers. Budda Baker had thumb surgery. Jalen Thompson is on injured reserve with an ankle injury and Chris Banjo injured his hamstring in Week 3.

It was a major reason why the defense struggled on Sunday. The Cardinals are hopeful they could get more than one of these players back this week to play against the New York Jets.

“I’m hopeful we’ll at least have a couple of them back.” head coach Kliff Kingsbury said on Arizona Sports 98.7 FM Monday afternoon. “I’m not sure how that’s going to play out. We’re going to get them out there tomorrow and start working with them and seeing how they feel and where that goes. Hopefully, all three are sooner rather than later. All three, when they are out there, have done a nice job for us.”

Baker’s return would be huge.

“Without Budda, a top-three safety, we are a different defense,” he said. “We didn’t play like we wanted to (Sunday) but Budda is one of the best players in the league and is a real eraser for us back there and can fix a lot of things. Your could tell yesterday we missed him.”

Deionte Thompson, who played in Baker’s position, wasn’t bad. If at least Jalen Thompson or Banjo can come back, that will help a lot.

Getting Baker back will solve a lot of problems they had.

The first injury report of the week won’t come out until Wednesday afternoon.

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Budda Baker had surgery; Cardinals hope return is ‘sooner rather than later’

The Pro Bowl safety has had his thumb surgery.

The Arizona Cardinals have been set back by injuries at safety. Pro Bowl safety Budda Baker is expected to miss at least one game after surgery to repair ligaments in his thumb.

Baker has had the surgery and is now recovering. Head coach Kliff Kingsbury spoke about it on Wednesday before practice. He wouldn’t say when he believes Baker will return but hopes he isn’t out long.

“Budda has had the procedure and we’re just hoping it’s sooner rather than later,” he said. “I don’t want to put any timetables on it just yet. Knowing Budda and the type of superhuman he is, you never know. Everything went well, so we’re excited about that.”

Assuming he misses Sunday’s game against the Carolina Panthers as is expected, the Cardinals will be down both of their starting safeties, as Jalen Thompson is on injured reserve with an ankle injury and must miss at least one more game. Chris Banjo, who has been starting in Thompson’s place, suffered a hamstring injury on Sunday and his status for Sunday’s game is uncertain.

That leaves Deionte Thompson and Curtis Riley as starters, and rookie linebacker Isaiah Simmons, who used to be a safety when he was in college, could see some time as well.

The Cardinals will need a healthy Baker. A quick return will be needed.

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VOTE: Seahawks over 49ers in Homegrown Legends tournament

Cast your ballot and vote the Seattle Seahawks over the San Francisco 49ers in the first round of the Homegrown Legends tournament.

The voting is now live for the first round of our Homegrown Legends tournament and this week features the Seattle Seahawks against the San Francisco 49ers.

But before you cast your ballot, here’s a little background on the contest and a look at Seattle’s roster.

Homegrown Legends: Seattle’s greatest products come home as virtual Seahawks

Which cities and states produce the best football talent? It’s an age-old debate, and Touchdown Wire asks you to help determine the answer.

We’ve imagined NFL rosters for the ages composed of the greatest players who grew up in the areas of the 32 current franchises. Our selection methodology is explained in detail in this article.

Touchdown Wire columnist Doug Farrar revealed his power rankings for our 32 Homegrown Legends rosters, providing the seedings for an epic virtual tournament.

Here’s where you come in. Cast your votes below in the first round of our Homegrown Legends tournament, and check back on Friday, Sept. 25, at approximately noon ET for results and the opening of second-round voting.

Click here to vote the Seattle Seahawks to the next round!

Vote: Homegrown Legends Tournament Bracket, Round 1

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49ers plan to ban fan who racially abused Budda Baker on IG

The 49ers are searching for the identity of a fan who used social media to post awful comments to the Cardinals’ Budda Baker.

The San Francisco 49ers are looking to identify a fan who posted racially abusive messages toward the Arizona Cardinals’ Budda Baker on Instagram, the team tweeted Tuesday.

