Russell Wilson wants to be highest paid NFL player

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Legatron4

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http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2015/06/29/russell-wilson-mentions-a-figure/

Russell Wilson mentions a figure: $25 million
Posted by Mike Florio on June 29, 2015

Seahawks quarterback Russell Wilson has yet again been interviewed. And he has yet again avoided questions about his contract with the team.

But Wilson has finally floated a figure, during an interview with ESPN’s Marty Smith.

Said Smith, “Nobody’s won more than you in the last several years. We’ve seen what some of your peers have gotten on the market recently. Based on the current market for the quarterback and based on your resume, what do you deserve?”

Wilson opted to be coy. “I don’t know, how much would you pay me, Marty?” Wilson said with a laugh.

“I mean, you have a Super Bowl and you took ’em to another Super Bowl,” Smith said.

“I think ultimately it comes down to the play,” Wilson said. “Just let my play speak for itself, and let the rest take care of itself. Continue to love the game for what it is, continue to fight, continue to play. No matter how much I’m getting paid, whether it’s $25 million or $1.5 million. I’ll be ready to go.”

The second number is what Wilson is due to make this year. The first number could be what Wilson is aiming to get, a possible slip of the tongue. (Or maybe he was simply thinking about the jersey number worn by teammate Richard Sherman.)

Wilson also called his relationship with the Seahawks “great” and “I don’t think it’s a bad relationship by any means.” He also reiterated his desire to stay in Seattle.

That’s fine, but at some point the desire to stay in Seattle and the desire to get paid will conflict, especially if he’s serious about making $25 million per year — which is $3 million more per year than the current high-water mark in the NFL set two years ago by Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers.
I hate the "you took them to another". He didn't do SHIT. I've been thinking though, and I feel like we won't know Wilsons worth when/if he gets injured. If Seattle wins 11 games and don't miss a beat on offense, we'll know he's just a mediorcre, product of the system QB. If they struggle to win 5 games, he's probably worth the money.
 

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http://mmqb.si.com/2015/07/13/russe...consin-badgers-nfl-seattle-seahawks-mmqb-100/

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Robert Beck/Sports Illustrated
The MMQB 100
Mon Jul. 13, 2015

No. 5: Russell Wilson Is Bigger Than One Play
Before he took the NFL by surprise Russell Wilson spent one year at Wisconsin, leading the Badgers to an unexpected Big Ten title. Paul Chryst, Wilson’s QB coach and now the head man at Wisconsin, looks back at their season together, and ahead as Wilson tries to bounce back from last year’s heartbreak and make a run at a second Super Bowl title

Editor’s note: This is part of our summer series, The MMQB 100, counting down the most influential people for the 2015 season.

By Paul Chryst

Scott Tolzien had just graduated, and we were looking for a quarterback for the 2011 season. We had heard Russell Wilson was available. He only had one season left, but after we checked in with a few people we knew at N.C. State and heard what they had to say about him, we were definitely interested.

I met with him for the first time when he and his brother came up for an official visit that spring. He met with the coaching staff, but it was important for him to meet with our players too. We had him meet with our entire offensive line. We wanted him to be comfortable with our players, but more importantly we wanted to know how our players felt about him.

Russell is very personable; he’s charming, focused … he has a great energy about him. People may see him now and think, He’s polished, he’s too good to be true. But that’s who he is. And the more time you spend time with him, and you see how consistent it is, you realize that he’s genuine. Every player we spoke with about him said the same thing: Let’s get him.

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Chryst watches as Wilson warms up before a game in 2011. (Andy Manis/AP)

We were never worried about his size. There was plenty of tape from N.C. State for us to work off of, and that film spoke volumes. Height is only an issue if you see a lot of balls getting knocked down, or if you see him missing things downfield. We had talked to Russell about this: We played a pro-style system, and our line was big—every one of those guys went to the NFL. So if height was going to be a knock on him going forward, this is where he could answer those questions.

He arrived on campus right after Fourth of July. I know that N.C. State and the guys he played with there meant a lot to him, but when he got here he jumped right in and only looked forward. Our guys were excited to have him here, and I think Russell looked around and saw that our guys and our system would be good for him. Our guys were confident, but they were open to having someone new come in. Russell was confident, but he was open to joining a new group. He knew what he had to do. That season, the real story for us was how the team meshed; it was a lot of unselfish guys coming together. That’s why it worked.

