Month: November 2024

Cowboys TE Jake Ferguson Suffers MCL Sprain

Jake Ferguson exited the Cowboys’ season-opening win on Sunday, but he has avoided the worst-case scenario on the injury front. The third-year tight end is not expected to miss considerable time (if any), as first reported by WFAA’s Ed Werder.

[RELATED: Recapping Cowboys’ Offseason]

Ferguson – who offered an encouraging update on his status Monday – is nevertheless in danger of being sidelined for a brief stretch. Tests revealed he is dealing with an MCL sprain as well as a bone bruise, per Ian Rapoport of NFL Network. He is therefore considered week-to-week at this point, although ESPN’s Todd Archer confirms Ferguson is still a candidate to play in Week 2.

After a relatively quiet rookie season, Ferguson took a notable step forward in production last year. Dalton Schultz‘s successor posted 761 yards and five touchdowns on 71 receptions in 2023. Expectations are high for a repeat of that output this campaign, one in which CeeDee Lamb and Brandin Cooks remain atop the receiver depth chart. Quarterback Dak Prescott will stay in place for years to come, but one of his top targets may be temporarily unavailable.

Dallas beat Cleveland 33-17 on Sunday, with Ferguson registering three catches on five targets. The 25-year-old earned a Pro Bowl nod for his production last year, and a similar showing in 2024 would set him up well for an extension in March. Two years remain on his rookie contract, though, and Micah Parsons headlines the list of Cowboys in line for a new deal during the 2025 offseason.

If Ferguson misses time, Lamb and Cooks will be positioned to remain focal points in the passing game. At the tight end spot in particular, Dallas will turn to Luke Schoonmaker and Brevyn Spann-Ford for an increased offensive workload if required. In relatively short order, though, Ferguson should be back to full health.

Steelers P Cameron Johnston Suffers Season-Ending Knee Injury

SEPTEMBER 9: Johnston is indeed out for the year, Ian Rapoport of NFL Network reports. The Steelers will spend the coming days searching out replacement options for the remainder of the campaign as a result. Pittsburgh currently has roughly $16.3MM in cap space.

SEPTEMBER 8: After three years with punter Pressley Harvin III, the Steelers made the decision to move on with a new punter in 2024, signing former Texans leg Cameron Johnston. Unfortunately, it looks like they will be forced to find another solution to their punting game as Johnston has suffered what head coach Mike Tomlin called a “serious injury,” per ESPN’s Brooke Pryor.

On a punt in the fourth quarter of today’s win over the Falcons, Johnston’s kicking leg was hurt when a Falcons defender fell into it after Johnston landed following the kick. When the defender made contact, the knee appeared to pop, and Johnston collapsed to the turf in what looked to be a significant amount of pain. Johnston limped off the field after the trainers took a look, inspiring some hope, but he was later carted off the sideline into the locker room before the end of the contest.

Needing one more punt before the game came to a close, the Steelers turned to kicker Chris Boswell, who delivered a 43-yard punt. The responsibility isn’t a completely unfamiliar one to Boswell, who kicked field goals and punts during his time at Rice in college. He punted 15 times for the Owls with an average of 40.3 yards per punt. It doesn’t seem to be sustainable to rely on Boswell to perform both roles on special teams moving forward, though, so expect Pittsburgh to seek another solution while Johnston is out.

One such solution, though perhaps an unpopular one in Pittsburgh, could be to bring Harvin back. After being released by the Steelers, Harvin signed with the 49ers but was waived before the season began. Now, Harvin would be available to return for another stint, if invited. Over the past two seasons, Harvin averaged 43.83 yards per punt, placing the Steelers at 32nd in the league in that statistic, but with today’s injury, Pittsburgh may not have much of a choice. Johnston will undergo an MRI soon to determine his prognosis and the Steelers course of action.

Jets’ D.J. Reed To Test Free Agency In 2025

The Jets’ secondary will play a key role in the team’s ability to deliver on expectations in 2024. That unit includes Michael Carter for the foreseeable future, and the same will no doubt be true of Sauce GardnerWhether or not fellow corner D.J. Reed stays with New York beyond the coming season will not be learned for several months, however.

Reed is a pending free agent as he prepares to play out the final season of his three-year, $33MM contract. That pact has proven to offer solid value from the Jets’ perspective, as the 27-year-old has served as a full-time starter and consistent contributor in coverage. With a Gardner mega-extension looming as early as next spring, though, Reed confirmed he will test the market in March before deciding on his next move.

