Back in June of 2021, Ravens offensive tackle Ja’Wuan James filed a grievance against the Broncos seeking $15MM consisting of his 2021 and 2022 salaries of $10MM and $5MM, respectively. James has reportedly settled with his former team and will receive $1.09MM, according to Charean Williams of NBC Sports.
The grievance stems from a torn Achilles that James suffered while working out away from the Broncos’ facility during the 2021 offseason. He missed out on a $9.85MM guaranteed salary that Denver claimed was only guaranteed for injuries sustained at the team facility.
James has not played since the injury and is currently listed as the backup to Baltimore’s starting left tackle Ronnie Stanley. Ravens fans are hoping not to have to see James come in, but, historically, Stanley has only played in two games since signing a contract extension in October of 2020.
Here are a few more rumors from the AFC West, starting with two rumors out of Sin City:
- Raiders head coach Josh McDaniels told reporters that star tight end Darren Waller returned to practice today, according to Paul Gutierrez of ESPN. Waller had missed six practices since mid-August due to a hamstring injury. Adding Waller back to the mix gives Las Vegas a dangerous array of pass catchers with Waller and receivers Davante Adams and Hunter Renfrow.
- After the trade yesterday that sent former second-round pick Trayvon Mullen to Arizona and with Darius Phillips not making the initial 53-man roster, Raiders nickel cornerback Nate Hobbs is finally set to move to an outside cornerback gig, according to Vic Tafur of The Athletic. The team’s coaches have long been boasting of their plans to move Hobbs around on defense, and they now have a prime opportunity to see what he can do on the outside of the secondary.
- The Broncos surprised quite a few when punter Sam Martin failed to make their initial 53-man roster. Instead, Denver will move forward with former-Steelers punter Corliss Waitman. General manager George Paton attempted to defend the cut by telling reporters that the move was not a reflection of contracts but one of abilities, according to Troy Renck of Denver 7. Martin has been a starting punter since being drafted in the league back in 2013 by the Lions. He had signed a three-year, $7.05MM contract to join the Broncos and was headed into the final year of the deal set to make $2.25MM. Martin reportedly refused to take a pay cut for the 2022 season and Denver now will rely on the leg of Waitman, who holds an $825K cap hit. According to Paton, though, the $1.4MM cap room cleared by cutting Martin had nothing to do with it. Also according to Paton, Waitman, who has two games of NFL play under his belt, simply beat out the veteran kicker with 139 games of NFL experience. Broncos fans will get to judge for themselves when they see Waitman’s regular season debut in a Broncos uniform in Seattle on Monday Night Football.
Regarding the Broncos’ punter change, author failed to mention two other notable issues – Waitman is a lefty kicker (ST coach is a big fan of such) and Martin exhibited poor judgement/leadership in injuring his ankle before a preseason game by practicing his “back of end zone two tap” catches during pregame warmups. For the past 5-6 years, this has been an underachieving team with questionable player leadership (he’s been there for many of these years). Maybe they also wanted to get the knuckleheads out of the building?
Oh sure, lets all make fun of Punters and Kickers not doing anything for 95% of practice and games and then also lambaste them for trying to contribute by broadening their arsenal of skills.
You’ve never heard of the “Bronco Special”? Where the LS clips his thigh on the snap, botching it to the ground, upback picks it up, scrambles a bit, and tosses a fade to the P in the back corner endzone???
Well I haven’t either. But could be a thing. I’d love to get Pat McAfee’s take on the situation actually.
Seemed like two topics that could’ve been mentioned in the article. The lefty foot is prolly more important than the sprained ankle screwing around pregame.
Yeah the lefty angle is for sure an interesting tid bit. Good share.
Seven out of nine visiting punters out-kicked Martin at Mile High altitude last year. That’s what Paton should have cited as a reason for making a change. A Bronco punter should consistently be in the top 5 in the league in yards/punt given the thin air advantage.