Month: November 2024

Saints HC Dennis Allen On Hot Seat?

Across his two seasons at the helm of the Saints, Dennis Allen has posted a sub-.500 record. 2024 offers an opportunity to rebound and help his job security, but New Orleans’ head coach likely faces pressure entering the campaign.

Allen is viewed around the league as being on the hot seat leading up to Week 1, Jeff Howe of The Athletic notes (subscription required). The 51-year-old took over from Sean Payton in 2022 after spending the previous seven years as the Saints’ defensive coordinator. That continuity helped the transition away from the Payton era, but the post-Drew Brees years have not yielded strong offensive showings for the team.

The Saints have ranked 19th and 14th in total offense during Allen’s time as head coach, and last year’s Derek Carr addition did not meet expectations. Improvement could take place in 2024, the first season since 2009 in which Pete Carmichael will not serve as offensive coordinator. New Orleans went outside the organization in adding Klint Kubiak as OC, a role he previously held in 2021. Increased efficiency on the ground and through the air will be key in the Saints’ efforts to return to the postseason.

Allen’s team improved from 7-10 to 9-8 last year, predictably remaining strong on defense. The Saints have ranked top-10 in points allowed during each of the past four seasons, and many of their top veterans on that side of the ball are still in place. The 2024 offseason consisted of a new round of restructures and extensions aimed at attaining cap compliance while keeping most of New Orleans’ core intact.

In December, a report named Allen as a candidate to be replaced at the end of the campaign. The Saints’ failure to win the NFC South certainly did not help his chances of retaining his title, but later signs pointed to attention mainly being focused on offensive changes rather than an Allen firing. The former Raiders head coach confirmed in January that he expected to remain in place, and that has proven to be the case.

Allen’s time with the Raiders included a record of 8-28 and resulted in his firing after an 0-4 start to the 2014 campaign. His tenure with the Saints has gone better to date, but plenty of room for improvement exists. If steps forward are not taken in 2024, he could be at or near the top of the list of coaches in danger of being let go in advance of the 2025 hiring cycle.

Offseason In Review: Seattle Seahawks

The Seahawks had been able to keep their operation afloat following the Legion of Boom’s gradual splintering, with Russell Wilson making his best statistical Hall of Fame case between Seattle’s mid-2010s Super Bowl seasons and the 2021 campaign that brought an injury and early decline signs. While Pete Carroll and GM John Schneider did well to cash in on their star quarterback in 2022, the team has not turned those assets into a true contender yet. This ended up costing Carroll his job.

Carroll’s right-hand man for 14 years, Schneider now has the final say. He landed on Mike Macdonald, whose Ravens defense took a leap last season. The Seahawks have gone from the NFL’s oldest HC to its youngest. They will hope Macdonald and his staff can better maximize the resources poured into the team following the Wilson trade.

Coaching/front office:

Carroll piloted the Seahawks to their highest peak — by far — in franchise history. It is difficult to make a strong case against the 2013 Seahawks being that decade’s best team and one of this century’s best squads. The Seahawks became the first team since the 1950s Browns — who obviously played in a much smaller NFL — to lead the league in scoring defense in four straight years. Carroll followed up his successful USC stay by guiding the Hawks to 10 playoff berths in 14 seasons, completing an NFL bounce-back effort after being a Jets one-and-done (1994) and being fired after three Patriots seasons.

Another case can be made the Seahawks were not the same team once they gave Wilson the first of his three extensions. The Seahawks made the playoffs five times from 2015-20. They won three wild-card games in that span, but they partially benefited from Blair Walsh‘s 27-yard missed field goal (2015) and Carson Wentz sustaining an early concussion (2019). The Lions team they topped in 2016 also ranked 27th in DVOA. This is not to say those Seahawk editions were not worthy playoff squads, but the franchise’s post-Super Bowl XLIX period saw regular check-ins as a second-tier contender. No conference championship appearances have followed since the infamous Marshawn Lynch “what if?”

