LE'VEON BELL TO
JETS? NICK FOLES TO JAGS?
The new league year begins at 4 p.m. ET on Wednesday, March 13. This
also marks the official opening of something you might care about a bit more
... 2019 NFL free agency! With the frenzy still a few weeks off, I made a list
of players set to hit the open market, reviewed team-by-team offseason needs
and concocted one fun free-agent fit for each organization. Let's start with
the AFC.
PITTSBURGH
STEELERS: PIERRE DESIR,
CORNERBACK
The Steelers require
linebacking help and -- suddenly -- a reliable wideout, with Antonio Brown
set to be shipped out of town. For this exercise, though, I'm
choosing to pad the Steelers at
cornerback. Former first-rounder Artie Burns has
massively underwhelmed, while Joe Haden turns
30 in April. The 28-year-old Desir was Indy's top cover man in 2018 and would
give Pittsburgh a solid presence against the run. After missing on countless
corners in the draft, free agency feels right for the Steelers.
BALTIMORE
RAVENS: MARK INGRAM,
RUNNING BACK
Baltimore's
pound-the-rock-down-your-throat attack was exposed in January's
playoff loss to the Chargers. With Lamar Jackson at
the controls, though, the Ravens aren't
about to ditch their devotion to the run. I like the idea of new play caller
Greg Roman unleashing a hammer-dropping ball-carrier like Ingram
alongside Gus Edwards and Kenneth Dixon.
BUFFALO
BILLS: MITCH MORSE,
CENTER
The Bills were
dragged down last season by one of the league's ugliest run-blocking units. The
pass protection wasn't much sunnier, forcing rookie arm Josh Allen to
run for his life inside a weapons-free offense. Assuming he bolts Kansas City,
Morse would give Buffalo an anchoring presence at the pivot after finishing as
the sixth-best pass-blocking center in football last season, per Pro Football
Focus.
CINCINNATI
BENGALS: JA'WUAN JAMES,
OFFENSIVE TACKLE
"Two linemen out of the
gate? That's no fun," you moan. Also not fun: Watching your cowed
quarterback get crunched to the godless turf. Bolstering Cincy's line remains a
top priority for newbie coach Zac Taylor. James, despite some past injury
issues, would give the Bengals a
reliable presence at right tackle. He's ripe to be overpaid, but bookends are
rare gems in today's NFL. It's a necessary expense.
CLEVELAND
BROWNS: FRANK CLARK,
EDGE
The Browns could
use a tackle, too, but equal need exists for a havoc-spinning pass rusher to
pair across from quarterback destroyer Myles Garrett.
A bull-rushing powerhouse, Clark boasts the speed and strength to cast off
blockers and crumble the pocket. Seattle wants him back -- "I'm
counting on it," said coach Pete Carroll -- but the Browns
are flush with piles of cash.
DENVER
BRONCOS: JAMISON
CROWDER, WIDE RECEIVER
After landing their
quarterback in Joe Flacco, the Broncos still
have plenty of work to do on offense. The line is a mess and the defense could
use corner help, but I'm suggesting a buy-low add at wideout in Crowder, a
unique physical talent coming off a campaign sideswiped by injuries. Redskins Coach
Jay Gruden insists
Crowder remains in Washington's plans, but the lightning-quick pass
catcher would fill a need in the slot for Denver.
HOUSTON
TEXANS: MATT PARADIS,
CENTER
After the Texans allowed
a league-high 62 sacks, finding better protection for franchise
quarterback Deshaun
Watson is nothing short of a burning priority. Less-disastrous
tackle play is a must, but issues extend to the interior line, where Nick Martin ranked
as the AFC South's worst center, per PFF. Paradis was off to a strong start in
Denver last season before a broken leg killed his campaign. He's expected to be
all systems go for camp and would help this line become something more than a
full-blown disaster.
INDIANAPOLIS
COLTS: NDAMUKONG SUH,
DEFENSIVE TACKLE
If the Rams let
him walk, Suh could help turn the middle of Indy's defense into a rough
neighborhood. General Manager Chris Ballard has built the roster off draft
picks and economical free-agent ads, but why not use some of your
league-high $108 million cap space on a blue-chip centerpiece?
