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Raiders waived TE Clive Walford.
A formerly buzzed about third-rounder, Walford's career was derailed by a 2016 ATV accident. He caught just nine passes in 13 games last season, falling behind Jared Cook and Lee Smith on the depth chart before a concussion landed him on injured reserve in December. Going on 27, Walford and his intriguing skill-set will still earn a second look, perhaps even on waivers
___________
If he's still available on waivers, his salary this year would be about $822k, so just adds a few hundred thousand to the cap. Good catch percentage, not exciting, may not have much left after the accident - but the Rams will likely need another TE, and he could be cut for nothing if it doesn't work out in training camp. Perhaps the Rams should take a look, since he'll be cheap and at one time looked like a good youngish TE
So as some of you know from previous years, I love April Fools day and pranking people.
But what is a guy to do when his favorite day of the year falls on Easter Sunday?
Well I just ordered 450 plastic Easter eggs to dump in the wife's car thru her sunroof. I think I might buy some jewelry for her and hide it in 1 of the eggs so she has to open them.
Or maybe just tell her she has a present in one of them, and watch her open them all
Now that the Rams have enjoyed a really great season and are in the process of putting together a PRETTY GOOD roster can we expect to see them getting more National Exposure/TV Games? They should be FUN to watch next season!!!
So as it stands, with our team, I just wanted to go over some numbers coming up.
First and foremost, we need to pay AD, but not QB money, that’s too much for one player not a QB. He absolutely deserves to be the highest paid defensive player though. Let’s say 20mil (Ish) a year. Preferably front loaded to make room for upcoming contracts
Then you have Gurley, I see what Bell has been doing and I don’t like it. Having a dynamic running back is a truly amazing thing to have, but I can’t justify giving him 20+ mil for a player who gains that much wear and tear. I’m curious to see where you guys value him.
Let’s say we trade for OBJ...what kind of contract is enough for him, with rumors he wants QB money as well? I couldn’t justify 20
Mil for him...maybe 15 IMO.
Then you have Goff, if he continues to improve, then he will get upwards of 25+ mil a year, not even a question, and it is necessary.
Peters, if he keeps his head on straight, where is he valued at? 15 mil?
Brockers contract runs out after next year I believe, what’s it going to cost to retain him?
Also, Lamarcus Joyner, safeties seem to not be getting paid, so maybe you can get away with 9-10 mil a year if he continues to be elite?
I understand the rams are going all in on win now mode (which I absolutely love) but on the flip side I can’t help but to think of the short term and long term future.
I suppose we have to continue to draft flawlessly and hope some players are willing to take discounts, and hope our coaches and front office are taking a page out of the pats book and knowing who to keep and who to
Let go...
Just curious on everyone’s thoughts on this, and if it has come across anyone else’s mind as it has mine...
Hopefully we can stagger and front load the contracts in order to make it work so we can continue to have flexibility with future FA and draft classes, my only issue with front loading is players wanting a new contract just a couple years into it...
The Rams have gone nuts on the defensive side of the ball - guys in, guys out, Peters/Talib/Suh. Franchise tag for Joyner. Re-signed NRC.
Aside from re-signing Sullivan, who is just a few years removed from back injuries, the Rams have largely ignored the offensive side of the ball.
Goff/Woods/Kupp can all realistically improve - either because they're young or the chemistry will be even better.
But there will be some issues IMO:
Gurley - he's young, so he can get better, right?!? Gurley had about the best season a RB can have, and historically (I know this thanks to fantasy football), RBs rarely repeat such a performance. Gurley will still be a huge part of the offense, but impossible for him to perform better IMO.
OL - health, health, health - we've talked about it before - no possible way we have this much luck with injuries to the OL next year, and two of the guys are pretty old.
Reynolds, Cooper, Higbee, Everett, Tavon - unknowns at this point - if we do nothing on offense, we need one of the WRs and one of the TEs to step up in a big way - that would hopefully be Reynolds and Everett - but counting on that to happen for a team with super bowl aspirations doesn't give me the warm and fuzzies..
