Xavier Woods in top 5 of NFL’s performance-based pay bumps for 2019

The Cowboys’ starting safety got a big pay day on Thursday.

When the 2019 offseason began, fans of the Dallas Cowboys were clamoring for the club to reach out and sign a star free agent at the safety position. Some wanted to pair Earl Thomas with Jeff Heath, but those in the know were looking to have Thomas added to a defensive secondary that still included Xavier Woods, a potential breakout star who was coming into his own.

Thomas didn’t join the club, and Woods may not have had the Pro Bowl season many predicted for him, but he had a solid season that proved he belonged in the starting lineup at the free safety position. For the second straight year, Woods started every game he played, 15 in 2019, and for his integral role with the Cowboys, he’s earned a big jump in his pay. As a former sixth-round pick, Woods has excelled past what the CBA projected for him, and thusly earned $403,298 the fourth-largest performance-based increase for last season.

He also earned another $212,457 from the veteran pool, bumping his 2019 salary from $645,000 to over $1.2 million.

To get these numbers, the NFL takes a player’s regular-season playtime (total plays on offense, defense and special teams) and divides by his adjusted regular season compensation (full season salary, prorated portion of signing bonus, earned incentives). Each player’s index is then compared to those of the other players on his team to determine the amount of his pay.

None of these amounts count against the salary cap.

Woods led all Cowboys’ DBs with 1,112 total snaps, including 997 on defense, 90.7% of the team’s defensive snaps. He tied for the team lead with two interceptions and also with two forced fumbles.

Woods is now eligible for a contract extension, having been in the league for three seasons and entering the final year of his rookie deal.

The NFL has only released the top 25 names for now, the full look at all who received bonus pay will be released soon.

As a side note, former camp body Charvarius Ward, who was traded for a player who retired a week later, won a Super Bowl with Kansas City and tops the chart for this year’s bumps. Good thing Dallas won’t need a cornerback soon.

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Could Teddy Bridgewater command $30 million per year in free agency?

New Orleans Saints quarterback Teddy Bridgewater is headed for a busy free agent market, but his contract demands are under serious doubt.

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Just how much is New Orleans Saints backup quarterback Teddy Bridgewater going to reel in during free agency? ESPN’s Jeremy Fowler fired up that conversation on Monday during an appearance on NFL Live, making the popular observation that Bridgewater expects to enjoy a busy free agent market and consider offers from multiple teams, both as a starter and potential bridge until a rookie is ready to take the reins. None of that is really surprising.

However, Fowler raised eyebrows by suggesting Bridgewater might draw as much as $30 million per year on his next contract. And that seems more than a little outlandish. While it’s true that quarterback salaries are on the rise, the only passers bringing in $30 million or more annually are established, veteran quarterbacks tied closely to an entrenched coaching regime. Here are the players at the top of the list:

  • Russell Wilson ($35 million)
  • Ben Roethlisberger ($34 million)
  • Jared Goff and Aaron Rodgers ($33.5 million each)
  • Carson Wentz ($32 million)
  • Matt Ryan ($30 million)

Nobody with Bridgewater’s credentials as a backup getting promoted to the top spot comes close, though Jacoby Brissett and Jimmy Garoppolo each earned more than $27 million last season. And there surely aren’t many teams eager to pay up $30 million for a bridge quarterback they plan to discard in a year or two. Designed obsolescence isn’t really the NFL’s forte.

So we’ll write this off as idle offseason chatter, the sort of talk that’s informed by agents trying to pressure suitors into paying up highly for their clients through the media. We wrote about the similarities between Bridgewater, Brissett, Garoppolo, and Nick Foles back in October 2019, suggesting an upgraded salary in the range of $22 to $27 million for the Saints backup once he gets a starting nod. That feels much more realistic, especially considering that Drew Brees played on a $25 million salary last year. If he won’t be getting better than that, it’s difficult to buy into the idea that Bridgewater will.

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Dak Prescott, the reported looming franchise tag and its fallout

After not getting an extension signed last offseason, the Cowboys and their quarterback are at an impasse once again, according to reports.

Cowboys fans couldn’t even enjoy their Super Bowl parties without the first bit of stomach-churning drama for their offseason. With hours still to go before the Chiefs began their way to a 31-20 victory in Super Bowl LIV in Miami on Sunday, reports suggested new head coach Mike McCarthy and the staff he’s assembled in Dallas could very well find themselves without their starting quarterback in the building when work starts back up.

According to NFL Network’s Mike Garofalo and Ian Rapoport, the team is “expected to place a franchise tag” on Dak Prescott.

That could in turn result in the four-year veteran skipping offseason workouts this spring and mark the second-straight year that one of the team’s main playmakers stays away until their contract desires are met. In 2019, Ezekiel Elliott held out while seeking a new deal.

