The Washington Commanders and wide receiver Terry McLaurin reached agreement Monday on a three-year contract extension worth up to $96 million that will end his hold-in and get him in uniform for the regular-season opener against the Giants, agents Buddy Baker and Tony Bonagura told ESPN’s Adam Schefter.
McLaurin and the Commanders’ front office had been at odds over his value since talks began early this offseason. By getting the deal done now the Commanders will retain their most consistent offensive player since he arrived as a third-round pick in 2019.
McLaurin, coming off his second Pro Bowl appearance, has surpassed 1,000 yards for five consecutive seasons.
He had hoped that would result in a speedy extension, but that did not come, and McLaurin expressed deep frustration during a 30-minute press conference on July 15. He did not report to camp a week later and was fined for missing the first four days — a total of $200,000. He already had been fined $104,768 for missing the mandatory three-day minicamp in June.
But after reporting McLaurin was placed on the physically unable to perform list with an ankle injury the team said he hurt late in the season. He was able to participate in voluntary workouts in the spring before skipping the OTA practice and minicamp. He was activated from the PUP list on Aug. 16.
McLaurin requested a trade on July 31, but that was not something Washington considered.
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