Month: September 2024

WR Michael Thomas Issued One-Game Suspension

Michael Thomas remains a free agent, and he is set to miss the opening game of the campaign if he lands with a team before Week 1. The former Saints All-Pro has been given a one-game suspension, as noted by NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport.

This ban will be classified as a personal conduct violation, Rapoport adds. The suspension stems from a November incident for which Thomas was arrested. The 31-year-old was alleged to have pushed a contractor and thrown a brick at his windshield after a verbal altercation. Thomas’ representation later denied the situation became violent.

In March, it was learned Thomas was set to enter a pre-trial diversion program. Upon its completion, the case – which brought forth misdemeanor simple battery and criminal mischief charges – was dropped. That brought an end to the three-time Pro Bowler’s legal situation, but precedent has shown criminal convictions are not required for NFL suspensions to be handed down. In this case, Thomas will now be required to sit out at least the opening game of the campaign, although he is currently set to miss much more time than that in the absence of a contract.

Thomas was among the NFL’s top receivers during his prime years in New Orleans. The former second-rounder broke the all-time receptions record in 2019 (149), leading the league in yards as well (1,725). That production earned him Offensive Player of the Year honors, but things have not gone according to plan since. Injuries limited him to 10 games between 2020 and ’22, and he suited up for that many contests last season.

In a move set up by the nature of his contract, Thomas was cut by the Saints this offseason. No teams have been connected to a free agent pursuit due to the long list of ailments he has dealt with in recent years, something which has of course also hurt his production. Thomas remains free to sign with a new team at any time, but in the wake of today’s news his chances of landing a deal before the start of the season have taken a hit.

Ravens To Bring Back QB Tyler Huntley

Shortly after being let go by the Browns, Tyler Huntley is positioned to return to his original team. The veteran quarterback is expected to re-join the Ravens, per veteran reporter Jordan Schultz.

Huntley joined Baltimore as an undrafted free agent in 2019, and he made his first regular season appearances the following season. The Utah alum ultimately earned the backup gig, and across the past four years he has totaled 21 appearances and 10 starts. Those figures include the Ravens’ wild-card loss in the 2022 playoffs as he filled in for an injured Lamar Jackson.

In 2023 – the first year of Jackson’s monster extension – the two-time MVP was able to remain healthy for a full campaign. That limited Huntley’s workload to four appearances in mop-up duty before getting the start for a Week 18 contest after the Ravens had clinched the AFC’s No. 1 seed. The Utah product signed a one-year deal with the Browns in free agency with Baltimore electing to lean on journeyman Josh Johnson for the QB2 gig.

Cleveland also signed Jameis Winston in free agency, however, and the former No. 1 pick was retained after the team reportedly tried to find a trade partner for either he or Huntley. Roster cuts came and went without a deal being made on that front, but with the Browns also carrying Deshaun Watson and Dorian Thompson-RobinsonHuntley became the odd man out on the depth chart. He will now return to Baltimore in a bid to further build his free agent stock.

The 26-year-old will join the Ravens via a practice squad deal, Jeff Zrebiec of The Athletic confirms. Baltimore had one open spot on the taxi squad going into Friday, and Huntley will now fill it while representing a familiar option at the position. Baltimore kept Jackson and Johnson on the active roster during cutdowns, waiving sixth-round rookie Devin Leary after he had an underwhelming preseason. Leary went unclaimed, though, and he signed to the practice squad on Wednesday.

Leary is viewed as a developmental option, and Huntley’s presence will give the Ravens another known commodity under center while he progresses. Baltimore is among the teams currently slated to be over the 2024 salary cap, but this move will no doubt be a one-year investment at a low cost. It will be interesting to see if Huntley winds up seeing any game time upon returning to his first NFL team.

Rams Likely To Move Jonah Jackson To C

Rams head coach Sean McVay is “leaning towards” installing offensive lineman Jonah Jackson as the team’s starting center, according to The Athletic’s Jordan Rodrigue.

