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Matt Slauson takes pay cut, wins starting job

Miami Dolphins v New York Jets

EAST RUTHERFORD, NJ - OCTOBER 17: Mark Sanchez #6 of the New York Jets celebrates his touchdown in the second quarter with teammate Matt Slauson #68 while playing against the Miami Dolphins at MetLife Stadium on October 17, 2011 in East Rutherford, New Jersey. (Photo by Nick Laham/Getty Images)

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The Jets ended a competition for the starting left guard job on Wednesday.

Coach Rex Ryan said that Matt Slauson will retain the job after getting a challenge from Vladimir Ducasse this offseason. Given the timing of the announcment, it doesn’t seem like Ducasse put up much of a fight. That might not be all there was to the decision the Jets were making, however.

Jenny Vrentas of the Newark Star-Ledger reports that Slauson recently agreed to take a pay cut for the 2012 season. He was due to make $1.308 million this season, but will now earn $1.05 million in fully guaranteed salary. Slauson, a 2010 sixth-round pick, was originally slated to make $565,000 this season but he earned escalators in his rookie year that pushed things up to a more robust number.

It’s not too much of a jump to see the relationship between the two things. Players don’t tend to take pay cuts unless they run the risk of losing their roster spots, so the loss of $258,000 likely bought Slauson another year on the Jets roster. With his presence assured, the Jets could halt a competition that always seemed like a stretch based on the way Ducasse played when forced into action last season.