Miami Herald

Tagovailoa reports for duty at OTAs

- BY OMAR KELLY okelly@miamiheral­d.com

The offseason is typically used as the time to handle NFL business, but it seems as if Tua Tagovailoa is walking a fine line of sending the Dolphins organizati­on a message while still trying to be the leader of his offense.

After reports surfaced that Tagovailoa began skipping the Dolphins’ OTA sessions last week, the franchise’s starting quarterbac­k for the past four seasons apparently changed course, showing up for Monday’s on-field offseason work, which was the first day of Phase 3 of the offseason program.

Whether Tagovailoa attends the whole week, and whether he participat­es in the on-field portion of practices, which are all voluntary at this point, was yet to be determined. But the NFL’s leading passer last season was indeed working in Miami Gardens on Monday, according to team sources.

However, Tagovailoa’s attendance doesn’t mean he’s close to finalizing a contract extension that would make him one of the 10 highest-paid quarterbac­ks in the NFL, securing a contract worth more than $45 million annually.

Kirk Cousins, 35, got the most substantia­l deal from an NFL team this offseason when the Atlanta Falcons signed the injured nine-year starter from the Minnesota Vikings, giving him a four-year, $180 million deal that guarantees Cousins $90 million.

And last week Detroit gave

Jared Goff, who owns a 66-50-1 record, a four-year, $212 million extension, guaranteei­ng the eighth-year veteran $170.6 million.

That new deal made Goff, who averages $53 million a season, the sixth quarterbac­k — joining Joe Burrow ($55 million), Patrick Mahomes, Justin Herbert, Lamar Jackson and Jalen Hurts — to average more than $50 million a season. The prevailing thought among some agents is that Tago

vailoa, 26, should be next.

With Jacksonvil­le trying to extend Trevor Lawrence, and Dallas’ Dak Prescott making $29 million in the final year of the four-year, $160 million deal he signed in 2021, there’s a chance the quarterbac­k market will continue to go up before Tagovailoa gets his deal.

Talks with Tagovailoa’s agent and general manager Chris Grier were tabled during the NFL Draft, but the hope was that a deal could get done this summer.

Now it seems as if one might not get done until training camp, and maybe even the start of the regular season.

The Dolphins got through their most financiall­y challengin­g offseason in two decades without redoing Tagovailoa’s contract, which would have created additional cap space since it would reduce his $23.2 million cap hit, which accounts for all of his fifth-year option.

And while the Dolphins’ biggest negotiatin­g leverage is the franchise tag Miami could use to retain Tagovailoa in 2025, preventing him from becoming an unrestrict­ed free agent, going that route would eat up another $42.5 million in cap space, which would hinder the team’s ability to put talent around him.

A multiyear deal, no matter the price, would spread out the cap hit for the first three or four years, keeping it manageable, which would likely allow the Dolphins to field a more competitiv­e team. This is important considerin­g safety Jevon Holland’s contract expires at the end of this season, and Miami could be facing another Christian Wilkins-like exodus if Holland is allowed to become a restricted free agent.

While edge rusher Jaelan Phillips and receiver Jaylen Waddle each had fifth year options triggered this month, guaranteei­ng respectabl­e salaries for the 2025 season, players in their position would prefer a multiyear deal.

If both continue on the pace they’ve been on the past three seasons, they could each be seeking $100 million contracts.

And let’s not forget that 2025 is realistica­lly the last year on receiver Tyreek Hill’s contract, because it’s very unlikely Miami honors the $45 million salary he’s due in 2026 in the final season of the four-year, $120 million contract the All-Pro receiver signed in 2022.

To afford the rising cost of the roster, the Dolphins need to get a multiyear deal done with Tagovailoa, because the only other option is to move on to another quarterbac­k.

Plenty of players skip, or limit their participat­ion in the offseason program for various reasons, and dissatisfa­ction with their contracts usually sits at the top of the list.

Last year, defensive tackle Zach Sieler attended, but sat out, all of Miami’s on-field OTA work while his camp pushed for an extension, which he got in late August, less than two weeks before the regular season started.

Center Connor Williams skipped all of Miami’s offseason program, including the mandatory mini-camp, and was fined $93,000 for doing so, because he wanted years added to his contract, to protect him from suffering a catastroph­ic injury like the ACL tear that is seemingly threatenin­g to end his career now.

Wilkins participat­ed in the offseason program, and worked for the first two weeks of training camp before shutting it down at the start of the regular season when negotiatio­ns fell apart.

 ?? DANIEL A. VARELA dvarela@miamiheral­d.com ?? Tua Tagovailoa throws at Organized Team Activities in 2022.
DANIEL A. VARELA dvarela@miamiheral­d.com Tua Tagovailoa throws at Organized Team Activities in 2022.

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