ASHBURN, Va. -- Washington Commanders wide receiver Terry McLaurin, frustrated with negotiations on a contract extension, has requested a trade, a source told ESPN's Adam Schefter on Thursday.
With the sides far apart, McLaurin held out for the first four days of training camp before reporting Sunday. There has been no movement toward a new deal, one source said.
McLaurin became a hold-in and was placed on the physically unable to perform list with an apparent ankle injury suffered last season, though he participated in spring workouts. By reporting, McLaurin could no longer be fined $50,000 per day.
After practice each day, McLaurin has appeared on the field and signed autographs for fans, many of whom have chanted his name. One young fan asked him Sunday if he had been signed; McLaurin laughed and told him he was funny. McLaurin would sign autographs for nearly 30 minutes then return to the building.
Team sources have said multiple times that the Commanders won't trade McLaurin. It's uncertain what interest he will draw from teams, knowing they would have to surrender a package that tempts the Commanders and then pay him more than $30 million per year.
"You'd like to get these things done quicker, but it doesn't always happen that way," Washington general manager Adam Peters said on the day players reported to camp. "Whatever happens along the way, just understand he's a great player and we want to keep him here."
McLaurin first expressed frustration and disappointment about the negotiations to reporters July 15, saying he would not step back onto the field until there was "progression" toward a deal. McLaurin has one year left on a three-year, $68 million extension he signed in 2022. Peters said last week that the sides have talked, but there has been no momentum.
A sticking point has been McLaurin's age. He would be 31 when an extension begins, an age when teams are reluctant to pay big money for receivers.
Last year, two older receivers signed extensions. At age 30, Miami's Tyreek Hill signed a three-year extension for $30 million per year with $52.535 million guaranteed -- but he was coming off consecutive seasons gaining at least 1,700 yards. At 31, Tampa Bay's Mike Evans signed a two-year deal for $41 million with $35 million guaranteed. Evans had caught 46 touchdown passes over the previous four seasons before the extension.
Earlier this week, Denver signed wide receiver Courtland Sutton, who turns 30 in October, to a four-year, $92 million contract with $41 million guaranteed.
Several other notable wide receivers signed long-term deals this offseason, including the Bengals' Tee Higgins (four years, $115 million with $40.9 million guaranteed), the Steelers' DK Metcalf (four years, $132 million, $60 million guaranteed) and the Jets' Garrett Wilson (four years, $130 million, $90 million guaranteed).
McLaurin is two years older than Metcalf, but they were in the same 2019 draft class. Their stats are comparable. Metcalf has caught 438 career passes for 6,324 yards and 48 touchdowns. McLaurin has caught 460 passes for 6,379 yards and 38 touchdowns. But crossing that age 30 line has become a deterrent toward receiving a similar or even better deal.
McLaurin has a base salary of $15.5 million this season with a cap hit of $25.5 million. He is coming off a career-best 13-touchdown season, with 12 of them thrown by quarterback Jayden Daniels. McLaurin has surpassed 1,000 yards for a franchise-record five seasons -- with a high of 1,191 in 2022 -- and has been one of the team's most popular players since entering the NFL.
"You're dealing with a really good player and really good person," Peters said July 22, "and you never lose sight of that and make sure every conversation you have is very straightforward and in good faith and keeping that mindset throughout ... understanding our goal is to get a deal done."
Multiple wide receivers have requested trades in recent years, including McLaurin's teammate Deebo Samuel, whose second request was granted by San Francisco this offseason. But the 49ers ignored his first one in 2022. Other wide receivers who have requested trades in recent years include Cincinnati's Higgins and the 49ers' Brandon Aiyuk. Both eventually signed extensions.