Money for Jaguars and Colts Players in 2026

2026年美洲豹與小馬球員的薪金


Introduction

This report looks at how much money two football teams pay their players in 2026.

本報告將分析兩支美式足球隊在 2026 年支付給球員的薪金金額。

Main Body

The Jacksonville Jaguars pay $33.115 million to their wide receivers. This is 10.9% of their total money. They pay less because some players are new. These new players have cheap contracts.

傑克森維爾美洲豹隊支付給其外接手 3,311.5 萬美元。這佔其總支出的 10.9%。由於部分球員為新進人員,因此支付金額較低。這些新球員簽署的是低價合約。

Jakobi Meyers has a new contract. He gets $6.2 million now. But he will get more money in 2027. Other new players cost less than $1 million.

Jakobi Meyers 擁有一份新合約。他目前的薪金為 620 萬美元。但他在 2027 年將獲得更多薪金。其他新球員的成本則低於 100 萬美元。

The Indianapolis Colts pay $11.682 million to their tight ends. This is 3.8% of their total money. This is a low number for the league.

印地安那波利斯小馬隊支付給其近端線鋒 1,168.2 萬美元。這佔其總支出的 3.8%。這在整個聯盟中屬於較低的數字。

Tyler Warren and Will Mallory are new players. They have cheap contracts. Other players have short contracts for only one year. This helps the team save money.

Tyler Warren 與 Will Mallory 是新球員。他們簽署的是低價合約。其他球員則簽署僅一年的短期合約。這有助於球隊節省開支。

Conclusion

Both teams use new players and short contracts to save money.

兩支球隊均利用新球員與短期合約來節省開支。

Vocabulary Learning

💸 Talking about Money & Cost

In this text, we see a very useful pattern for A2 students: how to describe price and cost using simple verbs.

1. The Verb 'Pay' We use pay when a person or a team gives money to someone else.

  • The Jaguars pay $33.115 million.
  • The Colts pay $11.682 million.

2. The Verb 'Cost' We use cost to describe the price of a thing or a person's contract.

  • New players cost less than $1 million.

3. The Verb 'Get' In casual English, we use get instead of receive.

  • He gets $6.2 million now.

Quick Guide for A2 Learners:

WordUse it when...Example
PayYou give money \toI pay for coffee.
CostSomething has a price \toThe book costs $10.
GetYou receive money \toI get a salary.

Vocabulary Boost:

  • Cheap \to Low price (Opposite: Expensive)
  • Save money \to To keep money for later.

Vocabulary Learning

report (n.)
A piece of writing that gives information about something
Example:I read a report about the football teams.
total (adj.)
The whole amount of something
Example:The total cost of the car was very high.
contract (n.)
A legal agreement between two people or groups
Example:The player signed a new contract for three years.
cheap (adj.)
Something that does not cost a lot of money
Example:This shirt was very cheap, only five dollars.
league (n.)
A group of sports teams that play against each other
Example:The team is the best in the league this year.
save (v.)
To keep money for the future instead of spending it
Example:I save money every month for a new phone.
Practice A2 words in a crossword