Month: December 2024

Poll: What Should Tom Brady’s Suspension Be?

When Tom Brady was handed his four-game suspension, all signs pointed to the four-time Super Bowl Champion being guilty, even if there was some surprise to the severity of the penalties associated with DeflateGate.

However, since the suspension was announced, a lot has happened that may have changed the public opinion on the subject. Brady predictably appealed the suspension, and although the NFLPA asked Roger Goodell to recuse himself from the hearing, the commissioner refused.

When Brady and Roger sit down together on Tuesday, it will be with a load of new information since the Wells Report was released. In the past week, both the American Enterprise Institute and Science Now have published lengthy reports that have raised doubt in the accuracy and focus of Ted Wells’ findings, providing Brady’s case with reasonable doubt from a scientific and procedure standpoint.

Of course, that doesn’t nullify the evidence Wells collected via text message, video, and interviews during his investigation.

Of course, not many fans and pundits expect the appeal hearing with Goodell to completely exonerate the reigning Super Bowl MVP, but Brady could still see his suspension reduced to two games. If that happens, and especially if it stays at four, Brady and the NFLPA will have the option to further a pursue an appeal in court.

Either way, it should be interesting to see how this turns out for both Brady and the league.

In light of all the information we have now, how long should Brady’s suspension be?

NFC Mailbags: Newman, Norman, Bucs, Reed, Cowboys

Our own Sam Robinson took you through some of the AFC Mailbags earlier today. Now to give the NFC some love, here are a few of the mailbags from that other conference:

  • The Vikings have been going with youth across the roster, and the secondary has been no exception with Xavier Rhodes and Trae Waynes slated to start on the outside. However, the team also signed 37-year-old corner Terence Newman to bring a veteran presence in the secondary, according to Ben Goessling of ESPN.com. Newman should take a little pressure of Waynes to be effective from day one.
  • The Panthers will definitely put a lot of focus into extending Luke Kuechly, but David Newton of ESPN.com expects that to come next offseason. Josh Norman is entering the final year of his rookie deal, and after performing well for the team he should be a priority for an extension.
  • Pat Yasinskas of ESPN.com is guessing starters in his latest Buccaneers mailbag. He picks George Johnson and Jacquies Smith, Danny Lansanah as their third linebacker, and D.J. Swearinger over Chris Conte at safety.
  • Kyle Van Noy and Theo Riddick are a pair of players that have uncertain roles for the Lions in 2015. Van Noy could earn a starting job at linebacker, but won’t see starter’s snaps due to the likely reliance on nickel and dime packages, according to Mike Rothstein of ESPN.com. Riddick will also likely be an afterthough at running back, but should have ample opportunities to catch passes out of the backfield and in the slot.
  • With Jordan Reed‘s injuries, Washington could have used help at tight end either in free agency or the draft, writes John Keim of ESPN.com. While it is surprising, it means the team has confidence in Niles Paul, and believes contributions from the receivers and running backs catching passes could help them survive without Reed for some time.
  • In our lone entry from a non-ESPN writer, Bob Sturm of the Dallas Morning News writes that with the versatility of Byron Jones and Corey White in the secondary, the Cowboys defense could give some very creative looks in 2015. Both players are nominally corners, but each has the ability to play safety as well, and that could let the team mix and match in the defensive backfield.

Minicamp Notes: Texans, Bengals, Browns, Lions

As minicamps break, beat writers love to write (and we all love to read) quick notes about players and position groups who are either surprising or disappointing us.

