Breakdown on Jared Goff’s new contract with the Detroit Lions

Breakdown on Jared Goff’s new contract extension with the Detroit Lions

As expected, the Detroit Lions agreed to a contract extension with quarterback Jared Goff on Monday. The contract is a 4-year extension worth $212 million dollars.

Per Albert Breer, the contract extension is broken down as:

  • $73 million signing bonus.
  • $125 million over the first two years.
  • $165 million over the first three years.
  • $57 million in 2028, which is an option year.

While it’s a lot of money with a lot of guarantees, it’s the going rate for quarterbacks. Especially the quarterbacks that win football games and that’s exactly what Jared Goff has been doing. Over Goff’s last 27 games, he’s gone 20-7 and he helped get the Lions their first Division Championship since 1992. Additionally, he helped get the Lions to the NFC Championship game.

Sure, some people will say that “QB wins” don’t matter but it sure feels like the organizations in the NFL value those wins. Especially since if a quarterback isn’t winning football games, he tends to lose his job as a starter in the NFL.

Whether you love or hate Goff as a quarterback and the new contract extension he received, you can’t deny that he deserved a new deal. He was dealt to Detroit and was essentially written off as a player in this league. Three years later and he’s rejuvenated the city of Detroit, the Lions football team and most importantly, his career. Cheers to several more years of chanting the name, Jared Goff! Jared Goff! Jared Goff!

 

Rams coach Sean McVay: ‘No doubt’ he could have handled the Jared Goff trade better

Rams coach Sean McVay: ‘No doubt’ he could have handled the Jared Goff trade better with the quarterback in an interview with Mike Silver

[mm-video type=playlist id=01eqbx8sj47vkwrznr player_id=none image=https://lionswire.usatoday.com/wp-content/plugins/mm-video/images/playlist-icon.png]

Los Angeles Rams coach Sean McVay parlayed trading Jared Goff and multiple first-round draft picks to Detroit in exchange for Matthew Stafford into a Super Bowl title. But McVay does indeed have some regrets over how he personally handled Goff during the trade process last offseason.

In a lengthy interview with veteran NFL reporter Mike Silver, McVay took some personal responsibility for mishandling Goff, who had taken the Rams to a Super Bowl of his own after the 2018 season.

Silver asks McVay if he “would have done things differently” regarding how he handled the football breakup with Goff, who Silver acknowledges is a close friend of his. Goff was caught completely off-guard and expressed some anger and frustration at how McVay acted towards him.

McVay is candid in his response,

“That was a hard thing for me because the thing that’s more important than anything is being a good communicator. Clear, open, and honest. Making sure people aren’t caught off guard and really having respect for the players and the coaches for what they have to do. And I wish that there had been better in-person communication.”

The Super Bowl-winning coach elaborated,

“The one thing that hurt me is that I would never want anything to be misunderstood about my appreciation, my respect for Jared. Was it a tough decision? Yes. Were there some things that I could’ve handled better in terms of the clarity provided for him? No doubt.”

McVay then broke down what he would have done differently.

“If I had it over again, what I would do is, before I had even gone to Cabo, when there was a possibility of, alright, if Matthew Stafford’s available, if there’s other quarterbacks available, that would be something that we would explore,” McVay explained. “You sit down with him, you look him in the eye, you tell him that, instead of calling him and setting up a meeting where that was my intention when I got back from Cabo.”

McVay regrets “not being able to look (Goff) in the eye” and how quickly the trade situation with Stafford accelerated.

“I regret it,” McVay added. “I will not make those same mistakes again.”

It’s an honest acknowledgment from McVay and it echoes what Goff himself said about their relationship since the trade. The full interview is available on YouTube and is worth the time if you have interest in McVay’s opinions on a lot of topics.

Jared Goff entering his make-or-break season with the Lions

QB Jared Goff entering his make-or-break season with the Lions after a poor first season that ended on a promising uptick

Jared Goff looked like one of the league’s most promising young quarterbacks when he helped the stacked Los Angeles Rams team on their journey to Super Bowl LII. They ultimately fell short to the Tom Brady-led New England Patriots, but the fans had hope for their young QB and coach.

