Month: November 2024

NFC West Notes: Wilson, Seahawks, Rams

Multiple reports have indicated that the Seahawks are offering Russell Wilson $21MM per year. However, Mike Florio of PFT hears from one league source that they might actually be offering $21MM in new money rather than $21MM annually. If the Seahawks are offering Wilson a five-year deal with $21MM per year in new money, that average applies to the four new years, making the total value in the range of $85.5MM ($17.1MM per year).

Here’s more on Wilson, the Seahawks, and a couple of Seattle’s division rivals in the NFC West:

  • If the Seahawks don’t give Wilson roughly $25MM per year, there are six or seven teams lined up that will, tweets Benjamin Allbright of 1340AM in Denver.
  • The best chance for Kam Chancellor and Michael Bennett to get new deals with the Seahawks is to go for a rare tandem holdout, opines Joel Corry of CBSSports.com (Twitter link). Legendary Dodgers pitchers Don Drysdale and Sandy Koufax employed this technique decades ago but it has rarely been attempted since in any major sport.
  • The Rams are currently on track to have more than a dozen players eligible for unrestricted free agency in 2016, and many of those players are starters or top reserves, writes Jim Thomas of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. While extension discussions take time, the club would ideally like to have a few of those contract situations resolved before the end of the season, says Thomas.
  • In the wake of the Cardinals‘ addition of Jen Welter to their coaching staff – detailed here by Kent Somers of the Arizona Republic – other teams around the league are interested in identifying other potential female coaching candidates, says Jason Cole of Bleacher Report (video link).

Zach Links contributed to this post.

Gosder Cherilus Visiting Bills, Lions

3:11pm: After visiting the Bills, Cherilus has left without signing a deal and is on his way to visit his old team, the Lions, reports Ian Rapoport of NFL.com (via Twitter).

10:11am: The Bills are working out free agent offensive tackle Gosder Cherilus, a source tells Mike Rodak of ESPN.com. Cherilus, 31, was released by the Colts on Sunday after a disappointing run with the team.

Buffalo has a need along their offensive line following the retirement of tackle Wayne Hunter last week and the release of guard Chris Williams on Tuesday. They could really use a veteran tackle like Cherilus with 2014 second-round pick Cyrus Kouandjio and 2014 seventh-round pick Seantrel Henderson currently set to battle for the starting right tackle job.

Cherilus signed a five-year, $35MM contract with the Colts in 2013, and started 29 games for the club at right tackle over the past two seasons. However, after a solid first season in Indianapolis, he struggled last year. Pro Football Focus (subscription required) ranked Cherilus 70th out of 84 qualified tackles, and he graded particularly poorly as a pass blocker. According to PFF’s data, he allowed six quarterback sacks, another 42 hits or hurries.

Because he received a sizable signing bonus when he signed his deal back in 2013, Cherilus will still count for a decent chunk of dead money against the Colts’ cap. His $6.9MM hit in 2015 will be reduced to just $2.9MM, but he’ll count for another $5.8MM against the club’s 2016 cap. All that dead money will serve as the Colts’ latest reminder of a poor class of 2013 free agents — the club has since cut LaRon Landry and Ricky Jean-Francois as well.

 

Cardinals To Release Alfonzo Dennard

The Cardinals are releasing cornerback Alfonzo Dennard, according to a source that spoke with Josina Anderson of ESPN.com (on Twitter). Dennard’s stint in Arizona lasted less than three months, after the Cards claimed him off waivers from the Patriots in early May.

Dennard, 25, was limited to just six games in 2014, having been plagued by shoulder and hamstring issues. He also saw his role in New England reduced with the arrivals of Darrelle Revis and Brandon Browner, and played in just 241 regular season snaps before landing on injured reserve. While the sample size was small, Pro Football Focus (subscription required) also graded him as the Pats’ least effective coverage corner — he allowed QBs to complete 68.2% of their passes and accumulate a 111.2 passer rating on throws into his coverage.

Due to an escalator in his rookie contract, Dennard had been set to earn a base salary of $1.542MM this season after making the minimum for his first three years, so his release by the Pats doesn’t come as a total surprise. However, that salary is non-guaranteed, so if he clears waivers after being cut by the Cards this time, a team should be able to take a flier on him at a lesser price.

Wilkerson Won’t Hold Out From Jets Camp

2:26pm: Wilkerson intends to play out the final season of his deal if an agreement isn’t reached by the start of the regular season, according to sources who spoke with ESPN.com’s Rich Cimini.