I had told him he’d have to compete for the starting job, but it didn’t take long for him to distinguish himself. A big reason was that he picked up our system so quickly. When I think back on our season together, my favorite moments weren’t the wins or this throw or that throw in this game.

It was the preparation, the time spent together in the meeting room, the off-the-field rather than the on-the-field. Scott Tolzien had spent five years in our system. With Russell, it was a different challenge for me as a coach. But Russell was a fast learner because he was an eager learner. He took pride in gaining knowledge. Early in camp, he got frustrated with himself when he stumbled spitting out a play. It’s things like that showed you how special he was. He sets the bar high for himself and for everyone around him.

Less than two months after he got here he was a team captain. That wasn’t the coaches’ decision; it was a player vote. Your captains are leaders, guys have to respect them on and off the field, and with Russell it felt right. That was an authentic reflection of how the team thought of him.

By midseason, we were undefeated and Russell’s name was being mentioned in the Heisman race. Then we lost two games back-to-back—our only losses during the regular season—and both of them came in the final minutes. We were losing by two touchdowns at Michigan State and Russell led two late touchdown drives to tie it. They caught a Hail Mary with no time left on the clock to beat us.

One week later at Ohio State Russell threw two late touchdown passes to take the lead and they beat us on a long touchdown pass with less than 30 seconds left. And we all know what losing a game does to a Heisman candidate … It never bothered him though. After each of those games, it came back to consistency for him. He never gets too low or too high. That’s how we got through it.

The way our schedule is now I don’t get to see a lot of him during the regular season, but I do get to watch most playoff games, especially the last two years. Even after he threw the fourth interception in the NFC title game, I knew you couldn’t count him out. Once you know Russell, you’re never surprised by anything he does. But you appreciate what he’s able to do. It’s the same with any great player: He trusts his preparation and he trusts who he is as a competitor. He has trained for these moments. A performance like that doesn’t just happen.

I think Russell loves being a quarterback, but it’s more about being the quarterback of a team. His team was in a position to win the Super Bowl. And I’m sure in his mind, it was as a team that they didn’t win that day. That last play isn’t going to affect him. I think even if the result had been different, if that throw was a touchdown, it wouldn’t have changed who Russell is going forward. He’s still going to have that edge to him, he’s still going to do the work and the preparation he needs to do. He’s bigger than one play.
 

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http://mmqb.si.com/mmqb/2015/07/30/russell-wilson-contract-negotiations-warren-moon

What Russell Wilson Wants
Russell Wilson’s deadline for striking a new deal with the Seahawks is Friday. Warren Moon, a friend of Wilson’s and a former franchise quarterback himself, shed some light on the motivations behind Wilson’s contract demands
by Robert Klemko

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Photo by Elaine Thompson/AP

As he nears a self-imposed Friday deadline for a new contract, Russell Wilson isn’t lacking unofficial advisers.

He’s described in league circles as a networking savant, and his fast-growing phonebook is filled with contact info for dozens of business moguls, celebrities, former players and gurus. Peek into his luxury box at Seahawks games and you might see a YouTube co-founder or the creator of HBO’s Entourage, and there’s no telling how many millionaires Wilson counts as mentors.

But at least one of them has earned the quarterback’s ear in recent years, and he’s closer to the game than most of Wilson’s buddies. Warren Moon was able to stump Wilson three weeks ago when dishing advice on his current contract negotiations with the team. “You know what you want,” the Hall of Fame quarterback told Wilson over the phone, “but what will you end up taking? What’s the least you’ll accept?” Wilson didn’t have an answer.

Moon understands Wilson’s motivations because in certain ways they mirror his own when he entered the NFL in 1984. Spurned in the 1978 draft (all 12 rounds), Moon and agent Leigh Steinberg believed his race was a deterrent. He signed a long-term deal with the CFL’s Edmonton Eskimos and won five Grey Cups in six seasons, then declined a homecoming with the Seahawks (Moon played at the University of Washington) to join the Houston Oilers, who offered—wait for it—more guaranteed money.