Mark J. Rebilas-USA TODAY Sports

Flash forward to 2022, and Jared Goff finds himself in year two with the Detroit Lions, and on a pretty expensive contract compared to his recent production. Although he hasn’t been who he was in 2018, the 2016 first overall pick clearly had enough talent to get him a major contract and be the first player taken off the board.

Goff is essentially in a contract year, as cutting Goff this year would see a $41m dead cap hit, with a loss of $10m in cap space right now. The Lions would create $20 million in cap space by simply waiting a year. That logic therefore would assume Goff needs to have a season worth $20 million if he wants to play out his contract in Detroit, which would keep him here for two more seasons. But is it over for the 27-year-old, who had a fairly average season (some would say below-average) posting a stat line of 3,245 Yds, with 19 touchdowns to 8 interceptions?

It might not be. As it’s a contract season, and year two in a system you can be optimistically educated as typically there is a natural bump in any year. On top of that, Goff has a solid offensive line and a running back with major dual-threat capabilities in D’Andre Swift. He also saw rookie WR Amon-Ra St. Brown show major flashes at the end of the year.

The Lions took that success and added to it by bringing in free agent wideout DJ Chark, and trading up for what many believe is the best WR in the rookie class in Jameson Williams. On top of these offensive weapons, the defense is much improved on paper — three out of four of these additions have yet to play a snap — with Aidan Hutchinson, DeShon Elliott, Josh Paschal, and Malcolm Rodriguez.

All of this, in addition to having a good coach, in year two of his program installation, contains the ingredients necessary for Jared Goff to return to his peak Rams form. Or close to it. Goff is still young enough (27) that a turnaround like we saw with Ryan Tannehill could be in order, where the Lions might just find a medium-term starter for their football team that can make them a perennial playoff team.

This season is where the Lions will see what they have in Dan Campbell, but they will especially find out about what they have in Jared Goff. It goes without harping too much that this season is so important for this Lions franchise, as it could lay the blueprint for where this rebuild/renovation/house flip/whatever you want to call it, is for the foreseeable future.

Raj Mehta-USA TODAY Sports

Are the Lions buyers for the next QB that shakes free? Are the Lions looking to trade up, or target a specific QB in the 2023 NFL draft? Or are the Lions content with Jared Goff for at least the next 5 seasons? All of this hinges on what we see from Jared Goff this season, and if he can find his way back to the Jared Goff that went first overall, and led his team to a Super Bowl in his third season.

Sean McVay wishes he had done more to help Jared Goff

Rams head coach Sean McVay recently reflected on his time with quarterback Jared Goff.

When the Rams traded quarterback Jared Goff to the Lions in early February, along with two future first-round picks and a third-round pick, for quarterback Matthew Stafford, it said two things very clearly: First, Rams head coach and offensive shot-caller Sean McVay was tired of designing his playbook around Goff’s obvious limitations. Second, Stafford provides many more options in the passing game with his mobility and ability to make throws all over the field.

Why Matthew Stafford will be a franchise-defining bargain for his new NFL team

In a recent interview, McVay opened up about Goff, and what went wrong in the end.

“I think that’s a really tough thing to answer. What I think is important to make sure that I mention is the amount of good things and really great leadership that he provided since I got here as a head coach. There’s been a Super Bowl appearance, there’s been a conference championship win, there’s been two division titles, there’s been three playoff wins that he was an intricate part of, there’s been three playoff appearances. So, what I’d rather focus on are the things that I think he did a great job of to establish himself in this league. The way he handled himself consistently day in and day out and all I can do is just be appreciative of that. That’s kind of what I would say on Jared.”

Goff seemed to be the perfect on-field extension of McVay’s offensive philosophies in 2018, the year the Rams made it to Super Bowl LIII before being stymied by the Patriots. Bill Belichick had a defiantly effective game plan for Goff — he would show one coverage before McVay’s voice cut out in Goff’s helmet, and then switch to another when Goff had to process things himself. Add that to the fact that teams had stopped biting on McVay’s pre-snap motion concepts earlier that season, and Goff was left to make things happen more with his own talent than the full use of McVay’s architecture. And that was never going to be the optimal formula.

