Colts face decision on Kwity Paye’s fifth-year option

By May 2, the Colts have to decide whether or not they will exercise Kwity Paye’s fifth-year option for the 2025 season.

The Indianapolis Colts have just over three weeks to decide whether they are going to pick up edge rusher Kwity Paye’s fifth-year option for the 2025 season.

All first-round selections come with a four-year rookie deal and a fifth-year option. This year the deadline for that option decision is May 2. If it is declined, Paye would become a free agent next offseason.

Sometimes, the difficulty of this decision is the timing of it with a full NFL season still to be played before the fifth-year option would go into effect.

The player’s salary for that fifth-year option season is fully guaranteed and determined by several factors, including playing time, position and whether the player has made any Pro Bowls.

For Paye, Over The Cap projects that his fifth-year option would be worth $13.38 million. And because these fifth-year options work essentially like a one-year deal, that entire amount would have to be absorbed under the salary cap in 2025.

Frequently, when these options are picked up, teams will eventually extend the player to a long-term deal, which helps reduce what is oftentimes a rather large one-year cap hit.

PFF recently predicted that the Colts would pick up Paye’s fifth-year option. Here was their reasoning behind that decision:

This one is pretty interesting, with Paye a good-but-not-great player who looks to have the makings of a solid NFL player for a long time, but maybe not much beyond that. That said, Paye has gradually improved and is a perfect fit in the Colts’ defense, and the option comes in at the lowest value for his position, so it makes sense for Indianapolis to pick it up and continue to push Paye’s development forward.

Last season, Paye recorded 28 pressures and a career-high 8.5 sacks — although that high of a pressure-to-sack ratio may not be sustainable year in and year out. Out of 58 eligible edge rushers, Paye ranked 11th in PFF’s run defense grade.

What Payton Turner would make on his 5th-year option

What would Payton Turner would make on his fifth year option in 2025? The Saints have to make a decision on the backup defensive end by May:

Decision time is approaching for the New Orleans Saints and the fifth-year option for 2021 first-round selection Payton Turner. On paper, it has looked like an easy to decision to not pick it up and just give him this next season to break through and earn another contract.

What would it look like if the Saints were to pick up his option, though? The NFL recently released the fifth-year option amounts along with the updated salary cap, which could make the Saints’ decision easier.

Turner would be due $13,387,000 in 2025 if the Saints decided to pick his option up — and every dollar would be guaranteed. If it wasn’t clear before, it’s crystal-clear now that the Saints will very likely not exercise that option before the May 2 deadline. In his first three seasons Turner has racked up 29 tackles and just three sacks. He just hasn’t done enough to justify being tied to him for another season with a significantly higher salary cap hit than he has had up to this point in his career.

[lawrence-auto-related count=4]

The Saints have an easy decision on Payton Turner’s fifth-year option

Unfortunately, the Saints have an easy decision on Payton Turner’s fifth-year option. Maybe he can turn things around like Cesar Ruiz did:

Unfortunately, the New Orleans Saints may not need to wait until the May 2 deadline to choose whether to pick up Payton Turner’s fifth-year option for 2025. The former 2021 first-round pick just hasn’t shown enough to warrant the cost: an estimated (and fully-guaranteed) $13.8 million, per the experts at Over The Cap.

For context, the Saints have already paid Turner a total of $10.1 million between his signing bonus and first three years’ salary. In 2024 he’ll play on a salary just over $2.3 million.

To this point in his three-year career Turner has appeared in a total of 15 games (out of 51 combined Saints games played), missing all but the first and last matchups in 2023 due to a devastating injury. He was banged up through his first two years in the league, too, but he missed a handful of games as a healthy scratch when teammates were outproducing him. In those 15 games he has totaled 29 tackles (20 solo, 8 tackles for loss), 3 sacks, 8 quarterback hits, and a fumble recovery.

Now he’s going into a make-or-break 2024 season. If Turner can stay healthy and make plays rushing the quarterback, he’ll earn an extension with the Saints in 2025 or a lucrative contract elsewhere. If he can’t do either of those things, he may hang around the league for a little while thanks to his draft status, but it’s just as possible that he’ll be out of the game altogether.