Here are a few links to some of the best stories and observations coming out of minicamps from around the league:

  • The Texans minicamp has completed, and John McClain of the Houton Chronicle notes that Brian Cushing, Jadaveon Clowney, and Louis Nix all should contribute in 2015. McClain also picks Brian Hoyer as the best chance to start, although he writes that Ryan Mallett has terrific upside.
  • The Bengals didn’t get immediate returns from A.J. McCarron after drifting him on Day 3 in 2014, but he is impressing the coaching staff this offseason. The team says he is developing into a starting-quality quarterback, according to Chris Wesseling of NFL.com. However, while he isn’t an immediate threat to take the starting job, the perennially underwhelming Andy Dalton could be on a shorter leash if the coaching staff has faith in McCarron.
  • Mary Kay Cabot of Cleveland.com gives her five takeaways from Browns’ minicamp, including the how good the offensive line and secondary should be, Josh McCown emerging as the clear starter at quarterback, Johnny Manziel still being a work in progress, and the lack of a go-to receiver on the roster.
  • Two players on the Lions who might contribute more than expected are rookie runing back Ameer Abdullah and second-year defensive tackle Caraun Reid, writes Dave Birkett of the Detroit Free Press. The team comes out of minicamp high on both players, as well as their secondary, but may add a veteran tackle at some point, according to Birkett.

Extension Candidate: Malik Jackson

One of the more intriguing players to suit up for the Broncos’ defense in recent years, Malik Jackson has a similarly interesting case for long-term employment in Denver.

Aside from Von Miller, finding a performer who’s made more flash plays on that unit the past two seasons than Jackson is difficult, but whether he’s a cornerstone talent like Miller on that defense is a layered case and depends largely on how Jackson is used in his contract year.

The Broncos have opted to unleash their hybrid performer in spurts during the past two seasons, and the results give the former fifth-round pick in 2012 an obvious case for an integral role in this season’s defense.

Jackson’s performance is hard to question, and the former Tennessee and USC cog’s eventual second contract will be one of the interesting test cases for Pro Football Focus.

Jackson managed a strange feat that will make him valuable if/when he hits free agency next March: he managed to be a top-12 player at both defensive tackle and defensive end in successive seasons on PFF’s advanced metrics without the team undergoing a scheme change.

From his six sacks in 2013 playing primarily as a 4-3 3-technique tackle to his three last season in an off-the-bench role spelling DeMarcus Ware and 2012 draft class companion Derek Wolfe at end, Jackson was rated as the 12th- and third-best player (subscription required) at his respective positions despite playing just 52.7 and 52.3% of Denver’s snaps in those campaigns. His 578 snaps last year ranked just 30th among 4-3 defensive ends, more than 400 behind Cameron Jordan‘s position-leading total.

Although Gary Kubiak‘s stated desire to play Jackson plenty due to the flashy plays the new coach has seen on film, the Broncos clearly prefer Jackson as an off-the-bench performer despite the success at each juncture, creating a junction point in his career coming up. Will clearing the 60-snap plateau for the first time in a game deprive him of the energy with which he plays and hamper his ascent?

Denver will now use a 3-4 scheme after Wade Phillips‘ arrival, and this would seemingly benefit the 6-foot-5, 284-pound tweener of sorts, with it requiring a bigger defensive end that can stop the run. With Ware relocating to outside linebacker opposite Miller in this set, it opens up a void for a pass-rusher up front, since Wolfe hasn’t shown much in that department since his rookie season. Jackson could also be used inside in passing-down scenarios this season when Miller and Ware potentially return to three-point stances on the edges, strengthening his case for a hefty second contract.

While Wolfe, who also is a career 4-3 end who will stay up front in a 3-4 alignment this season, excels against the run, Jackson’s showcased a knack for altering both ball-advancement methods. PFF bestowed its third-best run-stoppage grade (for a 4-3 end) upon Jackson last season, and the 25-year-old was the eighth-best pass-rusher in that grouping. Only Michael Bennett was a better multi-dimensional 4-3 end last season, while just J.J. Watt and Sheldon Richardson received higher against-the-pass and against-the-run grades than Jackson.

If Jackson can keep playing at or near the level he’s shown as a second- and third-year player, the Broncos may not be able to afford his fifth.

