After a failed attempt to be released ahead of free agency, Kirk Cousins is now in no rush to force a move out of Atlanta. He is planning to wait until after the draft before waiving his no-trade clause to facilitate a deal, per Sports Illustrated’s Albert Breer.
The Falcons held onto Cousins long enough for $10MM of his 2026 salary to vest into a full guarantee and have signaled their willingness to keep him as an expensive backup this season. He would prefer to find a starting job elsewhere, though he’s wary of a repeat of last year’s situation in Atlanta. The Falcons signed Cousins to a four-year, $160MM deal in March and drafted Michael Penix with the eighth overall pick six weeks later. That put pressure on the 13-year veteran to live up to his contract while making it clear that he was not the team’s long-term quarterback.
When Cousins hit a patch of rough play in December, the Falcons benched him for Penix, effectively ending the 36-year-old’s tenure in Atlanta after 14 games. In 2025, he doesn’t want a highly drafted rookie breathing down his neck. That would be a risk with his two most likely suitors, the Browns and the Giants, who hold the second and third overall picks in April’s draft. After years of instability under center, both teams have been repeatedly linked with the draft’s top two quarterbacks, Cam Ward and Shedeur Sanders.
Cousins’ willingness to wait on a trade should work for his potential suitors. The Browns and the Giants can do their due diligence on Ward, Sanders, and even Jaxson Dart and let the draft play out. The Steelers are considered a “safe bet” to land Aaron Rodgers, but if that doesn’t work out, they could inquire about Cousins, according to Breer. However, Pittsburgh may want to see if a top quarterback falls within range of a trade up from the 21st overall pick.
Cousins would only waive his no-trade clause prior to the draft if his new team commits to not using a first-round pick on quarterback, according to Breer. That condition may not be amenable to front offices in Cleveland and New York that are looking for a long-term franchise quarterback.
It’s possible that the Browns look at a talented roster besieged by injuries last year and decide that trading for Cousins and using the No. 3 pick on an impact receiver or edge rusher is enough to compete in the AFC North. That doesn’t seem likely for the Giants, who have more holes to fill on their roster. They have also signaled a desire to add another veteran and draft a quarterback in the first round, even after signing Jameis Winston.
Cousins’ approach does involve some risk. If the Browns, Giants, and Steelers all solidify their quarterback situations by the end of the draft, he may be left without any suitors headed into the summer. That would leave him stuck in Atlanta as Penix’s backup with a $27.5MM salary that could be a barrier to a trade.
The Falcons would already be absorbing $37.5MM in dead cap space ($12.5MM in 2025 and $25MM in 2026) if they moved Cousins. Eating some or all of his 2025 salary would push their costs to $90MM for just one year and 14 starts from Cousins, a position Falcons owner Arthur Blank would prefer to avoid, according to Breer.
That will, of course, impact how much draft compensation teams will give up to acquire Cousins. A trade out of Atlanta to a team with a starting job available remains his desired outcome, but it seems other dominoes will have to fall first.
This signing will never make sense.
Signing a top 5-10 QB of the last 10 years doesnt make sense? Really? Just because you have the power of hindsight and know that it didnt really work out, doesnt mean it didnt make sense
Signing him is fine. Drafting Penix is fine. Signing him and drafting Penix is dumb. That money or pick would’ve been used better on a pass rusher.
Signing Cousins and then signing Penix was dumb to some, but it turned out to be the right call since Cousins played terrible down the stretch and proved he wasnt healthy. If the Falcons had not drafted Penix then they’d be stuck with an aging QB who performed poorly and would more than likely perform poorly this season. Now they can focus on defense this draft.
Exactly
well said. Atlanta missed playoffs by a game. Would Rome Odunze or Brock Bowers or Dallas Turner have made the difference? possibly.
“well said” yet Atlanta had a better QB come in and get them close to the playoffs after Kirks production dropped off a cliff. Having a different random player wouldnt have saved Kirk from that, and having Penix from the start couldve thrown the season away having him play before hes ready. They have play makers at WR and TE already. Having Penix sets them up long term.
Just a year prior they had Heinicke and Ridder, grabbing plan A and plan B at QB to insure you have a good one makes all the sense in the world.
Signing him and drafting Penix was not dumb, and is clearly working out for them. That QB room is/was 20x better than it was the year before it and they went into 2024 with a plan for QB in the short term and long term.
But somehow thats soooo dumb youre so right they shouldve put in Penix before he was ready and hope he does just as well and hope he falls to you in the draft in the first place while letting a top 10 QB sign elsewhere. So smart
What you are missing is that they could’ve had a bridge QB provide similar to what Cousins did on a one or two year deal if you wanted what Cousins ended up providing. It wasn’t sign Cousins or you have to start Penix game 1. They gave Kirk a lot of guaranteed money to not start him a full season. The Falcons have one of the worst pass rushing defenses in the league and it’s been an issue for years. Wasting resources and opportunities to add talent is a big reason why the Falcons have been irrelevant.
Penix is years away.