So what does this mean? Look, I like our offense. But it needs DEPTH and insurance. While LB is a need, IMO we need to snag a WR and a few offensive linemen to supplement our offense. Preferably with the early picks if the board falls that way.
The offense struggled mightily against top flight defenses, and those are the teams we will have to go through. Goff improving should help us a lot, but I don't want to take any chances. If it fell this way:
Keep winning on paper ? Your team won 5 games last year. Our team made the playoffs
I am so fed up with these 49ers ! If they were good I would understand the beef. They are not good , they will not be competitive. I can't wait for our corners to shut down these 2 clowns .
I think this guy would be awesome as one of the MLB's in the Rams Defense! Don't think he will still be around at #23 but I would trade up (Within Reason) to get this player!
Every year I get caught up in our own acquisitions and fail to perceive accurately how other teams have evolved or which teams have potential.
I went back to find last year post free agency power rankings and it's really amazing to see how different the perceptions were back then and how the season took unexpected turns for many teams (Giants, Raiders, Cowboys were all contenders, Rams and Jags were snobbed)
Now I know power rankings are not universaly liked or agreed on but I think we can reasonably say that they quite accurately put teams in their generally perceived tier. Last years the Eagles were #19, the Vikings were #22, things turned out differently
Now our free agency was truly special this year, but let's keep in mind that only 5 out of last years top 18 teams made the playoffs. Off season is not over and every season is different.
Well, Suh has signed for a reasonable price, so let's get to the draft...with a trade first! Ready? No? Fuck it, let's do it anyway!
Trade
Mark Barron to the Indianapolis Colts for #104 overall (fourth) and #178 overall (sixth).
(I like Barron, but I see him as an eventual cap casualty next year, so I want to get something for him beforehand. Anyway, Indy needs a WILL linebacker for their new 4-3, so a Barron trade makes sense for both sides.)
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(Remember back in the 2014 draft where one of our targets - if Donald never fell - was C.J. Mosley? Here's our own C.J. Mosley, except better. Vander Esch has insane athleticism for his size and covers like a safety. He's just as good at stuffing the run, rushing the passer, doing whatever needs doing.)
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(An underrated deep threat, Gallup reminds me of a faster Robert Woods with his route-running, his soft hands, and sneaky speed. He only ran a 4.51 forty at the Combine, but he's much faster in pads. Gallup is just a solid football player who should be ready from day one.)
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(Griffin is an inspiration and also a hell of a good football player. Can you imagine him and LVE roaming the same field for us? I can, and it'll be glorious.)
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(Injuries are the only reason why Turay - who dominated the East/West Shrine game - falls here. He's an explosive pass-rusher who needs work, but can eventually be groomed as a starter.)
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(A former defensive tackle who will make the shift to a 3-4 linebacker, Mata'afa is a technically-sound pass rusher who should back up our other linebackers and play special teams.)
#176 overall - Isaac Yiadom, CB, Boston College. (6'1", 190 lbs.)
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(Yiadom's comparison on NFL.com is actually Bashaud Breeland. That immediately caused me to look into him more, and I'm quite glad that I did. Like Breeland, Yiadom is a press corner at heart, and he's a willing tackler. For now, he fits on special teams, where he's been great at.)
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(Cruikshank fits at free safety behind Joyner, taking the role that Cody Davis filled. He needs work in coverage, but he has incredible ball skills, and is a willing tackler.)
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(Cappa is our Whitworth successor. He's from a small school, so he'll need time to mature, but I think that he could - with time in the weight room - eventually take over for big Whit.)
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(Parris is the second small school lineman who needs to mature behind our offensive line. I can see him replacing either Havenstein, Brown, or Saffold, dependng on whom is released/re-signed.)
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(Demby is another small school lineman who needs time to mature. Thankfully, we have the offensive line able to do that. I could see him taking over for Brown or Saffold.)