“I’m going to go to free agency,” the Kansas State product said (via ESPNs Rich Cimini). “I’m focused on just handling my business, taking it one game at a time, ultimately winning, getting to the playoffs, making a push for a Super Bowl run, and then just seeing what happens after that.”

Reed hinted in June that he would wind up in free agency after playing out the 2024 season. As of that point, no extension talks had taken place, and no updates on that front have emerged since. The Carter deal makes him one of three slot corners averaging over $10MM per season, and a new pact for Gardner will move him near or atop the pecking order for outside players. Patrick Surtain and Jalen Ramsey moved the top of that market to (and then slightly beyond) $24MM per year, giving Gardner a target on his extension.

Keeping Carter and Gardner in the fold will make it challenging to also retain Reed. The former fifth-rounder has recorded one interception and one forced fumble during each of his Jets campaigns, adding 21 pass deflections during that time. Reed allowed two touchdowns and nearly identical passer ratings (81.9, 81.6) in coverage across the past two years, and a similar campaign is expected in 2024.

Another steady season would boost Reed’s stock and generate a market of outside suitors. He has expressed a desire to re-sign with the Jets, but that will not happen before he gauges his value as a free agent.

Cowboys, Dak Prescott Agree To Extension

The Cowboys and quarterback Dak Prescott have finally pushed their negotiations past the finish line. As ESPN’s Adam Schefter was first to report, Dallas and Prescott have agreed to a stunning four-year, $240MM extension that will make Prescott the highest-paid player in NFL history.

Schefter notes that all but $9MM of Prescott’s deal is guaranteed, which speaks to the inordinate amount of leverage that the three-time Pro Bowler wielded in this process. His $231MM in guaranteed money is $1MM more than Deshaun Watson received in his highly controversial deal with the Browns several years ago. And, as Ian Rapoport of NFL.com observes, Prescott’s guarantees — which include a record $80MM signing bonus — are $60MM higher than the next highest sum of guaranteed money ever handed out on a four-year contract.

[RELATED: Jerry Jones Addresses QB’s Record-Breaking Contract]

Throughout the offseason, questions lingered about whether or not the Cowboys would be able to work out deals with Prescott, wideout CeeDee Lamb and edge rusher Micah Parsons while saving the cap flexibility to make other moves. An otherwise quiet offseason revolved around negotiations on the Prescott and Lamb fronts in particular. The latter wound up cashing in on a $34MM-per-year extension which (like the former) will keep him in Dallas through 2028. Lamb did not reach the top of the receiver market, but Prescott has taken his position to new financial heights.

A $60MM AAV has long been a possibility, especially given the nature of the quarterback mega-deals worked out over the past two years and the position Prescott found himself in. No-tag and no-trade clauses were included in his previous pact, and Dallas was set to deal with a $55MM cap charge in 2024 in the absence of an extension coming into play. That was also the case for the dead money charge (roughly $40MM) in 2025 which would have been on the team’s cap sheet had Prescott departed in free agency next spring.

Both the 31-year-old himself and owner Jerry Jones made a number of public remarks in the build-up to today’s news. Continuing this relationship well past 2024 was a mutual goal, although Prescott hinted at testing the market on more than one occasion. Jones indicated in the spring he preferred to let the QB and WR markets take further shape before serious negotiations with Prescott and Lamb’s camps took place. That approach has yielded agreements for both, albeit along a less-than-ideal timeline given the missed time from training camp in one case and the run up to an artificial Week 1 deadline in the other.

Jones stated he would be on board with Prescott negotiations continuing into the regular season, but a late push by all parties involved yielded progress. That left the door open to an eleventh-hour agreement, although with Saturday night coming and going it appeared one would no longer be possible. In the end, however, Prescott is now on the books for the foreseeable future as he tries once again to guide the Cowboys to deep playoff run.

Dallas has posted a 12-5 record in each of the past three years, failing to convert that into postseason success in every instance. Head coach Mike McCarthy is entering a lame-duck year in no small part due to the Cowboys’ underwhelming defeat to the Packers during the wild-card round last season. Jones has routinely praised the former Green Bay Super Bowl winner, hinting he could be retained past the coming campaign depending on how things go. Prescott – who led the league in touchdown passes during McCarthy’s first year as offensive play-caller – will be expected to duplicate his success from 2023 for several more seasons.