Jackson signed with the Rams on a three-year, $51MM deal back in March after spending the first four years of his career with the Lions. A shoulder injury in training camp sidelined him for the preseason, but he has been taking reps at center as he ramps up to return.

Jackson has spent almost his entire career at guard, with just 24 career snaps at center — in Week 18 of the 2021 season — per Pro Football Focus. But the Rams are returning both of their starting guards in recently extended Kevin Dotson and 2023 second-round pick Steve Avila, so Jackson’s move to center allows McVay to get his five best offensive linemen on the field.

Avila frequently played center at TCU but worked as a guard — as since-departed Coleman Shelton manned the Rams’ center post last season — as a rookie. Avila’s mobility at guard is crucial to Los Angeles’ offensive scheme, according to Rodrigue. That said, Avila spent the offseason back at center, as Shelton signed with the Bears, only to be moved back to guard just before the regular season. That will make for an interesting transition for the former Big 12 standout.

McVay also announced that third-year running back Kyren Williams will be the team’s punt returner, per ESPN’s Sarah Barshop. Williams seized the Rams’ RB1 job last season with 1,350 yards from scrimmage and 15 touchdowns in just 12 games and is set to reprise his role this season. His new special teams gig could indicate that his offensive touches will go down with former Michigan standout Blake Corum also on the roster.

It is worth noting that McVay also handed the punt returning job to Cooper Kupp in 2021. He went on to lead the NFL in receptions, receiving yards, and touchdowns on his way to Offensive Player of the Year honors. Kupp’s punt returning duties did not impact his workload; instead, he simply fair caught 20 out his 21 punt returns in the regular season, per PFF. McVay may be employing a similar strategy this year: get the ball in the safest hands possible to avoid any costly muffed punts.

The rest of the Rams’ 53-man roster has taken shape over the last week, with Cobie Durant as the primary backup to outside cornerbacks Tre’Davious White and Darious Williams, writes Rodrigue. Third-year defensive back Quentin Lake is expected to start at the ‘star’ position in the Rams’ sub packages where he will operate as a safety, nickelback, or dimeback depending on the play call.

Chargers To Extend K Cameron Dicker

Eligible for an extension a year early due to his UDFA status, Cameron Dicker will capitalize. The Chargers have a deal in place to lock down their young specialist.

Dicker agreed to terms on a four-year, $22MM extension with the Bolts, ESPN’s Adam Schefter reports. The deal will include $12.5MM guaranteed. While the deal is technically worth $22.004MM, Dicker effectively checks in — at $5.5MM per year — tied with Evan McPherson and Graham Gano at No. 5 among kicker salaries.

The former Texas kicker has only played one full season with the Chargers, who ended Dicker’s nomadic 2022 run with an in-season agreement. Originally a 2022 Rams UDFA, Dicker bounced to the Ravens and Eagles before catching on with the Bolts on a November 2022 practice squad pact. Dustin Hopkins‘ hamstring injury that year changed the Bolts’ plans at kicker.

Upon cutting their roster down to 53 last summer, the Chargers traded Hopkins to the Browns to clear the way for Dicker. Hopkins signed an extension with Cleveland this offseason, and Dicker now has security in Los Angeles. The Chargers will hope this can provide some kicker stability, as the team has gone through some hiccups at the position over the past several years.

Injuries and inconsistency have plagued the Bolts at this spot for a while. They have gone through multi-kicker seasons in five of the past seven years, seeing Week 1 kickers Younghoe Koo and Tristan Vizcaino not pan out in that span. Even mid-2010s option Josh Lambo only lasted two seasons in San Diego, with Nick Novak the last Charger to firmly establish himself here. This deal will give Dicker, 24, a runway to become the longest-tenured Bolts kicker since Nate Kaeding (2004-11).

Dicker impressed during his 2022 half-season audition, going 19-for-20 on field goals. In 2023, he showed that form could hold up over a full season, making 31 of 33 tries — including 9-for-9 from 40-49 yards and 7-for-9 from beyond 50 — in 17 games.

