🚨 NEW RECORD: $114M FOR ALEC PIERCE? The Deal Shaking the NFL and the Hobby
The Indianapolis Colts just detonated the wide receiver market. On March 9, 2026, Indianapolis locked up Alec Pierce with a massive four-year $114 million extension ($116M max with incentives, $84M guaranteed and $60M fully guaranteed at signing).
That averages roughly $28.5–$29M per season, officially making Pierce the highest-paid free-agent wide receiver in NFL history.
And honestly? This deal looks insane when you consider he is a receiver that has never had a single 50 reception season. The tone around the league is one of pure disbelief. This was his first 1,000-yard year… and he only had 1,003! To put his volume in perspective, he wasn’t even rostered on half of our fantasy football teams until midway through this season.
The contrast is even more jarring when you compare it to his card market. It is incredibly rare for a player with so little hobby demand to get the largest bag in league history. You can buy Alec Pierce’s most expensive known 1/1 card for around $1,500. Meanwhile, the Colts just handed him $114 million.
In a corresponding move, the Colts also traded Michael Pittman Jr. to the Steelers, leaving Pierce as the clear WR1 in Indy. The move signals a total transition in Indianapolis, especially with the emergence of tight end Ty Warren as the clear #2 receiving option.
From an Eagles fan perspective, this whole situation makes the contract even wilder. I was actually hoping Philadelphia might target Wan’Dale Robinson as a WR2 and then bring in Alec Pierce as a slot weapon. The idea would have been to add flexibility to potentially move a disgruntled and declining AJ Brown while rebalancing the offense around DeVonta Smith and a couple of explosive complementary pieces.
But let’s be clear — that plan only makes sense if Pierce is your slot receiver, not the highest paid free-agent wide receiver in the history of the league. Paying record-setting money for a vertical role player with under 50 catches per season is the part that has people around the league doing double takes.
—Breaking Down the Deal
Pierce’s Production
NFL WR Market Chaos
Sports Card Hobby Impact
Alec Pierce Card Leaderboard
Prizm Parallel Scarcity
Mass Produced Rookie Card Values
Frequently Asked Questions
The Deal: Historic Splash or Forced Hand?
Pierce became the top available receiver after the Cowboys franchise-tagged George Pickens. Indianapolis couldn’t tag Pierce themselves because the team had already used their transition tag on quarterback Daniel Jones.
That meant Pierce would have entered unrestricted free agency with no compensation coming back to the Colts.
Instead of risking that scenario, Indianapolis reset the wide receiver market and secured him as their long-term WR1. At this point, Jerry Jones probably looks at the Pierce deal and decides it’s pointless to even negotiate a new deal with Pickens and makes him play on the franchise tag!
—Pierce’s Production Profile
| Season | Games | Receptions | Yards | YPC | TDs |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2022 | 16 | 41 | 593 | 14.5 | 2 |
| 2023 | 17 | 32 | 514 | 16.1 | 2 |
| 2024 | 16 | 37 | 824 | 22.3 | 7 |
| 2025 | 15 | 47 | 1003 | 21.3 | 6 |
Pierce has always been an efficiency monster rather than a volume receiver. Over the last two seasons he led the NFL in yards per catch among qualified receivers.
The concern critics point to is simple: Pierce has never reached 50 receptions in a season.
—NFL WR Free Agency Chaos
| Player | Move | Contract | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mike Evans | 49ers | 3y / $60M | Veteran red-zone threat |
| Wan’Dale Robinson | Titans | 4y / $78M | Looked expensive before free agency — now looks like a steal |
| Kendrick Bourne | Cardinals | 2y / $10M | Depth WR |
| George Pickens | Cowboys | Franchise Tag | $27.3M |
Before free agency opened, Wan’Dale Robinson’s four-year $78M deal with Tennessee raised plenty of eyebrows. That price tag for a smaller slot receiver initially sounded aggressive.
Then Indianapolis dropped $114 million on Alec Pierce — and suddenly Robinson’s contract looks like one of the better value deals of the offseason. Compared to the Pierce extension, Robinson’s deal now feels almost conservative.
If there’s one group celebrating this deal more than anyone, it’s the agent community. Every player in the league probably saw the Pierce contract and immediately picked up the phone to ask one question: “Can you get me Alec Pierce’s agents?”
Pierce is represented by Mike Swenson and CJ LaBoy of Wasserman Football — and after pulling off a market-resetting contract like this, their phones are probably ringing nonstop.
—The Sports Card Hobby Reaction
From a hobby perspective, the contract has collectors paying attention.
Despite Pierce’s massive deal, his rookie card market remains extremely affordable.
Most of his flagship PSA 10 rookie cards still sell for under $50, creating a massive gap between his on-field value and hobby pricing.
—Alec Pierce High-Value Card Leaderboard
- 2022 National Treasures RPA Red Shield 1/1 — ~$1,500
- 2022 National Treasures RPA NFL Shield /3 — ~$1,179
- 2022 Immaculate Shield Auto 1/1 — ~$1,000
- 2022 Mosaic Scripts Auto 1/1 — ~$999
- 2022 Certified NFL Shield Auto RPA 1/1 — ~$999
- 2022 Prizm Black Finite #330 1/1 — ~$835
- 2022 Flawless Rookie Debut Signatures Platinum 1/1 — ~$550
2022 Prizm #330 Parallel Scarcity
- Black Finite — 1/1
- Gold Vinyl — /5
- Green Shimmer — /5
- Green Sparkle — /8
- Gold — /10
- Gold Shimmer — /10
- Forest Camo — /15
- Navy Camo — /25
- Blue Shimmer — /25
- Red Shimmer — /35
- Purple Power — /49
- Orange Wave — /60
- Green Scope — /75
- Blue Ice — /99
- Hyper — /175
Mass-Produced Rookie Card Values
For most collectors, Alec Pierce cards come from high-print rookie releases like Prizm, Donruss, and Donruss Optic.
- 2022 Panini Prizm #330 PSA 10 — $31–$43
- 2022 Donruss #321 Rated Rookie PSA 10 — ~$33
- 2022 Donruss Optic #221 PSA 10 — $30–$45
Raw versions of these cards remain extremely cheap:
- Donruss Rated Rookie — $0.27–$1.50
- Prizm Base — ~$1
- Donruss Optic Base — $0.46–$2
- Absolute Base — ~$1.49
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Alec Pierce the highest-paid receiver ever?He is the highest-paid free-agent wide receiver in NFL history based on average annual salary.
What are Alec Pierce rookie cards worth?Most PSA 10 rookie cards sell between $30 and $45, while ultra-rare 1/1 cards have sold around $1,000–$1,500.
Will Alec Pierce cards increase in value?If Pierce produces consistent WR1 numbers in Indianapolis, demand for his rookie cards could increase significantly.
—Final Take
The Colts just reset the wide receiver market.
Whether this becomes one of the smartest contracts in NFL history or a massive overpay remains to be seen.
From a sports card perspective, however, the opportunity is obvious.
If Pierce truly becomes a long-term WR1 and posts another 1,000-yard season, the gap between his contract hype and rookie card prices could close quickly.
So the real question becomes simple:
Are you selling into the hype… or buying before the breakout?