Carroll also had to battle age (73 in September) and a new owner (Jody Allen) being in place from when he was hired. While Schneider stayed on and will control Seattle’s 53-man roster, the 15th-year GM will be on the clock if the Seahawks cannot mount a true charge in the near future. They again went in a defensive direction. After initial rumors connected ex-Carroll assistant Dan Quinn to the job, the three-year Cowboys DC was deemed to have been too close to the Carroll setup for team brass’ comfort. Macdonald, 36, became the pick — after a bidding war against the Commanders.

Washington ended up hiring Quinn, but he may well have been the organization’s third choice. The Commanders appeared to covet Lions OC Ben Johnson, and they then pivoted to Macdonald. After Johnson turned them down, the Commanders offered the job to Macdonald. The two-year Ravens DC also was viewed by some as Washington’s top choice. In competing with Washington, Seattle came in with the winning offer. The Commanders’ Macdonald pursuit led to the Seahawks offering a six-year contract. HC contracts are guaranteed, and while Dan Campbell and Dave Canales were two first-timers who received six-year deals during the 2020s (with Matt Rhule landing a seven-year accord), four- or five-year deals are standard NFL practice. Intent on landing their top choice, the Seahawks paid up.

Carroll had tried to keep the job, but a report also suggested he had made midseason comments about retirement. Carroll’s specialty, Seattle’s defense proved a letdown during the team’s second straight 9-8 season. Struggling in particular against the run, Carroll and Clint Hurtt‘s unit ranked 25th in scoring and 28th in DVOA. Enter Macdonald, who coaxed the Ravens to a No. 1 defensive ranking despite late-summer (Jadeveon Clowney) or in-season (Kyle Van Noy) additions in place as the team’s top edge rushers. Baltimore led the league in defensive DVOA, and the ex-Jim Harbaugh Michigan DC received an early chance at a top NFL job.

The Seahawks did not block contracted assistants from pursuing other gigs during the period between Carroll and Macdonald, and OC Shane Waldron joined the Bears. Waldron perhaps has not received sufficient credit for Geno Smith‘s stunning 2022 turnaround, with Canales — Seattle’s QBs coach in 2022 — seeing more praise. While Hurtt was not on the DC radar — he is back with Vic Fangio coaching the Eagles’ D-line — Waldron interviewed with multiple teams.

Seattle’s offense plummeted from ninth to 17th in scoring from 2022-23, with Smith taking a slight step back. Macdonald, whom the Giants blocked from interviewing Mike Kafka (also a Seahawks HC candidate), went off the board in an effort to shape his first offense.

No other teams were connected to Grubb, a career-long college assistant who only brings two years of Power 5 experience. Formerly Fresno State’s OC from 2019-21, Grubb played a central role in powering Washington to the 2023 CFP national title game. Michael Penix Jr. owes some of his elevated draft stock — after an injury-plagued Indiana tenure — to Grubb, whose offense produced Division I-FBS’ passing and receiving leaders (Penix, Rome Odunze). This combo boosted the Huskies to the brink of a national title, after the then-Pac-12 program had not played for one since 1991. Grubb, 48, had agreed to follow Kalen DeBoer to Alabama but ended up viewing this Seahawks offer as a better opportunity.

Schematic changes will be evident immediately in Seattle, and it will be interesting to see how Smith looks in Grubb’s offense. Macdonald kept the Ravens’ long-running 3-4 scheme in place but hired Durde, who had served as the Cowboys’ D-line coach under Quinn. Durde joined Macdonald as an in-demand candidate. The Falcons, Rams and Packers requested meetings, and the Cowboys interviewed him for their DC post — one that ended up going to Mike Zimmer — after the Commanders poached Joe Whitt. Macdonald also considered ex-Ravens coworker Zach Orr, but he received a Baltimore promotion.

Durde, who is English, coached the sport in London for nearly a decade before landing on Quinn’s Falcons staff. As Micah Parsons has shifted to a full-time pass rusher, Durde coached the star talent in a scheme that kept the All-Pro roving around formations. A former Macdonald Ravens mentor, Frazier is back after a 2023 sabbatical. The Bills employed the former Vikings HC as their defensive coordinator for six seasons, but Sean McDermott separated from his previous play-caller in 2023. Frazier’s presence figures to be important on a staff with a first-time HC and rookie DC.

