Howie Roseman's Contract Expires March 15: Could the Eagles Lose Their GM?
The most accomplished GM in Eagles history hits free agency next month. Here's why he's staying — and the one scenario where he might not.
Howie Roseman's Contract Expires March 15: Could the Eagles Lose Their GM?
Here's a nugget that should be getting more attention: Howie Roseman's contract with the Philadelphia Eagles expires on March 15. That's less than a month away. The most successful general manager in franchise history — two Super Bowl titles, three NFC Championships, a consistent pipeline of talent — is technically about to become a free agent.
Now, before you panic: he's not leaving. Almost certainly not. Jeffrey Lurie loves the guy, and the feeling is mutual. But the timing is fascinating, and the dynamics around it are worth examining.
What's Howie Worth on the Open Market?
GM salaries aren't public like player contracts, but the rumor is Howie currently makes around $4 million per year. Nick Caserio in Houston reportedly gets around $6.5 million. And Daryl Morey — a fraud with the Sixers, by the way — is approaching $15 million annually. If Howie Roseman hit the open market with his résumé, he'd be the highest-paid general manager in professional sports. No question about it.
Think about what a guy like Woody Johnson in New York would pay for Howie. Complete autonomy, north of $15 million a year, and the chance to build a franchise from scratch? That's a compelling pitch for anyone. Howie's cap management is legendary. His drafting over the last three years has been strong. His ability to build a contending roster year after year puts him in the conversation for best GM in the NFL.
Why He Stays
Family roots in Philadelphia. Kids in school. A lifetime relationship with Jeffrey Lurie, who kept him even when things weren't going well. Howie has survived multiple coaching changes, front office shakeups, and public criticism. He's built something real in Philadelphia, and Lurie will pay whatever it takes to keep him.
According to Howard Eskin, Howie quietly explored the possibility of getting involved with a potential team purchase at one point — the idea being he could transition from GM to a front-office equity role with an ownership group. That deal never materialized. But it tells you something about Howie's ambitions: the only thing that might lure him away isn't more money. It's ownership.
The Ownership Angle
Seattle is about to be sold. If a new ownership group came in and offered Howie a piece — even 2% of an NFL franchise — that's generational wealth. Jeffrey Lurie just sold roughly 6% of the Eagles for what's believed to be close to a billion dollars. Two percent of a franchise valued at $5-6 billion is $100-120 million. That's a different conversation than salary.
It's the Theo Epstein model. Win in one city, prove your value, then leverage that into an ownership or executive role somewhere else. Epstein did it going from Boston to Chicago. Could Howie do it going from Philadelphia to Seattle or another franchise? It's not likely right now, but it's the one scenario that makes leaving conceivable.
The Julian Lurie Factor
There's another wrinkle worth watching. Julian Lurie, Jeffrey's son, is increasingly involved in Eagles operations. He's been part of hiring processes and organizational decisions. He's young and smart, but at some point the question becomes: when Jeffrey steps back, does Howie's relationship transfer to the next generation? History says that transition isn't always smooth.
Bottom Line
Howie Roseman is going to get a raise and stay in Philadelphia. Jeffrey Lurie will make sure of it. But the March 15 expiration date is a reminder that the most valuable asset in the Eagles organization isn't Jalen Hurts, isn't Saquon Barkley, isn't any player on the roster. It's the guy in the front office who built the whole thing. Pay the man.
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