Despite the Chargers changing regimes this offseason, its Jim Harbaugh-led power structure will sign off on the Tom Telesco-era pickup for the long haul. Well, for the short term and then a wait-and-see period, as this is a kicker. But the $12.5MM guarantee — tied for the sixth-highest kicker figure — gives the longtime Longhorns option some stability after being unable to catch on to start his career.

Seahawks Sign Tyus Bowser To PS; Cowboys, Titans Showed Interest

The Seahawks signed Tyus Bowser to their practice squad, according to Bob Condotta of The Seattle Times, reuniting the linebacker with head coach Mike Macdonald after the two spent several years together in Baltimore.

Bowser also worked out for the Titans and the Cowboys, per Pro Football Network’s Adam Caplan, but opted to join his former linebackers coach and defensive coordinator in Seattle. The Seahawks were in need of outside linebacker depth after Uchenna Nwosu suffered an MCL sprain in their final preseason game.

Bowser’s versatility and scheme knowledge fit well in Macdonald’s defensive system, but the 29-year-old will have to prove he can stay healthy to earn playing time. Bowser has only played in nine games since 2021 due to an Achilles tear in January 2022 and a knee injury in 2023 that kept him on the Non-Football Injury (NFI) list for the whole year before he was released. That injury is the subject of an ongoing grievance between Bowser and the Ravens over his compensation for last season.

The Seahawks will not have to rely on Bowser right away, either. Nwosu avoided being placed on injured reserve during final roster cutdowns, an optimistic sign that he should return to the field by Week 4. Seattle also has veteran Dre’Mont Jones and recent draft picks Boye Mafe and Derick Hall at outside linebacker. Shortly after Nwosu’s injury, the Seahawks acquired Trevis Gipson from the Jaguars on August 26. Gipson resides on the team’s 53-man roster.

Along with Bowser, the Seahawks also signed cornerback Faion Hicks to their practice squad, per Condotta. To make room, they released offensive lineman Garret Greenfield. The team also waived tight end Jack Westover with an injury settlement.

Brandon Stephens Extension On Ravens’ Radar

After signing Lamar Jackson and Justin Madubuike to major extensions in the last two years, the Ravens will be looking to retain another piece of homegrown talent in cornerback Brandon Stephens, who broke out as a full-time starter last season.

He’s a guy that we certainly want to keep here long term,” Ravens GM Eric DeCosta said. “It’s not without challenge. He plays a position where the best players are highly compensated, but we’ll do our best.”

The Ravens drafted Stephens in the third round of the 2021 draft, a pick that was considered a reach by draft pundits at the time. He played running back at UCLA and converted to cornerback at SMU before making another switch to safety as in Baltimore. A 2022 injury to DeShon Elliott pressed Stephens into a starting role as a rookie, and he finished third on the team with 78 tackles. Stephens moved back to cornerback in 2022 but only started four games while behind Marlon Humphrey and Marcus Peters on the depth chart. Stephens stepped back into a starting role in 2023, playing 99% of the Ravens’ defensive snaps and recording career highs with two interceptions and 11 passes defended.

The Ravens have a history of re-signing their top impending free agents, and they’ll likely make a similar effort with their young cornerback. Stephens may not be as eager to get to the negotiating table, as he lacks league-wide honors and the cornerback market has stagnated in recent years. With players like Patrick Surtain and Sauce Gardner expected to reset the cornerback market next offseason, Stephens may bet on himself and cash in next year.

Baltimore has dealt with that situation before. Justin Madubuike turned down an extension offer in 2023 before his breakout season and earned a $24.5MM-per-year contract that made him the highest-paid DT in the league at signing. The Ravens may not be willing to similarly break the bank for Stephens, though, with substantial sums of money already committed to Lamar Jackson, Roquan Smith, and Marlon Humphrey in the coming years. The team will also need to prioritize extensions for All-Pro safety Kyle Hamilton and Pro Bowl center Tyler Linderbaum.