Demaryius Thomas remains in limbo with the franchise tag looming for his sixth season. If the Broncos do not come to terms on an extension for their Pro Bowl wideout by July 15, the last day franchise players can sign long-term deals, they must reach an accord with Miller to avoid a future without one of them. Unless Miller, who is playing this season on his fifth-year option, receives what would be a monstrous extension in the next nine-plus months, he’ll be in the franchise tag-or-free agency boat with Thomas.

One of them almost certainly will be franchised in 2016, leaving players like Jackson, 2013 tackles leader Danny Trevathan and Wolfe as clear lower-tier priorities despite lengthy statuses in and around the starting lineup. Deadlines generally induce action, and Denver’s re-signed its franchise players in 2012 (Matt Prater) and 2013 (Ryan Clady), which provides hope for a Thomas accord. That would provide some much-needed clarity for the Broncos’ future salary cap situation.

There’s also the matter of Peyton Manning‘s $21.5MM cap figure for 2016 that remains tethered to the Broncos’ plans. Should the 39-year-old quarterback retire, that obviously frees up a lot of money. But whether GM John Elway wants to entrust his team to a still-unknown commodity in Brock Osweiler — also a 2016 free agent despite scant on-field work as Manning’s lanky apprentice — and the low salary that should be attached to him is questionable, meaning potential re-ups for players like Jackson and Trevathan aren’t necessarily improved by a Manning departure after this season.

Plus, with the Broncos opting to splurge on its 2014 free agent class, a move that did yield four Pro Bowlers, instead of second contracts for the bulk of its talented 2011 draft/UDFA contingent (save for Chris Harris, who signed a team-friendly five-year, $42MM deal in December), an interesting build-from-outside methodology has emerged under Elway.

The Broncos largely opted to do the same thing in 2013, with a big free agent balance sheet and a sizable, albeit less-talented, cadre of homegrown players leaving. The second-contract gridlock that’s forthcoming will be an even bigger test for Elway, as Miller and Thomas are top-5 players at their positions.

Miller and, barring a restructure that is certainly in play, Ware could make more than $25MM between them next year. This depends on whether or not Miller is franchised. The Broncos also traded up to take Shane Ray in the first round this year. But Denver hasn’t shied away from bolstering strengths, with Harris re-signing despite Aqib Talib‘s big-money pact and Bradley Roby‘s first-round selection occurring months before.

With a good year, Jackson can aim high, possibly using Pernell McPhee‘s five-year, $38.7MM deal with the Bears as a benchmark. Despite McPhee primarily playing linebacker, his size, versatility and usage rate make him a comparable player, and Jackson probably has a more consistent resume.

If 3-4 defensive end is Jackson’s future, he could find himself on the Jason Hatcher/Desmond Bryant tier that includes an average income of $6.8MM per year. With another production leap in a starting role, it’s not out of the realm of possibility the advanced metrics darling could find himself on the fringe of the class that Jordan, Corey Liuget and Jurrell Casey occupy, with Casey’s $9MM/year serving as that group’s floor.

If that kind of salary demand becomes realistic, the Broncos’ issues with Thomas and Miller will get in the way of making Jackson a long-term part of their defense.

The Broncos not reaching a deal with Demaryius Thomas — as they failed to do last summer with he and Julius Thomas, who bolted for a huge Jaguars offer as a result — would cloud their future with Jackson, now their best defensive lineman and possibly by a large margin. So a future with a long-term deal for their consistent receiver, and a subsequent Miller franchise tag, would be a positive scenario for keeping Jackson in Denver.

Otherwise, with no young depth behind Wolfe and Jackson, the Broncos may have to start over on their defensive front’s edges — as they did at tight end this year, with an inferior talent in Owen Daniels — if these dominoes don’t fall their way.

