Browns make final Tough Decision to sign $88m Former Top-10 Pick

More information is generally beneficial to the NFL decision-making process, but the Cleveland Browns will be operating without sufficient knowledge when trying to decide the future of left tackle Jedrick Wills Jr.

The offensive lineman was placed on injured reserve on November 7 after he suffered a knee injury, but it wasn’t supposed to be a season-ender.

On Dec. 12, the Browns announced that Wills underwent successful arthroscopic knee surgery and would be sidelined for the rest of the season, though he’s expected to make a full recovery for the 2024 campaign.

So much for that.

Now, in addition to suffering from a rash of injuries along the offensive line, they’re backed into a corner regarding his future. Do they give him a speculative extension or let him play out his fifth-year option in 2024, potentially running the risk of losing him on the open market afterward?

Jedrick Wills Jr.’s Contract Status With Browns

The No. 10 pick of the 2020 NFL draft, Jedrick Wills Jr. is still playing out his rookie contract for the Cleveland Browns.

He signed a four-year, $19.7 million rookie deal that included an $11.9 million signing bonus and $19.7 million guaranteed, per Spotrac, and it gave him a $1 million base salary and a $4.4 million cap hit for the current season.

In May, Cleveland exercised its fifth-year option on the lineman’s contract, which means he’ll make $14.2 million in base salary and carry a $14.6 million cap hit to protect the blind side of whoever lines up at quarterback.

Shortly after, Bleacher Report’s Gary Davenport predicted that the Browns would ink Wills to a five-year, $88 million extension with $48 million guaranteed, largely to free up more financial flexibility for a team allocating a ton of guaranteed money to Deshaun Watson.

“This is a financial decision for the Browns. Deshaun Watson’s fully guaranteed contract puts a massive strain on Cleveland’s cap space every season. Having Wills on the books for over $14 million in 2024 takes away that much more wiggle room for GM Andrew Berry,” Davenport wrote. “That makes this a relatively easy decision. Provided that Wills doesn’t completely fall apart in 2023, he’ll be signed to a long-term extension in 2024 that affords the team more cap flexibility.”

Cleveland doesn’t have to rush into anything. It could easily wait until the heart of the 2024 offseason to decide whether it wants to offer Wills an extension.

But this injury, which limited the left tackle to just eight games played in 2023, complicates everything because Andrew Berry and the rest of the front office have fewer chances to see whether his progress is legitimate or the result of a small sample size before making a bigger, lengthier monetary commitment.

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