Today’s reserve/futures contracts:
New England Patriots
Seattle Seahawks
Today’s reserve/futures contracts:
New England Patriots
Seattle Seahawks
New Jaguars head coach Liam Coen is driving the organization’s search for a new general manager. It shouldn’t be a surprise that Coen is eyeing a familiar face to help guide his front office. According to FOX Sports’ Peter Schrager, the Jaguars have requested an interview with Buccaneers assistant general manager Mike Greenberg.
[RELATED: Liam Coen ‘Pushing Hard’ For Mike Greenberg To Become Jaguars GM?]
Greenberg has spent more than a decade in Tampa Bay’s front office. He’s gradually worked his way up the ranks with the Buccaneers, culminating in him earning the role of assistant GM ahead of the 2023 campaign. Per the Buccaneers website, the executive has been credited with managing the team’s salary cap, contract negotiations, and compliance with the CBA. He was lauded for his work last offseason, when he helped navigate the organization’s difficult cap situation to re-sign notable players like Baker Mayfield, Mike Evans, Antoine Winfield, and Lavonte David.
Interestingly, Greenberg was believed to be one of Tampa Bay’s decision makers who attempted to reach Coen during the play-caller’s off-grid departure from the organization. While there was some natural resentment following the fiasco, it may not be enough to dissuade the executive from considering a promotion in Jacksonville. The last we heard, Coen was reportedly “pushing hard” to bring Greenberg to the Jaguars.
The Bucs have so far rejected Coen’s request to lure contracted assistants to Jacksonville. While many of Coen’s initial inquiries were focused on lateral moves, Greenberg’s GM interview would represent a promotion. This means the Buccaneers wouldn’t be able to stop the executive from joining his former coach in a new spot.
The presence of former Jaguars GM Trent Baalke reportedly dissuaded some candidates from considering the HC gig, and the organization swiftly moved on from the executive when they realized the move would net them Coen. Greenberg is the first candidate to be definitively connected to the Jaguars, although Bears assistant GM Ian Cunningham and former Titans GM Jon Robinson have also been mentioned as potential options for the organization.
For the Buccaneers, Greenberg would represent another high-profile loss for the organization. In addition to Coen, the team has also lost one of their other assistant GMs in John Spytek, who agreed to join the Raiders as their new general manager. Of course, a Greenberg loss wouldn’t be completely unexpected, as the executive met with the Jets about their vacancy earlier this offseason.
After cycling through a handful of backup quarterbacks in 2024, the Dolphins are determined to find a capable contingency plan for Tua Tagovailoa. That search could lead them to a former first-round pick, as ESPN’s Adam Schefter reported today that the Dolphins could be a suitor for free agent QB Marcus Mariota (via Barry Jackson of the Miami Herald).
[RELATED: Dolphins To Prioritize Backup QB Job]
Schefter noted the friendship between Mariota and Tagovailoa, plus the lack of state income taxes. While Mariota’s stats have generally been underwhelming throughout his career, he’s shown an ability to keep his team afloat. In 74 career starts, the former second-overall pick has gone 34-40, including a three-year span with the Titans where he finished with a winning record.
Most recently, Mariota has served as a backup in stops with the Raiders, Falcons, Eagles, and Commanders. He did garner 13 starts with Atlanta in 2022, but he’s otherwise been held to a bench role over the past five seasons. Over that span, Mariota has completed 63.2 percent of his passes for 2,977 yards, 21 touchdowns, and 11 interceptions. He spent the 2024 campaign in Washington, where he tossed four touchdowns in three relief appearances.
Jackson adds another name to Miami’s impending search: Andy Dalton, with the reporter noting that the veteran is “held in high regard” by the organization. Dalton has garnered starts at all of his post-Bengals stops, although that wasn’t always necessarily the plan. The 37-year-old got five starts for the Panthers this past season while filling in for the struggling Bryce Young, with Dalton guiding his squad to only a 1-4 record while tossing seven touchdowns vs. six interceptions.
While the Dolphins pursued “a couple of top-flight backup QBs” last offseason, the team ultimately stuck with Skylar Thompson as their initial QB2 while releasing Mike White from the roster. Thompson only got one start for the Dolphins, as the team also gave Tyler Huntley and Tim Boyle looks under center. The trio of backup options represented a clear step back from Tagovailoa, and when the QB1 was sidelined early in the season, the Dolphins were limited to only 40 total points in four games. The Dolphins are clearly looking to avoid a similar situation in 2025.
