After over a month of hypothesis relating to T.J. Watt’s future with the Pittsburgh Steelers, news broke on Thursday that they’d agreed to a three-year, $123M extension with $108M assured that makes the pass-rusher the highest-paid non-quarterback in NFL historical past.
Each events appeared wanting to finalize a deal earlier than Pittsburgh gamers are attributable to report back to training camp
on July 23. Thus, some understandably questioned why the Steelers did not meet Watt’s asking value earlier than he skipped necessary minicamp practices in June.
In response to crew insider Mike DeFabo of The Athletic, “there have been plenty of challenges to get the contract carried out” earlier than Pittsburgh’s first coaching camp session of the summer season. As had been assumed for weeks, the four-year, $160M extension that included $123.5M assured that Myles Garrett of the Cleveland Browns received earlier this offseason impacted talks between the Steelers and Watt.
“Contemplating Watt and Garrett are about the identical age — Watt will flip 31 in October, whereas Garrett turns 30 in December — that contract served because the anchor level for negotiations,” DeFabo wrote.
A Wednesday report said that Watt might have initially requested a five-year take care of “4 of these assured.” It is unclear if he ever got here near receiving such a suggestion from the Steelers.
“The Steelers are sometimes reluctant to ensure cash past the primary yr of a contract,” DeFabo added. “They broke that precedent for the primary time in a serious approach the final time Watt was a free agent, handing him three years in ensures. This time round, they gave him the $108M in assured cash, which incorporates the primary two years of the three-year extension.”
Each Watt and Pittsburgh can declare victory. Watt agreed to a historic contract, whereas a win-now Steelers crew that signed 41-year-old Aaron Rodgers to be its beginning quarterback in June can have its most essential defensive participant working towards in the beginning of coaching camp.
Watt probably would be the highest-paid non-quarterback in NFL historical past, solely till the Dallas Cowboys pay defensive star Micah Parsons.