Lamar Jackson and his difficult contract situation with the Baltimore Ravens

Lamar Jackson is entering his final year with the Baltimore Ravens and has yet to sign a new contract. To make matters worse, negotiations are proceeding unusually due to his special circumstances.

The league year 2022 begins in a few days, on March 16 to be precise. It is likely that quarterback Lamar Jackson will still not have signed a new contract with the Baltimore Ravens. That would see him enter the last year of his rookie contract.

Not a very tempting perspective – for both sides. Of course, both sides can also come to an agreement in the course of the summer or even during the upcoming season without any time restrictions, but otherwise this current deal would actually end in the coming spring. And a franchise quarterback with an expiring contract is not a dream scenario for any team.

Recent history has shown that once teams have found their QB of the future, they do well to establish clarity early on. The Kansas City Chiefs, for example, extended Patrick Mahomes, whom they drafted in 2017, at the first opportunity, i.e. following three years in the NFL in summer 2020. The Buffalo Bills did the same a year later and the Houston Texans also managed to To bind Deshaun Watson long-term before his fourth season in September 2020 – even if this relationship went down the drain shortly followingwards.

But all of these teams had found a franchise QB and wasted no time in making them permanent. It should be clear that this is expensive – it is by far the most important position in football. Mahomes earns an average of $45 million, Allen $43 million and Watson $39 million.

Lamar Jackson: Cousins ​​and Prescott as cautionary tales

On the other hand, what happens if you wait too long and actually let it come to a situation in which a star QB reaches his final year of contract and then completes it, is shown by the situations of the Dallas Cowboys or in Washington, where you do it failed to extend in time with Dak Prescott or Kirk Cousins.

Cousins ​​was held twice per franchise tag before defecting to the Minnesota Vikings without compensation in 2018. And Prescott also got the (exclusive) franchise tag in 2020, costing the franchise more than $31 million for a year.

That may be an acceptable price from today’s perspective, but it was still quite high in 2020. More problematic, however, was the timing of this story. Because the fact that a new deal was only agreed on in 2021 – also following a franchise day – the competition had already created several precedents for franchise QB salaries. The market was significantly bloated compared to previous years, when the Cowboys preferred to hand out expensive contracts to edge defenseman DeMarcus Lawrence ($105 million over 5 years) and running back Zeke Elliott ($90 million over 6 years). The latter is still troubling the franchise today.

And so, in 2021, Prescott held all the aces and also landed a deal with an average annual salary of $40 million ($160 million over 4 years). Presumably the Cowboys would have avoided this threshold if they had acted sooner.

And that brings us back to Lamar Jackson, although his situation is a little more complicated than that of Prescott and the others. Jackson does without an agent and represents himself in negotiations with the Ravens. He saves a commission of a maximum of 3 percent of his annual salary. But he has to do everything that an agent normally keeps from a player.

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