Saquon Barkley is negotiating to include equity in his Philadelphia Eagles compensation package, according to people familiar with the contract discussions. The running back signed a three-year, $37.75 million deal in March 2024 after leaving the New York Giants, and is now exploring ownership participation as part of a restructured long-term arrangement.
The Eagles have not committed to equity inclusion, but discussions are active. Barkley's camp is studying structures used in NBA franchise deals, where star players including LeBron James and Dwyane Wade secured post-retirement stakes. The NFL permits passive ownership by active players under specific conditions: limited voting rights, minority stakes, and league approval. No current player holds such an arrangement. The closest precedent is Roger Staubach's real estate empire built parallel to his Cowboys career, and Troy Aikman's stake in a NASCAR team during playing years, both outside the league's franchise framework.
The timing matters. Barkley is 27 years old and outperforming contract expectations. He rushed for 2,005 yards in 2024, the ninth 2,000-yard season in NFL history, and delivered a 6.2 yards-per-carry average. The Eagles reached the conference championship. His market leverage is high, his runway is short. Running backs age poorly; the position is structurally undervalued in the modern passing game. Barkley wants wealth that outlasts his knees.
The Eagles' incentive is retention without cap destruction. Owner Jeffrey Lurie has explored alternative compensation models since the 2020 CBA negotiations. The team operates a $1.8 billion stadium complex, a $50 million training facility, and a corporate partnership base that generated $200 million in sponsorship revenue last season. Equity in ancillary entities—training academies, real estate ventures, or content studios—would cost Lurie nothing against the salary cap. The league office is watching. If Philadelphia structures a deal that offers Barkley a small percentage of a team-affiliated LLC, other clubs will follow.
The risk is precedent. Agents across the league are already drafting equity clauses into client pitch decks. A 2 percent stake in a team-controlled real estate project worth $100 million today could be worth $10 million in a decade, far exceeding a restructured bonus. The union would support it; diversified income streams protect players post-career. The ownership council would resist; liquidity events and governance complications multiply. Commissioner Roger Goodell has not commented.
Barkley's leverage extends beyond the field. His Q Score sits at 18, comparable to Odell Beckham Jr. at his peak. His social following is 4.2 million on Instagram, a top-10 figure for NFL running backs. Brands pay him for reach; the Eagles pay him for yards. If he converts reach into equity, he builds a second career before the first ends.
Watch the March 2025 league meetings in Phoenix. Ownership compensation rules require a three-quarters vote to amend. The Eagles are expected to present a framework for player equity participation in team-adjacent ventures. Watch also for coordinator movement: if Barkley's deal includes deferred stakes, offensive coordinator Kellen Moore's next head-coaching contract will be cited as comp. Moore is interviewing for three vacancies this cycle.
The Eagles' next earnings call is mid-February. Lurie typically deflects contract questions, but analysts will ask about cap management and alternative structures. Barkley's agent, Kim Miales, represents 11 other Pro Bowl clients. She has not returned calls.