The Ravens are aware that the cornerback market is set to rise and Stephens could price himself out of Baltimore. Baltimore already began restocking its cornerback corps this offseason, drafting Nate Wiggins out of Clemson in the first round and T.J. Tampa out of Iowa State in the fourth. Should no extension be reached soon, the 2024 season stands to be critical for determining Stephens’ value.

Marquise Brown Expected To Miss Chiefs’ Week 1 Matchup

Kansas City’s receiving corps looks quite different from the group it trotted out to open last season. While the Chiefs ultimately won Super Bowl LVIII anyway, they made the expected call to revamp their pass-catching contingent this offseason.

One of the players brought in, as expected, will not be available to open the season. After suffering an injury during the Chiefs’ preseason opener, Marquise Brown is not expected to play in Week 1 against the Ravens, per Andy Reid.

The former Baltimore first-rounder sustained an SC joint injury comparable to Tyreek Hill‘s from 2019. The all-time great went down in Week 1 of the ’19 season and did not return until Week 6 that year. Brown suffered his injury August 10, potentially putting Kansas City’s Week 2 matchup — after the upcoming post-Thursday mini-bye — in play for the free agent signing’s debut.

Reid’s early assessment of Brown’s status comes after SI.com’s Albert Breer indicated the former Ravens and Cardinals starter would miss early-season time. The Chiefs open with the Ravens and Bengals, potentially needing to count on others against Cincinnati as well. Since signing Brown, however, the two-time reigning champions added Xavier Worthy in Round 1, re-signed Mecole Hardman and reunited with JuJu Smith-Schuster after the Patriots cut bait. With Travis Kelce available after missing last season’s opener, the Chiefs appear better equipped than they were against the Lions last year.

While Brett Veach compared the injury to Hill’s 2019 malady, the eighth-year GM is optimistic. Kansas City’s decision to leave Brown on the active roster, rather than use a cutdown-day IR-return designation, reflects the team’s belief the offseason pickup can come back soon. Brown would have been down for at least four games had Kansas City placed him on IR.

I probably can confidently say it was similar to Tyreek, and I think given that timeline I think it falls within the timeline that Tyreek went through, but I know he’s here every day,” Veach said. “He’s to the point now where he can laugh without pain, so that’s a good thing. He’s certainly trending in the right direction, and look, there was a reason why we didn’t put him on the IR to start the season.”

Brown has gone through some injury bouts as a pro. A Lisfranc issue plagued him as a rookie, though the 2019 draftee played 14 games that year. The Cardinals rarely saw a fully healthy Brown. More foot trouble intervened last season, causing Brown to miss five games in 2022. The Oklahoma alum also played through a heel injury for much of the 2023 season, ultimately missing three games. The Chiefs will hope for a September return.

Seahawks GM: Team Not Discussing Geno Smith Extension

Hovering in largely unexplored territory on the quarterback salary spectrum, Geno Smith pursued a Seahawks extension this offseason. While the team adjusted the third-year starter’s deal, that came merely via a restructure. A more notable adjustment appears out of reach for the time being.

The Seahawks do not sound especially interested in extending a quarterback who has two years remaining on his current contract. GM John Schneider said (via The Athletic’s Michael-Shawn Dugar) it would be inaccurate to indicate the team talked extension terms with its current QB1 this offseason.

Smith is believed to have sought an an extension this offseason, but the Seahawks have him tied to what is now an incredibly team-friendly deal. After the Russell Wilson successor played another season for backup money (one year, $3.5MM) during his Comeback Player of the Year season, the Seahawks rewarded him with a three-year, $75MM extension. Although the contract represented a substantial raise at the time, a number of deals involving comparable quarterbacks have dwarfed where the Seahawks went for a player they had carried as a backup.

For both AAV and guarantees, this came in well south of where the Saints went for Derek Carr and Giants ventured for Daniel Jones during the 2023 offseason. Baker Mayfield‘s three-year, $100MM deal also created distance between the Buccaneers QB and Smith, whose $25MM average salary is on its own tier among starters — between the franchise-level arms and the Gardner Minshew/Sam Darnold level. Smith is the NFL’s 20th-highest-paid passer, but no one else is between Minshew’s $12.5MM AAV and Mayfield’s $33.3MM number.

