Interesting strategy by Russell Wilson, giving the Seattle Seahawks an April 15 deadline to do a contract extension with one year left on his current deal. If it works out, he’ll probably be the highest-paid player in the league by Easter. If it doesn’t, then a year from now, he could be the most exciting free agent in NFL history.
Because of where he is in his career, how badly the Seahawks need him and the league’s current economic landscape, Wilson’s contract situation makes him the most important quarterback in the league right now. He has a chance to set a new standard for contract guarantees at a time when that’s a hot-button issue with players. If the Seahawks decide not to sign him and go year-to-year with franchise tags, he could turn out to be Kirk Cousins with a better résumé.
Let’s take a look at Wilson’s contract situation, what’s going on behind the scenes and how it’s likely to turn out.
The motivation behind the deadline
The April 15 deadline seems arbitrary and makes Wilson seem unnecessarily eager. The ostensible reason he wants the deal done before the Seahawks start their offseason program is to avoid “distraction” — that ever-present, overused, ephemeral NFL hobgoblin that always plays big with the fans even though it’s usually a bunch of baloney. Surely Wilson, a college transfer and a third-round pick who won a Super Bowl at age 25 and came within a yard of winning another at age 26, has fought through more distracting challenges than wondering when his, let’s say, $35-million-a-year contract will be finalized.
The more likely reason is to prod the Seahawks into revealing their long-term intentions for Wilson and for their team. He has made it clear to the Seahawks that he’d be OK with playing out this season without an extension, which would force them to use the franchise tag on him next year (at a cost of about $30.3 million) or let him leave as a free agent. If they aren’t willing to sign him long-term, it might be helpful for Wilson to know that now. It could potentially even allow him and the team to look into sending him to a team that is interested in locking him up. And if that sounds crazy, please recall that Antonio Brown is now on the Oakland Raiders and that Odell Beckham Jr. is a Cleveland Brown.