Month: January 2025

Poll: Titans’ Options With No. 2 Overall Pick

According to most reports, Florida State quarterback Jameis Winston is a near-lock to be selected by the Buccaneers with the first overall pick in the NFL draft later this month. The more interesting position, then, becomes the No. 2 overall slot, where the Titans will have several options to choose from.

As Bill Barnwell of Grantland recently outlined, the two most plausible picks for Tennessee are probably Oregon quarterback Marcus Mariota and USC defensive lineman Leonard Williams. Mariota, a potential franchise QB, would signal a shift from incumbent signal-caller Zach Mettenberger, while Williams would pair with Jurrell Casey to form a fearsome defensive line. The Titans could also take a look at edge rushers Dante Fowler Jr. and Vic Beasley, and though it’s unlikely the club selects a receiver, Amari Cooper or Kevin White might be too talented to pass up.

Of course, Tennessee could also opt to trade the second pick — the Titans’ overall roster is among the league’s worst, so acquiring a bevy of picks in exchange for the No. 2 selection could be the most advantageous route. Specifically, a team looking to move up for Mariota could be willing to part with a haul of picks, and the Titans would probably be willing to entertain offers.

So what do you think? Will the Titans be loathe to pass up a chance at Mariota? Will they add another piece to their defense? Or will they trade the pick? Vote below!

Dolphins Notes: Crabtree, Ridley, Gore, Skrine

Free agent receiver Michael Crabtree turned down approximately $3MM from the Dolphins, according to Barry Jackson of the Miami Herald, who adds that Crabtree is seeking at least $4.5MM. We had heard that Miami was interested in the former 49er, and it appears as though they had serious enough interest to offer a contract. The 27-year-old Crabtree is reportedly in no rush to sign, but he will head to Oakland this week to meet with the Raiders.

Let’s check out some more Dolphins notes, all courtesy of Jackson…

  • Running back Stevan Ridley‘s visit with the Dolphins was simply “exploratory,” writes Jackson, but Miami has not ruled out signing the free agent. Ridley is coming off a torn ACL, so the club was presumably checking out his medicals.
  • Oklahoma defensive tackle prospect Jordan Phillips met with the Dolphins last week, reports Jackson, who points out that Miami probably isn’t in need on interior defensive line help given the presence of Ndamukong Suh and Earl Mitchell, among others. Phillips ranks as the fifth-best available defensive tackle according to the NFL Network’s Mike Mayock.
  • Miami showed “some interest” in running back Frank Gore, but not as much as some other clubs, Gore told Jackson. The 31-year-old Gore added that he would have liked to team with current Fin running back Lamar Miller, who like Gore is a University of Miami product.
  • One of the Dolphins’ top targets on defense was cornerback Buster Skrine, but the defensive back ultimately chose the Jets over Miami.

Bobby Wagner To Command $8MM+ Annually?

While the Seahawks have inked defensive end Cliff Avril and outside linebacker K.J. Wright to extensions in recent months, the club still has another key defensive contributor — middle linebacker Bobby Wagner — set to play on an expiring contract. Entering the final year of his rookie deal, Wagner is in line for a multi-year pact, and John Clayton of ESPN told Brock and Salk of 710 ESPN that the 24-year-old could command between $8MM and $10MM per season on a fresh contract.

According to Clayton, Wagner could conceivably garner a $10MM AAV even without hitting free agency, meaning Seattle would be willing to pay a high price to retain its inside ‘backer. Such a price tag would make Wagner the highest-paid ILB, as the current top earner — New England’s Jerod Mayo — averages $9.7MM per season. If Wagner were to settle for $8MM, the low end of Clayton’s estimate, he would still place among the top five highest-paid inside linebackers.

