Today’s minor NFL transactions:
Las Vegas Raiders
- Waived: P Julian Diaz, WR Isaiah Zuber
Pittsburgh Steelers
- Released: LB Jamir Jones
Today’s minor NFL transactions:
Las Vegas Raiders
Pittsburgh Steelers
Nick Caserio has found himself on the hot seat for months now, but it doesn’t sound like he’ll be leaving the Texans any time soon. According to John McClain of Sports Radio 610 (via Twitter), the Texans general manager “isn’t going anywhere.”
Caserio made a name for himself during his two-decade stint in New England that eventually culminated in him earning the role of director of player personnel (despite the title, Bill Belichick still retained final personnel decisions). Following multiple attempts at recruiting the executive, the Texans finally landed Caserio as their new GM in 2021.
From a glass-half-full perspective, Caserio has done an admirable job restocking the team’s draft assets as they embarked on a total rebuild. Deshaun Watson‘s sudden trade request (and subsequent sexual misconduct headlines) led to the organization deactivating the QB, but the Texans emerged from the year-long soap opera with three first-round picks from Cleveland. Houston had zero first- or second-round picks during Caserio’s first offseason at the helm, but the team had multiple firsts last year (resulting in Derek Stingley and Kenyon Green) and will be armed with a pair of firsts and a pair of seconds in both 2023 and 2024.
From a glass-half-empty perspective, Caserio saw his organization fall from 4-13 in 2021 to 3-14 in 2022. The team was never expected to compete right away, but Caserio has seemingly acknowledged some of his mistakes along the way. The organization surprisingly fired David Culley after only one season, and they let go of Lovie Smith following his one season as head coach in 2022. DeMeco Ryans will now mark the third head coach in Caserio’s three years with the organization, and just the idea of that coaching carousel had the Texans losing confidence in their GM back in December. Further, the organization fired Jack Easterby, the executive who played a major role in bringing Caserio from Foxborough to Houston.
Following a 2022 campaign that featured few highlights, there were whispers that Caserio could end up getting canned. The organization decided to stick with Caserio through yet another head coaching search, and it sounds like they’re committed to him running another draft. However, if the Texans fail to show any progress in 2023, there’s a good chance the organization could be looking for a new general manager next offseason.
Dexter Lawrence is pushing for a new contract. The Giants All-Pro defensive tackle won’t report to the start of the Giants offseason program as he pursues an extension, reports Pat Leonard of the New York Daily News.
[RELATED: Saquon Barkley Will Not Sign Franchise Tender Before Giants’ Offseason Program]
The former first-round pick is set to hit free agency following the 2023 season. He’s currently slated to earn $12.4MM this upcoming season via the fifth-year option, which the Giants picked up back in 2022. The Giants have been working on an extension with Lawrence, per Ralph Vacchiano of Fox Sports (on Twitter).
Following a 2021 campaign that saw him start a career-low 10 games, Lawrence came back with a vengeance in 2022. The defensive tackle set career-highs in tackles (68), sacks (7.5), and QB hits (28) en route to earning his first Pro Bowl nod and second-team All-Pro honor. Pro Football Focus ranked Lawrence second among 127 qualifying interior defenders, and he earned position-best marks for his run defense and pass rushing.
Considering Lawrence’s production last season, he should be eyeing a deal worth more than $20MM annually. There are currently six defensive tackles who top that mark, and while Lawrence will be hard pressed to match Aaron Donald‘s staggering $31.6MM average annual value, he could rival the contract that the Titans recently gave to Jeffery Simmons (four years, $94MM).
Lawrence won’t be the only Giants star skipping the start of the offseason program. We heard earlier today that Saquon Barkley won’t be signing his franchise tender prior to Monday as he pursues a long-term extension of his own.
After inking Roquan Smith to a record-breaking contract, the Ravens are reportedly shopping one of their other linebackers. According to Jason La Canfora of the Washington Post, Ravens linebackers Patrick Queen is “prime trade fodder” heading into the draft.
Queen was a first-round pick by Baltimore in 2020, and the LSU product has certainly backed up his draft stock through his first three seasons in the NFL. He collected 106 tackles and three sacks as a rookie, earning him PFWA All-Rookie Team honors. After seeing his numbers drop a bit in 2021, Queen had a career year this past season, finishing with 117 tackles and five sacks. He ultimately finished the year ranked 31st among 81 qualifying linebackers, per Pro Football Focus, with the site giving him position-leading grades for his pass-rushing ability.