Team
QB - Jared Goff, Sean Mannion.
RB - Todd Gurley, Tavon Austin, Malcolm Brown, Sam Rogers.
WR - Robert Woods, Cooper Kupp, Michael Gallup, Pharoh Cooper, Josh Reynolds, Mike Thomas.
TE - Gerald Everett, Tyler Higbee, Temarrick Hemingway.
OL - Andrew Whitworth, Rodger Saffold, John Sullivan, Jamon Brown, Rob Havenstein, Austin Blythe, Jake Eldrenkamp, Alex Cappa, Timon Parris, Jamil Demby.
DL - Aaron Donald, Ndamukong Suh, Michael Brockers, Tanzel Smart, Ethan Westbrooks, Morgan Fox/?Dominique Easley.
LB - Samson Ebukam, Leighton Vander Esch, Shaquem Griffin, Matt Longacre, Kemoko Turay, Hercules Mata'afa, Cory Littleton, Ejuan Price, Ramik Wilson/Bryce Hager.
DB - Marcus Peters, Aqib Talib, Lamarcus Joyner, John Johnson III, Nickell Robey-Coleman, Sam Shields, Isaac Yiadom, Dane Cruikshank, Troy Hill/Kevin Peterson, Blake Countess/Marqui Christian. Kayvon Webster (PUP, replaces Hill/Peterson).
K - Greg Zuerlein
P - Johnny Hekker
LS - Jake McQuaide
Well, that's a wrap. The Rams will own the West this year. Wanted to be the first 49er fan to offer my congratulations. I hope you face the Patriots in the Super Bowl and avenge the Cheat Bowl from 2001.
Ramswire, com is reporting that the Rams are bringing in my Favorite "Dark-Horse" Pick for a Look-see! RB - Rashaad Penny - San Diego State - 5ft 11 / 220 / 4.46 40 time at the Combine!
I watched him in the Shrine Game, and he really put on a show! I think he would make a great change-of-pace Back, behind Gurley!
Anyone else have any thoughts or info on the young man!?
NFL Catch Rule, Rewritten: League Aims to Simplify; Result Could Complicate At the owners meetings in Orlando, all eyes could soon be on the definition of a football move as a new proposal tries to take some of the subjectivity out of the question: What is a catch? Other sections include notes on defensive pass interference, Wayne Huizenga, anthem protests and more By Peter King
ORLANDO, Fla. — These annual NFL owners meetings might be hijacked by the national anthem debate. I mean, the Jets’ let-’em-protest president Christopher Johnson versus the stand-at-attention-or-else Bob McNair of the Texans would be great political theater on, say, Jake Tapper’s CNN show. Or that could flame out by midday today. Then what?
My money’s on the definition of a football move.
On Sunday afternoon, inside a ballroom at the Ritz Carlton, the NFL’s eight-man Competition Committee milled about after briefing NFL commissioner Roger Goodell on the rules proposal that the league hopes will clear up once and for all what a catch is. (I’m not optimistic it will.) In the front of the room, prepping the plays he wanted to show me that were at the crux of the proposed new rule, NFL vice president of officiating Al Riveron riffed on the rewrite of the complex rule.
“The Competition Committee rewrote the catch rule, basically, over the last two months,” Riveron said, withthe infamous Dez Bryant playpaused on the screen at the front of the room. “Totally. And it’s broken down in three basic things: control, two feet down or a body part down, and a football move. We took away the element of going to the ground. Once they fulfill these three steps, it’s over.”
Riveron ran the Dez tape. The play, Bryant’s controversial non-catch in the 2014 NFC divisional playoff game against Green Bay, is three years and two months old. In the eyes of the Competition Committee, it’s the Zapruder film.
“One of the examples we use as a football move is a third step,” Riveron said. “So watch Dez.”
Bryant catches the ball at the Packers’ 5-yard line, high above Sam Shields. “Control,” Riveron said.