Baker tweeted the abusive messages, which are NSFW and beyond the definition of atrocious. The sender called Baker the N-word four times and accused him of “trying to go after the knees” of 49ers players.

“The San Francisco 49ers unequivocally denounce the racist messages sent to Budda Baker,” the statement read. “The individual who sent the messages does not represent the 49ers or the Faithful. Per team policy, we are working to identify this person and will ban them from all 49ers games and events.

“Incidents like this demonstrate how much work remains to be done to address racism and hate in our society. We remain steadfast in our commitment to that work.”

Niners CEO retweeted the statements and commented:

49ers denounce fan who sent racist messages sent to Cardinals safety Budda Baker

Cardinals safety Budda Baker received a vile, racist message on Instagram after their win over the 49ers.

Cardinals safety Budda Baker made a regular football play late in the first half of Sunday’s season opener when he read a screen pass for 49ers tight end George Kittle, and wrapped up the much bigger tight end around the legs for a stop. The play resulted in a knee sprain for Kittle though after he came down awkwardly during Baker’s tackle. Kittle wound up missing only one snap and played the entire second half.

After the game, Baker found on his Instagram an expletive-laden, racist message from a user with a 49ers-themed avatar and Instagram handle. He posted a screenshot of the NSFW message on Twitter and wrote, “Im all good with opposing fans talking trash. But This right here man… All you can do is pray for ppl like this.”

What was said in the message went beyond trash talk. So much so that the 49ers issued a statement about the message:

Kittle also took to social media to show his support for the safety:

Kittle and Baker will see each other again Week 16 when the 49ers and Cardinals square off in Arizona. Hopefully there’s additional action from the NFL to ensure that person is banned from all NFL venues and events.

 

 

Full details for Budda Baker’s contract extension

He will count $3.78 million against the cap this year and has not guarantees after 2021.

Arizona Cardinals Pro Bowl safety Budda Baker received a four-year contract extension worth $59 million, making the highest-paid safety in NFL history. All we knew to start with was that he received a $10 million signing bonus with $22.1 million in total guarantees.

The details of his contract are out.



His 2020 salary was adjusted to an even $1 million. He received $10 million to sign.

He will make $4 million in fully guaranteed salary in 2021 and will be paid a $7.1 million option bonus.

The signing bonus will count $2 million against the cap this year and then the following four. His option bonus will prorate over the four years of the extension. He has not guarantees after 2020.

His salary jumps up to $11 million in 2022, then to almost $13.01 million in 2023 and finally to $14.2 million in 2024.

Here is the cap breakdown per year.

2020: $1 million salary, $2 million new signing bonus proration, $776,813 old signing bonus proration from his rookie deal — $3.77 million cap hit.

2021: $4 million fully guarantees salary, $3.78 million in bonus prorations — $7.78 million cap hit

2022: $11 million salary, $3.78 million in bonus prorations — $14.78 million cap hit

2023: $13.1 million salary, $3.78 million in prorations — $16.88 million cap hit

2024: $14.2 million salary, $3.78 million in prorations — $17.98 million cap hit

They could get out of the deal after 2021 and save money against the cap.

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What Budda Baker’s new contract could mean for Marcus Maye

The Jets will have an important decision with what to do with safety Marcus Maye next offseason.

The Jets will have to make a big decision with another safety next offseason. 

Marcus Maye, who’s poised to take over the role left behind by Jamal Adams, will be an unrestricted free agent in 2021 and could command a sizable new contract from the Jets, especially after Cardinals’ safety Budda Baker reset the market for the position.

Baker reportedly signed a four-year, $59 million contract this week. It will pay him $14.75 million annually – the most for any safety in the league. Maye, meanwhile, ranks 62nd with the final year of his rookie contract worth $1,638,510.

“Big ups to Budda,” Maye told reporters Tuesday after the deal was announced, “but we’re all in different situations. I know my talent.”

Baker and Maye were drafted three picks apart in 2017 (Baker was taken 36th and Maye was taken 39th) and play the same position, but that’s where the similarities end. They’re not the same player and have had very different careers thus far. That may change in 2020 if Gregg Williams adjusts Maye’s role in his defense, but for now, it’s hard to compare the two for the purposes of contract negotiations.