1:14pm: The Jets and Muhammad Wilkerson are still at an impasse in contract negotiations, but the defensive lineman still plans to show up for training camp, a source told Kimberley A. Martin of Newsday. Practice begins Thursday for Gang Green.

Although the 25-year-old skipped voluntary workouts and organized team activities because of stalled contract talks, he attended mandatory minicamp earlier this summer. Back in June, he told reporters “If I have to play under my contract, then so be it.” It appears that he’s keeping his word, even though he’s disgruntled.

Wilkerson is set to earn $6.969MM this season, and the Jets could opt to franchise tag him in 2016. The Jets added even more leverage to the talks when they used the No. 6 overall pick in the draft to select USC defensive lineman Leonard Williams, regarded by some as the best talent in this year’s class. However, the pendulum might have swung back the other way a bit when Sheldon Richardson was suspended for four games for violating the league’s substance abuse policy.

As a 3-4 defensive end in a blitz-heavy scheme, Wilkerson isn’t in a position to put up large numbers in the traditional statistical categories, only notching 24 sacks in his four seasons, including a robust 10.5 in 2013. Still, advanced metric sites like Pro Football Focus (subscription required) have rated Wilkerson extremely highly, listing him as the second-best 3-4 defensive end in 2012 and third best in 2014. J..J. Watt was first both of those years, and Richardson was ranked second this past season. Accordingly, he was named a Pro Football Focus All-Pro in both of those seasons.

Earlier this month, PFR’s Rob DiRe looked at Wilkerson as an extension candidate.

Jake Long Visiting Giants, Broncos

2:24pm: It does not appear that Long will be signing with the Giants today, Ralph Vacchiano of the New York Daily News tweets. The tackle is now planning to leave tonight to visit the Broncos.

10:00am: Former No. 1 overall pick Jake Long will visit the Giants after completing his visit with the Falcons, a source tells Rand Getlin of NFL.com (on Twitter). Long touched down in Atlanta on Tuesday to take a physical and audition for Atlanta brass.

Long, 30, visited the Giants earlier this offseason and while he didn’t come away with a deal, the door remained open for a signing. The veteran, who spent the past two seasons in St. Louis after spending the first five in Miami, saw time in just seven games for the Rams last season thanks to a torn ACL. There was some talk that Long could play on the right side with 2014 No. 2 overall pick Greg Robinson taking his place on the left, but that never came to fruition.

Long has torn his ACL in each of the prior two seasons, playing in just 22 games during that stretch. Last season, Pro Football Focus as (subscription required) ranked him as just the No. 36 tackle out of 84 qualified players. In 2013, however, Long graded out as the seventh-best tackle in the league with a strong 22.5 overall score, based on PFF’s advanced metrics. Yesterday, Jason Fitzgerald of Over the Cap expressed skepticism that Long will land anywhere, tweeting that a contract would probably have to be heavy on incentives for games played and overall playing time given his health issues.

Giants Hope To Have Manning Deal Done Before Season

Giants co-owner John Mara remains optimistic that a new deal will get done with quarterback Eli Manning and he indicated that an agreement could come in the next few weeks. In a wide-ranging interview with Steve Serby of the New York Post, Mara touched on the contractual status of his franchise quarterback.

I would doubt that that would happen in that quick a time frame,” Mara said when asked whether a deal could be reached before the start of training camp. “We would hope to have it done at some point before the season. But if not, it’ll hopefully get done at some point after that.”

A deal would make sense for both sides, giving the veteran quarterback some security beyond this season, and allowing the team to create a little cap flexibility. Manning, 34, started off slowly in 2014 under new offensive coordinator Ben McAdoo, but eventually hit his stride, throwing for 4,410 yards and 30 touchdowns on the year. Those totals fell just short of his career highs, ranking as his second-best marks in 11 NFL seasons. With a year under his belt working with McAdoo and Odell Beckham Jr., and Victor Cruz on his way back from a season-ending knee injury, Manning looks poised for another strong season in 2015.

Manning is currently in line to earn a $17MM base salary in 2015, counting for $19.75MM against the cap. After averaging $16.25MM on his last contract, the two-time Super Bowl MVP figures to be in line for at least a modest raise this time around.

Ryan Tannehill, Cam Newton, and Ben Roethlisberger are among the signal-callers who have signed new deals in 2015 averaging between $19-22MM per year. Of those extensions, Roethlisberger’s pact, which averages $21.85MM annually, appears to be the most logical point of reference in the talks between Manning and the Giants — both QBs entered the league as first-round picks in 2004, have earned three Pro Bowl nods, and have won a pair of Super Bowls.

