For the second straight day, Ja’Marr Chase has taken part in practice. The extension-seeking wideout was listed a limited participant once again, with rest – rather than an injury – being named as the cause (h/t ESPN’s Field Yates).
Chase has been present with the Bengals throughout training camp, but he has rarely been on the practice field while negotiations on a monster extension take place. The three-time Pro Bowler is positioned to land a deal at or near the top of the receiver market, a commitment which (if finalized) will break with organizational tradition in terms of including guaranteed money beyond Year 1 of an extension. That was a requirement for Joe Burrow‘s pact, but it remains to be seen if one with a similar structure is worked out in Chase’s case.
The 24-year-old’s camp slow-played negotiations during the spring in the eyes of the team, but Justin Jefferson, CeeDee Lamb and Brandon Aiyuk have all agreed to extensions with their respective squads this offseason. Those pacts range between $30MM and $34MM in annual value, and the Lamb accord bridged the gap between Jefferson and the rest of the market in terms of guarantees. A commitment surpassing the one Minnesota made for Jefferson might be needed for Cincinnati to keep Chase in place beyond 2025.
With the Bengals seeming to prefer waiting until next offseason to get a deal done with the LSU product, questions have lingered regarding whether or not he will take the field for Week 1. Indeed, ESPN’s Dan Graziano notes some within the organization have brought up Le’Veon Bell‘s 2018 Steelers holdout when discussing Chase’s situation. During his final college campaign, Chase opted out of the pandemic-altered season knowing he would be one of the top prospects in his draft class. Selected with the No. 5 pick in 2021, his reunion with Burrow has paid considerable dividends.
Chase has raked up 29 touchdowns in his three regular seasons to date, surpassing 1,000 yards each time. Expectations will be high for continued production on that level moving forward, especially if franchise tag recipient Tee Higgins departs in free agency next March. The Bengals have made a push in recent days to finalize an extension, but neither Burrow nor head coach Zac Taylor has firmly stated Chase will be on the field for Week 1. A lack of practice reps is not a concern, however.
“Preparation is an important part of getting ready to play games, but I don’t have a ‘Hey, this threshold has to be met for this individual in this particular instance,,” offensive coordinator Dan Pitcher said (via Graziano’s colleague Ben Baby). “We take it day-by-day and make the best decision we think we can make in the moment.”
Cincinnati’s 2024 campaign will begin against New England on Sunday. The Bengals will no doubt want to have clarity on Chase’s situation by that point, but it remains to be seen if he will be available.
Team player, all about the Benjamins…
I don’t get the Bengals. They can’t pay Higgins because they have to pay chase and now they are playing hardball with chase? It’s just going to cost them more money to sign him later.