Schneider’s comment on this matter pushes back on the previous report that indicated Smith’s camp did discuss a new deal with the team. At no point, however, has it appeared a new deal was imminent. Smith’s $25MM-per-year pact runs through the 2025 season, and the Seahawks have flexibility via no guarantees remaining on the accord beyond this year. New HC Mike Macdonald proclaimed Smith his starter early this offseason, and by remaining on Seattle’s roster in mid-February, the 12th-year veteran locked in $12.7MM guaranteed.

The Seahawks also restructured Smith’s contract, creating cap space and making it slightly more difficult to move on in 2025. Though, with no guarantees in the mix for next year, the team would only need to navigate $13.5MM in dead money were it to move on next year. This gives the team a season to evaluate Smith in Ryan Grubb‘s offense.

From Smith’s perspective, he is running short on time to capitalize on his newfound starter status. The former Jets second-rounder-turned-journeyman will turn 34 in October. The Seahawks passed on adding an heir apparent in 2023 or 2024, but this new coaching staff certainly could have such a move on the radar. Extending a player Pete Carroll brought in when two years remain on the deal does not seem a priority.

For now, the Seahawks have only Smith and trade acquisition Sam Howell in their quarterback room. The team added P.J. Walker this offseason but released the veteran backup earlier this week. Schneider did not rule out bringing Walker back, via the Seattle Times’ Bob Condotta, as it sounds like the team does plan on adding a de facto third-stringer at some point soon.

Offseason In Review: Chicago Bears

A quarterback-starved franchise for much of their existence, the Bears secured a rare opportunity to finally check that box off their to-do list. Last year’s trade with the Panthers brought about a move that may well not have occurred in a normal year. After building the 2023 offseason around Justin Fields, GM Ryan Poles cut bait on the run-oriented QB to prepare for a Caleb Williams-centered future.

The Bears have now secured a rare opportunity to reset their quarterback contract clock, moving on from a fourth-year passer to a rookie with a much higher ceiling. Williams now leads a Bears team that spent extensive time equipping its new passer with weaponry, setting up one of the most intriguing periods in this storied franchise’s history.

Extensions and restructures:

Poles acquired two new receiver regulars for Williams to target, but he also rewarded the one obtained in 2023. Moore stretched his run of 1,000-yard seasons to four — with four different primary starting QBs — and continued to do so with passers regarded well off the top tier at the position. Fields’ issues with accuracy aside, Moore smashed his career-high receiving mark from Carolina with a 1,364-yard Chicago debut. Moore also established a new career-best TD number (eight) and ranked in the top 15 in yards per route run (2.31). A Bears franchise that does not have many standout receiver seasons in its history enjoyed one during a mostly forgettable slate.

Moore, 27, said he did not shoot for a Justin Jefferson-level payday; the seventh-year player still did very well. Moore’s total guarantee number ($82.6MM) trails only Jefferson and A.J. Brown — as if we needed even more components impacting Brandon Aiyuk‘s endless 49ers negotiations — and the Bears structured this contract like a team that has a rookie QB deal around which to build. Moore’s cap number jumps from $7.2MM to $24.9MM from 2024-25, and this through-2029 contract — two seasons remained on his 2022 Panthers extension — does not include any void years.

The Bears guaranteed Moore’s 2024 and ’25 base salaries but have some flexibility beyond that. Moore’s age and production history should make this $27.5MM-per-year deal a win for the Bears, who secured four more seasons of control and would only be on the hook for prorated signing bonus money if they moved on post-2025. Seeing as Moore is a rare No. 1 wide receiver to stop through Chicago, any departure rumors can be tabled into the late 2020s. The Maryland alum’s deal will overlap with Williams and Rome Odunze‘s rookie contracts for at least three years.