Photo courtesy USA Today Sports Images

Rams Notes: Gurley, Cignetti, Ross, Fairley

As the St. Louis Rams look to compete in the NFC West and make the playoffs for the first time since 2003, here are a few notes from around the team heading into the summer months:

  • While the Rams hope first-round pick Todd Gurley will be ready to play this season, his contract has language that protects both the player and team in case he is unable to recover from the torn ACL he suffered at Georgia, according to Mike Florio of Pro Football Talk. Even if Gurley is unable to be a part of the active roster in his first two seasons, he will still receive his full salary for both years, but the Rams will be able to get out of the deal if he is unable to recover from his college injury.
  • The Rams will be making changes to the offense this year without Brian Schottenheimer, but they won’t be reinventing the wheel in St. Louis with quarterbacks coach Frank Cignetti as the new offensive coordinator, according to Jim Thomas of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch“It’s like this: Coach Schottenheimer put a tremendous foundation in place here,” said Cignetti. “It’s like buying a house. The foundation’s there. What do you do? ‘Let’s remodel a couple rooms.’ So really that’s what we’ve done.”
  • The Rams have brought in cornerback Aaron Ross for a workout, reports Aaron Wilson of the Baltimore Sun. Ross spent 2014 on injured reserve with the Ravens, but won two Super Bowl rings with the Giants and also spent time with the Jaguars during his NFL career.
  • New addition Nick Fairley is excited for his first season in St. Louis, writes Mark Inabinett of AL.com“I feel good being part of their defense,” said Fairley. “Just the style that they play – attack. It fits my skills, especially the D-line that they have is going to be amazing this year.” He also mentioned that he was planning on bulking up to 290 pounds in order to retain his quickness but still anchor the defensive line against the run.

Science On Brady’s Side In DeflateGate Appeal

A week after the American Enterprise Institute offered their rebuttal of the Ted Wells Report, Tom Brady is getting ammunition for his appeal from another source.

CSNNE.com writes that Rachel Ehrenberg of the Science News has published an article pokes holes in the science of the Wells Report, titled “Deflategate favored foul play over science.” She writes that the Wells Report fails to acknowledge scientific data on the allegedly doctored footballs.

According to Ehrenberg, the findings were “collected so haphazardly that they wouldn’t be allowed in a high school science fair.” The two different gauges differed in their readings by approximately 0.4 PSI, and it isn’t clear which was used before the game because that data was not recorded.

Also, while 11 of 12 Patriot footballs measured below 12.5 PSI at halftime, so did three out the four Colt footballs, according to one of the gauges.

Mike Petraglia of WEEI.com brings up an even more detailed summary of Ehrenberg’s report. Ehrenberg consulted a number of experts to recreate the conditions of the footballs from the night in question. Scientist Michael Naughton, an expert in condensed matters physics, recreated the situation in his lab at Boston College, finding numerous factors that could have led to the significant deflation.

Pittsburgh-based engineering firm HeadSmart labs also investigated the matter. The Wells Report had its experts as well, and Ehrenberg writes that video and text message evidence isn’t refuted by the science, but that Wells did not give the scientific possibility of DeflateGate it’s due.

All of this, plus the AEI report may still not be sufficient to get Brady off the hook for his four-game suspension. Earlier today, we heard from Ben Volin that there is no way Brady’s suspension is revoked, only possibly reduced.

However, all of these rebuttals to the Wells Report all enhance the case of Brady and the Patriots that they did nothing wrong. Should Roger Goodell, who refused to excuse himself from the appeal, uphold a suspension or even a reduced suspension, Brady and the NFLPA will have the opportunity to appeal. Especially if Goodell is not swift with his decision, Brady’s appeal in court could push the decision further back, and he keeps appealing all the way up, he may not have to serve his suspension until late in the season, or even until 2016, according to Mike Florio of Pro Football Talk.

Video Of Junior Galette Striking A Woman Emerges

Saints’ pass rusher Junior Galette was arrested in January in relation to allegations of battery. Galette was set to meet with league officials at the NFL office, but will have more to talk about than originally thought, as a video has emerged that shows Galette using force against a woman from 2013, writes Larry Holder of NOLA.com.

The video portrays an unrelated incident, in which a fight breaks out and Galette strikes a woman with his belt. It can be found on YouTube, under the name “Spring Break 2013 South Beach Brawl.”

