There is Aaron Donald and then there are all others, when it comes to NFL defensive tackles.
The same goes for salaries and contracts of the big guys up front.
There is Donald and then there is … Dexter Lawrence?
That could become the new pecking order at a position that has been enjoying a financial boon this offseason.
Lawrence is not planning to attend the opening of the Giants’ voluntary workout program Monday, hoping to spark negotiations on a new deal.
The way the market has evolved, there is every reason to believe Lawrence wants to be the second highest-paid defensive tackle in the league, behind only Donald, a future Hall of Famer.
Donald’s three-year, $95 million deal, with $46.5 guaranteed, averages $31.6 million annually.
Lawrence will not rise into that stratosphere.
The next target is Jeffery Simmons, who this offseason signed an extension with the Titans for four years and $94 million ($66 million guaranteed), an average of $23.5 million per year.
That is the goal for Lawrence to reach, or surpass.
Dexter Lawrence is ready for his payday, one that will put among the best in the game. Corey Sipkin for the NY POSTThen there is Daron Payne, who is staying with the Commanders on a four-year, $90 million deal ($59 million guaranteed), an average of $22.5 million annually.
Simmons, Lawrence and Payne are all 25 years old.
It stands to reason Lawrence will surpass the contract Javon Hargrave, 30, received to go from the Eagles to the 49ers: four years, $84 million ($40 million guaranteed), an average of $21 million per year.
Lawrence and Payne are represented by the same agent, Joel Segal, who could not be reached for comment.
Lawrence seeks to cash in at a time when other pass rushers are making bank. Getty ImagesThe Giants want to get this done.
General manager Joe Schoen arrived last year and immediately signed off on Lawrence’s fifth-year option for $10.7 million for the 2023 season.
Schoen knew Lawrence was a quality player.
In their year together, Schoen got to know Lawrence, on and off the field, and the determination was made to invest in him long term.
It did not hurt that Lawrence put together his finest season in 2022, with career-highs in tackles (68), sacks (7.5), tackles for loss (7) and quarterback hits (28). Lawrence, for the first time, was selected as a team captain.
“Dexter’s great’’ Schoen said earlier this offseason. “Leader, great player, did a good job for us this year so he’s definitely somebody we will talk to and we’d like to have him here for a long time.’’
The timing could not be better for Lawrence, as the money at his position has skyrocketed.
Schoen acknowledged that and possibly foreshadowed a challenging negotiation when he said this at the NFL Scouting Combine in late February: “That’s a little bit trickier, the defensive tackle market, when you look at the gap in between the highest paid and the next guy.’’
Does Lawrence deserve to make more than Payne and as much as or more than Simmons?
Daron Payne Getty Images
Jeffery Simmons Getty ImagesThe Giants selected Lawrence with the No. 17 overall pick in the 2019 NFL Draft.
At No. 19 that year, the Titans took Simmons, so, the comparison is apropos. In 64 games, Lawrence has 213 tackles, 16.5 sacks, 21 tackles for loss and 58 quarterback hits.
Simmons in 56 games has 189 tackles, 21 sacks, 28 tackles for loss and 46 quarterback hits. Simmons has been named to two Pro Bowls, Lawrence one.
Lawrence is a dominant run defender, but in some eyes might slightly lag behind Simmons as a pass-rush finisher.
Lawrence has also not come close to the 11.5 sacks in a season Payne put up in 2022.
If Lawrence gets what he wants and moves alongside or ahead of Simmons, the ranking of second behind only Donald could be temporary.
Chris Jones of the Chiefs is in the latter stages of a four-year, $80 million deal and is likely to receive a massive extension later in the summer.
Quinnen Williams, taken No. 3 overall by the Jets in 2019, ranks as high, or higher, than draft classmates Lawrence and Simmons, and with a new deal could move in behind Donald.
Schoen, at the NFL meetings last month, said the Giants have “had good conversations with the representatives’’ and were “in negotiations’’ to extend Lawrence.
But what the Giants view as a great package at this point will not be enough to get it done and, for now, Lawrence will stay away from the team facility.