Re-signings:

The Seahawks sent the Giants second- and fifth-round picks for Williams at the 2023 deadline. Hours after the Giants then sent second- and fifth-rounders for Brian Burns, the Seahawks did not let the asset they had acquired leave. Williams is back in the fold, representing a shift for a Seahawks team that continues to invest along the D-line after previously not devoting substantial resources — at least, not until the 2023 Dre’Mont Jones signing — to interior defensive linemen. Jones has since been working on the edge, even after spending five seasons as an interior rusher. Through that lens, the Seahawks have an inside-outside rush combo each on contracts north of $17MM per year.

After not quite living up to his No. 6 overall draft slot as a Jet, Williams has made a habit of timing his resurgences well. On the franchise tag in 2020, the USC product produced 11.5 sacks — far and away a career high — and commanded one of this era’s most player-friendly deals for a defender shortly after the March 2021 franchise tag application deadline (three years, $63MM, $45MM fully guaranteed). Williams did not come close to those 2020 numbers in 2021 or ’22, but upon being dealt to the Seahawks, he posted four sacks and 11 QB hits in 10 games.

Williams, 30, did not help a Seattle run defense that ranked 30th, but Macdonald will plug him into his defense. This could be a good sign for the 10th-year player, as Macdonald just coaxed a dominant season from Ravens DT Justin Madubuike. Williams has an extensive track record as a quality run defender, though his best work on that front came back in his Jets days.

Fant joined Williams in hitting the market. Early deals for Dalton Schultz and Hunter Henry helped the 2019 first-round pick, but his Seahawks usage did not create an extensive bidding war. Fant drew 93- and 90-target seasons during his final two Broncos years; after seeing 63 looks in his Seahawks debut, the Iowa product commanded a paltry 43 last season. After 670- and 673-yard showings in offenses with sub-average QB play in Denver, Fant has stalled out in Seattle. This contract, however, would appear to show the team agrees a production uptick should be expected.

The former No. 20 overall pick is the only player in Seahawks history to see his fifth-year option exercised, which is interesting due to his status as a Broncos draft choice. While Fant is unlikely to flirt with numbers ex-Iowa teammate T.J. Hockenson has put up as a pro, Grubb unlocking him could prove a gateway to a higher tier for Seattle’s offense.

Free agency additions:

AFC East fans will recognize several players in this year’s Seahawks starting lineup. Most of the main additions come from that division.

Last year’s Seahawks O-line underwhelmed in terms of performance and health, and the team’s 2024 offering is not off to a great start. Abraham Lucas is again set for an injury-driven absence. Offseason knee surgery, after the right tackle starter missed 11 games last season, led to a reserve/PUP list designation. The Seahawks will become the latest team to call on George Fant, who has begun to make a career of RT fill-in duty.

Fant, 32, never worked as a full-time Seahawks starter during his first stint. He still parlayed that tenure into a three-year, $27.3MM Jets deal. After being a three-year Jets starter, Fant subbed for the Texans by playing 874 RT snaps last year. Lucas’ injury history has become a concern, and the Seahawks did well to bring back their one-time basketball convert for key spot duty.

Seattle landed Williams at a discount, finishing a lengthy recruiting process after the seventh-year vet made a Ravens visit. If he plays to his Dolphins form, the team will need to prepare a big raise in order to keep the former second-rounder beyond 2024.

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Offseason In Review: New York Jets

After hitting on three foundational pieces in Sauce Gardner, Garrett Wilson, and Breece Hall during the 2022 draft, the Jets were ready to contend in 2023. The organization immediately addressed its QB woes, bringing Aaron Rodgers (and friends) to New York last offseason. Despite not having put together a winning season since 2015, optimism was unusually high among the Gang Green faithful.

We all know what happened next. Rodgers suffered a season-ending injury after only four offensive snaps, and the Jets once again had to deal with dismal quarterback play throughout the 2023 campaign. Despite Zach Wilson‘s best worst efforts, the Jets admirably stumbled to seven wins.

Considering the Jets’ all-in approach, 2023 was undoubtedly a lost season. Fortunately, it wasn’t all lost in New York. The organization was still able to identify some key roster holes, and it used the 2024 offseason to act accordingly. By adding key players via free agency and the draft, the Jets may have set themselves up for even more success than envisioned a year ago.

