
The Facts: Jones becomes a free agent next month, but the team appears ready to make sure he stays in Pittsburgh. The Steelers view Jones as better than 80 percent of the other backups in the league, according to Gerry Dulac of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. If that's the case, it's hard to see how the Steelers could let him get away, unless some other team were willing to offer Jones starter money.
Diehards Line:
And, as PFT points out, the reality is there’s no way another team will offer Jones starter money. The truth is, Jones has been serviceable at best when filling in for Ben Roethlisberger, completing 60.3 percent of his passes with a 7.6 yards per pass average, seven touchdowns and six interceptions. No team is going to make Jones its starter, so what would seem to make the most sense is the Steelers giving Jones a contract better than 80 percent of backups make. According to PFT, that might put Jones somewhere in the neighborhood of the two-year, $6.5 million contract the Cardinals gave backup quarterback Drew Stanton last year. For Jones, it would be a hefty pay raise over the four-year, $2.6 million rookie contract he just finished while the Steelers would retain a player they're comfortable with.