H
HardRightEdge
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However, the way things are going Bortles is not going to see that money. If he manages to stick this season with only $4.3 mil in cap savings he probably won't make it 2020. And if he makes it to 2020 he's not likely to earn the $12.5 mil in incentives in this deal.Roll your eyes if you must. You say it's a myth. But I've heard ex-NFL players say Brady has taken less. Who am I supposed to believe? I'm not saying you're wrong necessarily, but I haven't seen any conclusive evidence. To some extent I suppose it's a judgement call. Like Rodgers, it depends to some extent what you think Brady's value is.
But this article says Brady agreed to below market deals in 2013 and 2016. There is no shortage of articles that say Brady has taken less. If it's a myth, it's a well perpetuated one:
https://www.sbnation.com/nfl/2018/8...t-2018-serious-bargain-blake-bortles-ahahahah
Cousins' 3 year, $84 mil deal is the better example. With $31 mil in dead cap and no cap savings in year 3 (that year is fully guaranteed), he's pretty much a sure bet to be playing that season. The peculiarity of this contract is if next season the Vikings are convinced he is their franchise QB, that $31 mil will be renegotiated into a long term contract with a signing bonus reducing the cap hit in that season whereas if he is still in "prove it" mode or they want to move on, they will pay that $31 mil and then see what happens because they will not have a choice.
Either way, if Brady gets another year added at some point for 2020, it's pretty much a lock that Cousins will have put more cash in his pocket over the 2018-2020 period than Brady.
Throw Garoppolo's deal into the mix, but he's not secure past 2019 where his 2020 dead cap drops to $4.2 mil and the cap savings jumps to $22.4 mil. But all of these kinds of competing deals with high levels of speculation and projection are a recent development. Captain's point is valid that when you add up cash-in-pocket over the years Brady is at the top of the heap. It's his 2016 two-year extension for 2018-2019 that looks cheap relative to Cousins' deal.
Before these recent developments, I think security was being confused with the actual cash paid over time. Brady's been signing shortish extenstions and a series of renegotiations where the end point of his current deal has not been so far in the future which goes to less security. I could be wrong, but that 2016 extension putting him under contract for 4 years at that point was his longest in a decade. In the final analysis, he may not have been the highest paid in terms of average over the length of the contract, but shortish extensions keep him fairly current while long term contracts like Rodgers' in 2013 started to slip behind the curve.
But when you look at deals like Cousins' deal, fully guaranteed, there's not much doubt he'll be making more than Brady over a 3 year period. What happens for him after that is anybody's guess.