Coaching/front office:

  • Retained head coach Robert Saleh, GM Joe Douglas
  • Parted ways with assistant GM Rex Hogan

Thanks to the efforts of head coach Robert Saleh and general manager Joe Douglas, there would have been optimism heading into 2023 even if the Jets hadn’t acquired a future Hall of Fame quarterback. Unfortunately, the team’s offensive improvements proved short-lived, and the Jets’ 7-10 record in 2023 was once again a reflection of the offense.

With the organization again failing to make the playoffs, both the head coach and the GM found themselves on the hot seat. Of course, even the most basic context would indicate that 2023’s failures couldn’t entirely be attributed on the duo, and Woody Johnson seemed to share that sentiment when he announced that he’d retain his HC/GM tandem. Reports of paranoia from within the organization hint that there could be cracks in the foundation, but ownership is willing to give the franchise architectures at least one more shot (this time with a healthy Aaron Rodgers).

One storyline to watch in 2024 will surround the handling of offensive coordinator Nathaniel Hackett. Following a failed stint as the Broncos’ head coach, the former Packers OC teamed up with Rodgers again for the 2023 campaign. When the franchise QB went down, Hackett faced a lot of the blame for the Jets’ offensive inadequacies, leading Saleh to explore a hire to whom Hackett would cede at least some authority. No hire emerged, and while Rodgers again vouched for the embattled OC, Hackett certainly joins the other central Jets decision-makers on the hot seat.

Extensions and restructures:

C.J. Mosley did not have the best start in New York after inking a then-record-setting five-year, $85MM deal in 2019, but the former Ravens draftee has since reclaimed his place as one of the NFL’s top linebackers. With no guaranteed money remaining on the player’s contract, the Jets committed fully to the linebacker for the 2024 campaign while also providing an option for 2025. Of course, this brought a reduction in AAV from Mosley’s previous $17MM-per-year number. He was not the only accomplished linebacker to accept a salary reduction in exchange for guarantees; the Jaguars proceeded this way with Foye Oluokun as well.

Mosley has strung together back-to-back 150-plus-tackle slates and collected his first All-Pro honor — a second-team selection — in 2022. Thanks to the offseason extension, he’ll continue to roll in a high-end tandem with Quincy Williams for at least one more season.

Trades:

The Jets appeared to have it all figured out when they acquired Haason Reddick from the Eagles. The organization had just let Bryce Huff walk to Philly on a lucrative deal, and with Reddick no longer in the Eagles’ plans, the Jets swooped in and acquired the veteran. Unfortunately, Reddick decided to play hardball in pursuit of a contract extension, leading to one of the organization’s biggest offseason headaches in recent years.

The impending free agent still has not reported to his new squad, and considering the Jets’ refusal to negotiate until Reddick actually shows up to team facilities, it is seeming increasingly likely that the holdout will extend into the regular season.

A two-time Pro Bowler who has compiled the fourth-most sacks during the 2020s (50.5) recently took the drastic step of requesting a trade out of New York, but the Jets would be hard-pressed to find a suitor considering the player’s contract demands.

Reddick, 30 this month, has sought a deal in the $25-$28MM-per-year range, while the Jets offered him a below-market number before acquiring him via trade. Reddick had expected the Jets to revisit extension talks, but the team wanted to gauge his fit first. This led to a staredown and the eventual trade request. The Jets were rumored to be ready to adapt Reddick’s 2024 earnings via sweeteners, but the linebacker is seeking term on any extension. Usually we’d wait until one side blinks, but it sounds like neither a stubborn Reddick nor a stubborn Jets front office are willing to relent.

The Jets were not done making trades, with the organization finally ripping off the human-sized Band-Aid that was quarterback Zach Wilson. There was once hope that the former No. 2 overall pick would help lead a rebuilt Jets squad to the promised land. After struggling as a rookie and failing as a sophomore, the Jets pivoted to veteran Aaron Rodgers as their new QB savior. Still, the organization was confident that Wilson could be a future contributor while learning under Rodgers’ tutelage. Instead, Wilson was thrust right back into the lineup.

