GLENDALE, Ariz. — The Arizona Cardinals found gold in the desert. When Marvin Harrison Jr. went down with appendicitis and a lingering heel injury last fall, a massive void opened in the offense. Michael Wilson didn’t just step up; he kicked the door off the hinges. The third-year wideout hauled in 78 receptions for 1,006 yards and seven touchdowns, proving he can carry the load of a true No. 1 target. Now, as the 2026 league year looms on March 11, general manager Monti Ossenfort faces a multimillion-dollar question.
Earning the Payday
Wilson enters the final year of his four-year rookie deal. Thanks to the NFL’s Proven Performance Escalator—a CBA mechanism rewarding draft picks who outplay their draft slots—his 2026 salary skyrockets to nearly $3.9 million, carrying a cap hit of roughly $4.1 million. The Stanford product earned every penny. He torched secondaries down the stretch, scoring touchdowns in five consecutive games to close out the 2025 campaign. Defensive coordinators adjusted, but Wilson kept eating. You could almost feel the tension in State Farm Stadium turn to pure electricity every time Kyler Murray looked his way on third down.
“I knew what I could do. When Marvin went down, the offense needed someone to move the chains. I just demanded the ball and let my preparation take over. We have something lethal building here.”
— Michael Wilson, Cardinals Wide Receiver
Playoff Implications / What’s Next
Arizona boasts a terrifying trio heading into the 2026 season. A healthy Harrison, an ascending Wilson, and elite tight end Trey McBride give this offense frightening potential. But financial realities bite hard. The Cardinals must decide whether to extend Wilson now or make him play out the final year of his rookie pact.
Training camp will ignite a fierce battle. Wilson has a legitimate chance to unseat Harrison as the pure ‘X’ receiver. If he replicates his 2025 production, his asking price will explode well beyond the $20 million annual mark, putting immense pressure on the front office to lock him down before the wide receiver market resets again.

