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Contract details for Patriots free agency signing Kindle Vildor

Despite fielding one of the best starting trios in football, the New England Patriots had a low-key need at the cornerback position in free agency. With Alex Austin not tendered as a restricted free agent and subsequently leaving for Miami, the depth behind Christian Gonzalez, Carlton Davis and Marcus Jones suddenly looked even shallower than it already had.

In order to address the issue, the Patriots brought in six-year veteran Kindle Vildor on a one-year contract. Turns out, the deal has a structure we have become quite familiar with this offseason.

CB Kindle Vildor: Contract details

Base value: $1,402,500

Maximum value: $1,402,500

Guarantees: $437,500

Signing bonus: $137,500

Salary (2026): $300,000

2026 (age 28):

Base salary: $1,215,000

Signing bonus: $137,500

Workout bonus: $50,000

Salary cap hit: $1,262,500

Vildor’s deal, like that of linebacker K.J. Britt and safety Mike Brown before him, qualifies for the veteran salary benefit. What this means is that the Patriots are able to reduce the cap impact of his $1.215 million base salary — the minimum for a player of his experience — down to $1.075 million. Vildor is still paid the full salary, but the difference is considered a benefit and therefore not counted against New England’s cap.

The idea behind the benefit is simple: to allow a veteran player to be competitive in free agency against younger and therefore cheaper competition. To be eligible, however, said player needs to be an unrestricted free agents and sign a one-year contract that includes no more than $187,500 in additional compensation on top of his base salary.

If the criteria are met — and they obviously are in Vildor’s case — the base salary gets reduced down to the equivalent minimum value of a two-year vet, a reduction of $140,000.

Despite it, however, the newest Patriots defensive back still counts against the team’s books right now. His remaining cap charge of $1.263 million cracks the Top 51 list, replacing a lower-salaried player and slightly lowering New England’s available cap space (which still stands at approximately $35 million, according to salary cap expert Miguel Benzan).

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