More than four months earlier, the Bears reached a quick resolution with Johnson. They did so despite allowing Johnson’s camp to negotiate with other teams at the 2023 trade deadline. The Bears were not satisfied with any trade offers, wanting a first- or second-round pick for a player who had not shown All-Pro-level form from 2020-22. Interest from multiple teams ensued, but Poles soon affirmed he wanted Johnson in the fold long term.

The Bears and Chiefs snapped a notable drought of cornerback franchise tags; the Rams’ second Trumaine Johnson tag (2017) represented the most recent such move coming into this offseason. While the Chiefs tagged L’Jarius Sneed to fetch draft capital in a trade — as the NFL’s latest dynasty operates around one-contract CBs — the Bears had more room to pay their tagged cover man.

Poles has made his stamp on this defense, having now given high-end contracts to defenders on all three levels. The third-year GM paid Tremaine Edmunds and Montez Sweat last year and re-upped Johnson days before free agency. Johnson had expressed some frustration Sweat was paid first despite his midseason arrival and mentioned an aim at becoming the NFL’s highest-paid corner. The Bears did not give in there, but the former second-round pick — after a well-timed breakout — did well in terms of guarantees.

After subsequent deals for Sneed, Tyson Campbell and AJ Terrell, Johnson’s AAV sits 10th among corners. It is a bit unusual for a franchise-tagged player to settle for such placement, but Johnson secured $43.8MM fully guaranteed — fourth among corners — and $54MM guaranteed in total (seventh). This is also a clean contract, with no void years involved and the former second-round pick’s 2026 guarantee not vesting until that year. Johnson’s 2024 and ’25 base salaries are guaranteed; the fifth-year CB is due $44MM in that span. That is more than two tags would have covered, explaining how the Bears finalized this deal so quickly.

Pro Football Focus graded Johnson first overall among corners, and Pro-Football-Reference’s coverage metrics backed that up. After allowing passer ratings (as the closest defender) north of 94.0 from 2020-22, Johnson checked in with a 50.9 number last season — a four-INT slate that produced a second-team All-Pro honor. The Bears are confident this was not merely a contract-year outlier; they will count on Johnson to anchor their mid-2020s secondaries.

Trades:

Although feigned debate surfaced about this decision, those in the league never seemed to be convinced the Bears strongly considered passing on Williams to keep Fields. The Bears wanted a Day 2 pick for their three-year starter, a player around whom they themed the 2023 trade (which moved them out of C.J. Stroud/Bryce Young territory), and the Falcons were floated as a possibility. The Fields market turned out to be ice cold. If now-starter Russell Wilson can hold off the younger passer and play 50% of the Steelers’ 2024 snaps, the Bears will only collect a 2025 sixth. Fields reaching the 51% play-time barrier would give Chicago Pittsburgh’s 2025 fourth.

Poles, of course, did not draft Fields. That would have made it borderline insane had the third-year GM passed on a second straight No. 1 overall pick. The Panthers throwing Young into a terrible spot became the Bears’ golden ticket, with Chicago benefiting from the lowest point in Carolina’s history.

Poles labeled Fields’ murky status exiting the season a unique situation, and the Bears were then tied to wanting a historic haul for the top pick. No real noise about Fields having a shot to stick in the Windy City emerged henceforth, and while the Bears may or may not have passed on other offers to do right by the former No. 11 pick, it is hard to believe they rejected a significantly superior proposal. The four other teams to discuss Fields with the Bears viewed him as a backup.

That said, Fields (23rd in 2023 QBR) would probably still be the Bears’ quarterback had Young elevated the Panthers out of the NFL basement. Though, the Bears landing the Nos. 2 or 3 picks via the Panthers may still have resulted in them dealing Fields and starting over with Jayden Daniels or Drake Maye. Fortunately for Poles, his decision proved easier. The Steelers passed on Fields’ fifth-year option, and the electric runner/sack-prone passer will not be extended in 2024. Fields looks to have a shot at sticking with the Steelers via a 2025 re-signing, but he will need to overtake Wilson and show growth.