Parsons (whose resume includes two first-team All-Pro honors, one second-team nod and three Pro Bowl invites) no doubt would have been a higher organizational priority if not for Prescott and Lamb entering the offseason as pending free agents. With both of their pacts now taken care of, attention will turn to Parsons’ level of play in his fourth campaign. The 25-year-old will set himself up for a major payday with another productive campaign in 2024, but Dallas’ cap outlook has of course been considerably altered in recent weeks.

Today’s deal (and, more specifically, the massive guarantee commitment) confirms Prescott will remain a Cowboy for most, if not all, of his career. His legacy remains linked to the franchise’s ongoing Super Bowl drought, but the next several years will offer an opportunity to break through in the postseason. It will be interesting to see, meanwhile, how the quarterback market shakes out in the near future with the top of the pecking order changing once again.

Rory Parks contributed to this post.

Malik Willis To Start For Packers; Team Has Reached Out To Ryan Tannehill

Packers quarterback Jordan Love will be sidelined for three to six weeks as a result of the MCL sprain he suffered in the club’s Week 1 loss to the Eagles. Recent trade acquisition Malik Willis will step into the starting lineup for Green Bay’s home opener against the Colts next week, per Fox Sports’ Jay Glazer (via Aaron Nagler of CheeseheadTV).

However, the team has reached out to veteran passer Ryan Tannehill, as Dianna Russini of The Athletic reports. Tannehill is the most accomplished quarterback still on the market after his Titans tenure came to an end this spring. The 36-year-old has received interest from teams this offseason, but he appeared content to wait out the start of the year and examine the opportunities which presented themselves. Week 1 has certainly done so in the form of the Love injury.

Earlier today, Ian Rapoport of NFL Network provided an update on Tannehill’s status. The Texas A&M alum has stayed in shape while awaiting a potential offer, but he intends to return to action only under the “perfect” circumstances. A playoff contender featuring a strong offensive line and skill-position pieces would be Tannehill’s target, Rapoport notes, while adding finances would play a part as well. With just over $195MM in career earnings, Tannehill can afford to be selective when considering his suitors.

As a team which went to the divisional round of the postseason last year in large part on the strength of its young offense, though, the Packers represent a logical landing spot for Tannehill. Each of Green Bay’s top pass-catchers from last year remain in place, and free agent pickup Josh Jacobs is positioned to handle a heavy workload in the backfield. The team entered Sunday with roughly $14.6MM in cap space, providing the flexibility for a short-term addition under center.

For now, at least, it will be Willis at the helm. The former Titans third-rounder lost out to Mason Rudolph this offseason for the team’s backup gig, prompting his trade to the Packers. Willis was caught off guard by the move, one which came after Sean Clifford and Michael Pratt struggled to earn the QB2 spot. Both young passers were cut, with Clifford being retained via a practice squad deal and Pratt leaving the organization. Clifford represents an option more familiar with Matt LaFleur‘s scheme, but to little surprise Willis get the nod for at least one start.

Adam La Rose contributed to this post.

Poll: Which First-Time Head Coach Will Fare Best In 2024?

The 2024 coaching cycle produced eight hires around the NFL. Raheem Morris (Falcons), Jim Harbaugh (Chargers) and Dan Quinn (Commanders) are each in place as head coaches after previously serving in that role with past teams. The other five are making their coaching debuts this weekend.

Dave Canales ended a lengthy tenure with the Seahawks in 2023 when took over as the Buccaneers’ offensive coordinator. That was his first opportunity as a play-caller at the college or NFL levels, and Tampa Bay did not rank among the league’s elite in terms of passing production. The team was also last in rushing yardage, but overall the Buccaneers outperformed expectations in 2023. Quarterback Baker Mayfield was among the many in-house players who landed a contract keeping him in Tamp Bay this offseason.

That came in no small part from the former No. 1 pick’s career highs in yards (4,044) and touchdown passes (28) under Canales. Expectations will be high for another NFC South title in 2024 for the Bucs, but the opposite will be the case in Carolina as Canales begins his first head coaching gig. The 43-year-old helped stabilize Mayfield’s career in Tampa Bay after doing the same with Geno Smith in Seattle. Canales will now be tasked with overseeing Bryce Young’s development.

Selected first overall last April after the Panthers’ blockbuster trade to acquire the top pick, Young struggled mightily in 2023. The same was true of many other aspects of the organization, of course, and head coach Frank Reich was fired midway through his first season as head coach. General manager Scott Fitterer was dismissed this offseason, with Dan Morgan being promoted as his replacement. He and Canales are at the helm of a long-term rebuild, but at least slight improvement from last year’s 2-15 campaign will be expected in 2024.

