Devon Witherspoon has already forced his way into the center of the NFL cornerback conversation, and the Seahawks are now staring down the next big step: paying him like it.
ESPN analyst and writer Jeremy Fowler ranked Witherspoon No. 4 among cornerbacks in the league, and the case for him is bigger than simple coverage grades. He can line up in different spots, close on the quarterback and still erase receivers. He may not be the purest lockdown corner in football, but the argument that he is the most valuable player at his position is very much alive.
That value showed up again last season when Seattle moved him from slot cornerback, where he started for his first two years, to boundary cornerback. The shift put him on some of the league’s top wideouts and opened the door for Nick Emmanwori to go from undervalued rookie to future star.
Witherspoon responded by allowing only 9.1 yards per completion, the seventh-best mark among cornerbacks in the league. He gave up just two touchdowns, 375 yards and a completion percentage of 69.5% over the season.
The production hasn’t been limited to coverage, either. In 43 games across three seasons, Witherspoon has posted 16 tackles for loss, 4.5 sacks and nine quarterback hits. Head coach Mike Macdonald and defensive coordinator Aden Durde have leaned into that versatility, using him in blitz packages because of his speed, explosiveness, aggressiveness and reliability as an open-field tackler.
That side of his game was on display in the Seahawks’ 29-13 win over the New England Patriots in Super Bowl LX, when he logged one sack and three quarterback hits. One of those hits on quarterback Drake Maye sped up the throw that Uchenna Nwosu turned into a pick-six.
Witherspoon might not sit in the same pure coverage tier as Denver’s Pat Surtain, Houston’s Derek Stingley or New England’s Christian Gonzalez, but his overall impact makes the debate more interesting. He is a corner who affects the game in more ways than most players at his position, and that’s exactly why Seattle wants to keep him around.
The Seahawks have made it clear they want a long-term extension done by training camp. They’ve already taken care of draft classmates Jaxon Smith-Njigba and Derick Hall, which only adds to the expectation that Witherspoon is next. Still, the sides have reportedly been apart on the final number for weeks.
The money question is straightforward: Witherspoon wants to be paid near the top of the cornerback market. Only four cornerbacks in the league have deals with $100 million guaranteed, and only two of those are averaging more than $30 million per year.
Three players total are at $30 million or higher annually. Reggie Johnson of the WIN Sports Groups represents both Witherspoon and Gonzalez, two players in serious discussions to become the highest-paid corners in the league.
Seattle can probably land on a deal that gets Witherspoon to $30 million a year, but the front office also has to keep an eye on what comes next for Emmanwori, defensive tackle Byron Murphy II and quarterback Sam Darnold. There is still time to get the extension done before training camp or soon after, but the Seahawks know exactly what they’re negotiating for: one of the most valuable defenders in the NFL.
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