The team and league are both aware of the video and Galette’s participation in it, according to Holder.

The charges from this past January were dismissed, and although a civil suit was filed, it hasn’t moved forward since March. Galette and his camp tried to push the incident as a one-time thing.

“Really, at this level, you can conduct yourself as good, as choir boy as you want, sometimes the trouble comes to you,” Galette said on Wednesday, in regard to the recent arrest. “In that situation, there was nothing I could do. Everything, if I could do it all over again, there’s not much different that I can do as far as what this person wants for me out of my life.”

The video from 2013 does not shine a good light on Galette, and with other recent domestic violence incidents and suspensions around the league, the NFL will likely use this video as strong visual evidence to hand down a suspension and eventually uphold that suspension in case of an appeal.

Cassel, Henderson On Bills’ Roster Bubble

With the Bills three-headed monster of Matt Cassel, EJ Manuel, and Tyrod Taylor all competing for the starting job, fans in Buffalo don’t have a ton to look forward to on offense. However, one of those three may actually already be falling behind the curve.

Cassel, an 11-year veteran, may be in danger of not making the roster, writes Mike Rodak of ESPN. Rodak called him the clear loser of the group of passers based on the three OTA practices and three minicamp sessions that were open to the media. He added that Cassel was inaccurate, forcing throws, and turning the ball over at alarmingly high rates (via Twitter).

Rodak listed Manuel as the slight winner, but was adamant that Cassel had been the worst of the three, noting that he was “consistently subpar this spring,” (via Twitter).

Many fans and pundits saw the Bills trading for Cassel as an indication that they planned on starting the season with him under center. It would have been difficult to imagine him not making the roster, even as a veteran backup for Manuel at the very least. However, if he continues to underperform, the team could still take the $4.15MM he is set to earn this year off the books by releasing him before the season opener.

Last year’s starting right tackle Seantrel Henderson may also be on the bubble of making the roster, and there are a few red flags that lead Rodak to believe he could be the odd man out along the offensive line (via Twitter). Henderson arrived to camp late and lost the starting job in practice to last year’s second-round pick Cyrus Kouandjio. Additionally, head coach Rex Ryan expects the team to sign veteran swing tackle Wayne Hunter, who could play both right tackle and left tackle, as well as tight end in heavy packages. With Hunter, Kouandjio, and Cordy Glenn in the fold, Henderson would have limited value to the team.

Details Emerge On Tom Brady’s Appeal

Engulfed by lawyers, Tom Brady and Roger Goodell will face off Tuesday in the appeal summit regarding the quarterback’s four-game suspension the commissioner handed down in May for Brady’s role in Deflategate, and Ben Volin of the Boston Globe discusses how the sides will go about this procedure in New York.

One source informed Volin that Goodell only hears about 10% of these cases, and he delegated this responsibility for the recent appeals of Adrian Peterson, Josh Gordon and Greg Hardy. But with Brady serving as one of the faces of the league in the 21st century, Goodell will serve as the judge to determine whether his own judgment was justified.

Per Volin, around 12 people will be present in the meeting room: attorneys for both sides, NFLPA executive director DeMaurice Smith and Brady’s agent Don Yee will join the 16th-year quarterback and the 10th-year commissioner. Another source informed Volin that Goodell, while technically not on either side as the hearing officer in this setup, is “tame and usually fairly civil” in these circumstances. NFL executive vice president Troy Vincent and senior vice president of labor policy and government affairs Adolpho Birch could also be in the room.

It’s kind of like a court of law, but it’s a private hearing; it’s confidential,” one source told Volin. “And the jury is Goodell.”

Goodell will ask questions during each presentation, reports Volin, but the NFL and the appealing contingent do not argue directly with each other despite the acrimony that’s transpired between representatives of each side during this historic offseason ordeal.

There’s really no back-and-forth at the same time,” another source told Volin. “The appellant makes their case, then the league makes theirs, then the appellant gets to rebut it, then the league gets another chance, then both sides have closing arguments, and that’s pretty much it.”

