This post was originally published on this site
Not picking up Najee Harris‘ fifth-year option, the Steelers also did not conduct any known extension talks before Week 1. A team with a no-in-season negotiating policy has either left this winter window open to re-sign Harris or is prepared to move on with Jaylen Warren and a cheaper option in 2025.
Although Harris could do well on the market, the Steelers are not closing the door on re-signing him before that point. While cautioning no franchise tag is coming to keep the four-year starter off the market, the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette’s Gerry Dulac pegs the possibility of the Steelers re-signing Harris before free agency as “strong.”
[RELATED: Either/Or Scenario Looming With Russell Wilson, Justin Fields]
If nothing else, Harris has offered consistency in Pittsburgh. Added after the team let James Conner walk in 2021, Harris surpassed 1,000 rushing yards in all four of his seasons and has never missed a game. After a 1,200-yard rookie season, he proceeded to churn out three seasons with totals between 1,034 and 1,043 yards. Each rookie-contract season featured yards-per-carry numbers between 3.8 and 4.1. Harris certainly does not bring much flash to the equation, but he has been a productive running back. And this year’s free agent market is not set to rival 2024’s.
The Saquon Barkley– and Derrick Henry-fronted class changed teams’ outlooks, and the accomplished group helped set the market for extensions. In the months that followed, 2025 free agents-to-be Conner, Rhamondre Stevenson and Chuba Hubbard signed re-ups worth between $8.3-$9.5MM per year. Alvin Kamara, who would have become a 2025 street free agent upon being a Saints cap casualty, instead reached a compromise to stay. New Orleans extended Kamara at two years and $24.5MM. The Lions did not appear on track to release David Montgomery in the final year of his three-year deal, but the sides huddled up on a second contract — a two-year, $18.25MM pact.
As 2024 proved busy at running back, it both set a potential price range for Harris and depleted the market. While the batch of extensions points to Harris landing a deal in that ballpark, the former first-rounder could do a bit better simply because teams have limited options. Then again, a 2025 RB rookie class is viewed as much better than 2024’s; that would stand to negate potential Harris market advantages.
As it stands, Harris headlines a free agency class that includes Rico Dowdle, Javonte Williams, Aaron Jones, J.K. Dobbins and Nick Chubb. The Broncos are not expected to bring back Williams, who has not been the same since a 2022 knee injury, and two significant maladies have defined Chubb’s past two seasons. Dobbins impressed with the Chargers and should do better on this year’s market, but the ex-Raven also landed on IR yet again last season. Jones turned 30 in December; Harris will turn 27 this offseason.
Harris and Dowdle may well be the prizes on the upcoming market; the latter is coming off a 1,000-yard season but has far less mileage on his career odometer (331 carries) compared to Harris (1,097). The Steelers and Cowboys, respectively, still have until March 10 to conduct exclusive negotiations with their starters. The Steelers would stand to have a low ceiling on where they want to go with Harris, as they passed on an option year worth $6.79MM and did not see him deliver a contract year out of step with his previous work.
While Harris may still be in Pittsburgh’s plans, Dulac adds the team will follow through on tendering Warren, who is a restricted free agent. A second-round tender is projected to cost more than $5MM, which could lead the Steelers to take their chances with the low-end number — one that would not bring any compensation back in the event Pittsburgh did not match a Warren offer sheet — to conserve cash. A reality in which the Steelers pay Harris would point to Warren being given the low-end tender.