Odds Starting to Favor Dak Prescott’s Next Contract Being More Than $35 Million Per Season

By David Golokhov in NFL Football
Published:

- Dak Prescott and the Dallas Cowboys are in the midst of contract negotiations
- Rumors surfaced about a week ago that Prescott turned down a contract worth $35 million per year
- Prescott is likely to top that number on his next contract
The Dallas Cowboys and quarterback Dak Prescott continue to go back and forth on contract negotiations and one thing is for certain: he’s in for a huge payday.
Will it top the $35-million mark? Considering what other quarterbacks have been paid, it’s quite likely Prescott gets at least $35 million per year.
Odds on AAV of Dak Prescott’s Next Contract
Contract Value | Odds |
---|---|
Over $35 Million Per Season | -140 |
Under $35 Million Per Season | EVEN |
Odds as of May 29.
Should The Cowboys Invest In Dak?
The Cowboys have placed the franchise tag on Prescott for the 2020 season, which means he’s going to make $33 million this year. The Cowboys are mostly in the driver’s seat for now as they could tag him once again in 2021, which would cost the team $37.69 million. That gives them two more years to evaluate him.
There’s no question that Prescott can be elite at times, but he doesn’t appear to be a player that can consistently make everyone around him better. When the offensive line struggles or he doesn’t have optimal weapons, he doesn’t always look elite. In fairness, that can be said about many quarterbacks.
Cowboys: We are giving you $175M for 5 years.
Dak Prescott : I don’t want it.
Jerry Jones: pic.twitter.com/CKyhNtfzm3
— Mutebi Alex Kato 🐐 (@mutebilx_qato) May 21, 2020
Prescott has games like his 444-yard, three-touchdown, and zero-interception outing against the Detroit Lions last season. At the same time, he had just 223 yards and an interception with no touchdowns in a loss at the New Orleans Saints, and 212 yards, no touchdowns, and a pick in a setback at the Patriots.
The questions the Cowboys have to ask are will he get better and can he elevate the current offense, which is loaded with talent. They might feel like Andy Dalton or Cam Newton would give the team similar production at a much cheaper price.
Cowboys in a Tough Spot Financially
The Cowboys have painted themselves into a corner. Re-signing Prescott is the right move and they needed to pay Amari Cooper too, but making Ezekiel Elliott the highest-paid running back in the NFL doesn’t look like it makes a ton of sense these days. Zeke is great but the running back position is losing value.
me logging on for another day of “Is Dak Prescott a top quarterback?” https://t.co/rFHEMjkSz9
— Mina Kimes (@minakimes) May 21, 2020
Now the Cowboys are forced to think about a future where Prescott, Elliott, and Cooper soak up $70 million in cap space. They’re already in salary cap hell with just over $4 million in cap space right now – the fifth-least – before they’ve even signed all of their rookies. That puts them in a tight spot.
Free Agent Quarterbacks Get Paid
Regardless of what you think of Prescott, he’s going to get paid and he’s going to get over $35 million per year on his next contract. The odds for over $34.5 million per season were at -120 before but now the over is at -140 on $35 million. The reality is that Ben Roethlisberger ($34 million) and Jared Goff ($33.5 million) earned in that range a couple years ago, and Kirk Cousins just signed extension worth $33 million per year.
Dak Prescott turned down a 5-year, $175 million contract offer from the #Cowboys according to @CSimmsQB
It would've made him the highest paid QB in history.
Prescott instead is seeking “north of $45M” in the final season of his new deal, reportedly. pic.twitter.com/IBYCVaxVk7
— Dov Kleiman (@NFL_DovKleiman) May 21, 2020
Prescott is still just 26 years old and is as good or a better option than each of those players. Even if the Cowboys decide to pass on him or let him hit the market, he’ll get at least $35 million as many teams could use an upgrade at quarterback.
However, Dallas keeps their offensive stars and tends to overpay. Prescott will start Week 1 and, eventually, sign a long-term deal above $35 million per year.

Sports Writer
For over 15 years, Dave has been working in mainstream media and sports betting. He hosted a station on Sirius Satellite Radio for four years, and is currently a senior writer for AskMen. He's interviewed hundreds of hundreds of high-profile sports stars like Shaquille O'Neal and Floyd Mayweather.