Bryant left foot down at the 5. “One,” Riveron said.
Bryant right foot down at the 4. “Two,” Riveron said.
Bryant left foot down, with a chunk of sod flying up, at the two-and-a-half-yard line. “Three,” he said. “We have a catch. Contact with the defensive player [Shields]. Down by contact. Play over. Process over. Catch. Doesn’t matter that the ball’s jarred loose.”
That would have reversed 2014 history. This next play is more recent.
“Now Jesse James,” Riveron said.
December 2017: New England, 10-3, at Pittsburgh, 11-2. Home field in the AFC playoff in the balance. Almost certainly it’s Pittsburgh’s with a win. Pats up 27-24, 30 seconds left. Ben Roethlisberger throws to tight end James near the goal line.
The video starts. James catch just outside the 1-yard line. “Control,” Riveron said.
Left knee on the ground, two feet from the goal line. “A knee equals two feet,” Riveron said.
Football move—James reaches across the goal line and breaks the plane … and the ball moves perceptibly as both hands and arms hit the ground beyond the goal line. “Now he reaches,” Riveron said. “Football move. It’s over. Catch. Touchdown. He made the football move. He broke the plane of the goal line. Play over.”
“One question,” I said. “Can you define ‘football move?’”
“We’ve got this in our proposal,” Riveron said. “Player reaching out with possession. Player pulling the ball back. Player making a third step. Player protecting himself. Those qualify for a football move.”
The Riveron point, backed by the Competition Committee, is pretty clear. The simplicity of it—the three elements of control, two feet down and football move—sounds simple. But as we’ve learned, with the betterment of replay technology, the increasing number of HD cameras at every NFL game, and the ability of TV crews to have far better views of tight plays, simple plays are not simple anymore.
Look at the replays the NFL overturned in 2017—such as the overwrought, overcorrected Kelvin Benjamin touchdown for Buffalo in New England that should not have been negated but was—and you realize so much of this is subject to human control too. I expect a few things if, as expected, the new rules pass this week when a three-quarters vote of the 32 teams comes up.
• I expect Riveron to be less of a micromanager as the replay supervisor in 2018. There is no question that the Competition Committee and the league office thinks the standard of indisputable visual evidence must be reinstated after a 2017 season when it was fungible.
• I expect this rule to pass, because there is little organized opposition. I couldn’t find league or team people ready to fight it before the vote this week. That’s because it’s better than the rule that includes the point that a receiver must keep possession when he goes to the ground.
“The problem with that,” said Competition Committee chairman Rich McKay, “is that if the players takes three steps and then goes to the ground, it could be a number of yards after he’s caught the ball.” In Bryant’s case, for instance, it was four yards between the time he took possession and the time the ball was jarred loose by contact with the ground.
• Three weeks ago today, I quoted a person close to the Competition Committee in this column, regarding the what-is-a-catch conundrum: “Going to the ground is going away,” my source said. And immediately I heard from several people in the league wondering if the league was simply exchanging one problem for other ones. Dean Blandino, the predecessor to Riveron, told me the Competition Committee is getting what it wanted with this new rule.
“The Competition Committee wanted those plays, the Dez play and the Jesse James play, to be catches, and basically figured out, How do we do that? They figured it out. But now the issue is going to be, ‘Did they perform a football act, an act that is common to the game?’ That is going to be subjective.”
My feeling is, this rule is better than the one it’s replacing, but it is not a cure-all. If anything, I think Riveron is going to have more reviews in 2018 than last year.
“We just have to be mindful that this is not going to solve everything,” Blandino said.
I wish as a football-crazy people we could realize that. There are so many analysts, fans, players and coaches who express incredulity when a call on the field is upheld or overturned. Nothing is perfect, and no system in a bang-bang sporting play is perfect.
I had to watch the Bryant replay more than 10 times to see all the intricacies. Imagine doing that on the field, in real time. It’s hard. Football can’t be perfectly officiated. We shouldn’t think this system will fix all wrongs, because all wrongs in such a fast game cannot be fixed.
