July 7, 2024

Discussion: Should the Detroit Lions match Brock Wright’s offer from 49ers?

Should the Lions match the 49ers’ offer sheet for Brock Wright? We take a closer

They Detroit Lions have a bit of a conundrum on their hand. After placing a restricted free agent tender on tight end Brock Wright (worth one year, $2.985 million), the San Francisco 49ers came in and offered Wright a potentially much better deal. The 49ers gave Wright a three-year, $12 million offer sheet, which the tight end promptly signed.

But because the Lions placed the RFA tender on Wright, they now have the opportunity to match that offer and sign him back to Detroit on those terms. They have until Wednesday to make that decision.

NFL: NFC Wild Card Round-Los Angeles Rams at Detroit Lions

Wright has been a key player for the Lions over the past three seasons. While some may undervalue the importance of a TE2, Detroit utilizes a second tight end more often than the average team. Wright has logged over 1,000 offensive snaps over the past two years, and he’s finished in the top 10 in Lions special teams snaps in each of the past two seasons.

Should the Lions match the 49ers’ offer for Brock Wright?

My answer: It’s complicated.

NFL: NFC Wild Card Round-Los Angeles Rams at Detroit Lions

First we need to acknowledge what we don’t know in the situation. We don’t know exactly how this contract is framed. Three years, $12 million sounds like a lot—and we also know, per Adam Schefter, that there is $6 million guaranteed in this deal. But what if the deal looked like this?

Brock Wright: three years, $12M, $4.5M signing bonus

2024: $1.5M salary (all guaranteed), $1.5M signing bonus proration: $3M cap hit
2025: $2M salary, $1.5M signing bonus proration: $3.5M cap hit
2026: $4M salary, $1.5M signing bonus proration: $5.5M cap hit ($1.5M in dead cap if cut)

NFL: NFC Wild Card Round-Los Angeles Rams at Detroit Lions

Granted, this is just a mock up of what the contract could look like, but is this really that much more than what the Lions offered? It would essentially operate as a two-year, $8 million deal, because he likely wouldn’t see the final year of that contract. So that would result in $8 million in cap hit spread out over three years ($3M, $3.5M, $1.5M). If this was the case, I think the Lions would be wise to match this.

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