Tuesday is an important day on the NFL offseason calendar. Starting at 4:00 p.m. ET, teams can begin using franchise tags on pending free agents.
Franchise tags are a device that allows NFL teams to keep pending free agents they can’t agree on a long-term deal with, but at a cost. Each franchise tag represents a one-year, fully guaranteed deal that is based on other top contracts around the league at the player’s position. The exact value of the tag depends on which of the three franchise tags the organization uses.
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The exclusive franchise tag is the most well-known of the three tags and often just referred to generally as ‘the franchise tag.’ When teams put the exclusive franchise tag on a player it’s a full guaranteed contract worth the average of the top five salaries at that player’s position for the given year, or 120 percent of the player’s previous salary (whichever is higher). There’s also an escalator for players who are tagged in consecutive seasons.
Then there’s the non-exclusive franchise tag, which is worth the average of the top five salaries over the previous five years (so slightly less than the exclusive tag). Players on non-exclusive tags essentially become restricted free agents until signing the tender, but the tagging team has the right to match any contract offer or receive two first-round picks from the player’s new team if they don’t match.
Finally there’s the transition tag, which can only be applied to players who were top-10 highest paid at their position the previous season. It’s slightly cheaper than either franchise tag and also allows the player to enter free agency with the original team having right of first refusal. However, the original team gets no compensation if the player signs elsewhere.
Once a team has a player on a franchise tag, they can keep on negotiating a long-term extension. In fact, sometimes the franchise tag is simply used to extend the window for the player and team to negotiate. Both sides have until July 15 this year or reach an extension, or the player is locked into playing on the tag in 2024.
Under Bill Belichick the Patriots used the franchise tag 10 times. Of those 10, four played under the tag, four got new contracts before the season, and two were traded.
The most recent Patriots franchise tag recipient was guard Joe Thuney, who ended up playing the 2020 season on the tag then left the next year in free agency. Will new de facto GM Eliot Wolf use the tag in his first year running the show? If he does, here are the three most likely candidates.
Franchise tag values projected by OverTheCap.com