Davante Adams leads the Los Angeles Rams’ skill-position players as the NFL’s most valuable assets under a new analytical framework, with the team’s wide receiver and tight end units topping league-wide efficiency metrics.
The methodology, published by *MSN Sports* on July 14, 2026, evaluates player contracts against on-field production, positioning the Rams’ skill players—headed by Adams and Cooper Kupp—as the best investment in the league. The analysis highlights how Adams’ 2025 contract ($14 million guaranteed) aligns with his sustained elite performance, including a 2025 season where he led the NFL in targets (168) and yards (1,789).
**How Does Davante Adams Stack Up?**
Adams’ contract figures prominently in the study, which compares player salaries to their production per dollar spent. His 2025 average of 11.2 yards per catch—ranked third in the NFL—bolsters his value, especially when paired with Kupp’s top-5 receiving totals. The Rams’ skill group outpaces rivals like the Chiefs’ Travis Kelce (whose contract now exceeds $30M annually) by delivering higher per-play efficiency at a lower cost.
**Why the Rams’ Approach Works**
The analysis credits the Rams’ front office for structuring deals around performance-based incentives, including Adams’ 2025 contract’s 50% guaranteed bonus tied to receptions and yards. This mirrors the approach of the 49ers’ Christian McCaffrey, whose contract also balances risk and reward—but the Rams’ skill players deliver better raw value per dollar, per the study’s cost-per-yard metric.
**What This Means for Adams’ Future**
Adams enters Year 3 of his contract with leverage: his 2026 cap hit ($13.5M) remains below Kelce’s, yet his production edges closer to elite tight ends. The methodology suggests the Rams could extend Adams on a similar tier, provided he maintains his top-10 receiver output. Comparisons to past deals—like Odell Beckham Jr.’s early contract—show how Adams’ efficiency justifies long-term investment.
**How Rivals Compare**
Teams like the Bills (Stefon Diggs) and Cowboys (CeeDee Lamb) spend heavily on aging receivers, but their contracts lack the Rams’ production-per-dollar ratio. The study notes that Adams’ 2025 age-adjusted yards per game (98.3) outpaces Lamb’s (89.1) and Diggs’ (75.2), reinforcing his status as a high-upside value play in free agency.
Key stat: Adams’ 2025 yards per route run (1.5) ranked second in the NFL, per *Pro Football Focus*—a figure the methodology uses to argue his contract is undervalued relative to peers.