https://www.cbssports.com/nfl/news/...rade-matthew-stafford-calling-teams-about-qb/
WTF is this garbage?
Once vaunted for their refusal to rebuild, the
Rams are in teardown mode entering the 2023
NFL offseason. Big-name starters like
Jalen Ramseyand
Leonard Floyd have
reportedly already been shopped on the trade market. Now quarterback
Matthew Stafford is among the potential casualties. Just a year after giving Stafford a $160 million contract extension following their
Super Bowl run, Los Angeles has been calling teams about dealing the QB,
according to NFL reporter Michael Lombardi.
"Matt Stafford is fully available," Lombardi said on "The Pat McAfee Show" Thursday. "They would love to trade [him]. They can't [easily] do it, because he's got $57 million guaranteed. [But] they're trying to get out from it. [They've] called teams, I know this."
Officially, Stafford's four-year, $160M extension includes $63M guaranteed,
per Over the Cap. The Rams would actually absorb a net loss of $54M by trading Stafford before June 1. If they were to deal the QB after June 1, however, they'd instantly save $1.5M, as well as tens of millions from 2023-2026. That's discounting the possibility of another team taking on large portions of Stafford's guaranteed money, or renegotiating the contract entirely.
Stafford's career prospects have changed in a hurry. A prized acquisition for Sean McVay and the Rams ahead of the 2021 season, he arrived from the
Lions as part of a blockbuster trade package including two first-round draft picks. He threw a career-high 41 touchdowns while guiding L.A. to a Super Bowl LVI victory. But injuries wrecked his offensive line, his supporting cast -- and then his own health -- throughout 2022, in which he played just nine games and downplayed speculation of an early retirement.
Fully healthy, Stafford remains an above-average starter. But he also entered 2022 with questions about an injured elbow, and his contract would require clearing the aforementioned hurdles. It's unlikely he'd have a serious trade market until deep into the summer, provided there are still teams desperate for a proven starter.