--------------------------------------- ON JIM KELLY
The Hall of Fame quarterback, who announced recently that the cancer in his jaw and mouth had returned, is scheduled to have surgery Wednesday in New York to take another crack at eradicating the disease that he’s dealt with for five years.
This time, the surgery is expected to be more radical, with doctors likely to remove his prosthetic jaw and more in his lower facial region, and rebuild the jaw area with parts of his leg bone. One of his friends at the league meetings here says Kelly is optimistic and bullish on the chances for a recovery that will lessen the pain he has felt in his jaw area because of the prosthesis.
It’s a daunting surgery, and an even more daunting disease. Our best to Kelly and his family.
------------------------------------------ QUOTES OF THE WEEK
I
“This isn’t the second chance. This is the 35th chance. This is the last of the last chances to show people that I’ve made a drastic change in my life, and it’s for the better and I’m happy with where I’m at.”
—Johnny Manziel,to Bruce Feldman of SI.com. Manziel worked out for NFL teams at the University of San Diego pro day Thursday.
II
“This is the starting quarterback on our team. There are no 'bridge' players.”
—Cleveland coach Hue Jackson, on the notion that Tyrod Taylor, acquired from Buffalo in trade this month, is a bridge player to the long-term quarterback in Cleveland.
Tyrod Taylor is a bridge player to the long-term quarterback in Cleveland.
III
“I always felt like an undrafted free agent. Even last year, even when I was in year six or seven, after my biggest years, I still felt like an undrafted free agent. I don’t know if that was just me, because of how it’s always been and kind of always being looked over, but I always felt like someone was out to get me or out to replace me.
And that played to my advantage. It’s not always a fun feeling, because you’re always paranoid that you’re getting cut. You never know in this business, but from Day 1, I wanted to do everything in the world to make people look stupid if they cut me.”
Woodhead, 5'8" and a constant underdog, caught 300 footballs in his career, and more in the playoffs—including a touchdown pass from Tom Brady in the Super Bowl six years ago. Not bad for a guy from Chadron (Neb.) State.
IV
“Darnold, Allen, Mayfield, Rosen.”
—ESPN’s Chris Mortensen, on the Cover 2 podcast of Don Banks and Nick Stevens at Patriots.com, asked in what order the first-round quarterbacks will be drafted.
Mortensen also said he thinks a fifth quarterback, Louisville’s Lamar Jackson, will be a first-round pick.
V
“I’m not saying I’m going to stop being active, because I won’t. I’m just going to consider different ways to be active, different ways to bring awareness to the issues of this country to improve on. I don’t think it’ll be in the form of protesting during the anthem. And I said ‘during’ because it’s crazy to me that the narrative got changed to we were protesting the anthem, because that wasn’t the case. But I think we’re going to take a different approach to how to be active.”
—Free-agent safety Eric Reid, a staunch supporter of Colin Kaepernick with the 49ers. Eleven days into free agency, despite having a good résumé and being just 26, Reid remains unsigned.
I wonder why.
---------------------------------------- STAT OF THE WEEK
NFL head-coaching hires, last three offseasons: 20.
NFL head-coaching hires, last three offseasons, offensive side of the ball: 14.
Percentage of offensive hires in the last three years: 70 percent.
2018 … 4 offense: Nagy, Gruden, Shurmur, Reich; 3 defense: Wilks, Patricia, Vrabel.
------------------------------------ FACTOIDS THAT MAY INTEREST ONLY ME
This is a testament to the tenacity of soon-to-be-35-year-old running back Frank Gore, who was signed by his hometown Miami Dolphins last week: If Gore rushes for 76 more yards as an NFL back, only three backs in NFL history—Emmitt Smith, Walter Payton and Barry Sanders—will have rushed for more yards than Gore.