Prescott is currently not under contract, as his rookie deal officially expired when the Cowboys’ season ended. The 26-year-old, coming off his best statistical season as a pro, has been a financial steal for the club since being selected in the fourth round of the 2016 NFL Draft and then thrust into the starting job over Tony Romo just months later. The two sides were unable to come to an agreement over the 2019 offseason, with Prescott playing in good faith that the team would make his contract extension a priority.

And yet…

“I’ve heard nothing to indicate that they are anywhere close to a contract extension,” Garofalo reported on-air from South Florida.

That would put Prescott on a collision course with a franchise tag later this month or in early March. The club may elect to use a tag designation as a way to extend the negotiating window, as they did two seasons in a row with defensive end DeMarcus Lawrence. “It would also ensure Prescott is paid in the high-$20 million range for the 2020 season should the Cowboys use the nonexclusive tag,” as NFL.com points out. “An exclusive tag, which prevents another team from signing him, guarantees $30-plus million.”

Prescott’s 2019 salary was just over $2 million. “The franchise tag, though only a one-year deal, would,” according to Dallas radio station 105.3 The Fan, “pay Prescott $33.4 million, which is in the ballpark of the yearly salary he has been seeking.”

But Prescott has been vocal about wanting to secure a multi-year deal, even telling ESPN’s Sage Steele that he was “confident” a new contract was coming. But he also admitted to Dan Patrick that he thought it was coming last year, too.

Elliott was a holdout for all of the team’s 2019 training camp and preseason as he waited for a deal to get done with Jerry and Stephen Jones in the front office. When he returned just prior to Week 1, though, Elliott was largely a plug-and-play fixture in the Dallas offense.

Prescott, who again is under no contractual obligation to appear, would severely handicap the Cowboys coaching staff already dealing with major changes in the first year of the McCarthy regime. Kellen Moore will return as offensive coordinator and look to establish his identity as a play-caller in just his second year in the role. Doug Nussmeier will act as the new quarterbacks coach after working with the tight ends previously. Plus, there are new position coaches for the offensive line, wide receivers, tight ends, and running backs.

That’s a lot of newness to be installed all at once. The league even gives teams with new head coaches extra sessions of offseason work to compensate. Having the field general who hasn’t missed a game in four full seasons would be a significant bonus for the offensive players and provide a strong sense of continuity in the huddle. One has to wonder how productive any of that would be if the starting quarterback is M.I.A.

Back in September, during the previous round of extension chatter, Cowboys executive vice president Stephen Jones spoke about Prescott’s leadership and importance to the team, but also made it clear that a deal for any individual also has to keep the team’s salary cap in mind.

“Man, he’s the ultimate leader,” Jones was quoted as saying. “He’s got all the respect in the locker room. No one roots for him more than Jerry and I. Everybody, I know he does, all want to get this contract done, but it’s got to be right for Dak. People are obviously wanting to get it right for him. At the same time, we want to get it right for our team. At the end of the day, we’re just trying to divide up the cap space. That can be difficult when you’ve got as many great, young players as we have. Certainly Dak, he wants what’s best for the team. So does Zeke, so does DeMarcus Lawrence. We got guys who want to win.”

Cowboys Nation went through this in 2019 with both of the other players Jones mentioned. Fans should strap in and get ready for a new round of money meetings, contract comparisons, and holdout hypotheticals.

Prescott and the Dallas front office already have.

Alvin Kamara earns proven performance pay raise for 2020 season

New Orleans Saints RB Alvin Kamara earned a 2020 salary proven performance escalator after playing so well and often early in his career.

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New Orleans Saints running back Alvin Kamara took the league by storm back in 2017, and he hasn’t looked back. Even in 2019 — by all accounts a down year for the electrifying runner, plagued by injuries — he still finished second on the team in yards from scrimmage per game (1,330), a blistering clip of 95 yards per game. His participation was key for the Saints offense, and it’s resulted in a bump to his 2020 salary.

The NFL’s collective bargaining agreement ensures proven performance escalators for players who were drafted between rounds three and seven and signed to typical four-year rookie contracts. If those players log snap counts of 35% or better in at least two of their first three years in the NFL (or play 35% or more of total snaps during those three years), they qualify for an increased base salary in their fourth season.

For Kamara, that means a jump in pay from $977,500 to $2,147,000. That number is fully guaranteed, meaning it will cost the Saints an additional $1,169,500 when the 2020 salary cap comes into effect this March. Estimates suggest the cap will reach $200 million for the first time in 2020, so this shouldn’t be a big hurdle for the Saints to maneuver around.