Washington, Ryan Kerrigan Agree To Extension

12:49pm: Kerrigan’s deal is worth $57.5MM in total and goes through 2020, Albert Breer of NFL.com tweets. The linebacker will earn $32.78MM over the first three years of the deal.

12:41pm: Washington announced that outside linebacker Ryan Kerrigan has agreed to a multi-year extension. It’ll be a five-year deal worth $11.5MM per season, according to Ian Rapoport of NFL.com (on Twitter).

To get to a moment like this where you get a chance to play out the rest of your NFL career with the team that drafted you, the team that you love, the city that you love, it hasn’t really hit me yet, but it’s an awesome feeling,” Kerrigan said. “Now it’s my job to go reward the Redskins for the faith they put in me by playing well this year, and for the rest of my career.”

In 2014, Kerrigan turned in one of the best performances by a pass rusher in team history, posting a career-best 13.5 sacks. Kerrigan also had five forced fumbles in 2014, tying for the league lead and becoming the first Washington player to finish atop league rankings in that category since LaVar Arrington’s NFL-best six forced fumbles in 2003.

Kerrigan finished as PFF’s fifth-best 3-4 OLB and he also showed that he has a penchant for the big play, with two interceptions, two touchdowns, 16 passes defensed, and a whopping 15 forced fumbles to his credit. He has never been particularly strong against the run, earning negative grades in that area in all four seasons of his professional career, but his pass-rushing abilities make him an integral part of Washington’s front seven.

Robert Kraft, Tom Brady Issue Statements

9:15am: At a Wednesday morning press conference, Patriots owner Robert Kraft said that he was “wrong to put his faith in the league” (via Mike Reiss of ESPN.com on Twitter). Kraft explained that he was willing to “accept the harshest penalty in the history of the NFL for an alleged ball violation” because he believed that it would exonerate Brady, Jeff Howe of the Boston Herald tweets.

Kraft expressed regret for not taking legal action against the NFL and slammed Goodell. “There are those in the league office who are more determined to prove they were right rather than admit any culpability,” the Pats owner said, according to Mike Garafolo of FOX Sports (on Twitter).

Kraft’s full statement is below (transcript from Mike Florio of PFT):

I felt it was important to make a statement today, prior to the start of training camp. After this, I will not be talking about this matter until after the legal process plays itself out, and I would advise everyone in the organization to do the same and just concentrate on preparation for the 2015 season.

The decision handed down by the league yesterday is unfathomable to me. It is routine for discipline in the NFL to be reduced upon appeal. In the vast majority of these cases, there is tangible and hard evidence of the infraction for which the discipline is being imposed, and still the initial penalty gets reduced. Six months removed from the AFC championship game, the league still has no hard evidence of anybody doing anything to tamper with the PSI levels of footballs.

I continue to believe and unequivocally support Tom Brady. I first and foremost need to apologize to our fans, because I truly believe what I did in May, given the actual evidence of the situation and the league’s history on discipline matters, would make it much easier for the league to exonerate Tom Brady.

Unfortunately, I was wrong.

The league’s handling of this entire process has been extremely frustrating and disconcerting. I will never understand why an initial erroneous report regarding the PSI level of footballs was leaked by a source from the NFL a few days after the AFC championship game, [and] was never corrected by those who had the correct information. For four months, that report cast aspersions and shaped public opinion.

Yesterday’s decision by Commissioner was released in a similar manner, under an erroneous headline that read, “Tom Brady destroyed his cellphone.” This headline was designed to capture headlines across the country and obscure evidence regarding the tampering of air pressure in footballs. It intentionally implied nefarious behavior and minimized the acknowledgement that Tom provided the history of every number he texted during that relevant time frame. And we had already provided the league with every cellphone of every non-NFLPA that they requested, including head coach Bill Belichick.

Tom Brady is a person of great integrity, and is a great ambassador of the game, both on and off the field. Yet for reasons that I cannot comprehend, there are those in the league office who are more determined to prove that they were right rather than admit any culpability of their own or take any responsibility for the initiation of a process and ensuing investigation that was flawed.

I have come to the conclusion that this was never about doing what was fair and just. Back in May, I had to make a difficult decision that I now regret. I tried to do what I thought was right. I chose not to take legal action. I wanted to return the focus to football.

I have been negotiating agreements on a global basis my entire life. I know there are times when you have to give up important points of principle to achieve a greater good. I acted in good faith and was optimistic that by taking the actions I took the league would have what they wanted. I was willing to accept the harshest penalty in the history of the NFL for an alleged ball violation because I believed it would help exonerate Tom.