Antonio Pierce has slightly more experience than his fellow first-year coaches. The Raiders gave him the interim HC title after Josh McDaniels was fired midway through his second season in Vegas. Owner Mark Davis was in a similar situation when Rich Bisaccia took on interim duties in 2021. Davis allowed Bisaccia to depart, a move he has since expressed regret over.

Instead of repeating that move this year, Davis tapped Pierce for the full-time gig. Many players publicly endorsed the former Pro Bowl linebacker after he guided the team to a 5-4 record down the stretch. Efforts to land a quarterback in the first round of the draft were unsuccessful, so training camp saw incumbent Aidan O’Connell and free agent pickup Gardner Minshew compete for the starting gig. Neither passer impressed, and the veteran will begin the year atop the depth chart based largely on his experience.

The Raiders added Christian Wilkins to a defensive front already featuring Maxx Crosby, and the team’s defense will be leaned on heavily amidst questions in the passing game. Vegas’ rushing output without Josh Jacobs in the backfield will also be worth watching as Pierce looks to lead the Raiders to a postseason return or at least offer a reason for long-term stability on the sidelines.

Jerod Mayo was known to be the Patriots’ heir apparent to Bill Belichick well before the six-time Super Bowl winner parted ways with the organization. Belichick’s departure came about after the third year with Mac Jones in place at quarterback wound up as a disaster. Sweeping changes on offense were made in the offseason, although a number of players brought in during Belichick’s tenure were retained.

That will leave Mayo – who spent his entire eight-year playing career in New England – with several familiar faces on defense in particular (except, notably, Matt Judon). The 38-year-old spent much of his first training camp overseeing a quarterback competition between veteran Jacoby Brissett and rookie Drake Maye. The latter will begin his career on the bench, but as the No. 3 pick in April’s draft and the more productive passer during the preseason he is expected see the field in relatively short order.

The 2024 campaign will be measured in large part by Maye’s development, but the degree to which the Patriots’ offensive line and receiving corps progress will be worth watching as well. Mayo and first-year de facto GM Eliot Wolf‘s roster is not expected to compete in the AFC East, but a step forward from the end of the Belichick era would provide optimism moving forward.

Pete Carroll attempted to remain in place at the helm of the Seahawks in 2024, but the team moved forward with finding his replacement. Mike Macdonald, 36, is the only head coach younger than Mayo and he represents a candidate to enjoy a lengthy tenure in the Emerald City just as Carroll did. Macdonald spent the 2022 and ’23 seasons serving as the Ravens’ defensive coordinator, boosting his stock considerably during that time.

Baltimore led the NFL in points allowed, sacks and takeaways last year. That unprecedented feat put him on the head coaching radar despite his age and the fact many younger head coaches tend to have a background on the offensive side of the ball. New OC Ryan Grubb will take charge of Seattle’s offense while Macdonald focuses on orchestrating a defensive rebound. The Seahawks have ranked no better than 22nd in total defense over the past five years.

Seattle finished 9-8 last season, and quarterback Geno Smith is among the core players still in place from Carroll’s final campaign. If Macdonald can guide the team to a better finish on defense, a postseason berth could very well be within reach. The NFC West figures to remain highly competitive, though, so his first year at the helm will feature several challenges if a return to the playoffs is to take place.  

Brian Callahan joined Zac Taylor’s original Bengals staff in 2019 and he worked as offensive coordinator for five years. That gig did not include play-calling responsibilities, but Callahan drew head coaching interest before landing the Titans’ position. Tennessee moved on from Mike Vrabel after a second straight losing season, and Callahan will be tasked with developing quarterback Will Levis in his place.

The 2023 second-rounder made nine starts during his rookie campaign after taking over from Ryan Tannehill. Levis’ ability to progress will be Tennessee’s top storyline as he takes charge of a unit which now features Calvin Ridley, Tyler Boyd, Tony Pollard and multiple new starters along the offensive line. Callahan’s ability to fit those new elements into the offense and maximize Levis’ potential will determine much of the team’s short- and long-term outlook.

The Titans went 6-11 last year and the AFC South includes three other teams which have young passers; all of them posted better records than Tennessee in 2023. Ran Carthon enters his second season as general manager, and the team’s new regime will be tasked with moving forward with a new core compared to the Vrabel era. Callahan is a central figure in that effort, and Levis’ first full campaign atop the depth chart will be worth watching closely as Callahan handles play-calling duties.

Which staffer do you think will have the best campaign in 2024? Cast your vote in PFR’s latest poll and have your say in the comments section.

