Raiders Welcome Cowboys WR CeeDee Lamb signing 4-year, $240M contract…See More

Cowboys' CeeDee Lamb Boldly Claims He's NFL's Best Receiver After Huge Game  vs. Giants

 

Dallas Cowboys quarterback Dak Prescott became the highest-paid player in NFL history on Sunday after agreeing to a four-year, $240 million contract extension with $231 million guaranteed, multiple media outlets reported.

The deal includes an $80 million signing bonus and runs through the 2028 season.

The contract carries an average annual value of $60 million per season, which is $5 million more per campaign than Joe Burrow (Cincinnati Bengals), Trevor Lawrence (Jacksonville Jaguars) and Jordan Love (Green Bay Packers).

Word of Prescott’s new deal comes just hours before the Cowboys open the season against the host Cleveland Browns.

The high-profile move is the second made in short order by the Cowboys. They signed star CeeDee Lamb to a four-year, $136 million contract extension that includes a $38 million signing bonus, the largest ever for a wide receiver.

Prescott, 31, had been set to enter his ninth season on the final campaign of a four-year, $160 million contract he signed in 2021.

He led the NFL in completions (410) and touchdowns (36) last season. He threw for 4,516 yards in 17 games as Dallas finished the regular season 12-5.

A three-time Pro Bowl selection, Prescott owns a 73-41 record in 114 career starts since being picked by Dallas in the fourth round of the 2016 NFL Draft. He has thrown for 29,459 yards with 202 touchdowns and 74 interceptions.

Well over a year after Tom Brady initially tried to invest in an ownership share of the Las Vegas Raiders, the NFL is reportedly close to approving the move.

In the days leading up to the start of the 2024 NFL season, much has been made of the access that Brady will have — or more specifically, will not have — in his job as Fox’s leading NFL analyst. But while it was thought that Brady’s ownership share in the Raiders would be approved months before the start of the 2023 NFL season, that (as of Week 1, 2024) has still not occurred.

Ian Rapoport of NFL.com reported Sunday that the move is expected to be approved by the end of the 2024 season and could come sooner than that.

“Sources say his approval as a limited partner could be voted on and approved by league ownership as early as October, but there is also a possibility it is done at the December labor seminar and Special League Meeting,” Rapoport wrote. “Either way, the expectation is that Brady’s approval is final by the time the 2024 season concludes.”

Rapoport also detailed what the issue has been.

“This should end a long-running saga for Brady, who first thought his purchase would become finalized in May of 2023. But for over a year, it was hung up by the NFL’s Finance Committee with questions about the valuation of the percentage set to be sold to Brady. The price Brady would pay was increased this past February in line with the potential market value. By March, NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell said the situation was ‘progressing.’”

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