After trading for Smith last season, the Ravens gave him a five-year, $100MM contract ($45MM guaranteed) in January. That contract made Smith the highest-paid off-ball LB in the NFL, and it will predictably influence the team’s decision making elsewhere on the roster. With so much money committed to Smith (and with the front office eyeing a fifth-year option decision on Queen this offseason), it makes sense that they’d look to trade off one of their linebackers.
The Ravens are only armed with five selections heading into this year’s draft, so a Queen trade could help them add to their arsenal. As La Canfora notes, the Ravens need a cornerback, and while there should be some highly graded players available when they pick at No. 22, one anonymous executive believes the front office could trade back and still land a top-end player at the position.
“I think six [corners] go in the first round,” the executive told La Canfora, “and [the Ravens are] probably thinking they can get one they like later on — maybe even the second round — and add picks.”
Hours after losing Devin Singletary to the Texans, the Bills agreed to terms with Damien Harris. The former Patriot appeared to fill the Singletary void, with the signing coming shortly after GM Brandon Beane said the team was looking to add at the position.
Buffalo might not be done with backfield augmentations. The team brought in Latavius Murray on a free agency visit, Field Yates of ESPN.com tweets. Most recently with the Broncos, Murray has managed to play 10 NFL seasons despite being a sixth-round pick.
The Broncos appeared to be a potential spot for Murray, who led them in rushing last season. Javonte Williams‘ ACL recovery timetable may bleed into the regular season — or at least into training camp — and former Murray coach Sean Payton is now at the helm. Payton also referenced a Murray text exchange ahead of his Denver courtship, seemingly indicating a return could be in play for the ex-Alvin Kamara change-of-pace back. But Samaje Perine signed with the Broncos, potentially removing Murray from the equation. Even after the Broncos’ Perine add, Murray return rumors persisted. But nothing has developed on that front.
Murray, 33, quickly leapfrogged Melvin Gordon upon arriving in Denver from New Orleans’ practice squad. Despite the in-season arrival, the former Raiders sixth-rounder more than doubled Gordon’s yardage output and finished with 703 (4.4 per carry). Murray’s contract expired in March. If Murray were to play an age-33 season, he would join a select group of modern backs to do so. Frank Gore and Adrian Peterson are the only pure running backs to be on a team’s Week 1 roster at 33 or older over the past six years. Ex-Murray Saints teammate Mark Ingram, who turned 33 in December, will try to join this club as well.
The Bills added Harris to a backfield corps that includes 2022 second-round pick James Cook and deadline acquisition Nyheim Hines. While Hines contributes regularly as a return specialist, he also has passing-game chops. Murray would stand to overlap with the Harris as a between-the-tackles threat, but the Bills are taking a look anyway. Murray is from central New York, though he went to college at Central Florida.
The Syracuse-area native has played for five teams and has a 1,000-yard season — back in 2015 with Oakland — on his resume. Murray has mostly worked as an off-the-bench back, playing alongside the likes of Kamara and Dalvin Cook. But the Broncos turned to him as a near-full-timer last season, with Williams on the shelf and Gordon again struggling with ball security. Murray topped 100 rushing yards in two of Denver’s final four games, including a 130-yard showing against the Cardinals in Week 15.
With each passing day, the reality of Bryce Young leading off the 2023 draft looks more likely. C.J. Stroud does not seem to be gaining momentum and looks set to be available when the Texans go on the clock at No. 2 overall. Although Stroud-to-Charlotte buzz emerged recently, Jason La Canfora of the Washington Post notes the Panthers have been leaning in Young’s direction for weeks. They have not deviated from that plan, and SI.com’s Albert Breer adds Carolina sees special qualities in the 5-foot-10 passer.
Buzz regarding Frank Reich preferring the 6-3 Stroud has died down, with multiple reports last week indicating the Panthers — who hosted Young on Tuesday — are big fans of the 2021 Heisman winner. This will put the Texans to a decision; their previously reported Young meeting is on tap for today, Ian Rapoport of NFL.com tweets. Here is the latest from this draft’s QB crop:
Browns defensive tackle Perrion Winfrey is facing a misdemeanor assault charge in Harris County (Texas), according to cleveland.com’s Mary Kay Cabot. The second-year D-lineman was arrested Monday night.
