Current:Home > MarketsCowboys QB Dak Prescott becomes highest-paid player in NFL history with new contract -FinanceCore
Cowboys QB Dak Prescott becomes highest-paid player in NFL history with new contract
View
Date:2025-04-14 05:38:09
Jerry Jones and the Dallas Cowboys finally went all in this offseason by paying up for their quarterback in historic – and atypical – fashion.
Dak Prescott and the Cowboys on Sunday agreed to a record four-year, $240 million deal, making the passer the highest-paid player in NFL history. As the league's first $60 million per year player, Prescott leapfrogged the Cincinnati Bengals' Joe Burrow, Jacksonville Jaguars' Trevor Lawrence and Green Bay Packers' Jordan Love, who all agreed to extensions with an average annual value of $55 million.
Prescott's new deal includes $231 million guaranteed, ESPN's Adam Schefter reported.
“What it means is a big commitment to our next five years and our future as well," Jones told reporters in Cleveland, confirming terms of the deal. "I hope Dak is our quarterback for the rest of my time. I have a lot of confidence in him.”
The agreement comes on the day Dallas begins its season against the Cleveland Browns. Though Prescott said Thursday that he did not see the Week 1 kickoff as the deadline for getting a deal done, he said on Aug. 29 that whether a contract was reached would indicate "a lot."
PLAY TO WIN $5K: USA TODAY's Pro Football Survivor Pool is free to enter. Sign up now!
The three-time Pro Bowl passer had been set to enter his final season of his four-year, $160 million contract while counting for an NFL-high $55 million cap hit.
Though Jones has widely resisted resetting the market in contract negotiations, Prescott held unique leverage thanks to his contract, which included no-trade and no-franchise-tag clauses that would clear his way to reaching free agency in 2025 if not extended.
Jones maintained that the negotiations were not a reflection of any concern or doubt regarding Prescott.
"When you look at a situation, you've also got to weigh, 'OK, what are the consequences of the other side of the coin?' " Jones told reporters on Wednesday. "And so Dak's situation right now for me, from my mirror, has more to do with our situation than it does with the merits of Dak Prescott being the quarterback of the Dallas Cowboys."
The contract is the second major pact the Cowboys have reached with a star player in the last two weeks. All-Pro wide receiver CeeDee Lamb agreed to terms on a four-year, $136 million deal on Aug. 26.
The next bit of business for Prescott and the Cowboys: trying to push the franchise to its first Super Bowl title – or at least NFC championship game appearance – since the 1995 season.
veryGood! (18924)
Related
- Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
- After backlash, Scholastic says it will stop separating diverse books at school book fairs
- Grandpa Google? Tech giant begins antitrust defense by poking fun at its status among youth
- U.S. intelligence says catastrophic motor failure of rocket launched by Palestinian militants caused hospital blast
- Tom Holland's New Venture Revealed
- UAW and Ford reach a tentative deal in a major breakthrough in the auto strike
- Up to a foot of snow blankets areas of Helena, Montana in 1st storm of season: See photos
- Vermont police find 2 bodies off rural road as they investigate disappearance of 2 Massachusetts men
- Nearly 400 USAID contract employees laid off in wake of Trump's 'stop work' order
- Jeep maker Stellantis plans to invest 1.5 billion euros in Chinese EV manufacturer Leapmotor
Ranking
- Highlights from Trump’s interview with Time magazine
- Fresh off a hearty Putin handshake, Orban heads into an EU summit on Ukraine
- Starbucks threatened to deny abortion travel benefits for workers seeking to unionize, judge says
- The Masked Singer's Jenny McCarthy Is Totally Unrecognizable in Dumbledore Transformation
- The Louvre will be renovated and the 'Mona Lisa' will have her own room
- Oregon Supreme Court to decide if GOP senators who boycotted Legislature can run for reelection
- Democrats’ divisions on Israel-Hamas war boil over in Michigan as Detroit-area Muslims feel betrayed
- Rep. Jamaal Bowman pleads guilty to a misdemeanor for pulling a fire alarm in House office building
Recommendation
Residents worried after ceiling cracks appear following reroofing works at Jalan Tenaga HDB blocks
A teacher was shot by her 6-year-old student. Is workers’ compensation enough?
'Priscilla' review: Elvis Presley's ex-wife gets a stylish yet superficial movie treatment
Allison Holker and Stephen tWitch Boss' Daughter Weslie Looks All Grown Up for Homecoming Dance
US wholesale inflation accelerated in November in sign that some price pressures remain elevated
Why the Diamondbacks were locks for the World Series as soon as they beat the Brewers
Jonathan Majors' domestic violence trial gets new date after judge denies motion to dismiss charges
Israeli hostage released by Hamas, Yocheved Lifshitz, talks about ordeal, and why she shook her captor's hand