In 2017 and 2018, Goff’s first two seasons under McVay, Goff tied with Philip Rivers for the fourth-most touchdown passes in the NFL with 60. His interception rate of 1.83 was the eighth-lowest in the league — lower than Russell Wilson’s, Matthew Stafford’s, Dak Prescott’s, and Patrick Mahomes’. His quarterback rating of 100.8 was the sixth-highest.

But in 2019 and 2020, after the Rams had signed Goff to a four-year, $134 million contract extension, his regression was obvious. He threw just 42 touchdown passes, coughed up 29 interceptions, and his passer rating dropped to 88.1. It wasn’t quite the complete reversal of fortune fellow 2016 draft pick Carson Wentz experienced last season, but the last two seasons confirmed what Goff’s detractors believed him to be: A product of McVay’s system, incapable of operating outside the box at a level required of a true franchise quarterback.

Why the Rams won the Stafford-Goff trade in an absolute landslide

McVay refused to lay the blame at Goff’s feet, saying that the trade was simply the best decision for the organization.

“I think what I would say that I’ve learned over the last handful of years is things change by the day. And you probably want to be careful making blanket statements when you can’t predict the future. Again, all I can go back to is appreciation for the times that we did have and wishing him nothing but the best moving forward.

“I think Jared and I had a lot of conversations. We had one that I want to keep that between myself and Jared, but I don’t want to get into the specifics of those types of things. But when you look back on the four that we did have together, there’s a lot of times you can smile on. And I would say there’s a lot of things that, you know, when I self-reflect, I certainly wish I was better for him in some instances. And those are things that think you have to acknowledge, move forward and make sure that, that you learn from every mistake that you make. And certainly, I’m not going to run away from the things that I could have been better for him as a leader and as a coach. There was a lot of really good things that occurred from 2017, and on that I think we can eventually really have a much better appreciation for. We have had good conversations that were healthy. And I think we were able to both communicate open and honestly with one another, but those details were to keep between us.”

All that said, there’s absolutely no doubt that the Rams recognized that the ability to return to their former Super Bowl-level performance on offense was going to require a quarterback with the simple ability to do more. Still, McVay refused to take the bait when asked whether the offensive downturn was all his quarterback’s fault.

“I think the unfair narrative has been that some of our decrease in production is exclusively on the quarterback, that’s not true at all,” McVay concluded. “I think certainly, I have a big hand in that. I have to be able to look myself in the mirror and acknowledge and be able to evolve, improve and take ownership in that. I do know that the head coach and the quarterback are the ones that always, sometimes you get too much credit or too much blame, but I’m not going to run away from the blame that’s deserved on my end. What I do think is important is that the narrative becomes, all right, this is the outlet for why the offense wasn’t what it was, that’s unfair to Jared and I think it’s disrespectful to what he’s done over the last four years. There’s a lot of things.

“Football’s the ultimate team sport. That quarterback position is vital to your success, but it’s not exclusively the reason for, or the reason not. There’s an element that absolutely, it’s about the ten around him. It’s about what kind of things are we doing to put our players in the most favorable spots? And when you go back and you watch, and there’s a lot of layers to every single snap, every single play, it’s not exclusive to the quarterback and there’s a lot of times when I’m looking at saying, ‘Man, I’ve got to do a better job, or we do collectively as a staff,’ and then there’s somewhere we’re saying, ‘We’ve got to execute. Whether it’s from upfront, tight ends, receivers, running backs or the quarterback.’ That’s what makes football such a unique game, but I do think that’s what goes back to it being the ultimate team game because it takes all 11 to be able to operate at an efficient level. It takes coaches and players being connected and being on the same page.”

What does he want in a quarterback, and how important is that quarterback to the overall team success? McVay pointed more to the overall than to the quarterback’s responsibility.

“I would say this, I think as a team going back, you kind of just bring it back to being in that Green Bay visitor’s locker room after the game,” he said of the Rams’ divisional round loss to the Packers, in which Goff completed 21 of 27 passes for 174 yards and a touchdown. “What I think is so hard is that when you fall short or when you lose in the divisional round, or when we lost in the Super Bowl a couple years ago. What you don’t appreciate until you accumulate enough experience to really apply tangible evidence is how difficult it is – when you really say, ‘Hey, you start over.’ You don’t just show up where you fell short the following year. It’s so difficult to get yourself in a position to win your opener, to then follow that up by winning your second game, putting yourself in a position to win a division, potentially compete for a first-round bye, get into the playoffs, win in the playoffs.