Winfrey faces a charge of assaulting a family member, per court records, which indicate he grabbed a woman he was dating and “unlawfully, intentionally and knowingly” caused her bodily harm. Winfrey, 22, allegedly grabbed Brianna Mack and pulled her with his hand. He is free on a $1K bond.
The Browns drafted Winfrey in the fourth round last year. Although the team did not make much of an effort to upgrade at defensive tackle during the 2022 offseason, Winfrey did not start any games. Browns coaches also benched Winfrey at points due to maturity issues, Cabot notes. The 6-foot-4 D-lineman was a healthy scratch in multiple games last season.
The Oklahoma product did play regularly, however, lining up for 341 defensive plays with Cleveland as a rookie. He missed four games overall, landing in concussion protocol at one point, and part of the absence was related to a scooter accident.
Cleveland has since added Dalvin Tomlinson at D-tackle, with the big-ticket free agent joining lower-level adds in Trysten Hill and Maurice Hurst Jr. Three years remain on Winfrey’s rookie contract. He could face a suspension under the NFL’s personal conduct policy, regardless of this case’s outcome.
Given their financial commitments at safety coming into free agency, the Seahawks made a surprising move by signing Julian Love to join Jamal Adams and Quandre Diggs. The Giants appear to have been surprised as well.
Like they did with Saquon Barkley during what became a narrow in-season negotiation — during the bye week — the Giants made Love an offer believed to be worth more than the two-year, $12MM Seahawks pact Love signed. The Giants then submitted a second offer earlier this year, according to the New York Post’s Paul Schwartz, who notes this proposal was worth more than what the team offered midseason.
[RELATED: Barkley Not Planning To Show For Team Workouts]
When Love chose the Seahawks offer, Schwartz adds the Giants were somewhat surprised. They gave Bobby McCain a one-year deal worth $1.3MM, but the team may still be on the lookout for a safety starter to replace Love alongside Xavier McKinney.
“I think I’m a player on the rise and I’m young, so a lot of things were going for me, I felt. Then the market was tough for safeties, that’s just the reality,” Love said recently. “I wouldn’t have expected it, but it was what it was. When Seattle saw where I was at contract-wise, they jumped at the opportunity to bring me on, which is exciting and it makes you feel like you’re wanted in this process. There were a few teams down at the end, but I think the appeal of Seattle was too great for me to pass on.”
No numbers have emerged regarding the Giants’ midseason or offseason Love offers, but this year’s non-Jessie Bates safety market not producing any deals worth at least $8MM per year did not bode too well for Love, even after a strong contract year. The new Giants regime used the same timetable with Love and Saquon Barkley, making an initial fall offer before upping it slightly ahead of free agency. But Barkley ended up being franchise-tagged — the expected outcome in the event a Daniel Jones extension surfaced — and Love hit the market. When free agency opened, the sides were not close on terms; that led to the Seattle visit.
McKinney has missed chunks of two seasons — 2020 and ’22 — but looks to remain in New York’s long-term plans. The former second-round pick could rebound and command a nice raise with a quality contract year, and Schwartz notes the Giants were not going to have Love making more than McKinney on a long-term deal. McKinney is now extension-eligible, but it would make sense for the Alabama alum — considering the ATV accident that cost him seven games last season — to bet on himself raising his value in 2023.
As for Love, he now sits 28th for safety AAV. Vonn Bell, Jordan Poyer, C.J. Gardner-Johnson, Donovan Wilson and Juan Thornhill checked in a bit higher on their offseason deals, but Bell’s three-year, $22.5MM Panthers pact was the closest any safety came to Bates’ four-year, $64MM Falcons windfall. Gardner-Johnson signed a one-year deal after turning down a multiyear Eagles offer, joining Love in perhaps overestimating this year’s safety market. Love is expected to play a regular role, regardless of Adams’ health, in Seattle; the Seahawks are planning to use Adams closer to the line of scrimmage more often in 2023.
