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2025 NFL Draft: Contract details revealed for Titans first-round pick Cam Ward

Barkley-Truaxby: Barkley Truax04/25/25BarkleyTruax
Cam Ward
Brett Davis-Imagn Images

Cam Ward‘s contract figures have been revealed after being selected No. 1 overall in the 2025 NFL Draft by the Tennessee Titans. According to Spotrac, Ward is expected to sign a four-year contract worth $48,757,500 with an AAV of $12,189,375. Ward is also expected to receive a signing bonus totaling $32,100,000.

Ward finished his single season at Miami having been responsible for 43 touchdowns (39 passing) to go with 4,313 passing yards while finishing with the No. 1 QBR (88.8) in the country. In the 12 games that he played all four quarters, Ward threw for 300 yards or more in 10 of those matchups.

He had a couple of other stops along his college football journey before playing for head coach Mario Cristobal in Coral Gables. He began his career playing for Incarnate Word at the FCS level, where he threw for nearly 7,000 yards and scored 61 touchdowns during first his two seasons there before transferring to Washington State ahead of the 2022 college football season.

What NFL Draft analysts are saying about Cam Ward

Now that Cam Ward has been drafted, fans may be wondering what to expect from their new quarterback. NFL Draft analyst Lance Zierlein provided his analysis of the QB.

Zierlein: “Gunslinger with good size, a big arm and the mobility to help out his offensive line. Ward can read the full field and operates with average decision-making and processing quickness. Like a shortstop, he rips sidearm rockets that fit into tight windows on all three levels, but his delivery and mechanics cause inconsistencies with placement and accuracy.

“He is fairly consistent regardless of the coverage scheme he sees, but figuring out disguised coverage on the pro level will take time, and it is not a given he will develop that skill. He looks to strike it rich with aggressive, vertical throws; for better efficiency, he needs to learn to mine for gold with combo reads and rhythm throws. While he has the ability to move the sticks with his legs, he’s more of a pocket passer than a dual-threat quarterback. Pocket mobility helps him extend and make plays out of structure, but the longer he’s off-schedule, the spottier his decision-making can get.

“With a patient plan and a nurturing offensive coordinator who can accentuate his physical tools while regulating the feast-or-famine elements of his play, Ward could become a good NFL starter inside of his first contract.”