Categories: Contracts

Chargers and Philip Rivers Agree to $84 Million Extension

Continuing the trend of some pretty eventful offseason moves around the NFL, the Chargers have locked up quarterback Philip Rivers to the tune of $84 million and $65 million guaranteed over the next four years.

The contract, worth $21 million per year in new money, will make Rivers the highest paid quarterback in the NFL to not win a Super Bowl, the same distinction he had when he signed his last extension in 2009. On a yearly basis Rivers will now move ahead of Cam Newton and Matt Ryan, which makes sense given Rivers consistent production. The guaranteed at $65 million will move Rivers slightly ahead of Ben Roethlisberger who received $64 million in injury guarantees in his recent extension. Though the full guarantees have not been reported yet on the deal I would think it is safe to assume they will be in the range of $31-35 million which will be in line with the recent contracts signed by Roethlisberger and Russell Wilson. The current top earner in terms of full guarantees is Aaron Rodgers at $54 million.

There had been much discussion this offseson about Rivers and San Diego perhaps parting ways, but at the end of the day this is probably the best situation for both sides. Once the Chargers did not trade him before the draft there was almost no other option for them moving forward. The franchise tag would have been costly and there was no guarantee Rivers would even report under the tag. Coming in under Roethlisberger, who Rivers had exceeded in contract value in the last go around, was likely the concession they wanted to see from him to finalize  contract.

With Rivers under contract all eyes will now turn to Eli Manning of the Giants. Manning, the first round pick from the famed 2004 draft class, has already set the QB market once in his career and is used to being treated as the top player from a contractual perspective. The difference this time around is Manning is years removed from not only a Super Bowl but a playoff appearance. However, with the market so tight between Rivers at $21 million and Roethlisberger at $21.85, I think he can push strongly to be the highest paid player in the NFL, at least until Andrew Luck signs a new contract. I have to think that Manning’s camp will now push hard to get a deal done with Rivers setting the absolute floor for a negotiation. This will be an interesting one to watch.

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Published by
Jason Fitzgerald

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