“So, there’s so many things that we just want to take it one day at a time, be totally and completely present. I think it’s really all-encompassing to coaches, offense, defense, special teams – everybody can do their job at a little bit higher level. If we do that and we continue to just build and peak at the right times, you give yourself an opportunity to be relevant. Kind of like what I was saying earlier with the Bucs, they peaked at the right time. I think they showed that they can handle some adversity, I think a lot of people were probably counting them out after we had a game on Monday night, where we won, then they lose to the Chiefs the following week. But they had a late bye, they did a great job of rallying the troops and peaking at the right time. So, we’re really just focused on what we can control right now and that’ll be an ever-evolving process as we’re gearing towards whoever we open with and trying to really start 1-0.”

The Rams will try and start 1-0 in 2021 with Matthew Stafford, and would seem to have a far better opportunity of building on that than they did with Jared Goff.

Twitter reacts to Matt Stafford news

Twitter reacts as former Georgia football QB Matt Stafford has been traded from the Lions to the Rams for Jared Goff and picks.

On Saturday, news broke that former Georgia quarterback Matthew Stafford had been traded from the Detroit Lions to the Los Angeles Rams for Jared Goff.

Adam Schefter was the first to report the news, and added that the Lions will receive a third-round pick in 2021, a first-round pick in 2022 and a first-round pick in 2023.

The deal, however, cannot be made official until the start of the new league year on March 17.

Twitter went wild for the news of the two No. 1 picks being swapped.

See here:

Why the Rams won the Stafford-Goff trade in an absolute landslide

Sometimes, trades are close in their competition. Not in this case. The Rams just fleeced the Lions in the Jared Goff-Matthew Stafford trade.

Yes, the Rams now have no first-round picks through at least the 2024 season. They may have thrown their first-rounders out of the equation through an entire Presidential administration that just started if they get a little frisky down the road. But in today’s NFL, when you believe that you have a team that is all the way there outside of the most important position on the field, you have to do whatever it takes to get yourself out of that.

Look. The Rams were nuts in the first place for giving Jared Goff the kind of contract extension they gave him back in September, 2019 — a contract which revealed the franchise’s belief that Goff was a quarterback on the rise. As I wrote at the time, the tape and stats showed very different stories. So, the Rams made a really big, bad mistake — they overbet on a quarterback they believed to be better than he ever will be.

But even with offloading their first-round picks in 2022 and 2023 for Matthew Stafford, the Rams have now done the smart thing a franchise does when it’s that most important position away from actual greatness. They went out and got a quarterback who is absolutely better than the guy they got in every possible way… and they got another franchise to accept the debt of the terrible extension they signed him to in the first place.

Because let’s be clear about this. If you want to talk about Matthew Stafford in terms of QUARTERBACK WINZ, just sit outside while the adults are talking. Jared Goff has benefited through his NFL career with his relationship with Sean McVay. Matthew Stafford has had to navigate through a series of dumpster fires through most of his NFL career, and as I posited in a Stafford tape piece last week, Stafford lives on an entirely different plane.

Why Matthew Stafford will be a franchise-defining bargain for his new NFL team

Everything McVay wants to do — passing out of run-heavy sets, play- and run-action, the ability to hit total route concepts all over the field — Stafford is far better at all of this than Goff will ever be. Period, full stop. And the Rams have a $33 million cap hit for Stafford in 2021, and a $26 million cap hit in 2022. Stafford will turn 33 on February 7. There’s a lot of meat on the bone.

As for the Lions? They have all kinds of draft picks, but they’ve married themselves to one of the league’s more limited quarterbacks through the next couple of years, and the debt is frightening.

Sometimes, you have to look beyond the obvious to see how things work in the future. The Rams got a much, much, better quarterback at a time when they have everything else they need to contend. The Lions just hamstrung themselves with a supremely limited quarterback at a time when they’re going through a massive rebuild. Draft picks or not, the Rams won this trade in a landslide, and that’s why.