It’s hard to argue that Wagner isn’t worth the money, as the former second-round pick has been a key cog in the center of Seattle’s defense since his entry into the NFL in 2012. He’s started 40 games during his first three seasons, averaging about 86 tackles per year during that span. In 2014, he graded as the league’s fifth-best inside linebacker, according to Pro Football Focus (subscription required), rating as the No. 2 ILB against the run. Wagner also (somewhat infamously) earned one vote for 2014 NFL MVP, courtesy of former NFL head coach Tony Dungy.

We heard last week that the Seahawks will try to hammer out an extension with Wagner before the 2015 season begins, so if mid-September is their deadline, the club certainly has time to work out an agreement. Of course, Seattle has a larger priority on its plate, as quarterback Russell Wilson is also eligible for a long-term deal.

West Notes: LA, Chargers, Broncos, Cardinals

With several NFL teams (including the Chargers) interested in moving to Los Angeles, Nick Canepa of the San Diego Union-Tribune looks at the concept of relocation fees, the money that a club will have to pay to the league in exchange for changing cities. Per Canepa, the owners haven’t formalized the price tag of moving just yet, but he hears that it could be anywhere from $250MM to $500MM. As Mike Florio of Pro Football Talk explains, commissioner Roger Goodell has the “discretion to adjust the transfer free based on the NFL’s interest in encouraging the move or discouraging the move,” so if the league is in favor of a team moving to LA, the fee could conceivably be (relatively) modest.

Let’s take a look at some more notes from the West divisions:

  • In an in-depth piece on teams’ departures effect on cities, Jonathan Horn of the San Diego Union-Tribune reports cities that lose teams pay more to bring football back than keeping their existing franchises. Houston, which lost the Oilers after the 1996 season, topped the list in paying $519MM to spawn the Texans. St. Louis, Baltimore, Cleveland and Houston averaged just more than $225MM in costs for their respective new stadiums. So while a club like the Chargers could vacate its home city, its conceivable that San Diego fans could yearn for an NFL return in due time.
  • The Broncos made it a priority to bring in players who were familiar with new head coach Gary Kubiak‘s offensive scheme, a strategy that is especially evident along the offensive line, writes Jeff Legwold of ESPN.com. Center Gino Gradkowski and guard Shelley Smith, acquired via trade and free agency respectively, each have a history with both Kubiak and offensive coordinator Rick Dennison.
  • With this year’s draft less than four weeks away, Josh Weinfuss of ESPN.com examines who could be available to the Cardinals with the 24th pick, noting that the club could be in a position to take the best player available. Weinfuss points to Stanford tackle Andrus Peat and Kentucky edge rusher Bud Dupree as logical candidates for Arizona.

Sam Robinson contributed to this post.

Extra Points: Crabtree, Ridley, Bears

The Dolphins were willing to pay Michael Crabtree close to $3MM to suit up in aqua this season, but the longtime 49ers receiver sought “at least” $4.5MM per year, reports Barry Jackson of the Miami Herald.

After seeking more than $9MM per campaign, Crabtree’s visiting the Raiders in hopes of salvaging some kind of value from what’s been an anti-climactic offseason from the inconsistent wideout. Crabtree earned at least $4.5MM in salary and bonuses the past five seasons.

