March 14th marked the official opening of the NFL 2018 free agency market, undoubtedly becoming the busiest and most boisterous day across the league.
According to official NFL statistics, over 550 transactions were completed that day. All 32 teams were involved without exception, heralding the beginning of a brand new season with a thunderous boom.
Among them, the future of Super Bowl champion Kansas City Chiefs' starting quarterback, Smith, drew significant attention, sparking widespread discussion.
From both a rational and emotional standpoint, Kansas City's decision not to retain Smith came as a small shock—a surprise the league hadn't anticipated. For the past two weeks, Chiefs fans had been protesting, demanding that their Super Bowl-winning QB be retained.
Then came insider reports.
The core issue was salary. Smith's financial demands exceeded the Chiefs' salary cap flexibility. The Chiefs' decision to let go was made out of necessity.
From another angle, the writing had been on the wall ever since the Chiefs used a first-round pick on Mahomes the previous season. Smith should've known his time in Arrowhead Stadium was ticking down. The Super Bowl win was a bonus, and now was the perfect time to cash in—truly the smart choice.
Analysts began releasing breakdowns, and the uproar in Kansas City gradually settled.
Some fans hurled insults, branding Smith as greedy, a traitor who turned his back on the team and the city in favor of chasing money. But their complaints changed nothing.
The deal was done.
Now the key question became: which team would sign Smith?
All eyes turned to the unfolding drama, generating a massive wave of speculation.
Then came the shocker.
No one expected that on day one of free agency, the headline-grabbing move would come from Minneapolis—not because of the Super Bowl, but because of a major shakeup by the Minnesota Vikings.
After falling short in the NFC Championship last season, the Vikings retooled aggressively. Having lost out on Smith, they pivoted immediately and stole the spotlight on the opening day of free agency.
First, they traded away Case Keenum, last year's breakout QB, to the Denver Broncos.
In one fell swoop, they cleared out both their QBs, dumping salaries and leaving the position wide open.
Their target?
Kirk Cousins.
Eventually, the Vikings completed a trade with Washington to acquire Cousins, who had spent the last two seasons on the franchise tag.
But all that movement—just for Cousins?
Well, yes. Cousins had proven himself as a top-tier quarterback in the league, though some doubted he was truly elite. After their bitter playoff loss, the Vikings clearly believed he was worth the gamble.
The true shock wasn't just who they signed, but the deal itself.
Cousins inked a three-year, $84 million contract. That $28 million per year made him the highest-paid player in the NFL, out-earning even the top quarterbacks—despite never having won more than one playoff game.
But the real bombshell?
Fully guaranteed.
This was the first fully guaranteed contract in NFL history.
That means no injury clauses, no performance incentives, no snap count conditions—every dollar guaranteed.
To explain it in the most extreme way: even if Cousins got injured during training camp and never played a single down—not even in preseason—he'd still receive all $28 million that year.
That's what fully guaranteed means.
Up until now, teams fiercely resisted full guarantees. With a hard salary cap, it's financial suicide. Such deals ripple across the league—once one player gets it, others demand the same, pushing teams to the brink.
Even legends like Peyton Manning, Tom Brady, Aaron Rodgers, and Drew Brees had to negotiate carefully and never received such terms.
But now it had happened—with Kirk Cousins, of all people?
Were the Vikings out of their minds?
Washington's front office: "We told you so."
Rumors had long circulated that Cousins was a far better negotiator than he was a quarterback. Now, it seemed that might be true.
The league was stunned.
First: record-breaking salary.
Second: full guarantees.
Players and team execs alike were jolted.
Foremost among them? Le'Veon Bell.
The Pittsburgh Steelers' star running back had been fighting for a big contract for years. He believed he deserved to be paid like a top-tier offensive weapon—especially since the Steelers were no longer a defense-first team and leaned heavily on Bell's production.
Yet the Steelers declined to extend him after his third season. He kept his head down, played out his rookie contract, and delivered elite numbers year after year—still, all he got was a franchise tag.
Even after another stellar 2017 season, Pittsburgh dragged their feet on an extension, especially over guaranteed money.
Now, seeing Cousins' deal?
Bell lost it.
He immediately called his agent—only to be met with more delays and empty reassurances to "stay patient."
Jesus Christ, he'd already waited two years. How much more patience could they expect?
"Kirk Cousins?!"
"Kirk freaking Cousins!"
"That guy gets a fully guaranteed deal? And I can't even get $20 million a year?"
"Don't tell me quarterbacks are different!"
"Don't!"
"If you can't get this done, I'll find Cousins' agent. I bet he'd love the chance to land a record-breaking contract for the best running back of the last four years."
"Screw it!"
"Get lost!"
And with that, Bell hurled his phone to the ground in a fit of rage.
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Powerstones?
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