In any case: the 2024 season is critically important for Turner’s future in pro football. He did everything right in 2023 by attacking the offseason with a positive attitude and being receptive to coaching. He just needs to repeat that process and hope for better injury luck when the season kicks off.

This isn’t the end of the line for Turner. The Saints chose to not exercise right guard Cesar Ruiz’s fifth-year option for 2024, either, ultimately signing him to a long-term extension before the season started in 2023. Ruiz broke out in 2022 after settling into his new position and built on that progress over the summer. Obviously Turner isn’t in the same situation, but he can still turn things around and earn a second contract with the team that drafted him. With Cameron Jordan getting older and the Saints pass rush falling off, they could really use a breakout campaign from Turner in the fall.

[lawrence-auto-related count=4]

Saints downgrade DE Payton Turner, won’t return vs. Buccaneers

The Saints ruled out Payton Turner against the Buccaneers. He may end up having played in just the season opener and season finale this year:

Don’t look for Payton Turner to get on the field Sunday against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. The New Orleans Saints announced Saturday evening that they were downgrading Turner’s status and ruling him out for Week 17’s matchup; the third-year defensive end recently returned to practice and has one more week left to earn a green light to suit up for a game. He was listed as questionable on the injury report before being ruled out, with head coach Dennis Allen expressing pessimism about his status on Friday.

Coincidentally, the Saints have just one game left in the 2023 regular season next week against the Atlanta Falcons. So it’s looking like, if anything, Turner will end up playing the season opener and the season finale for New Orleans.

It’s been a really tough year for him. Turner didn’t miss a single day of practice throughout the summer and at training camp, playing as many snaps as his coaches would give him in three preseason games. But his cleat caught in the turf at the Caesars Superdome while he was rushing the quarterback to force an incomplete pass back in Week 1, dislocating two toes and forcing him to undergo surgery and a lengthy rehab.

Now, his hopes rely on the Saints beating the Bucs without him so he can return and help their long-shot playoff bid in Week 18. The Saints must decide whether to pick up his fifth-year option for 2025 in the spring of 2024, but there hasn’t been enough production from Turner through his first three years to make that a very difficult decision for the front office. Hopefully he can play well once he’s healthy and turn his career around.

[lawrence-auto-related count=4]

Chiefs decline RB Clyde Edwards-Helaire’s fifth-year option

The #Chiefs have officially declined to use the fifth-year option on their former 2020 first-round draft pick.

The Kansas City Chiefs have officially declined to pick up RB Clyde Edwards-Helaire’s fifth-year option.

As a former first-round draft pick, Edwards-Helaire was one of the many NFL players eligible for an option year following the conclusion of his rookie deal. Edwards-Helaire’s fifth-year option would have cost the team around $5.5 million full-guaranteed as he failed to meet the league’s playtime criteria or accolade criteria.

The 24-year-old running back has missed a lot of games during his first three seasons due to a laundry list of injuries. As a rookie, he suffered an ankle sprain and a hip injury late in the year. In October of 2021, he suffered an MCL sprain which saw him placed on injured reserve. In Week 16, he suffered a shoulder injury that kept him out until the divisional round of the playoffs. This past year, Edwards-Helaire finished the season on injured reserve after suffering a high ankle sprain against the Chargers in Week 11.

Despite the injuries, Edwards-Helaire has managed fair production in his first three seasons. He’s carried the ball 371 times for 1,472 yards and 11 rushing touchdowns, averaging 4.4 yards per carry. He’s also added 72 receptions for 577 yards and six receiving touchdowns, proving to be a weapon in the passing game.

Without the fifth-year option, Edwards-Helaire will become an unrestricted free agent in 2024. Should Edwards-Helaire manage some sort of a bounceback year in Kansas City in 2023, they’d need to re-sign him or use the franchise tag in order to keep him on the team.

