Patriots place transition tag on Kyle Dugger: What it means
For the first time since the 2020 season the Patriots are using a tag on one of their pending free agents. However, it’s not the franchise tag.
Just two hours before the NFL’s deadline for teams to tag players on Tuesday, ESPN’s Jeremy Fowler reported the Patriots are placing the transition tag on safety Kyle Dugger. The transition tag for safeties this year is a $13.8 million dollar tender for the 2024 season.
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The transition tag is different than the franchise tag. A franchise tag actually has two variations – exclusive and non-exclusive. Exclusive tags keep players in the building on a tender, while non-exclusive still allows the player to negotiate with other teams but gives the original team the right to match the deal, and receive draft compensation if they don’t.
Meanwhile the transition tag, like the non-exclusive franchise tag, still allows the player to negotiate with other teams and gives the Patriots the right to match. However, the Patriots would not get draft compensation if they choose not to match another team’s offer for Dugger.
It’s also not a guarantee things will get that far. The Patriots can continue working on a long-term deal with Dugger to prevent another team from putting them in that position. Teams have until July 15 to work out contract extensions with tagged players. After that point, they’re locked into playing the season on the tag.
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Each team is limited to one tag overall per offseason. So, although they used the transition tag and not the franchise tag, the Patriots don’t have another tag to use. That means the team’s other tag candidate – offensive lineman Mike Onwenu, will likely hit unrestricted free agency when the new league year begins next week.
Dugger, who turns 28 next week, was a second-round pick by the Patriots in 2020 and is hitting free agency for the first time. In 17 games last season Dugger recorded a career-high 109 tackles with two interceptions and seven pass breakups. Early in the season Dugger played more deep safety following the retirement of Devin McCourty and breakout from Jabrill Peppers, but saw more time in his previous box safety role later in the year.
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