Jerry Jones Addresses Dak Prescott’s Deal

The Cowboys were one of few teams to experience two big wins today: their win over the Browns in Cleveland and the signing of their star quarterback to the highest salary in NFL history. Both were a long time in the works, but Dak Prescott‘s new contract is perhaps the more gratifying of today’s victories because of the wait.

Prescott’s extension, which includes $231MM in guaranteed money, an $80MM signing bonus, and a $60MM annual average, was the result of several months of negotiations. In that time, Cowboys fans frustratingly watched quarterbacks with arguably lesser accomplishments, like Trevor Lawrence and Jordan Love, become the highest-paid players in the NFL. The frustration wasn’t that players they deemed lesser were getting big contracts, it was that with every big quarterback contract that got signed, the price tag for Prescott kept going up.

There’s an argument to be made that if Cowboys owner Jerry Jones had worked faster to secure extensions for stars like Prescott and wide receiver CeeDee Lamb, the team could’ve have vastly saved on relatively cheaper deals. Instead of working to set the market, the Cowboys ended up being forced to react to it, leading to them being the only team in the NFL with two of the 20 highest-paid players in the NFL (by annual average) with Prescott at No. 1 and Lamb tied at No. 20.

The unofficial deadline that the team set for getting the deal done was the season opener, and Dallas snuck this one in before watching Prescott potentially test free agency at the end of the year. When asked if he was relieved to have got it done in time, Jones told reporters“Relief? No, I’m happy that it’s done. This was the time when it was right there for us to do. We were all set to go. That’s so critical.”

Jones claimed that the issue with getting a deal done was never about Prescott being the answer for them at the quarterback position. The concentration was just finding a way to make everything work, and the stars didn’t align until just in time to get the deal done.

“I think we all felt a little energy to come on in and, so to speak, get to a point where we could say ‘yes,'” Jones continued, per Clarence Hill of All City DLLS. “I’ve really known all along what a great player Dak is…I’ve seen too many very important deals not work out just because of miscalculating the right time when everybody’s ready to go. It was apparent to me over the last few days that we were ready to go and could put this in place.”

There was one other sticking point that kept holding Jones up throughout the process: the sheer magnitude of the money involved. “I’m talking about making him the highest paid player in the history of the NFL…$231 million guaranteed, I know, these numbers are beyond anything I could have ever imagined.”

In the end, the team got it done, and now, Prescott has the highest annual salary any player in the NFL has ever had. We don’t know all the specifics of the deal just yet, but ESPN’s Todd Archer tells us that his 2025 cap impact will include $26.13MM in bonus proration, in addition to the new proration of the signing bonus and new base salary. Jones claims he was working to put the Cowboys in the best position to win a Super Bowl in the future, and in his words, “(Prescott) was (their) best chance of getting one.”

NFC Restructures: Hockenson, Giants, Saints

The Vikings were in an uncomfortable position entering the season with less than $1MM in salary cap space. Such a low allowance would restrict the team in making any deadline or practice squad additions, so it was necessary for the team to rework somebody’s contract in order to free up a bit of cap space.

That player happened to be tight end T.J. Hockenson, per Ben Goessling of The Minnesota Star Tribune. While the exact details are unavailable at the moment, the Vikings converted a good amount of Hockenson’s $9.9MM base salary in 2024 into a signing bonus. The move cleared up around $7.92MM of cap space. They avoided utilizing a void year at the end of his contract to stash future cap since he already had one in his previous deal.

Here are a few other restructures from around the NFC:

  • The Giants also looked to restructure a veteran’s contract on the eve of the season, choosing to rework the deal of linebacker Bobby Okereke, according to ESPN’s Field Yates. The team converted $6.78MM of Okereke’s 2024 salary into a signing bonus. The move cleared up $4.51MM of cap space for New York this season.
  • Lastly, we recently mentioned that New Orleans worked to restructure the contract of tight end Juwan Johnson to clear up $3.5MM of cap space. Katherine Terrell of ESPN provided a few more details on the reworked deal, informing that the team converted $4.38MM of Johnson’s 2024 base salary into a signing bonus and added one additional void year to the end of his contract in order to achieve their desired result. In effect, his cap impact with the Saints was reduced from $7.01MM to $3.51MM.

Dolphins WR Tyreek Hill Briefly Detained By Police

4:35pm: After the game, Hill confirmed (via ESPN’s Marcel Louis-Jacques) he was pulled over for speeding while adding he did not attempt to identify himself to get out of the situation. He denied any verbal abuse of the arresting officer.

