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Shanahan: Samuel’s RB role did not factor in to negotiations
San Francisco 49ers head coach Kyle Shanahan Kirby Lee-USA TODAY Sports

Shortly after Deebo Samuel‘s trade request surfaced, matters like the wide receiver’s desire not to be used as a running back and his rumored desire not to live in California surfaced as ancillary reasons — beyond the contractual centerpiece in play — for wishing to be dealt. Kyle Shanahan said the role component did not factor in to the proceedings.

Samuel’s backfield usage did not come into play during the 49ers’ negotiations with their top wide receiver, Shanahan said Monday, via ESPN.com’s Nick Wagoner (on Twitter). The sixth-year 49ers HC said the progress that led to a three-year, $71.55M extension came from the key parties meeting face-to-face.

The 49ers did include some incentives to cover potential Samuel backfield duty. The escalators could pay Samuel as much as $1.95M over the contract’s life. If Samuel gains 380 rushing yards in any season on this deal, he would collect $650K, per Adam Schefter of ESPN.com (on Twitter). A more likely incentive to be collected is tied to rushing touchdowns. Samuel would collect $150K for each year in which he scores three rushing TDs. Samuel scored three rushing TDs as a rookie and notched eight last season.

As for more traditional contract numbers, the former second-round pick — as could be expected during a transformative offseason for the receiver position — did well for himself. The 49ers gave Samuel $41M fully guaranteed, Mike Florio of Pro Football Talk notes, adding that, by April 1, 2023, $58.2M of the deal will be locked in. Samuel’s salaries through 2024 will be guaranteed by April of next year; his 2025 base salary ($16.6M) is nonguaranteed. A big chunk of Samuel’s $41M guaranteed at signing comes from a $24M signing bonus.

Samuel’s fully guaranteed figure comes in sixth at receiver, checking in ahead of D.K. Metcalf‘s total ($31M). The Seahawks wideout, whose AAV tops Samuel’s, checks in with a nearly identical total-guarantee figure ($58.22M). The 49ers used a void year in 2026 to spread out Samuel’s signing bonus and minimize his cap hits. The wideout will not carry an eight-figure cap hit until 2024, according to OverTheCap. Samuel will be tied to a $6.68M cap number in 2022 and a $9.14M figure in 2023. The notable jump during this contract occurs in 2024, when the All-Pro’s cap number spikes to $29M.

The 49ers came up considerably from their initial offer, believed to be worth less than $19M per year, but the receiver market also changed considerably since mid-April. A.J. Brown signed for four years and $100M, with a receiver-record $56M fully guaranteed, and both Metcalf and Terry McLaurin eclipsed $23M per year. The 49ers now have Samuel and George Kittle signed through 2025.

This article first appeared on Pro Football Rumors and was syndicated with permission.

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