One of this era’s premier route-running technicians, Allen joins the Bears ahead of his age-32 season. The Bears landed the 11-year Charger despite interest from the Texans and Jets emerging; those teams circled back to other vets, while Allen began a contract year in Chicago.

The new Bolts regime offered Allen an extension, but the receiver’s camp labeled the proposal a pay cut. Allen remains tied to the $20MM-per-year deal he signed in 2020, and while he is open to an extension, the Bears now have Moore and Odunze signed long term. Even with Williams on a rookie deal, the team paying Allen even midlevel money beyond 2024 would be somewhat difficult. After all, the team has also paid a running back (D’Andre Swift) and tight end (Cole Kmet).

Allen is a six-time Pro Bowler who has excelled in the slot and on the perimeter. A strong Bears season could vault the former third-rounder from the Hall of Very Good tier to a player with a viable Canton case. As it stands, Williams will have one of the game’s best separators — ESPN’s Open Score metric placed Allen first in 2023 — to target in Year 1. Allen showed scant decline signs last season, averaging a career-best 95.6 yards per game and surpassing 1,200 for just the second time in a season. He got there in 13 games. The Bears will hope to extract one more prime-level year from the aging talent.

Bates remains on the Bears-built contract from 2022, when the Bills matched an offer sheet early in Poles’ GM tenure. The Bills used Bates as a 2022 starter but demoted him to a full-time backup last season. Bates, 27, battled Coleman Shelton for the center job but has missed time due to an undisclosed injury. Bates looks like the Bears’ sixth man up front when he recovers.

Taylor flashed in Seattle, posting 9.5 sacks and forcing four fumbles in 2022. He also totaled at least 5.5 sacks in each of his three healthy seasons. The former second-rounder, due for unrestricted free agency in 2025, has a chance to boost his value as a Montez Sweat sidekick.

Free agency additions:

The Bears joined the Eagles, Texans and others in entering the Saquon Barkley sweepstakes, and while Giants GM Joe Schoen indicated on Hard Knocks that Chicago had driven up the two-time Pro Bowler’s price, it looked to be a Philly negotiation that defined the running back market’s early hours. The Eagles were looking into re-signing Swift but saw his price point move past their comfort zone, and they pivoted to Barkley, whom Howie Roseman‘s team clearly viewed on a higher tier. Swift became the 2024 UFA market’s first commit, as the Bears continued to load up a roster around another rookie-scale QB contract.

Familiar with Swift from his Lions days, the Bears gave him the second-most money among UFA backs this year. Swift’s $14MM guarantee at signing outflanked Josh Jacobs, Derrick Henry, Devin Singletary and Aaron Jones. The ex-Detroit second-rounder’s age (25) and lighter workload by comparison to the other available backs undoubtedly boosted his stock. Swift will begin his Bears tenure with 788 career touches. Injuries were an issue for the Georgia alum in Detroit, which fetched barely a fourth-rounder in a 2023 trade.

Swift stayed healthy in Philly, booking a Pro Bowl nod after 1,049-yard rushing season. The former No. 35 overall pick also has two seasons (2020, ’22) in which he ranked in the top 10 among RBs in yards per catch, with the Lions using him as more of a dual threat compared to the Eagles. The Bears figure to take advantage of Swift’s multipurpose skillset, with the upper-middle-class RB contract pairing with Khalil Herbert and Roschon Johnson‘s rookie deals.

Byard joins Swift in coming from Philly, though the Eagles had cut the former All-Pro. Considering what happened on the safety market this offseason, Byard did well. As fellow cap casualties Quandre Diggs, Jamal Adams, Marcus Maye and Eddie Jackson all took one-year deals worth less than $4MM, Byard saw his guarantee approach where Justin Simmons‘ market went. The four-time All-Pro scored $7.5MM guaranteed from the Falcons. Byard, 31, has two first-team All-Pro distinctions on his resume (2017, 2021) and will provide a cheaper solution to Jackson’s Ryan Pace-authorized extension. Despite Byard’s involvement in the Eagles’ late-season collapse, Pro Football Focus rated him 22nd among safeties last year.