A full list of players whose fourth-year salaries have increased thanks to this CBA provision has been put together at Over The Cap; as it explains, Kamara’s percentage of snaps played has surpassed the 35% mark each year he’s been in the league, with a three-year average of 55.3%. He’s averaged 99.5 yards from scrimmage per game and scored 38 combined touchdowns during that time, so there isn’t much to complain about despite his slowed-down 2019 season.

The same can’t be said for Saints wideout Tre’Quan Smith, who has already qualified for an increased salary in 2021 by surpassing the 35% threshold in his first two years (54.1% in 2018, and 39.3% in 2019). Smith has played a lot of empty snaps for New Orleans, drawing just 69 targets in his first 26 games (a rate of 2.7 targets per game). While he has already scored 10 touchdowns, he has to start producing more consistently to justify his roster spot.

Alternatively, the only other Saints player on the path to qualifying for a proven performance bonus (so far) is second-year defensive back C.J. Gardner-Johnson. He played often as a rookie and was impossible to take off the field late in the 2019 season, totaling 51.0% of snaps played in his debut. With both of the players ahead of him on the depth chart headed for free agency (in slot corner P.J. Williams and safety Vonn Bell), his role should only continue to increase, and his future payouts with it.

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Chris Paul: ‘no chance’ he’ll waive $44M player option

In a recent interview with Sports Illustrated, Paul said there’s “no chance” he’ll waive his $44 million player option for 2021-22.

When Chris Paul was brought in to Oklahoma City as part of the trade for Russell Westbrook, the belief was that Paul wouldn’t be staying.

Whether it was Paul wanting out or the Thunder’s front office wanting to unload the veteran guard, CP3 was never supposed to be long for Oklahoma City.

But here we are, more than halfway through the season, and there Paul is, still on the sideline for OKC.

While there has been some chatter around the league regarding potential trades for his teammates, Steven Adams and Danilo Gallinari, there have been crickets when it comes to talk about moving Paul.

Paul insists that neither he nor his agents have asked for a trade. He also acknowledges that he does want an NBA Championship before his career is over.

So what’s getting a championship ring worth to Paul? Apparently not more than $44.2 million.

In a recent interview with Rohan Nadkarni of Sports Illustrated, Paul said there was no way that he would consider declining his player option to help facilitate a trade.

Paul is not going to make any grand sacrifices to place himself on another superteam. When asked whether he would waive the final year of his contract—a $44.2 million option for 2021–22 that’s seen as the biggest obstacle for teams interested in acquiring him—if it meant he could be traded to a championship contender, Paul answers swiftly: “No chance. That’s not happening. Nope.”

Paul maintains that he’s happy in Oklahoma City. $44.2 million worth of happy. And he doesn’t seem to be in a rush to go anywhere any time soon.

Salary released for new Georgia football OC Todd Monken

Salary info has been reported for new Georgia football OC Todd Monken,.

New Georgia offensive coordinator Todd Monken was recently hired by Kirby Smart to bring the Bulldogs’ passing game up to speed with the rest of college football.

Monken, who previously coached as the offensive coordinator for the Cleveland Browns and Tampa Bay Bucs, will take over for James Coley calling plays.

Per contract information obtained by DawgNation, we now know Monken’s salary at Georgia.

Monken will be earning $1.1 million as Georgia’s offensive coordinator in 2020.

According to the College Football Assistant Coach Salaries database at USA TODAY, that figure will make Monken a top-15 paid assistant in college football. There are only two offensive coordinators who earn more than Monken – Steve Sarkisian at Alabama ($1.55m) and Jim Chaney at Tennessee ($1.5m).

Coley, who remains on staff at the moment, earned $950,000 last season as offensive coordinator of the Bulldogs.

As reported by 247Sports, new UGA quality control analyst Buster Faulkner will earn a $150,000 salary.

How much is Georgia’s new OL coach Matt Luke making?

Here’s how much Georgia football’s new OL coach Matt Luke is making a year at UGA.

Georgia wasted no time finding a replacement for Sam Pittman, the Bulldogs’ former offensive line coach who is now the head man at Arkansas.

Pittman was about as good as there was at his job, securing commit after commit and building the Great Wall of Georgia.

He also served as the Dawgs’ associate head coach.

And he was paid nicely for it, too.

At Georgia, Pittman earned $900,000 in his final season, a crazy price tag for a position coach, but one that was well-deserved.

Shortly after Pittman left for Arkansas, the Dawgs secured his replacement: Matt Luke, the former Ole Miss head coach who has a long history of coaching offensive linemen.

Luke will also serve as associate head coach.

According to an open records request that was submitted and obtained by Dawgs247, Luke will also make $900,000 at Georgia.

From Dawgs247:

The length of the contract was not included in the information Dawgs247 was able to obtain. He’ll be paid $375,000 in base salary with $525,000 coming as additional compensation.

Anyone else think they took the wrong career path?