The NFL has stood at 32 teams since the Texans’ 2002 entrance. That expansion effort realigned the divisions and schedule, and the league has expressed satisfaction with the symmetry created. No expansion is likely in the near future, but how the league next expands will eventually become a more important topic.
If the NFL is to balloon beyond 32 teams, SI.com’s Albert Breer believes a foreign market would come before another American city lands a team. Rumors of a London team have dissipated over the past several years, though Roger Goodell has continued to pay lip service to what would be a historic (and challenging) development. More of that emerged Monday, with the veteran commissioner’s wording bringing this situation back into play.
The subject of an overseas Super Bowl surfaced months ago, as Goodell suggested such a move was possible. When asked about it today, Goodell said no overseas Super Bowl will be considered while the league is still a USA-only operation. However, Goodell added (via CBS Sports’ Jonathan Jones) that it would be on the table “if and when” the NFL places a team in a foreign country.
Logistical issues have loomed as a deterrent for a full-time team in London, but the NFL has both more international inroads and changed its calendar despite these in recent years. An anonymous owner also described a future in which an international division emerges as probable, though we still appear a long way off.
The 2021 season introduced a Monday-night wild-card game, and this season — after the 2020 and ’21 seasons brought COVID-19-driven reschedulings to provide a roadmap of sorts — debuted Wednesday games. The NFL is also aiming for play eight international games in 2025, with Spain guaranteed a game. Australia is also on-deck here. While London would make more sense as a franchise location, the NFL has done plenty to indicate it is serious about continuing to grow the game beyond U.S. borders.
Additional expansion would create issues regarding schedule balance, and unless the league would want a repeat of the strange setup it concocted when it added only Browns 2.0 in 1999, more than one team would need to be added in an expansion scenario. When the NFL awarded Cleveland its current franchise, an odd team count existed from 1999-2001. The 31-team period meant every week required at least one team to be on a bye. This introduced the strange setups in which Week 1 was a bye for a team and so on.
The Texans’ debut solved that issue, and the NFL navigated the extra regular-season game by alternating seasons in terms of which conference holds the extra home game. Within the near future, a plan for 16 international games — something Goodell reiterated today — could cover the conference tasked with playing nine road contests that year. While the league remains a ways off from playing this many overseas games in a season, Goodell continuing to bring up placing a team in a foreign market effectively entrenches this matter on the back burner once again.
Part of the Ravens’ calculus in acquiring Diontae Johnson at last year’s trade deadline (and reclaiming him off waivers after the regular season) was the potential to recoup a compensatory pick for him when he left in free agency.
However, Johnson’s lack of production and locker room issues in both Baltimore and Houston is expected to scuttle any chance of him getting a contract that would qualify for the compensatory formula. Instead, Johnson will likely sign a one-year deal for the veteran minimum that could earn him more money with incentives, per Sportskeeda’s Tony Pauline.
His 51.0 yards per game in Carolina had him on pace for a sizable payday in free agency that would have likely netted his former team a compensatory pick, but his struggles with the Ravens and the Texans cratered his value. He only made three catches for 18 yards across five games and expressed frustration with his minimal role with both teams. As a consistent (albeit target-dependent) wideout over the course of his career, Johnson will likely have a chance to rebuild his value next season.
The Raiders are hiring University of Washington offensive coordinator Brennan Carroll to be their offensive line coach and run-game coordinator, as first reported by Yogi Roth of the Big Ten Network and confirmed by ESPN’s Adam Rittenberg.
Brennan Carroll is the son of Pete Carroll, the Raiders’ new head coach. Brennan previously coached under his father at USC and with the Seahawks, holding the titles of assistant offensive line coach (2015-2019) and run game coordinator (2020) in Seattle. He left the Seahawks to take over as offensive coordinator and offensive line coach at the University of Arizona, where he stayed for three seasons before accepting a similar position with the Huskies.
Carroll’s departure will continue multiple offseasons of turnover for the Washington football program. In 2024, head coach Kalen DeBoer was tapped to replace Nick Saban at Alabama, while offensive coordinator Ryan Grubb took the same job with the Seahawks. The Huskies then hired Jedd Fisch away from Arizona to replace DeBoer. Fisch brought Carroll with him to Washington as OC and installed Steve Belichick as defensive coordinator. Interestingly, both Carroll and Belichick left the Huskies this year to take jobs on their father’s new staffs: Carroll in Las Vegas, and Belichick in North Carolina.