I have often said, ‘If you want to get a deal done, sometimes you have to get the lawyers out of the room.’ I had hoped that Tom Brady’s appeal to the league would provide Roger Goodell the necessary explanation to overturn his suspension. Now, the league has taken the matter to court, which is a tactic that only a lawyer would recommend.

Once again, I want to apologize to the fans of the New England Patriots and Tom Brady. I was wrong to put my faith in the league. Given the facts, evidence, and laws of science that underscore this entire situation, it is completely incomprehensible to me that the league continues to take steps to disparage one of its all-time great players, and a man for whom I have the utmost respect.

Personally, this is very sad and disappointing to me.

9:09am: On Tuesday, NFL commissioner Roger Goodell decided to uphold Tom Brady‘s four-game suspension and in the process, he asserted that the Patriots quarterback destroyed his phone in an attempt to hide critical evidence from league investigators. We then heard statements from virtually every party involved, with the exception of the accused. That changed this morning when Brady took to Facebook to give his version of events. In a lengthy statement, Brady refuted the notion that he broke his phone in order to conceal evidence:

“I also disagree with yesterdays narrative surrounding my cellphone. I replaced my broken Samsung phone with a new iPhone 6 AFTER my attorneys made it clear to the NFL that my actual phone device would not be subjected to investigation under ANY circumstances. As a member of a union, I was under no obligation to set a new precedent going forward, nor was I made aware at any time during Mr. Wells investigation, that failing to subject my cell phone to investigation would result in ANY discipline.

Most importantly, I have never written, texted, emailed to anybody at anytime, anything related to football air pressure before this issue was raised at the AFC Championship game in January. To suggest that I destroyed a phone to avoid giving the NFL information it requested is completely wrong.”

Brady also claimed that “the discipline was upheld without any counter offereven though multiple reports indicated that there were settlement talks between the two sides before Goodell’s decision was handed down. Either way, Brady is set to serve a four-game suspension, unless a federal court intercedes in the ruling.

Eric Berry Cleared To Practice

Eric Berry has been cleared by doctors to return to practice and is expected to join the Chiefs on the field later today, as Dave Skretta of the Associated Press writes. Berry diagnosed with Hodgkin’s disease late last season and has been sidelined ever since.

Berry experienced discomfort in his chest in a late season contest against Oakland and Chiefs trainers discovered a mass on the right side of his chest. Further testing showed that the safety had Hodgkin’s disease and he began treatment in early December. Berry went through the final round of treatment in June, and doctors now feel that he’s strong enough to get back to football.

He’s kept himself in good shape, believe it or not,” Chiefs coach Andy Reid said on Tuesday, before Berry was cleared to return. “He’s really done a good job there.”

Berry, the No. 5 overall pick in the 2010 draft, has played his entire career in Kansas City. He missed all of the 2011 season with a torn knee ligament, but returned to start all 16 games the following year. He has started 53 games in all, piling up 323 tackles with 5.5 sacks and eight interceptions.

The return of Berry is wonderful news for the player, his family, and concerned fans everywhere. From a football perspective, the 26-year-old is regarded as one of the best run-stopping safeties in the game and the Chiefs clearly need him. Kansas City graded out as one of the worst run defenses in the NFL in 2014.

Extra Points: Chiefs, Berry, Brady, Ravens

Here’s a quick look around the NFL..

  • Chiefs coach Andy Reid told Terez A. Paylor of the Kansas City Star (on Twitter) that he doesn’t anticipate adding any big-name guys with his remaining roster spot.
  • Reid gave reporters, including BJ Kissel of KCchiefs.com (on Twitter), an update on safety Eric Berry. “Eric is going through some tests right now. We’ll have more information in a day. Everything has been positive so far,” said Reid. The Chiefs safety has been battling Hodgkin lymphoma and it sounds like we may be getting close to hearing a timetable for his return.
  • Jason Fitzgerald of Over The Cap (on Twitter) believes that the Patriots will rework Tom Brady‘s contract to bring the suspension money down significantly.
  • The Ravens are expected to stick with reserve quarterbacks Bryn Renner and Jerry Lovelocke heading into camp, sources tell Aaron Wilson of the Baltimore Sun (on Twitter). Still, the Ravens tried out Doug Williams’ son, D.J. Williams, sources tell Wilson (on Twitter) as well as quarterback Austin Trainor and quarterback/wide receiver Trent Steelman (link).