Baker has a leg up on Maye in four crucial aspects: durability, production, pass-rush ability and run-stopping. Baker’s played in eight more games than Maye and tallied 113 more total tackles. He also has seven quarterback hits, 3.5 sacks and leads safeties in quarterback pressures since 2017 with 33. Finally, Baker ranks third at his position with 68 run stops since 2017.

Maye missed a lot of time in 2018 with foot and shoulder injuries but is a much more traditional defensive back in that he’s overperformed Baker in coverage. The Jets safety’s Pro Football Focus coverage grade eclipsed 70.0 the past two seasons, including a 77.4 grade in 2018, which ranked 23rd out of 100 safeties. Baker’s coverage skills have improved every year since he entered the league, but he finished 2019 with a 64.8 grade.

As for what this all means with Maye’s future on the Jets, it’s hard to say. He’s a talented safety, but unless Williams unlocks a new version of Maye in 2020 it would be hard for Joe Douglas to justify paying him more than Baker – which would essentially be what Adams wanted if the Jets hadn’t traded him to Seattle.

If we compare Maye’s career to that of the top-five highest-paid safeties (Baker, Eddie Jackson, Tyrann Mathieu, Kevin Byard and Landon Collins) over the three-year span before they received their extensions, Maye ranks last in every category except forced fumbles and interceptions – where he ranks second-to-last. It’s an inexact science considering they all play in different defenses with different skillsets, but it paints the picture that Maye won’t – or shouldn’t – command a top-five contract, and that will play a big role in Joe Douglas’ decision with Maye.

Everything could change if Maye has a career year in 2020. The Jets already insinuated he could assume Adams’ role on defense as a hybrid safety/pass-rusher. If Maye proves he can play multiple defensive positions this season, his case for a top contract gets better. A lot is riding on the 2020 season when it comes to Maye’s future on the team. 

There are other considerations at play for the Jets as well.

For one, they could look at extending Sam Darnold a year early if he takes a big leap in his third season (much like the Rams and Eagles did with their quarterbacks). The safety free- class could also include solid players like Justin Simmons, Anthony Harris and Jaquiski Tartt. The Jets may see them as better options in their secondary than Maye after this season. Of course, the ultimate kicker is the 2021 salary cap, which is entirely dependent on how the coronavirus pandemic affects this season’s revenue stream. If the cap drops too low, Douglas may want to invest money elsewhere and find a cheaper option to fill out his safety group with Ashtyn Davis leading the way.

Baker’s contract will have an effect on Maye’s negotiations, but not to the same extent it could have if this was Adams. Maye is good enough to get a second contract and would be only the third second-round pick by the Jets since 1984 to make it to his fifth season (David Harris and Kellen Clemens were the other two), but it’s hard to know where he stands on the Jets’ list of priorities until he sees the field this season.

GM Steve Keim: Budda Baker embodies what a Cardinals player should be

He used Baker as an example for his scouts to look for before the draft.

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For Arizona Cardinals general manager Steve Keim, he wants more than just talented players on his roster. He wants them to have some traits beyond the physical talent that is requisite in the league.

He wants a particular personality and passion.

Safety Budda Baker has that.

It is one of the biggest reasons why the Cardinals rewarded Baker with a four-year contract extension, making him reportedly the highest-paid safety in NFL history.

Keim used Baker as an example with scouts before the draft as the sort of player they need to find.

Keim spoke about Baker at the press conference to announce his extension and described how he started scouting meetings this year by playing a clip of a Baker highlight.

It was against the Pittsburgh Steelers and Baker flew across the field past several teammates and prevented a touchdown on a play in which there were multiple missed tackles.

“That was an emphasis of ‘what does a Cardinal look like,'” he said. “To me, that’s everything that Budda Baker embodies — his passion, his love for the game, the speed, the explosiveness he plays with every snap and his desire.”

Baker is not yet at the peak of his career. He is still ascending. He also has the respect from his peers in the league and also his teammates.

It doesn’t feel like this is a contract the Cardinals will regret.

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