July 5, 2024

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Dolphins Urged to Make $180M Decision on QB Tua Tagovailoa

The Miami Dolphins face a looming decision on what to do with quarterback Tua Tagovailoa, and one analyst believes they will reach a “reasonable” one.

The quarterback is coming off a season where he led the league in passing yards and earned a Pro Bowl nod, but questions remain about his durability and ability to get the team to the next level. While general manager Chris Grier has said that the team wants Tagovailoa in Miami for the “long term,” Pro Football Network’s Adam H. Beasley predicted that the team would hold off on giving him a mega deal like the one Joe Burrow landed.

Dolphins struggle in cold weather.

Dolphins Predicted to Give Reasonable Deal With an Out

Grieg said in his season-ending press conference that the team has been in contact with Tagovailoa’s agent on a contract extension. The quarterback just completed his fourth NFL season and earned some early MVP buzz this season before the team fell off late in the season, losing three of their last five games and squandering a three-game division lead before a wild-card exit.

Dolphins struggle in cold weather.

Beasley predicted that the Dolphins would hold the upper hand in negotiations, with the option to hold onto Tagovailoa’s rights for the next three years at $135 million thanks to a fifth-year option and the potential for two franchise tags.

Beasley wrote that the Dolphins would stay away from a deal the size of Burrow’s five-year, $275 million extension, giving Tagovailoa a smaller but still significant commitment.

Dolphins struggle in cold weather.

And so a reasonable figure for a long-term deal for Tua (which allows the Dolphins a moderately painful out after 2025) is more like this: Four years, $180 million with $100 million guaranteed,” Beasley wrote. “That would put him in line with the inflation-adjusted contracts of Matthew Stafford ($46.6 million AAV if the salary cap when he signed was the $242.5 million it’s expected to be in 2024) and Daniel Jones ($43.2 million).”

The Dolphins will have some other tough decisions on how to best spend their money this offseason, with key players headed to free agency including defensive tackle Christian Wilkins and linemen Connor Williams and Robert Hunt.

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