Wilson’s 60.1% completing and 1.9% interception rates in 2023 both marked career-best figures, but his 4-7 showing as a starter (which included an eventual refusal to move back into the starting lineup, a charge Wilson denied) spelled the end of his tenure in New York. The Jets benched Wilson a grand total of three times. It appears he is headed into this season as the Broncos’ third-string quarterback.

While the Jets have generally used free agency and the draft to address their offensive line, the team did swing a trade for a starting-caliber tackle. The Jets acquired old friend Morgan Moses, who spent the 2021 campaign in New York. Since then, the veteran had a two-year stint in Baltimore. Pro Football Focus basically ranked Moses as a top-15 tackle between those two campaigns. One of the NFL’s longest-tenured tackle starters, Moses will line up on the right side of the line for the Jets, but the team’s newfound depth means the veteran will have to perform to keep his spot.

The Jets moved on from John Franklin-Myers following a four-year pairing. The defensive lineman turned into one of the team’s most reliable pass rushers in recent years, with Franklin-Myers collecting 14.5 sacks between 2021 and 2023. Reddick’s incoming salary represented a key reason why the Jets bailed on Franklin-Myers, a three-year starter for the team. The Broncos, however, reworked the versatile D-lineman’s contract and are prepared to use him as a starter in their 3-4 scheme.

Free agency additions:

With Zach Wilson failing as the starter, the Jets quickly realized they should have rostered a better contingency option for Aaron Rodgers. So, the team went out and acquired one of the top backup quarterbacks on the market, handing Taylor more than $8MM in guaranteed money to (hopefully) sit on the bench.

Taylor has not started double-digit games since the 2017 campaign, but the journeyman QB has garnered 15 combined starts over the past six years. Over that span, he has gone 6-8-1 as a starter while completing 59.9% of his passes for 3,079 yards, 14 touchdowns, and 11 interceptions. While the Jets obviously prefer for Rodgers to be healthy, all wouldn’t be completely lost — at least, compared to last year’s plan — if Taylor is forced into the lineup.

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Cardinals OC Drew Petzing Expected To Draw 2025 HC Interest

The Cardinals finished 4-13 last season. While the showing in Jonathan Gannon‘s first season locked down the No. 4 spot in the draft, Arizona obviously has a long way to go in GM Monti Ossenfort‘s rebuild. But some more attention is coming the organization’s way ahead of this regime’s second season.

Particularly, many around the league are studying the work of the Cardinals’ offensive coordinator. The scheme Drew Petzing has implemented is drawing praise, and The Athletic’s Jeff Howe indicates a widespread belief exists the second-year coordinator will be summoned for HC interviews in 2025 (subscription required). With Gannon a defense-oriented coach, Petzing is going into his second season as an NFL play-caller.

[RELATED: Offseason In Review: Arizona Cardinals]

This would be a rare development for the Cardinals, who have not seen an OC land a top job since the Kurt WarnerLarry Fitzgerald combination powered Todd Haley to the Chiefs’ gig in 2009. (Before that, it had been since Rod Dowhower‘s 1985 Colts arrival.) The Cardinals will probably need to show significant improvement for Petzing to have a true opportunity to become a finalist for a position, but Ejiro Evero‘s recent rise — after being tied to 5-12 and 2-15 teams — does remind that clubs have been more willing to look for promising assistants on non-playoff teams.

Coming from a role as the Browns’ quarterbacks coach, Petzing helped Jacoby Brissett to a bounce-back season — during Deshaun Watson‘s 11-game suspension — and coached under or alongside Kevin Stefanski for nine years. Working with the Vikings’ wide receivers for most of the Adam ThielenStefon Diggs pairing’s duration, Petzing followed Stefanski to Cleveland and spent two years as the Browns’ tight ends coach. Stefanski moved him to QBs coach in 2022. While Petzing could not coax Watson to anything especially close to his Texans-level form, that appears to a bigger-picture issue involving the quarterback.

Petzing, 37, only coached Kyler Murray for eight games last season, doing so after late-summer acquisition Josh Dobbs and 2023 fifth-round pick Clayton Tune combined for nine starts as the Pro Bowler finished ACL rehab. Petzing’s offense ranked 24th in scoring and 19th in yards, with DVOA placing the unit 21st. Considering the Cards only had their starting QB for eight games, that is not exactly a discouraging finish.