[lawrence-auto-related count=3 category=217674209]

Saints decline fifth-year option for RG Cesar Ruiz, making him a free agent in 2024

Saints decline fifth-year option for right guard Cesar Ruiz, making him a free agent in 2024. He’s now entering a contract year:

Well that’s disappointing. NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport reports that the New Orleans Saints are declining to exercise the fifth-year option for right guard Cesar Ruiz, their first-round pick in the 2020 NFL draft. He’ll now become a free agent in 2024 along with left guard Andrus Peat, whose contract was reworked earlier this offseason.

It’s not too surprising. Ruiz was a liability through his first two years in New Orleans, and though he made impressive strides last season he ended the year with a foot injury and needs to show he can rebound from it to continue playing at a high level.

Take that with the cost involved — if the Saints had picked up Ruiz’s option they would have been on the hook for more than $14 million in 2024 — and it makes more sense to see if a long-term contract extension at a lower rate isn’t the better move.

[lawrence-auto-related count=3]

[stnvideo key=”pahxNoVopr-2714582-7618″ type=”amp”]

Here’s what it would cost for the Saints to pick up Cesar Ruiz’s fifth-year option

Here’s what it would cost for the Saints to pick up Cesar Ruiz’s fifth-year option for 2024. If the Saints don’t exercise it, he’ll be a free agent next offseason:

There we go: Sports Illustrated’s Albert Breer shared an NFL memo on Tuesday that confirmed the fifth-year option values for players picked in the first round of the 2020 NFL draft, including New Orleans Saints right guard Cesar Ruiz. We had a good idea of the amount Ruiz was likely going to cost, thanks to the league’s new tiered system, but now it’s official.

If the Saints exercise Ruiz’s fifth-year option for the 2024 season, he’ll count against the salary cap by a fully-guaranteed $14.175 million. They’ve picked up the fifth-year option on every first-round pick New Orleans has drafted since Brandin Cooks back in 2013, and we’ve written before that Ruiz should be an easy decision. It’s a safe bet that they’ll do the same with him before the May 1 deadline.

How are these values decided? All offensive linemen (tackles, guards, and centers) are lumped together, and the different tiers are sorted by Pro Bowl appearances, playtime criteria, and a base level simply for having been a former first-round pick. Over The Cap’s analysts explained the process in detail here. Here’s how they stack up for offensive linemen:

  1. Multiple Pro Bowls: $18,244,000
  2. One Pro Bowl: $16,660,000
  3. Playtime criteria: $14,175,000
  4. Baseline: $13,565,000

One common tactic the Saints have used with these fifth-year options is to restructure them (it’s initially contained within a single base salary) so that much of the cap damage is spread out over automatically-voiding void years in the future. It’s what they did with Marcus Davenport, Marshon Lattimore, and Ryan Ramczyk in the past. Taking that route with Ruiz in 2024 would set his salary cap hit at about $3.8 million, though it risks leaving as much as $10.3 million behind in dead money for 2025 if he doesn’t sign a contract extension.

That’s a risk the Saints have shown they’re willing to take. They were able to lock up Lattimore and Ramczyk under long-term deals, but Davenport is on track to depart in free agency and leave a dead money cap hit of $7.6 million behind. Ruiz’s arrow is trending up, though, and he should earn a solid contract extension with New Orleans after another strong season. If nothing else, picking up his fifth-year option for 2024 buys the Saints some time to put out other fires before turning attention to his situation.

[lawrence-auto-related count=3]

[mm-video type=video id=01grqaz85rzv10nxnfkd playlist_id=01eqbyhwtgq69krjzq player_id=01eqbvhghtkmz2182d image=https://images2.minutemediacdn.com/image/upload/video/thumbnail/mmplus/01grqaz85rzv10nxnfkd/01grqaz85rzv10nxnfkd-af9c269f45eeaf637002b41a9098d0e0.jpg]

Seahawks declining fifth-year option for DE L.J. Collier

The Seahawks are declining the fifth-year option on defensive end L.J. Collier, according to a report by Jeremy Fowler at ESPN.

The Seahawks are declining the fifth-year option on defensive end L.J. Collier, according to a report by Jeremy Fowler at ESPN.

