The New England Patriots gave out some big contracts during the first week of free agency. Safety and special teamer Mike Brown, who is coming over after a three-year stint in Tennessee, does not belong in that same category.

Brown’s contract with the Patriots is for one year only, and as a look at its details shows not necessarily putting too much of a dent into the Patriots’ books.

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S Mike Brown: Contract details

Base value: $1,350,000
Maximum value: $1,350,000

Guarantees: $50,000
Signing bonus: $50,000

2026 (age 27):
Base salary: $1,250,000
Signing bonus: $50,000
Workout bonus: $50,000
Salary cap hit: $1,175,000

The Patriots signed the fifth-year man to a contract only slightly above the veteran’s minimum for a player of his experience, which says a lot about his outlook. Unlike other members of New England’s free agency class, he is not guaranteed a spot on the roster come September.

As for the pact itself, it includes a $1.25 million base salary, $50,000 workout bonus and fully-guaranteed $50,000 signing bonus. Despite those numbers adding up to $1.35 million, only parts of that sum actually are counted against New England’s cap at the moment. Brown, after all, qualifies for the veteran salary benefit: as a player of four or more credited seasons, he is eligible for such a deal.

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In essence, this means signing a qualifying unrestricted free agent to a one-year contract that includes no more than $187,500 in additional compensation on top of his base salary. If those requirements are met, teams are allowed to reduce the salary impact, which in Brown’s case is $200,000 (the difference between him having four or two credited seasons on his résumé).

Despite the favorable nature of that arrangement, however, his chances of making the roster will hinge entirely on his performance this summer.

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