I don’t have a problem with signing Cousins. Drafting Penix was a shock, but also not crazy to prepare for the next stage at the most important position. But giving Cousins the $10 mil payment and not waiving him before the payment was due is malpractice. It’s OK to cut ties with him, it happens in the NFL everyday. They signed him, it didn’t work out, they drafted his replacement, it happened sooner than expected. But waive him, keeping him doesn’t make any sense. NOBODY is trading for a 38 year old QB that declined last year with a $40 mil cap hit, who also happens to have 1 career playoff win. They should have cut ties with him, and moved on. Ridiculous.
That statement alone proves you nothing about the NFL
Cousins has been a top 10 QB last 10 years of course it made sense for the falcons to sign him!!!! lol
If he hadn’t experienced a significant injury (for a player his age), then yes, but he hadn’t played since. Risky gamble with a guy that old.
how is a QB with a .500 record a top ten QB? top ten salary? yes. bottom 20 talent….for sure
wjf- You’re saying that knowing how his 2024 unfolded. He was signed BEFORE the 2024 season. Tangerine calling top 10 over 10 years might be a bit generous–he was probably more like top 12–but “bottom 20” (I think you meant “20th best” because “bottom 20” would indicate he could be the 12th best QB) can only be said knowing that he performed poorly in 2024. Nobody thought he was the 20th or worst ranked starting QB in the league going into last offseason.
Laughing. Cousins is a good bet better than a dozen or, so at his current salary, quarterbacks currently on NFL rosters right now. Did I mention the few has beens still available.
The record is indication not of the quarterback but perhaps other factors?
Don’t disagree. But what happened last offseason is irrelevant. Cutting him a $10 mil check last week is front office malpractice. They should cut him. Continuing to keep him is bananas. There is no team that is trading for him and his contract. All they’re doing is trying up money in someone they’re going to waive anyways. Penix is the guy now, cut him. It’s OK to have been wrong one year later. Continuing to pay him thinking they’re going to get someone to accept their mistake is delusion.
Once you’re in for 27 million what’s the difference if it’s 37 million for a back up?
I think they’re still hoping somebody will trade for him and it will only cost them the 10 million. The only problem is after FA nobody has any money left. Other teams were hoping they would cut him and they could get him for basically nothing. Paying the bonus just keeps a possible asset. They still would have had to pay him anyway. If I’m paying somebody I’d much rather he played for me than somebody else. Unclemike’s rule #1 in Cap management.
He will be a great addition to the Giants
Best destination might be raiders
6 could be too far for Sanders and Ward to fall
But drafting Dart or Shough at 6 is way too high.
They could opt to draft McMillian to pair with Bowers and fortify the oline via draft. Or trade back amass picks and build up the oline rb and wr room
If you trade back acquire picks you could target a tackle mid to late 1st
Grab a rb in the second
Grab a wr in the second
Grab some oline help in 3rd
Ever hear of Gino Smith?
I havent heard of Gino Smith actually
I totally forgot they traded for Geno Smith. Welp that rules out Raiders
They already traded for Geno Smith…why add Cousins also?
Cause I forgot they traded for Geno Smith
Atlanta is such a mess. Waste of valuable cap space. Most of us knew that contract was absurd especially knowing they were gonna reach for Penix whom NO ONE had going in the top 10, most didn’t even think he’d go in the first round.
lol it was well documented the raiders and broncos wanted penix. It wasn’t really a reach when both of those teams sat out on him not expecting the falcons to draft him. Terrible take.
Sean Payton wanted Bo Nix. Everyone knew this. BTW – neither the Broncos or Raiders were picking in the top 10. Michael Penix going to the Falcons.
There was as much smoke around Denver and Penix as there was Denver and Nix. The choice became easy when Atlanta drafted Penix.
Sean Payton wanted a QB. If Nix was gone and Penix was there or McCarthy was there he would have taken him and said “we got our guy”. Never once has a team said well we did not really want this guy but he fell to us so figured why not
He was 100% going in the 1st round as soon as his pro day ended. Everyone in the world knew it. You were out of the loop, man.
A deal works when it benefits both sides. Dealing Cousins for nothing and paying his salary to play elsewhere does not benefit the Falcons. Cousins will be the highest paid backup in the NFL unless he put something on the table for the Falcons. Cousins suffers from extreme avarice so he won’t do it.
I’m just happy nobody associated with the Falcons is managing my retirement funds 🙂
Terry Fontenot masterclass.
Falcons’ fans can rationalize giving a quarterback coming off of a major injury a ridiculous amount of money all they want. It’s amazing that after everything that happened with Watson that teams are still willing to shell out ludicrous contracts for the likes of Rodgers and Cousins, who are past their prime years. Oh well, if nothing else, it will be entertaining to watch the Falcons try to tap dance around the salary cap in the future. In essence, the Falcons lost a lot of the financial benefit of a quarterback on a rookie contract by providing the other quarterback with an exorbitant contract.
I don’t understand why so many people are worried about the Falcons keeping a player that has already been paid. They cut him, the money is still gone, and then they have to find another backup QB. The Falcons have zero incentive to release him.