After helping Trey McBride to an Arizona-years franchise tight end record, with 825 receiving yards, Petzing will have No. 4 overall pick Marvin Harrison Jr. at his disposal this season. A Cardinals ascent would appear to specifically boost their OC’s stock, as the NFL perpetually searches for up-and-coming offensive minds. Harrison elevating this unit, with Murray now nearly two years removed from his knee injury, could help determine if Petzing will be the rare Cardinals OC to jump onto the coaching carousel.

Seahawks Add Jaren Hall To Practice Squad

One of the Vikings’ four starting quarterbacks last season, Jaren Hall could not stick with Minnesota’s 53-man roster this year. The Vikings waived the 2023 fifth-rounder to make room for Brett Rypien last week.

As Rypien makes his way from Chicago to the Twin Cities, Hall will receive another opportunity. The Seahawks are bringing him in as their de facto third-stringer. The Seahawks are adding Hall to its practice squad, per the Seattle Times’ Bob Condotta. Seattle released wide receiver Easop Winston to make room.

[RELATED: Seahawks Not Discussing Geno Smith Extension]

Hall joined Kirk Cousins, Joshua Dobbs and Nick Mullens as Vikings QB starters during a rare four-QB1 season in NFL history. The BYU product completed 65% of his passes at an impressive 8.4 yards per attempt. Hall, however, suffered a concussion in his first start — leading to Dobbs’ quick post-trade debut — and was benched in his second start, a Week 17 loss to the Packers.

Hall had replaced a struggling Mullens ahead of Week 17 but did not get the call for the Vikes’ season finale. Minnesota still has Mullens on its 53-man roster, with the ex-San Francisco UDFA joining Rypien as Sam Darnold‘s backups. J.J. McCarthy is on IR. The Vikings are not carrying a practice squad passer.

Minnesota drafted Hall 164th overall, doing so after he threw 31 touchdown passes compared to six interceptions in his final BYU campaign. Hall succeeded Zach Wilson as the Cougars’ starter in 2021. The Seahawks showed pre-draft interest in the two-year college starter last year, per ESPN.com’s Brady Henderson.

The Seahawks will take over Hall’s development, stashing him behind Geno Smith and trade acquisition Sam Howell. Seattle had placed P.J. Walker in that role during training camp but cut the veteran backup/XFL 2.0 starter last week. Two years remain on Howell’s rookie contract, while Smith is also signed through the 2025 season. The Seahawks can elevate Hall to their 53-man roster up to three times, before they must use waivers to make him their emergency option — thanks to the NFLPA nixing an offseason rule change aimed at QB flexibility.

NFL Practice Squad Updates: 9/2/24

Here are Monday’s practice squad additions and subtractions:

Carolina Panthers

  • Signed: WR Praise Olatoke

Houston Texans

Indianapolis Colts

Los Angeles Chargers

Los Angeles Rams

  • Signed: OL Blake Larson

New England Patriots

New York Giants

Pittsburgh Steelers

  • Signed: DB Ayo Oyelola

San Francisco 49ers

Tennessee Titans

  • Signed: S Kendell Brooks

Weaver has dropped from the player who logged 640 defensive snaps in 2022, when Harold Landry was sidelined for the year, to the practice squad level. The Titans waived Weaver after setting their initial 53-man roster. He will follow ex-teammate Teair Tart by joining the Texans’ D-line upon being a Titans cut. Though, Tart landed in Houston via waiver claim and never dropped to the P-squad. Weaver registered 5.5 sacks in 2022 but did not record any in 15 games last season.

The Giants waived Long last week. He will join a Colts team that has made multiple moves at corner since setting its initial roster. Indianapolis, which took some heat for not augmenting its outside CB situation this offseason, claimed Samuel Womack off waivers from San Francisco and waived Darrell Baker. Long, a former Rams third-round pick, played for three teams (Raiders, Panthers, Packers in 2023.