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49ers Made Offer For Broncos WR Courtland Sutton

Brandon Aiyuk‘s 49ers drama is over; the long-running extension saga ended with a $30MM-per-year deal. But the Steelers loom as the second-place finishers. Pittsburgh not having a wide receiver to send to San Francisco hurt its chances, as the 49ers understandably wanted an immediate replacement.

A workaround formed for the 49ers during the trade chapter — which featured framework with the Steelers — of this offseason-overshadowing Aiyuk drama. The defending NFC champions offered the Broncos a third-round pick for Courtland Sutton, according to The Athletic’s Dianna Russini, but Denver declined.

For all intents and purposes, this would have been akin to a three-team trade. The 49ers would have then traded Aiyuk to the Steelers, Russini implies, with the Broncos suddenly playing a central role in the “what if?” Aiyuk-to-Pittsburgh scenario. The Pittsburgh component also includes the team offering the 49ers second- and third-round picks for Aiyuk, SI.com’s Albert Breer reports. The Sutton piece of this puzzle would have involved the Pittsburgh third going to Denver.

Had the Sutton offer produced a deal, the 49ers would have been better positioned to send Aiyuk to the Steelers. With the Broncos keeping Sutton as their top wideout — after a Browns deal involving Amari Cooper fell through — the 49ers were in a tougher spot with Aiyuk. The parties returned to the table and hammered out an extension that locks in fifth-year standout through 2028.

Considering the Broncos unloaded Jerry Jeudy for fifth- and sixth-round picks, this seemingly would have been a tempting proposal. Sutton was acquired before Sean Payton‘s arrival, and only $2MM in guarantees remain on his through-2025 deal. Sutton has also been a trade-rumor mainstay since before the 2022 deadline. Denver holding off here suggests the team wants a proven target around Bo Nix, as a future Sutton trade proposal may well not include third-round compensation.

While Pittsburgh has only George Pickens as a proven starter-level receiver, the team did draft Roman Wilson in Round 3. The Steelers have turned several Day 2 wideouts into promising receivers, with Antonio Brown coming from Day 3. This edition, now featuring ex-Broncos QB Russell Wilson at the controls, looks to include Van Jefferson as Pickens’ top complement. It would have been out of character for the Steelers to bring in an outside receiver of Aiyuk’s caliber (and pay him the $27MM-plus-per-year deal they proposed), but it does look like the Omar Khan-led operation was close to doing so. It needed some help the Broncos were unwilling to provide.

San Francisco’s offer comes nearly 18 months after Denver nearly dealt Sutton to Baltimore. The Ravens were on the verge of acquiring Sutton in March 2023 but backed out and signed Odell Beckham Jr. The Broncos, who had set a second-round asking price on Sutton and a first-rounder on Jeudy last year, went back to the well with the two John Elway-era WR additions. Sutton overtook Jeudy as Russell Wilson’s top target, catching 10 touchdown passes — including a few acrobatic grabs — to help the team recover from a 1-5 start.

Jeudy is now in Cleveland; he may well have become Aiyuk’s Browns complementary piece, with the 49ers wideout nixing a trade that would have sent Cooper to San Francisco. Both Cooper and Sutton expressed disappointment in their contracts this offseason, though their respective teams agreed on mere incentive packages. Despite this low-key end to Denver’s Sutton talks, the team appears to value the 2018 second-rounder in Payton’s second year.

Russini’s report also pours some cold water on the Broncos unloading Sutton before the trade deadline. Denver just cut Tim Patrick, who had run with its starters for much of camp and the preseason, but has Sutton in place as its wideout anchor. The team will attempt to develop recent draftees Marvin Mims, Troy Franklin and Devaughn Vele, as Josh Reynolds is now in place as veteran support. But Sutton, who is entering his age-29 season, will be relied upon to boost Nix’s rookie-year development.