While Brady obviously wants the entire suspension erased due to what he views is an exceedingly harsh punishment, one source told Volin the future Hall of Famer isn’t seeing any reduction, with the ban being “lenient” to begin with.

He’s getting a suspension,” that source told Volin. “The only question is, is it four or two games?”

As previously noted, Brady’s side will have a chance to present new information in an attempt to reduce or eliminate his four-game ban, and Volin notes the Patriots quarterback’s team will cite the NFL’s operations manual which states a $25K fine is the baseline for a team that tampers with footballs (although Goodell has the jurisdiction to increase it as he sees fit). Volin also reports Brady’s side, in addition to possibly using the AEI report released last week that scrutinizes Ted Wells‘ investigation and potentially providing more information from Brady’s cellphone after he initially denied access to it, will use the fact that the Panthers and Vikings were issued only a warning for placing footballs near heaters during a December 2014 contest and Brett Favre being fined just $50K for a lack of cooperation in his 2010 scandal for improper text messaging.

The NFL will back Wells’ analysis and the ruling that Brady was “generally aware” of the alleged deflation procedures. Should the summit extend beyond Tuesday, it will resume Thursday, although there is no defined timeline for the decision to come down. Volin reports the Brady ruling may not emerge until the end of July, with Hardy’s May 28 appeal still in limbo as the latest example of the pace of these proceedings.

Brady, who can still file a federal lawsuit if this ruling doesn’t go his way, will lose $1.88MM if his four-game suspension is upheld.

AFC Mailbags: Bills, Raiders, Jets, Colts

It’s a June Saturday, so that means a full dose of mailbags from the NFL beat writers. We’ll start with some Bills thoughts.

  • Walk-year left tackle Cordy Glenn could be the odd man out when it comes to contract re-ups next offseason, writes Vic Carucci of the Buffalo News. The fourth-year starter’s put together a solid body of work, particularly in 2013 where Pro Football Focus slotted the 2012 second-round pick as its 13th-best tackle. But with Marcell Dareus‘ massive second payday forthcoming, Glenn’s next deal may come from elsewhere, since Carucci doesn’t believe the Bills view him as a certainty to play up to the kind of contract a quality left tackle commands in free agency.
  • Showing up late for minicamp may cost right tackle Seantrel Henderson his starting job, with 2014 second-rounder Cyrus Kouandjio stepping in as a result. This could just be for minicamp as Buffalo assesses its front-line talent, but Carucci notes that with Glenn potentially in his last season with the team, they may need to see what they have in Kouandjio.
  • Third-round pick Clive Walford has a chance to beat out incumbent Mychal Rivera for the Raiders‘ starting tight end job if he keeps up the play he showed during minicamp, notes ESPN.com’s Bill Williamson. The ESPN scribe already views Walford, a 6-foot-4 Miami product, as a more dynamic playmaker than Rivera, who despite being a quality garbage-time fantasy option, rated as Pro Football Focus’ second-worst tight end (subscription required) in 2014.
  • Jets ESPN.com reporter Rich Cimini thinks re-signing both Muhammad Wilkerson and, eventually, Sheldon Richardson will be difficult, with the possibility of defensive linemen making as much as $30MM per year in 2017. That eye-popping figure may be a bit high considering J.J. Watt and Ndamukong Suh don’t average $20MM per season. The Jets do allocate a league-high $34.4MM to their offensive front, and renegotiations there could help keep together what could be the best defensive line in the game. But Cimini expects the Jets to take a hard-line stance with Wilkerson after drafting Leonard Williams at No. 6.
  • After alternating snaps in minicamp, Lance Louis and Hugh Thornton are the Colts‘ top candidates to start at right guard if Jack Mewhort moves to right tackle, writes ESPN.com’s Mike Wells. The oft-injured Donald Thomas is an outside candidate to reclaim that spot after multiple season-ending injuries, although he didn’t participate in minicamp.