BLAKE BORTLES
OBVIOUS, BUT JUSTIN HOUSTON?
Julian
Edelman was barely done with his Monday morning Super Bowl MVP press conference when
the first cuts started. The Falcons waved
goodbye to cornerback Robert Alford,
who, two long years ago, had a pick-six of
Tom Brady in the Super Bowl.
Alford was signed by the
Cardinals just two days after his release, a reminder that free
agency doesn't necessarily wait for mid-March.
Other notable names like Texans
wideout Demaryius Thomas have been released since, but most of
the roster pruning will take place closer to when the new league year starts on
March 13.
Below is my best guess at projecting some of the potential
AFC cuts.
Note: Unless otherwise cited,
salary-cap figures in this piece were found on OverTheCap.com.
STRONG CANDIDATES
FOR RELEASE
1) CASE KEENUM,
QB, DENVER BRONCOS: Broncos executive
John Elway admitted Keenum was a "short-term"solution,
and then he showed that he meant it in trading for
Joe Flacco. NFL Network Insider Ian Rapoport reports that the Broncos
will now shop Keenum. If nothing comes to fruition there, Elway is
likely to eat the $6.5 million guaranteed on Keenum's 2019 contract to save
salary-cap space, rather than let Keenum compete with Flacco.
2) BLAKE BORTLES,
QB, JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS: Bortles will still cost the Jaguars $16.5
million against the cap in dead money, even if they cut him. That includes $6.5
million in guaranteed money due to Bortles in 2019 because of the deeply
unnecessary contract
extension Jags executive Tom Coughlin and general manager David
Caldwell gave Bortles last offseason. It's up to the same front office to
recover from that mistake quickly.
3) MALIK JACKSON,
DT, JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS: Jackson has enjoyed a sneaky-good three-year
run in Jacksonville and wasn't a huge liability last season, especially in a
part-time role after his snaps were reduced late in the season. But $13 million
is too much to pay for a rotational lineman when the Jags have real cap issues
(see above) and real needs, and Jackson knows he's a
goner. He won't be our No. 1 free agent again, but he'll inspire plenty of
interest.
4-5) CB JIMMY SMITH AND
WR MICHAEL
CRABTREE, BALTIMORE RAVENS: The two men whose end
zone battle essentially decided Super Bowl XLVII could be
linked again this offseason. Smith hasn't stayed on the field enough to earn
his scheduled $9.5 million salary, while Crabtree's one season in Baltimore was
a disappointment. The Ravens need
to get younger and faster at wide receiver and in the secondary.
6) RYAN
TANNEHILL, QB, MIAMI DOLPHINS: Due $38 million over
the next two years, Tannehill's fate will be a great litmus test of just how
desperate teams are in the quarterback market. There's a chanceanother
team will see that contract and give up a draft pick to obtain it. A chance.
7-10) WR DEVANTE
PARKER, DE ROBERT QUINN,
WR DANNY
AMENDOLA AND DE ANDRE BRANCH,
MIAMI DOLPHINS: Nearly every genre of personnel mistake is represented
here. Parker is an example of the first-round pick who fizzled out despite all
sorts of chances. Amendola was the aging veteran overpaid for leadership. Quinn
was the expensive trade acquisition who never made sense. Branch was the most
costly of all, a homegrown contract-year hero who the club didn't correctly
self-scout. These are the moves the Dolphins have
made to win between six and eight games in nine of the last 10 years.
11) DONALD PENN,
OT, OAKLAND RAIDERS: Jon Gruden announced his intentions at tackle
when the Raiders drafted
two players at the position last year, and that came before Penn missed most of
2018 with a groin injury.
12) BUD DUPREE,
LB, PITTSBURGH STEELERS: Mike Tomlin has been patiently waiting for
Dupree to live up to the Steelers'
edge-rushing tradition for four seasons. Paying him $9.232 million on a
fifth-year option would represent far too much patience.
13) CHARLES CLAY,
TE, BUFFALO BILLS: Clay was a splashy free-agent signing by former GM
Doug Whaley. He was a healthy scratch late last season, usually the final sign
a player is on his way out.
POTENTIAL SURPRISES
1) JUSTIN
HOUSTON, LB/DE, KANSAS CITY CHIEFS: Houston is one
of the best pass rushers of the last decade, so I was surprised how casually
The Athletic's Nate Parker wrote that Houston was unlikely to return to the team in
2019 because of his $21.1 million cap figure.
The more I thought about it -- and read comments from Chiefs GM
Brett Veach -- the more sense it made. The Chiefs are
switching to a 4-3 defense under new coordinator Steve Spagnuolo, and Veach
lauded how youngsters Chris Jones and Derrick Nnadi fit
into the new system. The team has already said it will bring
back Dee Ford, which probably means the franchise tag. Veach was
vague about Houston's future. K.C. doesn't have a ton of cap space and needs to
start making room for extensions for Jones, Tyreek Hill and
eventually Patrick
Mahomes. Houston can still play at a high level, but perhaps not at
the level you'd expect for someone set to count for $21.1 million against the
cap at age 30. If released, he'll get picked up quickly on a big deal
elsewhere.
2) KELECHI
OSEMELE, OG, OAKLAND RAIDERS: New Raiders GM
Mike Mayock -- that still feels bizarre to write -- has plenty of cap space,
but the team might want to continue getting younger up front.
3) MARCELL
DAREUS, DT, JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS: Dareus is
ultimately a valuable run-stopping specialist who is paid like a superstar.
4) ERIC WEDDLE,
S, BALTIMORE RAVENS:Weddle said after the season he'd retire before playing
for another organization, but then backed off that statement. A valuable pickup by former GM
Ozzie Newsome, the 34-year-old no longer possesses the range he once had.
5) JAMIE COLLINS,
LB, CLEVELAND BROWNS: Still dogged by occasional complaints about his
effort level, Collins' bigger issue is his lack of playmaking. It's been a
while since NBC's Cris Collinsworth called him one of the best defensive
players in football.
6) S DEVIN
MCCOURTY OR LB DONT'A
HIGHTOWER, NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS: Bill Belichick has
shown in the past he's not afraid to let go of highly paid defensive leaders.
Retirement has been floated as an option for McCourty, which could be a
pre-emptive strike against any Patriots request
for a pay cut. Hightower was terrific in the playoffs and is the heartbeat of
the team's linebacker group, but the Pats often err on the side of letting go
of a player a year too early rather than keeping him a year too long. It's hard
to imagine New England cutting both players, but saying
goodbye to one would be a typical Belichickian way to move on from the Super Bowl afterglow.
OTHER PLAYERS IN TROUBLE (in alphabetical
order):
Dwayne Allen,
TE, New England Patriots;
Kelvin
Beachum, OT, New York Jets;
Travis
Benjamin, WR, Los Angeles Chargers;
Morgan
Burnett, S, Pittsburgh Steelers;
Adrian
Clayborn, DE, New England Patriots;
Isaiah
Crowell, RB, New York Jets;
Johnathan
Cyprien, S, Tennessee Titans;
Carlos Hyde,
RB, Jacksonville Jaguars;
Kevin Johnson,
CB, Houston Texans;
Dre
Kirkpatrick, CB, Cincinnati Bengals;
Ronald Leary,
OG, Denver Broncos;
Corey Liuget,
DT, Los Angeles Chargers;
Brandon
Marshall, LB, Denver Broncos;
AJ McCarron,
QB, Oakland Raiders;
Seth Roberts,
WR, Oakland Raiders;
Josh Sitton,
OG, Miami Dolphins;
Daniel
Sorensen, S, Kansas City
Chiefs.
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