Huskies quarterbacks coach Jimmie Dougherty also received interest from multiple NFL teams in this hiring cycle, per NFL Network’s Tom Pelissero, but he opted to take a promotion to offensive coordinator to stay in Washington.
In Las Vegas, Carroll will go to work improving on the NFL’s worst rushing attack in 2024. The Raiders finished with just 1,357 rushing yards and 3.6 yards per attempt, both league-lows by a significant margin. Getting more talent in the backfield beyond Alexander Mattison and Ameer Abdullah will be a priority this offseason, but the offensive line is in good shape. Kolton Miller put up another solid season at left tackle, while rookies Jackson Powers-Johnson and DJ Glaze emerged as reliable starters. The unit can still get better, but combined with Andre James and Dylan Parham, the Raiders have a decent starting five heading into next season, especially if they can further develop their younger linemen.
FEBRUARY 2: Although the NFL schedule may well chance twice during the 2020s, Goodell said Monday (via Bovada’s Josina Anderson) no formal discussions have taken place on a move to 18 yet. It appears a near-certainty those will happen in the not-too-distant future, as the NFLPA will have a major bargaining chip to use in an effort to land concessions from the league in exchange for the extra game.
FEBRUARY 1: An 18-game regular season may be on the horizon. According to Mike Florio of ProFootballTalk.com, the NFL and NFLPA recently discussed the potential schedule adjustment.
This comes on the heels of a recent Roger Goodell interview. The commissioner cited the NFL’s continued “focus on the safety” aspect of the game as a stepping stone for a potential 18-game season. Goodell continued to point to the league’s “20-game framework” and the understanding that an added regular season contest would only come at the expense of a preseason exhibition.
As Florio notes, the league’s current Collective Bargaining Agreement lasts through the 2030 season, and it’s believed an 18-game schedule could be apart of the next CBA. When the two sides last agreed on a new CBA in 2020, they expanded the regular-season schedule to 17 games.
Florio believes “it’s possible (if not likely)” that the NFL and the NFLPA are currently refining details for an 18-game schedule, and their recent discussion indicates that the change could be coming sooner than later. Mark Maske of The Washington Post cautions that an agreement is not imminent, although he adds that NFL owners remain hopeful that the NFLPA will agree to expand the regular-season slate. If the two sides continue to move in the right direction, some owners believe the change could be implemented in the “next two to three years.”
There have been previous rumblings of an 18-game campaign, and NFLPA executive director Lloyd Howell already hinted at some possible concessions surrounding the addition of an 18th game. While overall compensation is the obvious one, other points of negotiation would include additional bye weeks, improved playing surfaces, and decreased travel.
While these concessions represent some possible hurdles during negotiations, it seems the two sides are at least heading towards an eventual solution. While an 18-game schedule was once discussed as possible, it’s seeming more and more likely that an 18-game schedule is truly inevitable.
One of the NFL’s defining offseason storylines looks to have taken shape today. Myles Garrett has requested a trade, and The Athletic’s Dianna Russini reports the team has known about the reigning Defensive Player of the Year’s aim for a while.
As could be expected, the Browns are not in a rush to accommodate the impact defender. Browns GM Andrew Berry has said multiple times this offseason Garrett would not be dealt, with his most recent offering insisting no trade would occur even if two first-round picks were proposed. The team is not budging in light of this request becoming public, but Garrett may be dug in as well.
Trade requests are a common play amid contract talks, but this appears to be a true desire on Garrett’s part to leave town. Garrett wants to be dealt to a team in better position to contend for a Super Bowl, per ESPN.com’s Jeremy Fowler, who adds that this is not a contract play. It could also naturally be assumed the Browns would have time to show Garrett they are serious about a route back to immediate contention, Fowler adds that the eight-year veteran would not change his mind and wants to move on.
Garrett debuted for a Browns team that went 0-16, doing so after a 1-15 season moved the team into position to draft the Texas A&M standout. Although the Browns snapped a 17-season playoff drought when Kevin Stefanski earned the first of his Coach of the Year honors by overseeing a Baker Mayfield rebound in 2020, the team’s attempt to go bigger has backfired in historic fashion. Cleveland’s Deshaun Watson acquisition, when the fully guaranteed contract is factored in, may be the worst trade in NFL history. No veteran QB had cost three first-round picks since 1976, and Watson never came close to justifying it. It has dragged down Berry’s attempts to fortify the roster around a two-time Coach of the Year.
