Should the Jaguars Consider Trading For 49ers WR Brandon Aiyuk?
šA report surfaced this week that the Jaguars were sniffing around a trade for San Francisco 49ers star wide receiver Brandon Aiyuk. We have zero confirmation this report is one hundred percent true but what we can do is take the idea and run with it. The hypothetical trade looked like this:
.š„, Aiyuk has a 49.7% route win rate, 1.9% drop rate, and an average target separation of 1.78 yards. All three of those numbers are better than Calvin Ridley and Christian Kirk posted in those stats last year. Aiyukās 57.3% route win rate in zone would pair so well with Christian Kirkās 48.6% route win rate in man (7th in league). In my eyes, Aiyuk is a top receiver in this league.š As far as the trade price itself? Itās right in line with the last five blockbuster wide receiver deals weāve seen recently. They are:
- Hollywood Brown and BAL 2022 3rd (100) for ARI 2022 1st (23)
- A.J. Brown for PHI 2022 1st (18) & PHI 2022 3rd (101)
- Tyreek Hill for MIA 2022 1st (29), MIA 2022 2nd (50), MIA 2022 4th (121), MIA 2023 4th (122), & MIA 2023 6th (178)
- Davante Adams for LV 2022 1st (22) & LV 2022 2nd (53)
- Stefon Diggs & MIN 2020 7th (239) for BUF 2020 1st (22), BUF 2021 4th (134), BUF 2020 5th (155) & BUF 2020 6th (201)
āIf you want a proven WR1 in this league you gotta pay and the 49ers asking price in this scenario is fine for a player as talented as Aiyuk. Especially considering the throw in is Zay Jones and not another pick.
Argument 2
š Trading for Brandon Aiyuk comes with signing him to a long term extension. This is a hold up for many fans and I understand. There is a lot of money tied up in the wide receiver room already and Aiyuk would command close to 25 million a year. Iām not going to speculate on what his contract terms would look like. Thatās beyond me. Regardless, with Trevor Lawrence playing his last ācheapā year itās time to strike and figure out the rest later.
š“This puzzle is going to look a lot more complicated after the Jaguars have to start paying Lawrence big-time money. Every good team in the league has to let good players walk away or trade them. Itās what happens when you accumulate a ton of talent and canāt afford it all. Yes, this deal would likely mean losing a player like Tyson Campbell, Walker Little, or Andre Cisco after next year. Maybe two of them but when was the last time ātoo much talentā was a problem around here?
š±I have to give Trent Baalke credit in one department and that is the way he has worked his contract structures. He has done a really good job of managing individual cap hits without sacrificing the team. Baalke may not always have the right player signing the contract but he rarely leaves the team with their hands tied later. He has also done a good job restructuring players when needed. The Brandon Scherff restructure and Arik Armstead contracts are both great examples recently of Baalke being really smart when it comes to managing contracts. If I trust Baalke to do something well it's to figure the cap out.
šCam Robinson, Brandon Scherff, and Foye Oluokun are three contracts you can easily get out of after the season and they combine for 55 million dollars in cap hit this upcoming season in 2024. Thatās enough cash dropping off the books along with another roughly ten percent salary cap increase next year to make me think paying Aiyuk and Lawrence can work.
Argument 3
šøThe draft is a gamble. Period. It is an objective fact that a handful of players taken in the first round of this year's draft wonāt have good NFL careers. I certainly love the idea of hitting a rookie wide receiver in the first and getting him cost-controlled for the next five seasons. In fact, thatās my preferred option!
ą½§Adonai Mitchell is a player who is gaining a lot of steam and looks like the late teens may be his draft spot. I love him as a player and when I watch him he reminds me of Ceedee Lamb. Could he be that good? Certainly, but unfortunately itās just as likely he isnāt very good at all. Thatās the nature of the business. There are so many reasons a player ābustsā but many of those reasons have nothing to do with talent or even football itself.
āThere is too much luck involved in the NFL draft to assume pick 17 will be the answer. In the 2020 draft, the Eagles were on the clock with the 21st pick. They needed a receiver. The top three on the board? Jalen Raegor, Justin Jefferson, and Brandon Aiyuk. They obviously picked Raegor leaving Jefferson on a silver platter for the Vikings at pick 22 right behind them. No one expected Jefferson to fall that far and the Vikings are forever grateful.
ā¤Why did Jefferson drop? Concerns of him being a product of playing with Joe Burrow, JaāMarr Chase, and the greatest college offense ever. They scouted the offense, not the player. Sound familiar? Iām looking to mitigate risk here. With where this team is currently a flopped first round pick, no matter the position, is going to hurt them in the long run more than paying Brandon Aiyuk.
š¹The other thing to consider here is neither you, me or your favorite Twitter GM will be the one making the selection in April. With Baalkeās draft record, the proof is in the pudding. Where has he found his success? The trenches and defense mainly. Where has he whiffed the hardest? Wide receiver. A list of receivers Baalke has drafted:
- Ronald Johnson (2011 Rd 6)
- A.J. Jenkins (2012 Rd 1)
- Quentin Patton (2013 Rd 4)
- Bruce Ellington (2014 Rd 4)
- DeAndre Smelter (2015 Rd 4)
- Aaron Burbridge (2016 Rd 6)
- Jalen Camp (2021 Rd 6)
- Parker Washington (2023 Rd 6)
š¼Two conclusions to be made here. The first is Baalke doesnāt swing at receiver early. Itās not a part of his draft philosophy and thatās evident by taking a receiver before round four only one time in nine drafts as a General Manager. The second is, well, he just doesnāt have an eye for receiver scouting. Somehow itās entirely possible that Parker Washington could havethe best career of receivers drafted by Baalke. Go get the sure thing in Brandon Aiyuk and use the rest of the draft to solidify the depth this team needs.
ą¹For me, this trade would be a home run. The Jaguars would have a true outside receiver locked up long-term to pair with Trevor, it leans into Baalkeās strengths as a general manager, and mitigates another disaster that would only set this team back further. Would you make the trade?