On another Gore note: I’m happy for one of the all-time good guysthat he gets to continue his career in his hometown—if he makes the Dolphins’ roster at 35 this September. But it’s a curious move. He’s played 13 grueling NFL seasons, and his last three are the only ones in which he averaged less than 4.0 yards per rush.
Good for him, to get to play for his hometown team this spring and summer at least, and good for the Dolphins to be able to show the rest of the team his worker-bee ethos. It’ll be interesting to see as training camp progresses if he has a legitimate shot at playing time there.
------------------------------------------- TWEET OF THE WEEK
Good for the Giants’ scion. Odell Beckham Jr. is very close to not being worth the trouble.
---------------------------------------- POD PEOPLE
Jordan Palmer on the similarities between Darnold and Carson Palmer, which he first noticed when Darnold was in high school: “I was like, ‘That kid over there it looks exactly like Carson when he was that age.’ Red hair, freckles, wearing some scrubby basketball shorts, white socks crinkled down, and just walked like him, talked like him, acted like him. Two years later, he’s in Elite 11, [age] 17 now. ... There's 11 quarterbacks in the country, the top 11—he's the only kid who's uncommitted. And I said, ‘Why aren’t you committed?’
He goes, ‘I just want to come here and see where I want to go to school. I want to look at these other guys.’ And at the time there's a kid named Ricky Town. Ricky Town was the top recruit out of California committed to USC. Everybody's talking about he was the next [Matt] Leinart, next [Mark] Sanchez, whatever. And Sam watched Ricky throw for one day and he came up to me and said, ‘After this whole thing's over I'm going to ask and commit to USC.’
He said, ‘That kid [Town] is going to transfer,’ and he did. Carson did the same thing, but Carson was coming out of high school. He was I think the second-rated player behind Jason Thomas from Compton Dominguez. Carson played against Jason, saw Jason work, and said, ‘I'm going to SC too.’ Same class. Jason changed positions and then ended up transferring. It’s ironic the same thing keeps happening. Now Sam’s leaving USC with a chance to be the number one pick in the draft, just like Carson.
“They’re both internal processors, they're both grounded in incredible humility to the point where you may question how confident they are there. They’re that humble. They don’t like attention. They don’t do social media. They don’t want a bunch of media. They don’t love signing autographs. They just want to win and have a great time with their teammates, and they actually love the work part of it. And they’re very close, you know.
Sam’s like a little brother to me. Carson doesn’t get involved in any of the coaching stuff that I do, but he has gotten involved with Sam, and it’s crazy how similar they are … This is like the same kid. The way I would compare them, though, he’s got about 10 percent less of Carson’s arm talent at that age and about 25 percent more athleticism than Carson at that age. So I’m not going to sit here and compare the two of them in terms of who’s going to project to be better but it’s pretty crazy … Very, very similar.”
---------------------------------------------------- THINGS I THINK I THINK
1. I think there’s one rule the NFL likely won’t fix at these league meetings, and I cannot figure out why. The Jets proposed a rule that would limit defensive pass interference penalties to 15 yards, with the exception being flagrant fouls such when a cornerback, clearly beaten, tackles a wide receiver downfield with the ball in the air; that would remain a spot foul.
On Friday, league officials downplayed the efficacy of a rule that would limit defensive pass interference to 15 years, with EVP for football operations Troy Vincent saying: “The professional defensive backs are too skilled, too smart … You don’t want a defensive back being able to strategically grab a guy.” Of course you don’t. That’s why you keep the egregious fouls spot fouls, and cap all the jousting fouls at 15 yards. And that’s why you make the rules change for one year only, and revisit it after the season.
2. I think the reason I’m bullish on changing this rule is that year after year, we see how the field gets tilted by ticky-tack calls. In the Saints-Vikings divisional playoff game, Ken Crawley was flagged on consecutive first-quarter plays for pass-interference downfield, handing the Vikings 54 yards for the simples acts of jousting with a wide receiver; there was nothing remotely flagrant.