The Giants have McCain, Dane Belton and Jason Pinnock under contract alongside McKinney. Love took over after the Giants cut Logan Ryan and let Jabrill Peppers walk in 2022. The team has higher priorities entering the draft, and while safety can be considered an auxiliary need, the Giants may rely on McCain or one of their younger holdovers to team with McKinney.
One of the top edge defenders available in the draft, Clemson’s Myles Murphy will have a busy week. The 6-foot-5 pass rusher met with the Jaguars earlier this week, NFL.com’s Ian Rapoport tweets, and Bengals, Falcons and Texans visits are on tap for one of Clemson’s two first-round-caliber D-line talents. Joining D-tackle Bryan Bresee on this front, Murphy submitted a consistent resume at the ACC power. In three seasons, the 268-pound edge recorded 18.5 sacks and 36 tackles for loss. The Jaguars, who have drafted an edge in Round 1 three times since 2019, go on the clock at No. 24. The Bengals, who have Trey Hendrickson and Sam Hubbard signed beyond 2023, hold the No. 28 pick. The Texans (Nos. 2, 12) and Falcons (No. 8) are needier on the edge, but their draft slots might not align with a player ranked just outside the top 20.
Here is the latest from the draft:
Saquon Barkley should not be expected back with the Giants anytime soon. The franchise-tagged running back has engaged in off-and-on extension talks with the Giants since November, but the team hammered out a Daniel Jones deal prior to the tag deadline.
The Giants using the tag on Barkley with minutes to spare before last month’s deadline allowed them to retain both their quarterback and running back, but the player without the long-term contract should now be expected to stay away. Although Barkley’s $10.1MM tag salary will be locked in when he signs the tender, Newsday’s Kim Jones notes the Pro Bowl running back will not do so ahead of the team’s offseason program (Twitter link).
[RELATED: Giants Interested In 2023 Andrew Thomas Extension]
Brian Daboll‘s team will convene Monday for the start of offseason workouts. Players cannot be fined for missing this stage of the offseason, though teams generally have good attendance for the non-mandatory portion of spring work. Minicamp represents the first point in which players would incur fines by not attending. Until Barkley signs his tender, he can steer clear of minicamp free of fines. It would certainly not surprise if the sixth-year back follows that path.
Franchise-tagged players regularly wait on signing their tenders, though Tony Pollard signed his $10.1MM Cowboys tag last month. Pollard can be fined for not attending Dallas’ minicamp. Barkley, Josh Jacobs, Evan Engram and Lamar Jackson are exempt from fines. The Commanders already agreed to an extension with Daron Payne, removing the sixth-year defensive tackle from the tag contingent.
The Giants offered Barkley a deal in the $12.5MM-per-year neighborhood last season and upped it to the $13MM-AAV range this offseason. While Barkley holding out for a deal on the Christian McCaffrey–Alvin Kamara deal makes sense, seeing as those contracts were agreed to back in 2020 on a lower salary cap, this year’s running back market did not do him any favors. None of this year’s free agents signed a deal that ranked in the top 10 at the position. Barkley is better than the backs who hit the market this year, but the Giants should not be considered likely to raise Barkley’s offer by much more — if at all — ahead of the July 17 deadline for tagged players to sign extensions.
It does not sound like too much urgency exists on the team’s part, with ESPN.com’s Jordan Raanan noting (via Twitter) the Giants are not overly motivated to reach an agreement right now. The Giants pulled the $13MM-AAV offer after franchise-tagging the former Offensive Rookie of the Year. Barkley, 26, attended player-organized workouts with teammates last week in Arizona, The Athletic’s Dan Duggan tweets. By not signing his tender, the injury-prone back does run the risk of seeing an injury lead to the Giants rescinding the tag. But Barkley may be attempting to stay away as a last-ditch leverage play. Though, his leverage is limited.
Seeing Barkley’s cap number reduced would benefit the Giants, however, as they have Dexter Lawrence entering a contract year as well. The Giants’ $2.3MM in cap space ranks 30th in mid-April. They will need more to sign draft choices, though restructures can help on that end as well. The team also has Leonard Williams tied to a whopping $32.3MM cap number, which can be reduced via an extension. Big Blue, which was eyeing an incentive-laden deal with now-Ravens wideout Odell Beckham Jr., will be set to carry the Barkley and Williams cap numbers to start its offseason program.