“He’s a really strong and mature guy, very spiritual, but he’s human also,” says Moon, who last communicated with Wilson about contract talks three days ago. “I had to deal with doubt because of my color, he has to deal with it because of his size. He feels like he’s being disrespected because of that.”

Wilson, who is 5-11, was a third-round pick out of Wisconsin in 2012, downgraded in part due to his stature. Since then, he has won a Super Bowl, been to two, completed more than 63% of his passes and sits just shy of 10,000 passing yards over three seasons, a total his critics often point to as evidence of his relatively light impact on a team built around defense and a power running game. For comparison, of the 12 quarterbacks who started all 48 games over the last three seasons, Wilson is the only one who didn’t reach the 10,000-yard plateau.

Contrast that popular criticism with Wilson’s reported desire to earn about $25 million per year with landmark guarantees that would make him the league’s highest-paid quarterback, and you might understand Seattle’s reticence to commit. Yet Wilson, according to Moon, is taking the long view, keeping in mind the likelihood that new contracts for Aaron Rodgers, Eli Manning, Philip Rivers and Andrew Luck would come on the heels of any Wilson deal. Wilson, Moon says, is trying to preemptively keep up with the Joneses, not set a long-term benchmark for passer contracts.

“Given what he’s done since he got here, he deserves to be paid like one of the top five to seven quarterbacks in the league because that’s about where he is, in terms of skillset, production and success,” Moon says. “I don’t think Russell necessarily wants to be the highest paid in the league; he understands where the QB market is going.

“If Russell was able to get $22 million right now, there are going to be four or five guys who leapfrog him. He just wants to stay in suit with the guys at the top. He doesn’t want to sign a deal that becomes obsolete.”

But what Wilson really wants more than league-leading yearly compensation is piles of guaranteed money. He has played the last three seasons for just over $2.1 million, per the CBA-negotiated rookie wage pool. Ever the politician, Wilson’s comments have hinted at the notion that he’s owed something for past sacrifices while promising no lapse in work ethic regardless of outcome.

“Whether I'm fortunate enough to receive a lot of money for a lot of hard-earned work or I'm still working for it every day,” Wilson said recently, “I'm never going to change in that aspect of it all.”

In the 26-year-old’s thinking, he gave up a promising baseball career to play quarterback in a scheme that assigns more risk to the passer than any in the NFL (Wilson’s 1,877 rushing yards over the past three seasons is the most among quarterbacks), and his reward ought to reflect that.

“The organization can use the argument that he’s not asked to throw as much as other quarterbacks because it’s true,” Moon says, “but he is asked to run the ball more than other quarterbacks, which could possibly shorten his career. He gets there differently, but he’s just as productive as these other guys.”

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While he's yet to miss a game, Seattle's offense puts Wilson at greater risk than the average quarterback. (Jonathan Ferrey/Getty Images)

Aside from the material arguments about Wilson’s impact and worth, there’s the personal side of the negotiations. There’s pride at stake here: No Super Bowl winning quarterback has ever played under the franchise tag, which Wilson could very well face if negotiations fall through this offseason and the next.

Common sense lends to the notion Wilson and agent Mark Rodgers will come to an agreement before Friday rather than see Wilson play for $1.5 million in 2015. As former Seahawks coach Mike Holmgren noted last week, “To not sign it, and to play this year for [$1.5 million]. They always run the risk of injury. If he asks me, I’ll tell him. And that’s why I think he’s making a mistake.” In either case, whether he takes a deal or not, Seattle runs the risk of irreparably damaging a relationship with a star player, despite what the congenial quarterback will say in the press this month as training camp begins.

“These contract negotiations can really bitter and sour a player,” Moon says. “It really affects the way they play, prepare, and those relationships in the organization.

“He’s saying all the right things, but what are you going to think about every time you see that coach and that GM and that owner. It takes away from your dedication to the organization. You don’t want to see that at the quarterback position. You want that guy to be all in.”

There’s one more thing to consider. Wilson's feelings will be moot if a contract hinders Seattle's ability to assemble the kind of roster that has helped Wilson thrive over his first three seasons. So even if we do see some resolution in the next 24 hours, the final verdict is years away.