I’ve got no problem with flagging Crawley, even flagging him twice. But the Vikings went from first-and-10 at their 40-yard line to first-and-goal at the Saints 6 in a couple of minutes—all because of simple coverage jousting. Those flags simply do not deserve to tilt the field like that.
3. I think the league’s defense—there were only 11 DPIs of 40 yards or more last year—is specious. One of Crawley’s penalties was 20 yards, the other 34. Certainly a 40-yard DPI foul is huge. But a 25-yard DPI is huge too. And last year, there were 60 defensive pass-interference calls of 25 yards or more, per Pro Football Focus’ Nathan Jahnke. SIXTY! In addition, there were a total of 126 flags for DPIs of 16 yards or more.
4. I think I will end with this: I talked to Stanford coach David Shaw about the college rule (15 yards max on DPI) versus the spot foul in the NFL, and he said, even though there’s a fear of a beaten cornerback dragging down a receiver, it doesn’t happen often. Shaw prefers the college rule.
5. I think, of course, Michael Bennett is innocent until proven guilty in the case involving a charge by Houston police that he assaulted a disabled elderly female security officer nearly 14 months ago at the Super Bowl. But it is a bad look when the Houston police chief calls a press conference to issue a strong denunciation of Bennett’s alleged actions.
“I think it’s pretty pathetic that you would put your hands on a 66-year-old paraplegic and just treat them like they don’t exist,” Houston police chief Art Acevedo said. There’s a warrant out in Texas for Bennett’s arrest. It’ll be interesting to hear Bennett’s response—and the response of his new team, the Eagles—to the incendiary charge.
6. I think the one blue-collar, middle-class, free-agent signing I like a lot is Carolina getting cornerback Ross Cockrell (former Steeler and Giant) for the reasonable price of two years and $6.8 million. Cockrell, per Pro Football Focus, allowed a passer rating of 70.3 on men he covered for the Giants last year; Aqib Talib, for instance, allowed an 82.7 rating. Good value there by the Panthers.
7. I think that story of New England safety Duron Harmon being detained in Costa Rica for trying to enter the country with 58 grams of marijuana is concerning for a few reasons. The biggest: Harmon’s smart and mature, the kind of veteran Bill Belichick relies on as a leader. To try to bring a significant quantity of marijuana with you on a trip to another country? That’s stunningly irresponsible, particularly when there’s heightened security around the world these days.
8. I think the words of Bills coach Sean McDermott at the NFL’s coaching-development symposium heartened those in the crowd—such as Cincinnati defensive coordinator Teryl Austin. McDermott’s message basically was: It’s not you; it’s me. Most often when head-coaching interviews happen, candidates fail to get the job because they’re not exactly what the team is looking for, or they’re not on the side of the ball the team is ideally looking for.
It’s not because they stink. Austin, for instance, has interviewed seven times and not gotten a head-coaching job. I always think so much of the coaching merry-go-round is chance and happenstance, and based on which is the hot team. In December, Frank Reich was on the radar of zero teams; now he’s the head coach of the team with Andrew Luck at quarterback.
He got the job because the Eagles’ late-season hot streak, the discovery that he was a huge piece of the Super Bowl-winning strategic offensive puzzle in Philadelphia, and because Josh McDaniels dropped out. I’ve long believed that there’s little that helps a prospective coach other than the performance of his players and his ability to control a room of men.
Lobbying the owners and GMs is zero help. This symposium identifies coaches who may be head-coaching prospects down the road, and it’s a good idea. I saw incoming Eagles quarterbacks coach Press Taylor down here for the symposium. It’s smart for the NFL to develop young prospects early on.
9. I think this analytical look at Oklahoma quarterback Baker Mayfield by Robert Klemko was really interesting—and it showed the tools Mayfield will bring to the NFL for some team. Of 63 quarterbacks who have taken an exam called the Athletic Intelligence Quotient test since 2012, Mayfield scored second-highest. A high score indicates a player who should be able to get on the field sooner and not be cowed by the mental part of the game.