This development hardly comes as a surprise. Collier (26) has had one promising stretch in Seattle during the 2020 season, totaling three sacks and seven quarterback hits that year. However, he produced very little both in his rookie year and during the 2021 campaign. The team reportedly had discussions about trading Collier around the deadline but got no takers.

Collier not getting his option picked up is the latest in a long line of failures for the Seahawks in this department. In fact, to date they have only picked up one fifth-year option, which they did a few weeks ago on tight end Noah Fant – who came over as part of the Russell Wilson trade. This speaks to some pretty awful decision-making in the first round of the draft over the years.

[lawrence-related id=88910]

[listicle id=88950]

Seahawks pick up fifth-year option for TE Noah Fant

The Seahawks are picking up the fifth-year option for tight end Noah Fant, according to a report by ESPN’s Adam Schefter.

The Seahawks are picking up the fifth-year option for tight end Noah Fant, according to a report by ESPN’s Adam Schefter. Fant was recently traded to Seattle from the Broncos as part of the massive Russell Wilson deal.

Fant’s option for 2023 will cost the Seahawks just $6.85 million, making this an easy decision. A former first-round pick by Denver in the 2019 NFL draft, Fant has totaled 10 touchdowns and 1,905 receiving yards in 47 games.

Fant recently told a Denver radio station that he was a little frustrated by the way the Broncos used him offensively. Given the number of weapons the Seahawks have it will be difficult for Fant to match his targets with the Broncos. However, if offensive coordinator Shane Waldron puts him to use in different and more aggressive ways than he was by his playcallers in Denver then Fant will be more than worth the cost of the fifth-year option.

[lawrence-related id=87442]

[listicle id=87325]

Chiefs RB Clyde Edwards-Helaire’s fifth-year option decision coming up in 2023

The #Chiefs don’t have a fifth-year option decision to make this year, but they’ll have an intriguing one this time next season.

NFL teams will soon be making decisions on fifth-year options for 2019 first-round draft picks.

The league deadline for exercising fifth-year options for the 2023 NFL season is coming up on May 2. The Kansas City Chiefs don’t have a decision to make this year. They, of course, traded away their first-round draft pick in 2019 to acquire Frank Clark from the Seattle Seahawks in the first year of a defensive rebuild under Steve Spagnuolo. While the team will avoid a tough choice in 2019, they’ve got one coming up next season.

In 2020, the Chiefs drafted RB Clyde Edwards-Helaire in the first round of the draft and the team will have a decision to make on his fifth-year option in 2023. It was the first time that Brett Veach had made a first-round pick during his tenure as general manager. Fresh off a national championship win with LSU, expectations were high for Edwards-Helaire right off the bat. Unfortunately, the running back has fallen well short of those expectations.

Over his first two seasons in Kansas City, he’s played in just 26-of-39 possible games (combined regular season and postseason). These absences have largely been due to injuries. As a rookie, he suffered an ankle sprain and a hip injury in late December that lingered into the playoffs. His injury luck in his second year wasn’t much better either. It started with an August ankle sprain limiting him in the preseason and training camp. In October he suffered an MCL sprain which saw him placed on injured reserve. In Week 16, he suffered a shoulder injury that kept him out until the divisional round of the playoffs.

Despite the injuries, Edwards-Helaire has managed fair production over his first two seasons with 328 carries for 1,487 yards and nine rushing touchdowns. He’s also caught 60 passes on 86 targets for 462 yards and three touchdowns. Edwards-Helaire hasn’t yet been selected for Pro Bowl or All-Pro honors, which will have an impact on his projected fifth-year option contract number. He currently doesn’t reach playtime percentage numbers that would help boost his contract value, which means he’s currently projected to make between $5 million and $6 million on a fifth-year option.

Edwards-Helaire’s 2022 NFL season and his ability to stay healthy during it will be an important piece of the discussion when it comes to his fifth-year option. A healthy year as the lead back in Kansas City could completely flip the script on his future outlook. He was coming on strong in the playoffs, in games where Jerick McKinnon started over him.

Would you bring Edwards-Helaire back on a fifth-year option contract if the cost is around roughly $6 million fully guaranteed? Let us know your thoughts on in the comment section down below.

[listicle id=126436]