Andrew Brandt had a great quote on paying QBs: "
It doesn't matter how much you pay them, so long as they perform up to the contract."
He also said:
"Despite comments to the contrary, NFL teams have won Titles with a very highly paid QB"
NFL salary structures are byzantine with all kinds of accelerators, short term and long term bonuses, roster bonuses, workout bonuses etc
One way to sort it all out is annual average - but the problem is that Rodgers' current contract was structured in such a way to make him immovable. It also allows Rodgers to say he's the MVP and has the biggest paycheck. But like every deal, it contains a lot of fluffery
So when you take that placeholder deal and run it through the Comp-0-tron, you get results like the OP tweet
Take a look at the link below from OTC. They show the cap numbers AND they show the "OTC valuation"
During AR's MVP seasons, he was vastly underpaid. Even with the mediocre 2022 performance - Rodgers has an OTC valuation of $ 30M and his cap number was $28M last year and $31 M next year. So for 2020, 2021 and 2022- Rodgers cap space
wasn't an overpay compared to his performance and thus his cap $$ weren't a detriment to the overall roster build.
https://overthecap.com/player/aaron-rodgers/1085
Z sat out an entire season and GB ate all of that cash, he contributed nothing. Bak has been out- and he commands a big bag of dead money
Those are bigger issues than AR's pay imo. Rodgers past contracts weren't the problem and the new deal he signs this offseason likely won't be a big problem either.
IF/When his play drops off big time vs his actual pay (and it happens fast for many of them) then we'll come back and talk ROI again.
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