Franchise tag numbers for Tre’von Moehrig, Malcolm Koonce, Robert Spillane and other Raiders’ free agents - suong

   

We’ve hit the first stage of NFL free agency as the franchise tag window opened on Tuesday, Feb. 18. That means the Las Vegas Raiders have between now and Tuesday, March 8 to apply the one-year tender to Tre’von Moehrig, Malcolm Koonce, Robert Spillane or any of the team’s other impending free agents.

So, let’s examine the figures for each player this offseason, according to Over The Cap, as that could determine who gets the tag. The transition tag number for the impending free agents is also covered below.

For a few reminders, only one player can receive the franchise tag and the transition tag allows the player to negotiate with other teams, and the Raiders would have an opportunity to match any contract offer. Below is OTC’s explanation of how each figure is calculated.

Franchise and transition tenders are calculated by adding the respective tag numbers, divided by the sum of the salary caps, from the previous five seasons, and finally multipled by the current season’s salary cap. Franchise tag figures are based upon the top five salaries at each respective position, while transition tag figures are based on the top ten.

Tre’von Moehrig

Franchise tag: $19,626,000

Transition tag: $15,598,000

Either figure above would be quite the pay raise for Moehrig, who averaged just under $2 million per year on his rookie contract. The franchise tag would make him the second-highest-paid safety in dollars per year, behind Antoine Winfield Jr. and just ahead of Derwin James. For comparison, Budda Baker signed a three-year contract worth $18 million per season in December, and Xavier McKinney inked a four-year deal worth $16.75 million in free agency last year.

Malcolm Koonce

New York Jets v Las Vegas Raiders
Malcolm Koonce
 Photo by Ethan Miller/Getty Images

Franchise tag: $24,727,000

Transition tag: $20,769,000

Koonce has to be salivating at the figures above after making just under $5 million over the last four years. An argument could be made that he’s the biggest candidate to get tagged in Las Vegas seeing as this past season was supposed to be his “prove it year” but a knee injury put that to a halt. So, the one-year tender would be an easy way to extend that window. The transition tag could make sense for the former third-round pick since it would save the Raiders some money and give the club an idea of how the rest of the league values him to see if another team is willing to give him a multi-season contract.

Robert Spillane

Franchise tag: $27,050,000

Transition tag: $22,523,000

Over the last five years, Spillane has made about $12.3 million, according to OTC. So, he would double his career earnings next season if the Raiders choose to tag him. While a short-term contract makes sense for the linebacker who turns 30 next season, either figure above would be an overpay. Roquan Smith is currently the highest-paid off-ball linebacker at $20 million per year. The numbers above must be skewed by “linebackers” who are really pass-rushers or edge defenders. It wouldn’t be surprising to see the Raiders bring back Spillane with a significant pay raise/contract extension, but using the tag would make him the team’s third-highest cap hit behind Christian Wilkins and Maxx Crosby.