Some additional news from Miami and the rest of the NFL on Saturday night …

  • Although the Dolphins’ summit with Stevan Ridley was merely exploratory, the team hasn’t ruled out signing the ex-Patriots running back, reports Jackson. Ridley, who is recovering from knee surgery and is one of many starting-caliber backs still in free agency, is reported to be down to the Jets and Fins for his next destination.
  • The Dolphins also showed “some interest” in bringing Colts signee Frank Gore back to Miami, but the longtime 49ers bruiser told Jackson multiple teams beat out the Dolphins’ pursuit level.
  • Jackson lists Buster Skrine, a Jets acquisition on a relatively big contract, as a player who the Dolphins coveted but one who declined their offer.
  • Oklahoma defensive tackle Jordan Phillips visited Miami last week, adds Jackson. The Dolphins are intrigued by the Sooner talent’s potential despite landing Ndamukong Suh and housing several young players who are currently in their good graces.
  • With starter-level safeties Antrel Rolle and Ryan Mundy among the three back-line defenders on the Bears‘ roster, the team plans to address the position after the early rounds of the draft, writes Adam Jahns of the Chicago Sun-Times. Jahns mentioned Cody Prewitt (Ole Miss), Nick Perry (Alabama) and Northwestern’s Ibraheim Campbell as players the Bears have studied as possible fits.
  • Interior defensive line help also intrigues the Bears, reports Jahns, as they lost Stephen Paea to Washington. As they transition to the 3-4, the Bears are chock full of size outside, with Ray McDonald recently added as a five-technique end and Pernell McPhee arriving as a 280-pound linebacker. Interestingly, Jahns includes 300-pound Lamarr Houston, signed to a lucrative deal last year as a 4-3 run-stopping end, as an outside backer, which would be a unique experiment.
  • The Ravens will host Kansas free safety Cassius Sendish on a visit April 21, reports Aaron Wilson of the Baltimore Sun. A Waldorf, Md., native and potential late-round draft pick, Sendish will visit his hometown team’s facilities during the team’s day designated for local prospect meetings.

Colts Notes: O-Line, Carter, Mathis

Let’s touch on some Colts news as the week winds down.

  • When the Colts reconvene in just more than two weeks for OTAs, Khaled Holmes will get the first crack at the starting center spot, writes Kevin Bowen for Colts.com. Holmes started the Colts’ final two regular-season games and each of their three playoff contests despite only seeing action in five regular-season games last year, with the fourth-rounder holding his own in his crunch-time cameos. Indianapolis, which went through three centers last year and lost one in A.Q. Shipley to the Cardinals, will use Jonotthan Harrison (10 games as a starter last season) as the primary competition for Holmes — a 2013 fourth-rounder.
  • Bowen does not see CFL signee Duron Carter pushing potential breakout performer Donte Moncrief for snaps this season despite the southbound prospect’s 6-foot-5, 209-pound frame and solid Canadian numbers. But Bowen adds Carter is a prospect that could play a role down the line, although Andre Johnson‘s arrival will make it difficult for regular snaps in 2015.
  • Robert Mathis conceded his rehab from the season-ending Achilles ailment isn’t going as well as he’d hoped, per an interview with Alex Marvez and Bill Polian on SiriusXM Radio (audio link).
  • The free agency exits of Cory Redding and Ricky Jean-Francois vacate spots for younger talents, with Montori Hughes and Zach Kerr looking like the primary beneficiaries as of now, reports Bowen. Although with Kendall Langford (112 straight starts) signing and Arthur Jones due back from injury, the duo may still be relegated to backup responsibilities but could serve as key depth pieces.

Saturday Mailbags: Paea, Manziel, Titans

More from the designated mailbag day from the NFL media. Some notes from Washington, Cleveland and Tennessee rumblings from ESPN’s John Keim, the Cleveland Plain Dealer’s Mary Kay Cabot and ESPN’s Paul Kuharsky, respectively.