The idea of Suh and Defensive Rookie of the Year Darius
Leonard operating as teammates is beyond juicy.
JACKSONVILLE
JAGUARS: NICK FOLES,
QUARTERBACK
You've undoubtedly endured a
flood of Foles-to-Jacksonville blurbs by now, so I won't linger. With whispers
of "mutual
interest" between the Jaguars and
Philly's Super Bowl-winning backup, the bigger question is whether the
Eagles will franchise Foles to control this process and keep
the division rival Giants and Redskins out
of play.
KANSAS CITY
CHIEFS: KAREEM
JACKSON, CORNERBACK
Bags of money will go toward
retaining Dee Ford,
but the defensive to-do list runs deeper, as the Chiefs
shift to a 4-3 scheme under Steve Spagnuolo. Kansas City could use help at
every position, but free agency is a good spot to find cover-man help in the
form of Jackson, a reliable defender against the pass and a top-tier talent
against the run for Houston in 2018. He turns 31 in April, but has plenty left
for a win-now team like the Chiefs.
LOS ANGELES
CHARGERS: ANTHONY BARR,
LINEBACKER
The Chargers'
defense will continue to swirl around the nightmare tandem of Joey Bosa and Melvin Ingram.
The Bolts, though, could use a do-everything, versatile linebacker who plays
all three downs. Barr's stock has fallen after a brilliant campaign in 2015,
but he gives you a reliable tackler who can blitz the passer. Still squarely in
his prime with his 27th birthday coming up in March, he's worth a look inside
Gus Bradley's 4-3 scheme.
MIAMI
DOLPHINS: CLAY MATTHEWS,
EDGE
I'm throwing darts here, but this
feels like a 2019 Dolphins move
to me. Amid whispers the club plans to shy away from its history of dropping mega-millions in
free agency, look for the Fins to pad both sides of the ball with more
affordable talent. Turning 33 in May and coming off a 3.5-sack campaign,
Matthews is no lock to return to Green Bay.
NEW ENGLAND
PATRIOTS: GOLDEN TATE,
WIDE RECEIVER
The Patriots are
paper-thin at wideout. Beyond Julian
Edelman and special teams ace Matthew
Slater, the remaining pass catchers under contract are humans
named Braxton
Berrios, Cody
Hollister and Darren
Andrews. (Josh Gordon's
a restricted free agent and he's
currently suspended indefinitely by the NFL.) How about adding the
wily and hyper-productive Tate to a Patriots squad
just 12 months away from winning Super Bowl LIV?
NEW YORK
JETS: LE'VEON BELL,
RUNNING BACK
Close your eyes and imagine the
following: A watchable -- nay, intriguing -- Jets offense.
Gang Green houses the requisite dough to make a run at the level of player who
rarely reaches the open market. The cost will be massive -- "100 M's!" Bell
told TMZ when asked what it would take to sign with New York -- but general
manager Mike Maccagnan is running out of time to flip the switch on this
still-in-progress roster.
OAKLAND
RAIDERS: EZEKIEL ANSAH,
EDGE
Anyone fits the Raiders.
After trading away homegrown stars in Khalil Mack and Amari Cooper,
Jon Gruden and new general manager Mike Mayock oversee a franchise with a
thousand needs. Part of the team's $71 million in cap space (according to
Over The Cap) must go toward a pass rusher who can lift an Oakland
outfit that notched a league-low 13 sacks last season -- 17 fewer than the
closest competitor. Ansah comes with question marks, but it's not hard to
imagine Gruden falling for the former Lion.
TENNESSEE
TITANS: ZA'DARIUS
SMITH, EDGE
Smith generated plenty of
rough-and-tumble tape for the Ravens last
season. PFF credited him with 61 pressures, a breakout leap from his 40 in
2017. The Titans need
help pressuring the quarterback -- just like every team in the NFL -- and would
hope to grab Smith just as the 26-year-old hits his prime.
No comments:
Post a Comment