Cincinnati Bengals tight end Mike Gesicki paid the “Joe Burrow Tax” to help keep the team’s core together.
“I definitely knew that I was going to take the ‘Joe Burrow tax,’” Gesicki told the outlet. “So, I knew that, and I was like, I’m cool with it. And so, it makes it easy to come back to a place like this. … There’s so many different guys that were in the back of my mind as I’m thinking about, you know, do I test the market?”
According to data from Spotrac, Gesicki’s deal would have been second among free agent tight ends in terms of total value: The New Orleans Saints signed tight end Juwan Johnson to a three-year, $30.75 million deal. It would have been third in terms of average annual value: his deal carries an average salary of roughly $8.5 million per year; Evan Engram’s deal with the Denver Broncos carries an average annual value of $11.5 million, while Johnson’s carries an average annual value of $10.25 million.
Gesicki said at the end of the season that “making up money“ in free agency was ”definitely a motivation” for him, though there were other factors to consider, and praised head coach Zac Taylor and many of the players on the offensive side of the ball.
Ultimately, those other factors proved to be the determining ones.
“You hear about your value and all that kind of stuff and what it could be, and at that point, it’s just like, this is what I want,“ he told the Dayton Daily News. ”I wanted to go to Cincinnati, and I wanted to be in an offense that allowed me to reach my potential, and I think that this place gives me everything I’m looking for.”
Gesicki had his best statistical season since 2021. He appeared in all 17 games, catching 65 passes for 665 yards and two touchdowns. He was part of a Bengals offense that led the league in passing yards and passing touchdowns.