  • In signing two players who started as 4-3 defensive tackles for their former teams last season, Washington must relocate one of them in their 3-4 look, writes Keim. Before either Terrance Knighton or Stephen Paea will put on a red and gold jersey, Paea appears to be the one on the move. The former Bears defensive tackle will slide to end as Knighton, at more than 340 pounds, is expected to clog the A gap. Paea will be expected to rush from inside on passing downs, however, with Knighton coming off the field in many of those scenarios as he did in Denver last season. Keim said Jason Hatcher, Ricky Jean-Francois or Chris Baker will spell Knighton on passing downs.
  • Keim is uncertain why Washington, which pursued Derek Newton before he re-signed with the Texans and eventual Jaguars signee Jermey Parnell, hasn’t made a push to sign Joe BarksdaleThe Rams right tackle’s initial asking price reportedly surprised Jeff Fisher, but Keim expects Barksdale to be back in St. Louis next season. Keim lists right tackle, where unsigned free agent Tyler Polumbus and Tom Compton struggled last season, as the team’s biggest pre-draft offensive need.
  • Despite rumors out of Cleveland earlier this week that the Browns‘ intent was to move on from Johnny Manziel, Cabot does not expect that to occur after just seven quarters of NFL quarterbacking experience. Manziel, still in rehab despite his recent golf outing (Twitter link), is expected to be given a chance to prove his tools can translate in a run-oriented offense despite evidence to the contrary last year. Per Cabot, Manziel progressed under new quarterbacks coach Kevin O’Connell in preparing for the draft last year, furthering the belief the Browns intend on giving him another chance.
  • Cabot estimates a trade up for Marcus Mariota could cost the Browns three first-round picks. Cleveland owns selections 12 and 19 this year. Defensive lineman Danny Shelton will be a target for the Browns at No. 12 after they ranked last in the league in run stoppage in 2014, according to Cabot.
  • The Titans drafting a running back in the second round doesn’t make sense to Kuharsky, considering the team’s previous second-round investment in Bishop Sankey, the first back off the board last year.

NFC Rumors: Eagles, Panthers, Moore

With Chip Kelly now overseeing personnel decisions, the Eagles have probably had the NFL’s most interesting offseason. There is considerable risk and potentially some reckless methodology involved with the splashy maneuvers the franchise made, writes the Philadelphia Inquirer’s Jeff McLane.

McLane asserts the Eagles overbid in splurges for Byron Maxwell (six years, $63MM) and DeMarco Murray (4/$40MM) with other suitors not willing to come within $2MM AAV in Maxwell’s case or, with the exception of the Raiders, backing off well shy of the Eagles’ new commitment figure to Murray.

Also acquiring injury-riddled veterans Ryan Mathews, Sam Bradford, Walter Thurmond and Miles Austin, the Eagles went against conventional logic perhaps banking on their sports-science practices can benefit their new talents, adds McLane. But in the latter duo’s cases, the contracts didn’t seem to be commensurate with the recent production, thus negating some of the value typically associated with signing injured players, writes McLane.

Thurmond (one year, $3.25MM), who missed last season with a torn pectoral muscle, received almost the same amount he did from the Giants last March when he was coming off a healthier campaign and Austin bound for Philadelphia on a one-year deal worth $2.3MM ($1MM fully guaranteed) fresh off years headlined by injuries and borderline irrelevance compared to his previous work.

With 1,000-yard+ rushing seasons in both of his odd-year seasons (2011 and 2013) and season-defining maladies in his past two odd-year campaigns, Mathews received a bit of an injury-reduced salary, however, at three years and $11MM.

Let’s let it play out,” Eagles owner Jeffrey Lurie said to McLane. “I think with any coach, you need patience, you need vision, you need to let them gamble and fail, and gamble and succeed, because the last thing you want to do is make a coach risk-averse.”

Elsewhere around the NFC …

  • The Panthers‘ projected depth chart, according to the Charlotte Observer’s Joseph Person, has an open slot at No. 2 receiver behind 2014 No. 1 draft choice Kelvin Benjamin. Person slotted newly signed wideouts Ted Ginn and Jarrett Boykin with holdover Jericho Cotchery at the Nos. 3, 4 and 5 slots, respectively, and also left the starting cornerback position across from Josh Norman vacant for a late-arriving free agent. Michael Oher is positioned at left tackle, a role he’s only played for one full (2010) despite the literary and cinematic depictions of his pre-NFL life there.
  • Acquiring Ginn, Boykin and Oher, the latter two coming off disappointing seasons, represent the Panthers’ biggest gains this offseason, according to Person. The Panthers reporter listed defensive end, corner and running back as positions in need of upgrades heading into the draft, with Bene Benwikere‘s size (5-foot-11), Jonathan Stewart‘s durability and Kony Ealy‘s progression as charted concerns at those spots.
  • Sterling Moore briefly considered returning to the Cowboys before signing with the Buccaneers, according to an interview with Alex Marvez and Zig Fracassi on Sirius XM Radio (audio link). But the Cowboys left the corner feeling “kind of disrespected” after not electing to tender him as a restricted free agent this offseason despite a productive 2014 season.

