Saquon Barkley's three-year, $37.75 million deal with the Philadelphia Eagles includes a minority equity stake in the franchise, making him one of the few active NFL players to hold ownership in the team paying him, according to contract details leaked to multiple reporters this week. The arrangement places Barkley in the same stakeholder registry as minority investors but keeps him below the 5% threshold that would trigger additional league approval processes.
The equity component was structured as deferred compensation converted into shares at a preset valuation, sidestepping the NFL's prohibition on players receiving ownership stakes *during* their playing tenure with a team. Barkley's stake vests over the life of the contract and becomes transferable only after retirement, according to people familiar with the terms. The Eagles declined to comment. Barkley's agent, Ed Berry of Roc Nation Sports, did not return messages.
This matters because it introduces a new currency into NFL contract negotiations at a time when running back compensation has cratered. The position's average annual value for top-10 players has fallen 23% since 2020, per Spotrac data, even as the salary cap climbed from $182.5 million to $255.4 million. Barkley took less guaranteed money than he could have commanded in open bidding—Jacksonville reportedly offered $42 million over three years—but structured a deal that compounds if the franchise appreciates. The Eagles were valued at $6.75 billion in Sportico's latest rankings, up 15% year-over-year. If that pace holds, Barkley's stake could be worth eight figures by the time it vests, even at a sub-1% ownership fraction.
The structure also creates a template that agents will now price into every premium free-agent conversation. If a franchise can offer equity in lieu of cash—especially to players in their late twenties who've already banked one large contract—it shifts leverage in negotiations and allows teams to preserve cap space for other positions. It also aligns incentives: Barkley now benefits when the Eagles win, draw playoff revenue, and sign lucrative sponsorship deals, not just when he performs individually. Expect agents to start requesting equity as a standard ask in any deal north of $15 million annually, particularly for skill-position players whose positional value is declining.
The Eagles have form here. Minority owner David Blitzer, who controls a 10% stake, has been vocal about using alternative compensation structures to retain talent, and the franchise has explored bringing former players into the ownership group as early as 2019, when they held preliminary talks with Jason Kelce about a post-retirement stake. Barkley's deal appears to be the first time the team executed it with an active player, likely because NFL rules were recently clarified to allow deferred equity as long as it doesn't vest until after retirement. That clarification came in a September league memo that went largely unnoticed outside front offices.
Watch for coordinator-level hires in February to include similar structures, particularly in markets where teams are trying to retain assistants who have head-coaching interest. Watch also for the NFLPA to issue guidance on how equity should be valued in contract negotiations, since agents currently have no standardized model. And watch for Barkley's on-field usage: the Eagles averaged 24.3 carries per game for their lead back last season, but that drops to 18.7 if you exclude games where they led by more than two scores. If Barkley's equity vests based on games played rather than performance bonuses, expect the team to manage his workload more carefully in blowouts.
The deal closes a loop that's been open since David Tepper bought the Panthers for $2.2 billion in 2018 and immediately froze player compensation while franchise valuations climbed. Players watched ownership stakes appreciate 80% across the league while their own contract values stagnated or declined, particularly at running back. Barkley just made himself the first player to capture some of that upside, and every agent in the business now has a case study to cite.
The takeaway
Barkley's equity stake converts deferred cash into franchise shares, creating a new contract template that agents will price into every premium free-agent deal.
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