Age And Production The Key Factors In Terry McLaurin Contract Dispute

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Washington Commanders v Baltimore Ravens

BALTIMORE, MARYLAND - OCTOBER 13: Terry McLaurin #17 of the Washington Commanders celebrates after scoring a touchdown against the Baltimore Ravens during the fourth quarter at M&T Bank Stadium on October 13, 2024 in Baltimore, Maryland. (Photo by Patrick Smith/Getty Images)

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The conversation around Washington Commanders wide receiver Terry McLaurin’s desired contract extension has devoured the NFL offseason talk space for the past few weeks.

The impasse has been centered around McLaurin’s perceived worth based upon the currently established wide receiver market. A total of 11 receivers received contract extensions from their current teams this summer with four of them receiving deals with totals reaching at least $115 million.

What Are NFL Wide Receivers Making?

Those four receivers are Cincinnati Bengals Tee Higgins (four years, $115 million), New York Jets’ Garrett Wilson (four years, $130 million), Pittsburgh Steelers D.K. Metcalf (four years, $132 million) and Cincinnati Bengals Ja’Marr Chase (four years, $161 million).

However, the important aspect of each of the four’s recent contract extensions isn’t the total amount of millions but rather the annual earnings per year alongside the deal’s fully guaranteed salary.

What Is DK Metcalf’s Contract?

McLaurin desires a contract extension that’s on-par with Metcalf’s recent deal at 33 million per year. According to ESPN NFL Insider John Keim, McLaurin’s ideal contractual projection to Metcalf has much to do with the two wideouts residing from the same 2019 NFL Draft Class and both producing similar levels of regular-season production over the course of their six-year NFL careers.

Metcalf’s deal also features $60 million fully guaranteed upon signing which is the long-term monetary security that McLaurin truly wants as he enters the age of 30.

The Commanders have refused to abide with their long-time receiver’s demands which recently led him to demand a trade from the organization. Keim feels the divide may be from Washington feeling that attaching a massive long-term deal to its offensive weapon would be unprecedent for a soon-to-be thirty-year-old wideout.

"There’s precedent," Keim said. "The Commanders don't want to pay what they would view as an above-market deal for an older receiver."

The Athletic’s Nicki Jhabvala even voiced that there’s no such thing as an even negotiation going on between McLaurin and the Commanders. To her, Washington has most if not all of the leverage.

"The Commanders also know they have much more leverage than McLaurin in his contract dispute; he’ll be 30 in September, which means he’ll be 31 in the first season of an extension," Jhabvala writes. "It also means that holding out regular-season games could be career-ending. So, a deal will get done. There’s still time."

Are Terry McLaurin’s Numbers Comparable To DK Metcalf’s?

In fairness to Terry, he’s not only produced similar numbers to Metcalf since both entered the NFL but better and more consistent numbers over a course of multiple years despite having porous quarterback play. Prior to obtaining Jayden Daniels, McLaurin achieved four consecutive 1,000-yard receiving seasons from 2020 to 2023 as Washington’s go-to target.

Metcalf has missed out on 1,000-yard receiving seasons three times during his six-year career and has less career receptions and receiving yards than McLaurin despite both being targeted 726 times. However, Metcalf was likely rewarded such a massive deal by the Steelers due to his 28-year-old-age and upside as a pass-catcher as he enters his prime.

McLaurin will be thirty during the month of September and in his best season this past year posted his only double-digit touchdown reception season (13) alongside his third-lowest 1,000-yard receiving output of his career (1096). He’s never went over 1200 yards receiving, and in Metcalf’s career year during 2020, the Ole Miss product had 207 more receiving yards on just one more reception compared to McLaurin’s 2024 campaign.

Still, having a wavelength with the franchise’s second-year quarterback is important. As too is being the team’s lone pass-catcher with at least 80-plus receptions and 1,000 yards receiving last year. McLaurin’s worth to the offense is undisputed and is a big reason why the team hasn’t been moved by his most recent trade request.

Nonetheless, the money has to make sense for both sides. With each party dug in at the moment on what they feel is worthy compensation, a compromise will have to be met soon in order to break the stalemate.

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