TREY FLOWERS TO
EAGLES? EARL THOMAS TO ...
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. Here's the NFC
rundown:
ARIZONA
CARDINALS: DARYL
WILLIAMS, OFFENSIVE TACKLE
Have the Cardinals entirely
dismissed trading Josh Rosen to
draft Kyler Murray? I don't think so. Team brass stomped on
that narrative -- they do the protest too much! --
but whoever plays quarterback is beyond doomed until this leaky line is fixed.
Williams comes with questions after missing all but 56 snaps of last season
with a knee injury. His stellar play in 2017, though, makes him a candidate to
earn starting cash in 2019.
ATLANTA
FALCONS: SHELDON
RICHARDSON, DEFENSIVE TACKLE
Like the Cardinals,
the Falcons need
bodies along the O-line, but how about pairing the disruptive Richardson
alongside the sure-to-be-back Grady Jarrett?
This would mark Richardson's fourth team since 2016 -- a tad concerning -- but
he's a starting-level interior bully who can push the pocket.
CAROLINA
PANTHERS: TYRELL
WILLIAMS, WIDE RECEIVER
Free agency offers a
less-than-juicy cast of receivers, but Williams would furnish the Panthers with
a much-needed deep threat. A hopefully healthy Cam Newton could
use a burner to draw cover men away from D.J. Moore and Curtis Samuel.
Williams has shown a history of going dark for stretches around the occasional
100-yard gem, but the 27-year-old looms as a presumably affordable add for
Carolina.
CHICAGO
BEARS: LAMARCUS
JOYNER, SAFETY
With safety Adrian Amos and
promising slot corner Bryce
Callahan set to hit the open market, the Bears
have spots to fill in the secondary. Joyner would give Chicago a reliable
defender with just one missed tackle over the past two seasons.
Overall, he returned to the pack last autumn after a stellar 2017 campaign, but
would fill an immediate need for this Super Bowl contender.
DALLAS
COWBOYS: EARL THOMAS,
SAFETY
"Everyone in locker
room knows Earl loves the Cowboys," former Seahawks
teammate Cliff Avril told SiriusXM NFL Radio last summer. "He'd leave
immediately after work just to catch them play MNF."
The romance is real, with Thomas
most recently sharing an NFL Network segment on Instagram in which
analyst Willie McGinest paired Dallas and the star safety as a free agency fit.
The veteran backstop turns 30 in May, but Thomas remains a top talent.
As for the Cowboys,
Jerry Jones -- newsflash -- likes to make a splash. Our world makes zero sense
if this fails to happen.
DETROIT
LIONS: RONALD DARBY,
CORNERBACK
The Lions vastly
improved their run defense last season after trading for mammoth tackle Damon
Harrison. They still require help rushing the passer, though, and
desperately need a cornerback. Even coming off a torn ACL, Darby is the biggest
FA prize at the position and would get Detroit's team-building process off to a
promising start. Imagine the Lions generating
some excitement for a change?
GREEN BAY
PACKERS: PRESTON SMITH,
EDGE
We're still learning what kind of
front office the Packers are
running under second-year general manager Brian Gutekunst. After a flurry of
aggressive moves last offseason, how about padding out Mike Pettine's defense
with one of free agency's hidden -- or
not-so-hidden -- gems? The uber-consistent Smith spent last
season as football's eighth-ranked 3-4 outside linebacker, per Pro Football
Focus. With edge rusher arguably Green Bay's greatest need, Smith deserves a
long look.
LOS ANGELES
RAMS: HA HA
CLINTON-DIX, SAFETY
If you're reading this
mezzanine-level think piece from start to finish, you already know I
handed Rams
safety Lamarcus
Joyner to the Bears.
That leaves L.A. with a key spot to fill. Clinton-Dix won't change the world,
but he'd give Wade Phillips an experienced backstop to lean on.
MINNESOTA
VIKINGS: RODGER
SAFFOLD, OFFENSIVE GUARD
After inking a massive pact with
Minnesota last offseason, Kirk Cousins was
sold as the final puzzle piece for a club with Super Bowl aspirations. The veteran
passer was better than most believe, but Minnesota's crumbling offensive line
caused wire-to-wire chaos as Cousins spent too many games on the run. Saffold
turns 31 in June and will definitely be overpaid, but the Vikings cannot
sit still.
NEW ORLEANS
SAINTS: JARED COOK,
TIGHT END
Creative Saints coach
Sean Payton boasts a track record of maximizing athletic tight ends. The
pairing of Drew Brees and
Cook spinning tricks would serve as a deep nuisance to defensive coordinators
everywhere. Cook spent last season as the most valuable player inside Oakland's
offense and hits free agency as a talented and versatile producer. The Raiders want
him back, but what's not to like about joining a Super Bowl contender?
NEW YORK GIANTS:
RE-SIGN LANDON
COLLINS, SAFETY
The Giants house
a top-heavy roster flush with a handful of stars and plenty of needs. Instead
of creating another hole, why not re-sign the finest available safety not
named Earl Thomas?
General Manager Dave Gettleman was averse to handing out big-money deals to
defensive backs in Carolina, but a new approach is needed in New York.
PHILADELPHIA
EAGLES: TREY FLOWERS,
EDGE
Plugged-in Pats beat writer Mike
Reiss believes the team will pass on franchising Flowers. The
25-year-old pass rusher won't lack for suitors after leading New England's
defense during multiple Super Bowl
runs. The Eagles are
dangerously low on cap room, but I'm playing under the assumption every team in
the NFL knows how to massage the books to make a signing like this a reality.
SAN FRANCISCO
49ERS: DANTE FOWLER JR.,
EDGE
Just another team seeking someone
to bum rush the quarterback. Fowler was a genuine help to the Rams down
the stretch and sits squarely on the radar of Coach Mike Shanahan, who recently
told reporters, per NBC Sports: "We're always interested in adding pass rushers, and he's a good pass
rusher to add." Fowler plus another edge force with the No. 2 overall pick
would transform San Francisco's defense in a hurry.
SEATTLE
SEAHAWKS: BRANDON
GRAHAM, EDGE
The merry-go-round continues with
Philly's Graham shifting west to help Seattle's refurbished defense. The Seahawks thrived
with a younger cast of characters this past autumn, but Coach Pete Carroll
knows what the 30-year-old Graham brings: top-15 pass-rushing talent with a solid track record
against the run.
TAMPA BAY
BUCCANEERS: TYRANN
MATHIEU, SAFETY
Good luck finding a stauncher
supporter of Mathieu than Bruce Arians. A champion of the "Honey
Badger" in Arizona, the new Bucs coach has shown he can milk the most out
of the versatile defensive back. With Tampa in need of safety help, Mathieu --
still just 26 years old -- would give this defense a dose of identity.
WASHINGTON
REDSKINS: TEDDY
BRIDGEWATER, QUARTERBACK
A prime candidate to snag a
quarterback in the draft, the Redskins must
address the void left
by Alex Smith's grisly leg injury. The smart approach would mimic
what the Browns pulled
off last offseason, making a move for veteran Tyrod Taylor before
swinging for the fences with Baker
Mayfield. An affordable, short-range deal for Bridgewater fits the
bill.
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