Baker Mayfields Buccaneers Standoff Could Reshape The NFC South

In the NFC, quarterback contracts take center stage as Baker Mayfield and the Buccaneers remain at odds over his salary expectations while the Falcons gear up for a heated QB competition.

The Buccaneers’ contract standoff with Baker Mayfield is starting to look like a number-crunching showdown, and Joel Corry thinks the price tag could get hefty in a hurry.

Corry, a former agent and now a CBS Sports analyst, said he wouldn’t be shocked if Mayfield pushes for at least $50 million per year on his next contract. Mayfield is currently the 16th-highest-paid quarterback in the league, and the two sides are reportedly not close right now.

One comparison point, Corry said, is Colts quarterback Daniel Jones, who signed a two-year deal that averages $44 million annually and includes $60 million in guarantees. He also pointed to the average salary of veteran starting quarterbacks, which he said lands somewhere between $47.5 million and $51.75 million. That range could help frame where the talks eventually settle.

If Tampa Bay decides that kind of money is too rich, Corry said the franchise tag would enter the picture. In 2027, that figure would be at least $46.77 million, though it could rise depending on how the market and salary cap evolve over the next nine months. Corry also noted that the average of two franchise tags, a figure often used as a contract baseline, would be at least $51.447 million.

In Atlanta, the quarterback battle between veteran Tua Tagovailoa and third-year former first-round pick Michael Penix Jr. is being viewed as a tight one. Tagovailoa has one clear edge: he hasn’t had to rehab a torn ACL like Penix has. Even so, he still has believers from his former team who think he can get back to being a starter.

“He’s a great player,” Paul added. “So, definitely rooting for him.”

Carolina has its own familiar name back in the mix. Former Panthers offensive lineman Brady Christensen has spent the offseason as a free agent after tearing his Achilles midway through last season, but he was recently cleared for contact and is now in position to land somewhere.

The Panthers have kept in touch, and a reunion would make sense, but Christensen didn’t sound locked into a return to Carolina. He said he wants the best chance to compete for snaps.

“I think my ideal situation is to go in and compete,” Christensen said via Mike Kaye of the Charlotte Observer. “I don’t care about what position I play; I feel comfortable everywhere now.

So the ideal situation is just go and compete and find the field again. Being able to play on Sundays is my goal.”

Christensen said the rehab process was difficult and that three months ago, he didn’t feel ready to sign with a team. He and his camp decided patience was the right move.

“I wanted to be patient,” Christensen said. “I want a good opportunity.

I’m excited to get back on the field and kind of continue on the success I had last year. And I’m just really excited to prove myself, stay healthy, and just really have a good rest of my second half of my career, however long that may be.

I’m excited to get back out there.”

Over five seasons in Carolina, Christensen started 34 games and lined up just about everywhere along the offensive front. He said that versatility remains a point of pride.

“I pride myself on being a team-first player, and I feel like I’ve been that with the Panthers for the past five years,” Christensen said. “If the center goes down, but I’m playing tackle, I’ll go play center. And if the guard goes down, and I’m playing center, I’ll go to guard.”

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