DESEAN JACKSON,
ELI MANNING TO HIT MARKET?
I already took a look at the candidates to be released in the AFC. With the Joe
Flacco trade kicking off the "Oh, we're already
doing this?" phase of the offseason, let's get to the NFC cuts
before this article gets out of date.
Note: Unless otherwise cited,
salary-cap figures in this piece were found on OverTheCap.com.
1) SEAN LEE,
LB, DALLAS COWBOYS: It's been a great run. Lee wants to return to the Cowboys in 2019 -- and perhaps the
two sides can work out a pay cut -- but he doesn't have much of a role if Jaylon Smith
and Leighton
Vander Esch are healthy. Dallas owner Jerry Jones can get
sentimental about longtime Cowboys,
but carrying Lee with a cap figure over $10 million is going too far.
2) NICK PERRY,
LB, GREEN BAY PACKERS: Perry has only been healthy enough to play more
than 550 snaps once in his seven-year career. That season (2016) is what
afforded him the huge deal that
the Packers will
now likely get out of.
3) MALCOLM SMITH,
LB, SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS: Smith was part of GM John Lynch's large first
free-agency class from two years ago. So was Pierre Garcon, whose option was declined between the time the rough
draft of this article was written and the final version went up. Lynch is under
pressure to find more hits this time around.
4) TIM JERNIGAN, DT, EAGLES: The Eagles took a swing
with Jernigan after acquiring him from Baltimore, but back
surgery limited his productivity with the team. Philadelphia has so many other
question marks that Jernigan's $11 million salary looks like an easy cut.
5) MARK BARRON,
LB, LOS ANGELES RAMS: After years of Barron landing on lists like
this, it should finally be time for the Rams to
say goodbye to their hard-hitting linebacker.
6) ZACH BROWN,
LB, WASHINGTON REDSKINS: Brown saw the "writing on the wall" back in December and he
was probably right to expect his time with the 'Skins to end.
7-8) ALLEN HURNS AND TERRANCE
WILLIAMS, WR, DALLAS COWBOYS: Amari Cooper has
rendered most of his predecessors in Dallas extraneous.
9) GLOVER QUIN,
S, DETROIT LIONS: The former second-team All-Pro's excellent six-year
run in Detroit appears at an end after Quin struggled to adapt to coach Matt
Patricia's system.
10) KAM
CHANCELLOR, S, SEATTLE SEAHAWKS: Chancellor has not
officially retired, and $5.2 million of his $10 million 2019 salary remains
guaranteed. The Seahawks will
officially release him and say thanks to the quiet leader of perhaps the
defining position group of its era.
POTENTIAL SURPRISES
1) GERALD MCCOY,
DT, TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS: It was initially confusing to see McCoy's
name mentioned so often as a candidate for release after the
season, with Todd Bowles' scheme change mentioned as the most common reasoning.
Bucs general manager Jason Licht's noncommittal comments on the best Bucs
player of the decade felt telling. However, considering Licht's track record,
it requires a big leap of faith to believe he'll spend $13 million in cap room
on someone better than McCoy.
2) DESEAN
JACKSON, WR, TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS: Usually players
fear being cut. D-Jax wants it. His unhappiness in Tampa is
out in the open, yet Coach Bruce Arians expressed a desire to recruit him ... to stay. Only a badass could
lead the league in yards per reception in his 11th season, and Jackson knows
his services are still in high demand, no matter where he plays.
3) OLIVIER
VERNON, DE, NEW YORK GIANTS: Vernon hasn't been
healthy enough to live up to his monster
contract, and he's not worth the $15.25 million base salary he's due
in 2019. But the odds on general manager Dave Gettleman finding anyone better
this offseason is small. At 28, Vernon knows he'd have a strong enough
free-agent market to resist a pay cut.
4) ELI MANNING,
QB, NEW YORK GIANTS: Unlike Flacco, Manning would be extremely unlikely to
have a trade market. This release would be a surprise, especially if Eli is
open to following his older brother's path of accepting a pay cut in exchange
for incentives on his contract.
5) NELSON
AGHOLOR, WR, PHILADELPHIA EAGLES: Like the first
three names in this section, Agholor could be a tradeable asset. I'd expect
the Eagles to
bring him back on the fifth-year option of his rookie deal -- unless they can
upgrade via trade, at which point his $9.387 million contract would look more
onerous.
6) JASON PETERS,
OT, PHILADELPHIA EAGLES: Peters once called Eagles owner
Jeffrey Lurie "his best friend." Peters is a future Hall of
Famer at an extremely scarce position. Something tells me the Eagles will
figure out a way to keep him.
7) VIC BEASLEY,
LB, ATLANTA FALCONS: Thomas Dimitroff's old boss in New England has a
strong track record on balance of knowing when to give up on a personnel
mistake. I know what Bill Belichick would do with Beasley's $12.8 million
salary, but it's a lot harder to guess what the Falcons will
do.
OTHER PLAYERS IN TROUBLE (in alphabetical
order):
Arik Armstead,
DE, San Francisco 49ers;
Kurt Coleman,
S, New Orleans Saints;
Vernon Davis,
TE, Washington Redskins;
Mike Glennon,
QB, Arizona Cardinals;
Jermaine
Gresham, TE, Arizona Cardinals;
T.J. Lang,
G, Detroit Lions;
Cameron
Meredith, WR, New Orleans Saints;
Barkevious
Mingo, LB, Seattle Seahawks;
Mike Remmers,
G, Minnesota Vikings;
Dion Sims,
TE, Chicago Bears; Torrey Smith,
WR, Carolina Panthers;
John Sullivan,
C, Los Angeles
Rams.
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