Chiefs Notes: Suamataia, Perine, Humphrey

Kingsley Suamataia represents the only new piece along the Chiefs’ offensive line this season. The second-round rookie beat out Wanya Morris for the team’s left tackle job, the Kansas City Star’s Jesse Newell notes. The Chiefs had brought in the BYU product for a “30” visit and traded up (via the 49ers) one spot for the rookie blocker in Round 2. The agile prospect will succeed Donovan Smith, who remains a free agent. Kansas City needed to adjust at left tackle after seeing Orlando Brown Jr. reject its extension offer at the July 2022 franchise tag deadline. Although that caused some frustration among Chiefs brass, the team got by with Smith (with Morris as his backup) in 2023. The team now has Suamataia signed through the 2027 season.

Here is the latest out of Kansas City:

  • Andy Reid has apparently shown notable hesitancy about adjusting to his current area code, as Samaje Perine confirmed the 12th-year Chiefs HC called him from a phone still tied to the Philadelphia region. The veteran running back said (via ESPN.com’s Adam Teicher) he heard directly from Reid when making his decision about where to sign. This reminds of Reid’s pitches to J.J. Smith-Schuster and Drue Tranquill, both of whom having now signed two Chiefs contracts. Kansas City added Perine shortly before placing Clyde Edwards-Helaire on the reserve/NFI list. The veteran, who served as the Broncos’ top passing-down back in 2023 before being cut last week, joins rookie UDFA Carson Steele as the Chiefs’ active-roster RBs behind starter Isiah Pacheco.
  • The Chiefs have not seen a player seize their No. 2 cornerback job, and they looked to the waiver wire for some depth. The two-time defending champions submitted unsuccessful claims on corners Samuel Womack and Shemar Bartholomew, according to ESPN.com’s Field Yates. Waived by the 49ers, Womack ended up with the Colts. Bartholomew did not make it past the No. 1 spot on the wire; the Panthers made the rookie UDFA one of their six claims Wednesday. Kansas City will start Trent McDuffie, preparing to use him outside and in the slot once again, but has not landed on a full-time L’Jarius Sneed replacement. McDuffie 2022 draft classmates Joshua Williams and Jaylen Watson saw the most time last year, and the team kept yet another 2022 draftee — seventh-rounder Nazeeh Johnson — on the roster as well. Reid said recently the team may use a rotational setup into the season.
  • Creed Humphrey reset the center market recently, agreeing to a four-year, $72MM extension. Of the fourth-year center’s $50MM guarantee number, OverTheCap indicates $35MM is guaranteed at signing. The Chiefs fully guaranteed Humphrey’s 2024 and ’25 base salaries and locked in $8.9MM of his 2026 base ($14.3MM) at signing. If/when Humphrey is on Kansas City’s roster on Day 3 of the 2025 league year, the remainder of his 2026 base locks in. That rolling guarantee structure is in place for Humphrey’s 2027 pay as well, with $10MM of his $17.2MM ’27 base salary becoming guaranteed on Day 3 of the ’27 league year. In terms of AAV, Humphrey’s $18MM number leads the center market by more than $4MM.

Minor NFL Transactions: 9/2/24

Here are Labor Day’s minor moves:

Arizona Cardinals

Buffalo Bills

  • Removed from IR via injury settlement: CB Dee Delaney

Carolina Panthers

Dallas Cowboys

  • Removed from IR via injury settlement: WR David Durden

Las Vegas Raiders

Miami Dolphins

Minnesota Vikings

  • Removed from IR via injury settlement: TE Trey Knox

New Orleans Saints

  • Removed from IR via injury settlement: TE Kevin Rader

San Francisco 49ers

Washington Commanders

Stromberg sustained a knee injury that will require surgery. The 2023 third-round pick, one of five 2023 draftees that did not make Washington’s 53-man roster last week, will only need an arthroscopic procedure, per ESPN.com’s Jeremy Fowler. Stromberg is aiming to catch on somewhere else around the midseason point. He only played 26 rookie-year snaps on offense. The Arkansas product would technically have a chance to land back with the Commanders, depending on the terms of the settlement, but the team moving on so early may well point to the Adam Peters regime deeming the Ron Rivera– and Martin Mayhew-overseen move a mistake.

