Carson Wentz is somewhere smiling today, and it’s not because he might be a week away from returning to his place under center for the Eagles.

Wentz must be ecstatic because another top-tier quarterback just reset the market. Aaron Rodgers and the Green Bay Packers today agreed to a record-breaking four-year, $134 million contract extension that could be worth up to $180 million, according to ESPN’s Adam Schefter.

The extension includes nearly $103 million total in guarantees — with an annual average value of $33.5 million, according to Schefter. In May, Falcons quarterback Matt Ryan signed a five-year, $150 million contract with $100 million guaranteed.

Ryan’s contract dwarfed Jimmy Garoppolo’s five-year, $132 million deal (with $41.7 million guaranteed) with the 49ers as the largest in NFL history in terms of total compensation — while also replacing Kirk Cousins’ three-year, fully guaranteed $84 million deal with the Vikings as the deal with the most guaranteed money.

Wentz is under contract through 2019, and the Eagles hold a fifth-year option that would pay him close to $30 million, which will be the average of the top 10 highest-paid QBs in the league. If the Eagles choose to franchise-tag him in 2021, he’d make the average of the top five players at his position.

The Eagles can sign Wentz to a new long-term deal after this season if they so choose to, and Wentz will warrant a deal that pays him between $30 million $34 million annually, or close to the top five earners at his position.

Wentz, who now makes about $6.7 million per year on his rookie deal, is the 26th-highest-paid quarterback in the league. But those days are numbered. Wentz’s delight will only increase if a bigger contract than Rodgers’ comes along. That could go to Seahawks’ Russell Wilson, whose deal expires after the 2019 season.