Can the Colts afford to trade for Trey Hendrickson?

Can the Colts afford to trade for Trey Hendrickson?
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Trey Hendrickson is on the trade market; should the Colts take a swing at him?

Trey Hendrickson, star pass rusher of the Cincinnati Bengals, is publicly unhappy with his team and has asked for a new contract, otherwise he will not play for them in 2025. This has opened up many possibilities, most notably a trade that could involve the Indianapolis Colts. The question is: Can the Colts afford to trade for him and offer him a new contract?


Trade Price

Hendrickson’s trade price is tough to judge. He’s 30 years old and will be 31 in December. He is right in the middle of his prime with maybe only 2-3 above average or elite seasons left in him. Players like Khalil Mack, Kyle Van Noy, Za’Darius Smith, and even Julius Peppers back in the day have proven that you can produce at a very high level after the age of 30 and that good play can be found until around 33-34 before everyone experiences a big drop off. If that’s the case, then the Colts or team trading for Hendrickson could be getting 3-4 years of solid play from him. While that’s not worth a 1st round pick, that’s definitely worth a 2nd round pick and I believe that’s the price on him.


Current Season Cap Hit

Below is Hendrickson’s current contract and thanks to Over the Cap, we see that he is set to have a 18.66M cap hit for 2025.

According to the NFLPA, the Colts have 24M in cap space. The current 51st contract (that would be bumped out of the Top 51) is 1.03M so taking on Hendrickon’s contract for this season would actually cost the Colts 17.6M and leave them with around 6.4M in cap space for this season. They can easily afford the contract for 2025.


Projected Contract Extension

The dealbreaker in all of this is the contract extension. Danielle Hunter signed a 1 year contract worth 35M. Maxx Crosby signed a 3 year extension worth 35M per year and Nick Bosa signed a 5 year extension worth 34M per year. With the exception of Myles Garrett at 40M per year, those three guys are essentially the upper echelon of pay. After them, there is a drop off to guys like Josh Allen-Hines, Brian Burns and TJ Watt. It’s worth noting that TJ Watt’s contract was signed in 2021, so adjusting for inflation he would be making around 38-39M per year, so best to ignore his contract as well.

While Trey Hendrickson has established himself as one of the best edge rushers, I don’t think many would consider him in the tier of Maxx Crosby and Nick Bosa and while Danielle Hunter is in that echelon in terms of his contract, he signed only a one year extension. So Hendrickson isn’t in the upper echelon of player but he’s above Allen-Hines and Burns so his contract will be somewhere in the middle, so if you price towards...