Twelve days. July 24. That’s when veterans report to Foxboro, and Christian Gonzalez — the best defensive player on a Super Bowl finalist — will be suiting up for $2,259,482.
That number is $2.259 million. Not the $30-plus million elite corners are commanding. While the franchise sits at a Forbes valuation north of $9 billion.
Per Over The Cap, Gonzalez is making $2,259,482 in base salary this season. Trent McDuffie signed for $31 million per year with the Rams after being traded. Sauce Gardner and Derek Stingley Jr. are both on deals in the same tier. Those are the market comps. Gonzalez went 17th overall in 2023, made the Pro Bowl in 2025, earned AP All-Pro Second Team in 2024, and ESPN ranked him the third-best cornerback heading into 2026. He’s that caliber of player. He’s getting paid like a rotational depth piece.
The Patriots picked up his fifth-year option for 2027 at $18.119 million — bumped up because he made the Pro Bowl, which is the system working as designed. Great. Except the system also designed a situation where the gap between what he earns now and what he’ll eventually get is so wide that showing up to training camp and actually practicing feels like leaving money on the table.
So he skipped voluntary OTAs this spring. At mandatory minicamp in June, he participated at “lower-speed/lower-tempo.” ESPN’s Mike Reiss reported it’s “hard to imagine Gonzalez participating full throttle under his current contract.” What that means in plain English: expect a hold-in. He reports July 24 to avoid fines. He doesn’t practice at full speed. And Mike Vrabel spends training camp trying to install a new defensive system without his best corner locked in.
Reiss put it plainly:
Quick-hit thoughts/notes around the Patriots and NFL (clock ticks for team and CB Christian Gonzalez to find contract compromise; how realistic is a Patriots game in Scotland?; analytics reflect A.J. Brown's excellence even in "down" year etc.) https://t.co/8az5MzPdMq
— Mike Reiss (@MikeReiss) June 28, 2026
Gonzalez himself, at mandatory minicamp on June 9, said everything right: “I want to be rewarded as a Patriot. I love this town. I love this city.” He also said the rest of it: “That’s up to my agents and the team, and I hope we get something done.” Hope. Twelve days out. That word is doing a lot of work.
The man clapped back at a reporter last week on X — “@GregABedard got sum new to say abt me everyday lol” — and honestly that’s fair. He’s been nothing but professional while a Super Bowl franchise haggles over paying their best corner what lesser corners are already making.
Ty Law warned that one injury during an unresolved negotiation could blow the whole thing up. An anonymous NFL GM told heavy.com the deal gets done before the season. Fine. Then do it in the next twelve days and stop making this harder than it is.
Pay him or own whatever comes next.
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