katero
Jul 01, 2026

Agent's Take: How Rams can protect themselves when making a huge financial commitment to Puka Nacua

The most enlightened NFL teams will attempt to sign Pro Bowl and All-Pro players on rookie deals to contract extensions at the earliest possible instance. That's what the Seattle Seahawks did in March with 2025 NFL Offensive Player of the Year Jaxon Smith-Njigba, who was a 2023 first-round pick. Smith-Njigba became the league's highest-paid wide receiver on a four-year, $168.6 million extension, averaging $42.15 million per year, with a wide receiver-record $120,067,996 in overall guarantees. 

The deal is front-loaded. Smith-Njigba gets 25.2% of his new money before playing any of his new contract years, which start in 2028. Smith-Njigba has 37.1% of his new money through his first new contract year in 2028.

Under ordinary circumstances, wide receiver Puka Nacua would be a prime candidate to get a new deal before the Los Angeles Rams report to training camp on July 25 based on his production. The 2023 fifth-round pick led the NFL with 129 receptions for 1,715 yards and 10 touchdowns, all career highs, last season. Nacua's 107.2 receiving yards per game topped the NFL. He also carried the ball 10 times for 105 yards with a touchdown.

Nacua is off to one of the most productive starts to an NFL career for a wide receiver. He has 313 receptions for 4,191 yards and 19 receiving touchdowns in the 44 games he has played during his first three NFL seasons. Nacua's 313 receptions are fourth-most ever in this span behind Justin Jefferson (324), Michael Thomas (321) and Amon-Ra St. Brown (315). Only Jefferson (4,825) has more receiving yards through three seasons than Nacua. His 95.3 receiving yards per game are the most in NFL history.

The Rams would have a hard time justifying to Nacua that he shouldn't top the wide receiver pay scale after making Trent McDuffie the NFL's highest-paid cornerback in connection with his March trade from the Kansas City Chiefs. McDuffie's deal has a cornerback-record $100 million in overall guarantees. Quite frankly, Nacua is a better wide receiver than McDuffie is a cornerback.

Nacua would be in line to reset the wide receiver market with a four-year extension, averaging upward to $45 million per year, where there is as much as $125 million in overall guarantees, including in the neighborhood of $95 million fully guaranteed at signing. Both guarantee marks would be new standards for wide receivers. The deal would likely be front-loaded similar to Smith-Njigba's.

Off-the-field issues are jeopardizing Nacua's early payday. Nacua tried to sneak live streamers into the Rams practice facility against head coach Sean McVay's wishes late last season. During the livestream, Nacua performed a suggested touchdown dance with a gesture considered antisemitic, for which he apologized. A lawsuit was filed against Nacua in March alleging he bit a woman while intoxicated and made antisemitic statements on New Year's Eve. Nacua spent time earlier this offseason in a holistic care facility to focus on personal growth and overall behavioral improvement.

There have been instances where off-the-field problems didn't deter a team from giving a highly productive player in the final year of a rookie contract a new deal. It may be worth it for the Rams to explore a new deal for the Rams with an extremely team-friendly structure. 

That's what the Chiefs did with wide receiver Tyreek Hill in 2019. There were bigger concerns with Hill than Nacua. Hill was a fifth-round pick in 2016 primarily because of a domestic violence incident in college. The Chiefs banned Hill from offseason team activities in 2019 due to child abuse allegations relating to his toddler son until the NFL announced shortly before the start of training camp in July that he wouldn't be suspended because it couldn't conclude he violated the league's personal conduct policy based on available information. 

The Chiefs signed Hill to a three-year, $54 million extension right before the 2019 regular season started making him the NFL's third-highest-paid wide receiver along with Odell Beckham Jr. at $18 million per year despite having more baggage than Nacua. Because of Hill's baggage, the Chiefs protected themselves with the contract's structure in case Hill had another misstep.

Other posts