Rams set to go 7 years without a first-round pick

Rams set to go 7 years without a first-round pick

[jwplayer fcmaiUI2-ThvAeFxT]

Los Angeles Rams general manager Les Snead puts very little value in first-round picks – making that very clear once again in his blockbuster trade for Lions QB Matthew Stafford.

The Rams are trading two first-round picks to the Lions, with those selections reportedly coming in 2022 and 2023. They don’t have a first-rounder in 2021 because of the Jalen Ramsey trade, which was the case last year, too.

In fact, the Rams haven’t made a first-round pick since they took Goff No. 1 overall in 2016 after moving up to draft him. As a result of this trade, as well as others involving Ramsey and Brandin Cooks, the Rams aren’t slated to make a first-round selection until 2024.

That will make it seven years in a row that the Rams won’t use a first-round pick in the draft – a span unlike any other in the NFL.

The Ramsey trade undoubtedly has worked out in the Rams’ favor, but the deals for Cooks and Goff didn’t necessarily come with the return Los Angeles was hoping for.

Now, we’ll see if it really sets them back by missing out on first-round rookies for seven years in a row – barring a trade, of course.

[vertical-gallery id=644624]

Lions trade Matthew Stafford in blockbuster deal with Rams

The Detroit Lions are trading starting quarterback Matthew Stafford to the Los Angeles Rams for Jared Goff and several first round picks

[jwplayer 56SnFolq]

The Detroit Lions are trading starting quarterback Matthew Stafford to the Los Angeles Rams for Jared Goff, two future first-round picks, and a third-round pick. Matthew Stafford, a former No. 1 overall pick out of the University of Georgia, requested a trade from the organization this offseason and was receiving significant interest on the market.

The Los Angeles Rams and head coach Sean McVay quickly acted and now they have a new franchise quarterback. Jared Goff, another former No. 1 overall pick, is presumed to be the starter in Detroit.

Matthew Stafford joins a Rams team who had the top defense in the league last season. Los Angeles finished the season 10-6, but was reliant on their elite defense. The Rams struggled at times offensively, especially when compared to previous years.

Jared Goff and the Rams lost in the Division Round of the postseason to the Green Bay Packers. That defeat ending up being Goff’s final game with Los Angeles.

Now, Goff will join former Rams executive Brad Holmes in Detroit. Holmes in now the Lions’ general manager and is looking to rebuild following a 5-11 season. Goff has decent weapons in Detroit like D’Andre Swift, T.J. Hockenson, but new head coach Dan Campbell is looking to re-sign Lions No. 1 wide receiver Kenny Golladay.

ESPN’s Adam Schefter reported the news via Twitter:

[listicle id=38903]

Lions trade Matthew Stafford in blockbuster deal with Rams

The Detroit Lions are trading starting quarterback Matthew Stafford to the Los Angeles Rams for Jared Goff and several first round picks

[jwplayer 56SnFolq]

The Detroit Lions are trading starting quarterback Matthew Stafford to the Los Angeles Rams for Jared Goff, two future first-round picks, and a third-round pick. Matthew Stafford, a former No. 1 overall pick out of the University of Georgia, requested a trade from the organization this offseason and was receiving significant interest on the market.

The Los Angeles Rams and head coach Sean McVay quickly acted and now they have a new franchise quarterback. Jared Goff, another former No. 1 overall pick, is presumed to be the starter in Detroit.

Matthew Stafford joins a Rams team who had the top defense in the league last season. Los Angeles finished the season 10-6, but was reliant on their elite defense. The Rams struggled at times offensively, especially when compared to previous years.

Jared Goff and the Rams lost in the Division Round of the postseason to the Green Bay Packers. That defeat ending up being Goff’s final game with Los Angeles.

Now, Goff will join former Rams executive Brad Holmes in Detroit. Holmes in now the Lions’ general manager and is looking to rebuild following a 5-11 season. Goff has decent weapons in Detroit like D’Andre Swift, T.J. Hockenson, but new head coach Dan Campbell is looking to re-sign Lions No. 1 wide receiver Kenny Golladay.

ESPN’s Adam Schefter reported the news via Twitter:

[listicle id=38903]