Davis figures to land elsewhere and play this season. The 28-year-old linebacker sustained a foot sprain and will be out for a few weeks, according to NFL.com’s Tom Pelissero. Davis played in 16 games, split evenly between the Saints and Panthers, last season.

Ravens Host DL Lawrence Guy

Lawrence Guy spent the past seven seasons in New England, but he was not among the many Patriots defenders who landed a new contract this offseason. The veteran defensive lineman could find himself in place with one of his other former teams soon, though.

Guy recently visited the Ravens, per Ian Rapoport of NFL Network. The 34-year-old played 43 games with Baltimore from 2014-16 , logging 17 starts during that stretch. Guy’s most recent Ravens deal was for two years; upon playing it out, he secured a four-year contract with the Patriots. That was followed by another four-year accord, but he was released in a cost-shedding move with one year remaining.

Guy had not taken any known visits before auditioning for the Ravens. The former seventh-rounder’s playing time in Baltimore overlapped entirely with that of Zach Orr, who is now the team’s defensive coordinator. Orr was promoted as Mike Macdonald‘s replacement this offseason, and 2024 will mark his first time as a coordinator at the college or NFL levels. Guy would represent a familiar face up front for Orr.

The Ravens carried over their entire defensive line from 2023 this offseason, a unit which will again be led by Justin Madubuike. The former third-rounder shattered his previous career highs across the board last year, earning himself the franchise tag and eventually a $24.5MM-per-year extensionMichael Pierce, Travis Jones, Broderick Washington and Brent Urban are also in place along the D-line.

Guy started all but seven of his 110 Patriots appearances, handling a steady workload along the way. The former seventh-rounder remained consistent against the run and occasionally chipped in as a pass rusher. Guy’s best season in terms of sack production (4.5) came during his first full Ravens season. A Baltimore reunion would not include expectations for a repeat of that mark, but it could allow him to log a depth role and set himself up for another free agent deal next spring.

Packers Targeted K Brayden Narveson As UDFA?

The Packers’ multi-faceted kicker competition included a number of faces seeing time in the offseason, training camp and preseason. In the end, neither incumbent Anders Carlson nor veteran Greg Joseph earned the Week 1 gig. Instead, that job has gone to Brayden Narvesona waiver claim following roster cuts.

Narveson joined the Titans as an undrafted free agent this spring. Tennessee already had veteran Nick Folk in place, and the 39-old will indeed handle kicking duties in 2024. As a result, the Titans attempted to have Narveson pass through waivers and land on the practice squad. The Packers’ decision to claim him changed that plan, though.

“I was fully anticipating re-signing with the Titans on the practice squad,” the 24-year confirmed (via ESPN’s Rob Demovsky). “Even from the forefront, when they were recruiting me, if you will, during the draft, that was the guiding idea that that was probably what was going to happen. But at the same time, I prepared, I got opportunities in the games, I executed in the games.”

Narveson’s performance in the preseason put him on the Packers’ radar as they attempted to sort out their kicking situation. General manager Brian Gutekunst noted in an interview with Pete Dougherty of the Green Bay Press-Gazette that the team attempted to sign Narveson after the draft had concluded. The Packers still had Carlson (a 2023 sixth-round pick) in the fold at that time, and Lambeau Field is certainly not the most attractive setting for rookie kickers to attempt to launch their careers compared to other venues.

Notably, Demovsky reports the Packers did not, in fact, make an offer to Narveson as a UFDA. The Iowa State, Western Kentucky and NC State product’s only known offer came from the Titans, explaining his decision to sign with the team despite having to compete with Folk. Now, he will aim to earn a long-term stint in Green Bay in his first regular season action. Packers head coach Matt LaFleur expressed his confidence in Narveson after only two practices with the Packers, during which he went 10-for-11 on field goal attempts.

Narveson’s college career saw him convert at an accuracy rate above 79% only once in a season, during the 2020 campaign. After Carlson had an up-and-down rookie year, Narveson will look to carry over the momentum he built for himself during the summer. Gutekunst added (via Dougherty) Green Bay showed interest in free agent kickers likes Matthew Wright and Chad Ryland – cut by the Steelers and Patriots, respectively, last week – but the team will rely on a less experienced option to start the season.