DEMARCUS LAWRENCE
TOPS NO-BRAINERS
There's no excuse for the Cowboys to
lose DeMarcus
Lawrence. There's no good reason for the Texans
to say so long to Jadeveon
Clowney, at least not yet. The ever-expanding salary cap makes it
too easy for teams to use the franchise tag. If you can't find room for your
best players, it's a sign of bad management.
Six of my preliminary top-10 free agents are virtual locks to be
tagged, in part because their current teams can make space for a large one-year
commitment.
Below is my preview of franchise tag season, which
officially starts on February 19, when teams can first apply the tag. The
deadline to use the tag is 4 p.m. ET on March 5, and I'm currently projecting
10 players to be tagged by then. There's a chance I won't get everything right
below, but only a slight one.
(Before I get
rolling: The franchise tag is a one-year, guaranteed contract offer that
prevents a player from hitting unrestricted free agency. The salary is based on
the five-year average cap percentage for the tag at each position. All cap
figures and projected tag salaries cited below come from Over The Cap,
unless otherwise noted. Let's go.)
NO-BRAINERS
(1) DEMARCUS
LAWRENCE, DE, DALLAS COWBOYS: Several media outlets
that spoke to Lawrence last March after
the Cowboys
used the tag on him the first time. He didn't mind the huge single-season
salary one bit, but noted that his price would only go up if a long-term deal
wasn't worked out by the deadline. After another standout campaign, he's been
proven absolutely right.
(2) JADEVEON
CLOWNEY, LB/DE, HOUSTON TEXANS: Lawrence sounds more
likely to get a long-term extension than Clowney, who has more injury questions
hanging over him. The Texans might
also want to kick the can down the road a year before deciding whether they can
afford to pay J.J. Watt and
Clowney top-10-defender money at the same time.
(3) DEE FORD,
OLB/DE, KANSAS CITY CHIEFS: General manager Brett Veach already
announced Ford will be
back, with the franchise tag the most likely route to bringing the
declaration to fruition. A one-year deal makes sense from the Chiefs'
perspective, considering how Ford's contract-year explosion (13 sacks, seven
forced fumbles) was a pleasant surprise, not unlike Lawrence's breakout year.
Ford staying probably means that Justin
Houston is out the door.
(4) FRANK CLARK,
DE, SEATTLE SEAHAWKS: Few edge rushers have provided steadier pressure
over the last two seasons. Coach Pete Carroll confirmed the team is "counting on" Clark coming back. His age
(turning 26 in June) makes him a far stronger candidate for the tag than Earl Thomas,
who cemented his divorce with the Seahawks with a one-finger
salute.
(5) GRADY JARRETT,
DT, ATLANTA FALCONS: General Manager Thomas Dimitroff has spent so
much time looking for D-line disruptors that he can't possibly let his best
player up front get away.
(6) LANDON
COLLINS, S, NEW YORK GIANTS: This is going to be a
complicated offseason for Giants GM
Dave Gettleman, who is juggling the futures of Eli Manning, Olivier
Vernon, Janoris
Jenkins and possibly even Odell Beckham Jr.
Using the tag on Collins, a homegrown difference-maker, should be one of
Gettleman's easier decisions.
SAY YES
These players are by no means guaranteed to receive the
tag, but I'm leaning that, yes, they will.
(1) NICK FOLES,
QB, PHILADELPHIA EAGLES: Foles bought back his freedom for the cool
price of $2 million and now the Eagles are
expected to place the franchise tag on him as a precursor to a potential trade.
There are legitimate questions whether this should even be allowed,
setting up a complicated end to Foles' time in Philadelphia.
(2) DONOVAN SMITH,
OT, TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS: The Bucs act publicly like they drafted the
second coming of Jason Peters.
Pro Football Focus, on the other hand, has consistently graded Smith as one of
the league's worst tackles, and the eyeball test is closer to PFF's analysis.
With so few options available in free agency, it appears
the Bucs will continue to love the one they're with.
(3) C.J. MOSLEY,
LB, BALTIMORE RAVENS: In what is set up to be an exceptionally tricky first
offseason as Ravens general
manager, Eric DeCosta has made keeping Mosley a priority. That may have to include using
the franchise tag despite the pricey $14 million sticker shock for an inside
linebacker. The Ravens and
Mosley might be the most likely pair on this entire list to strike a deal
before the tag is even necessary because it should ultimately save Baltimore
cap room.
(4) TREY FLOWERS,
DE, NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS: Bill Belichick is loath to use the franchise
tag, but Flowers could (and should) represent an exception. He has been
the Patriots'
best defensive player on balance over the last three seasons, all of which have
wound up in the Super Bowl.
He's exceptionally versatile, intelligent and team-oriented. He perfectly fits
New England's leadership mold in the tradition of teammates Devin
McCourty and Dont'a
Hightower, except he's a better player and he's
younger. If push comes to shove, it makes more sense to say goodbye to one of
them instead.
NO PROJECTED TAG
(1) JA'WUAN JAMES,
OT, MIAMI DOLPHINS: This was the hardest call on this list. James has
proven to be an above-average starting tackle just entering his prime. He's exactly
the type of solid starter who will get paid like a superstar, a player with a
first-round pedigree that is one of the best available at a thin position.
(2) RODGER
SAFFOLD AND LAMARCUS
JOYNER, OG and S, Los Angeles Rams: Don't be shocked
if Saffold becomes one of the highest-paid guards in football. The Rams have
used the tag on defensive backs the last three years (on Trumaine
Johnson in 2016 and '17, Joyner in '18), but I anticipate they
will save the space this year to address different areas.
(3) ANTHONY BARR,
LB, MINNESOTA VIKINGS: Coach Mike Zimmer and the Vikings'
front office have prioritized contracts for other defensive players over the
last few years ahead of Barr. There's a sense they believe they can live
without him, an ambivalence that will wind up making Barr even richer when he
hits the open market.
(4) EZEKIEL ANSAH,
DE, DETROIT LIONS: GM Bob Quinn probably regrets paying $17.1 million
for four sacks in another injury-plagued year for the former No. 5 overall
pick. The Lions won't
make that mistake again, and Ansah will enter the market as one of the biggest
boom-or-bust players available.
(5) BRYCE CALLAHAN,
CB, CHICAGO BEARS: It's unlikely the Bears would
seriously consider paying Callahan more than $15 million, but I include him
here because it's not that crazy and he's a candidate to get a
sneaky-huge contract in free agency. Slot cornerback is now a starting
position, and Callahan is coming off an excellent year.
(6) PRESTON SMITH,
OLB, WASHINGTON REDSKINS: Smith is quietly an effective edge rusher despite
his low sack totals, with 38 hurries and nine QB hits in 2018. He's also strong
against the run, but the Redskins'
quarterback situation could make him too expensive to keep.
COULD THE STEELERS
REALLY TAG LE'VEON BELL?
Another franchise tag isn't in the cards for Bell. But a recent ESPN report suggested the Steelers could
place the transition tag on the running back, which would give them a chance to
match any competing offer. That would get messy and seems less necessary
with James Conner in
place, but it's a reminder that the Steelers haven't
yet closed the book on Bell returning to the team, even if he feels
differently.
No comments:
Post a Comment