Calais Campbell was one of the players who intervened once Hill was handcuffed. Campbell said he too was placed in handcuffs for “disobeying a direct order” (h/t Louis-Jacques). Campbell was cited but not arrested. The league has been in contact with the Dolphins as part of an investigation into the situation, as noted by NFL Network’s Tom Pelissero. One of the officers involved in Sunday’s incident has been placed on administrative duties, Miami-Dade Police director Stephanie V. Daniels announced.

11:04am: Dolphins wide receiver Tyreek Hill was briefly detained by police on his way to Hard Rock Stadium for the team’s regular season opener against the Jaguars today, as ESPN’s Adam Schefter reports. Schefter’s ESPN colleague, Jeff Darlington, says that Hill was pulled over for speeding, and he subsequently got into a verbal altercation with police.

As a result of the altercation, Hill was put into handcuffs, as shown in a video. A statement released by the Dolphins indicates that several of Hill’s teammates saw the incident and stopped to offer support. Ultimately, Hill was released with a reckless driving citation, and he will play in today’s game.

Hill’s agent, Drew Rosenhaus, is in attendance at Hard Rock Stadium, and prior to the game, he spoke with Darlington (video link). Rosenhaus said that the incident was, “completely unnecessary. I’m very distraught about it. We’re going to have to look into it. … It’s mind-boggling to me” (via Schefter).

This will surely not be the last time this situation is discussed, but for now, the upshot is that Hill is on the field as expected and is reprising his role as the Dolphins’ top wideout. Just last month, player and team hammered out a new deal that allowed Hill to keep pace with his elite WR peers, a deal that added $65MM in guarantees to Hill’s existing contract without adding new years to the term.

Hill, 30, was the first receiver to join the $30MM/year club, but the average annual value on his original Miami contract was inflated by a non-guaranteed salary in its final year that pushed the AAV to the $30MM mark. Assuming Hill continued producing at a high level after he arrived in South Beach via a trade with the Chiefs in March 2022, it was always a given that the two sides would come to terms on some sort of restructure.

That is exactly what happened, as Hill has topped 1,700 receiving yards in both of his first two years with the ‘Fins en route to consecutive First Team All-Pro honors. He is now on a “true” $30MM pact, which reflects his status as one of the league’s best pass catchers.

While Hill is no stranger to legal issues and controversy, it would seem that — outside of his reckless driving ticket — he will not face any long-term repercussions from today’s incident.

Brandon Allen Wins 49ers’ QB2 Job

Shortly after the close of minicamp in June, we heard that Josh Dobbs was leading Brandon Allen in the battle to become the 49ers’ backup quarterback. Allen eventually overtook Dobbs, however, with Eric Branch of the San Francisco Chronicle writing that Allen will open the season at the Niners’ QB2.

Allen, 32, did not play a single snap last year, spending the entire season as San Francisco’s third-stringer behind starter Brock Purdy and former backup Sam Darnold. Allen showed the coaching staff enough to earn another one-year deal with the organization and a chance at the backup gig, as Darnold was expected to land another job elsewhere (which he did, signing a one-year, $10MM deal with the Vikings).

After re-signing Allen, however, the 49ers added Dobbs to provide additional competition. Dobbs has more recent starting experience, appearing in 13 games (12 starts) between the Cardinals and Vikings last season. He flashed on occasion but finished the year with a 3-9 record and a 79.5 quarterback rating, completing 62.8% of his passes for 13 TDs against 10 interceptions. He did rush for 421 yards and another six scores.

Dobbs saw time in the preseason with San Francisco, and he felt his exhibition performances were sufficient to earn the nod. The 29-year-old indicated (in a separate Branch piece) he expected to be tapped as the backup based on his showing during the summer. Instead, he will open the campaign third on the depth chart as a veteran insurance policy in the event both Purdy and Allen run into injury problems.

“Brandon had the head start, just being here,” head coach Kyle Shanahan said (via Branch) when explaining the decision. “I thought he did some better things in practice. I thought Josh really closed the gap in the games… Brandon has a little more similarities to Brock, which I think made us lean that way. But it wasn’t anything against Josh. It was really a tough decision.”

Purdy will be counted on to guide a 49ers offense which still has all of its top skill-position players in place from 2023. Left tackle Trent Williams agreed to a reworked contract, thus ending his long-running holdout in time for Week 1. If Purdy misses any time during the year, though, it will be Allen tasked with taking over at the quarterback spot.

Adam La Rose contributed to this post.