Minor Moves: Saturday

We’ll keep track of today’s minor moves right here, with the most recent transactions added to the top of the list…

  • Fullback Bradie Ewing announced his retirement via Twitter after three seasons. The 25-year-old Ewing played for the Falcons in 2012 and 2013 after arriving in Atlanta as a fifth-round pick. The Wisconsin product sustained a season-ending wrist injury as a member of the Jaguars last season, and the Jags waived him earlier this week.
  • Steelers cornerback Antwon Blake signed his one-year, $1.54MM tender on Friday, according to Mark Kaboly of the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review. The 24-year-old finished last season with career-highs in tackles (42), forced fumbles (one) and interceptions (one). The Steelers still have two unsigned restricted free agents, fullback Will Johnson and safety Robert Golden.

AFC Links: Odrick, Lewis, Dareus, Titans

Deploying just seven position players that received positive grades from Pro Football Focus last season, the Jaguars have a steep climb back to contention. The fulcrum of that attempted ascent, however, could reside on their defensive front, with talent returning and incoming.

Two of the aforementioned septet came on the defensive line, Sen’Derrick Marks and Ryan Davis, and high-priced supplement Jared Odrick, who signed a five-year, $42.5MM contract on Day 2 of free agency, will add to this unit in a specific role, writes Ryan O’Halloran of the Florida Times-Union.

Jags defensive line coach Todd Wash expects to plug Odrick at their 4B spot, which is the bigger of the two defensive ends in Jacksonville’s 4-3 scheme, according to O’Halloran. Odrick played defensive tackle in the Dolphins’ 4-3 alignment last season and rated as PFF’s 19th-best interior lineman (subscription required) — two slots behind Marks. Odrick’s last season as a 4-3 end (2012), however, marked his worst as a pro. His previous work as an outside starter in a 3-4 scheme (2011) resulted in a career-best six sacks, half of which came in coverage, per O’Halloran.

Marks and Davis’ success came almost exclusively inside, making the edge a priority. The Jaguars could have their pick of ends Dante Fowler Jr. or Leonard Williams at No. 3 overall, depending on Marcus Mariota‘s potential to go at No. 2, providing a significant starting point in their rebuild.

  • Fowler will reportedly visit Jacksonville this week after his pro day in Gainesville, Fla., reports O’Halloran. The Jags probably won’t use all of their 30 permitted player visits but could exercise 20 of those meetings, O’Halloran reports.
  • Using Dashon Goldson‘s recent trade where the Bucs agreed to pick up the safety’s $4MM signing bonus in 2015 as he suits up for Washington, O’Halloran suggests this method as a way to make Marcedes Lewis a movable commodity for a potential late-round pick. No longer the starting tight end after the Jags signed Julius Thomas, Lewis is slated to count $8.2MM against the cap this year as Thomas accounts for $10.3MM of it — a league-high amount at the position, making the current arrangement unlikely to last.
  • In addition to a report earlier this week regarding Marcell Dareus‘ potential extension with the Bills, ESPN’s Josina Anderson hears the team will address this after the draft, although no offer has been sent yet (Twitter link).
  • The Titans could trade down if they don’t envision Mariota leading their offense or Williams chasing signal-callers, and The Tennesseean’s Jim Wyatt speculates wide-receiving help could arrive in that scenario in the form of Amari Cooper, Kevin White or DeVante Parker. ESPN’s Todd McShay has that trio going off the boardat Nos. 3, 7 and 10, respectively, in his latest mock draft (subscription required). The Titans selected current starter Kendall Wright in the first round in 2012.
  • While listing wideout, running back and starting right tackle as the team’s biggest needs, Wyatt envisions one of the top backs, Todd Gurley or Melvin Gordon, as Titans targets at No. 34.