With Watson now in play to miss all of 2025 due to a second Achilles tear, it is fairly clear the Browns need a new plan. Garrett said in December he would turn to a trade request if he felt the organization’s recovery blueprint was insufficient, and he has turned his key. That said, the Browns are still somewhat protected here thanks to the DE’s contract situation and the franchise tag’s presence. The Browns could tag Garrett in 2027, and while this process should be resolved by then, the tag’s presence arms the team with more leverage. Garrett staging a true holdout would be his only countermeasure, and as the Haason Reddick situation showed this past season, it is an expensive play.
Berry said last week the Browns are open to a second Garrett extension, despite two seasons remaining on his current deal — a five-year, $125MM pact. Nick Bosa is tied to a deal worth $9MM more per year than Garrett, and star rushers T.J. Watt, Micah Parsons and Trey Hendrickson are in contract years. The cost of doing business will rise for the Browns as a result. They appear OK with paying Garrett once again, which makes this trade request more interesting than the usual contract-driven asks.
It should be expected Garrett, 29, will pass on attending Browns offseason activities. Minicamp holdouts have been more common in recent years, as the fine for skipping the June workouts is roughly $100K. Training camp would be the battleground for Garrett, unless the Browns switch up and make a deal to recoup significant draft capital before this year’s draft.
The Browns hold the No. 2 overall pick, and a Garrett trade would arm them further to crawl out of the 3-14 mess the Watson decision largely created. As of now, Berry and Co. are prepared to wait out their top player.
Another ex-colleague of Mike Vrabel‘s is set to reunite with him in New England. The Patriots are hiring Todd Downing to be their receivers coach, as first reported by Greg Bedard of the Boston Sports Journal.
[RELATED: Patriots Add Ashton Grant, Others To Staff]
Downing’s NFL coaching career dates back to 2003, although he has never worked as a WRs coach to date. Still, this move comes as little surprise given his history with Vrabel. When the latter was head coach of the Titans, Downing worked alongside him (including two years as a play-calling offensive coordinator). The Patriots will – once again – have Josh McDaniels handling OC duties for 2025, but Downing represents an experienced addition to their staff.
The 44-year-old was fired after the 2022 season, one which he was arrested for DUI. Tennessee’s offense ranked 15th in scoring during Downing’s first year at the helm, but the unit regressed to 30th in that regard the following year. He did not need to wait long to find a new opportunity, though, joining the Jets as their pass-game coordinator in 2023.
Nathaniel Hackett‘s tenure as New York’s OC did not go as planned, and part of the team’s midseason coaching shakeup included a plan from Robert Saleh to demote Hackett and install Downing as play-caller. Saleh was fired before he could do so, but interim HC Jeff Ulbrich followed through with the plan. The Jets did not rebound as hoped on offense, generally speaking, after that move was made. Especially with a new coaching staff being brought in, it comes as no surprise Downing will be moving on in 2025. It will be interesting to see how he fares with a Patriots WR corps which could see several changes this offseason.
Prior to the news of Downing’s hire, ESPN’s Mike Reiss reported Wes Welker was among the staffers the Patriots considered for the role of receivers coach. Welker worked in that capacity with the 49ers from 2019-21 and followed Mike McDaniel from San Francisco to Miami. The 43-year-old was let go at the end of the campaign, though, leaving him in need of a fresh start. Welker’s career included six seasons with the Patriots playing under McDaniels and his coaching tenure started with the Texans while Vrabel was the team’s defensive coordinator.
In other staff news, Reiss adds that Matthew Slater will not be back with New England in 2025. The longtime special teams ace held the title of special assistant to head coach Jerod Mayo last season, but with Mayo no longer in place that role will not exist under Vrabel. Slater will need to head elsewhere if he is to continue his coaching career.
Kayvon Thibodeaux joined the Giants amidst major expectations in 2022. The former No. 5 pick has certainly shown flashes of his potential since then, although further development would certainly be welcomed over the coming years.
As a former first-round pick, Thibodeaux is eligible for to have his fifth-year option picked up. A decision on that front will need to be made this spring as the Giants plan their edge rush outlook for the future. While labeling the call a “tricky one” for New York, Dan Duggan of The Athletic writes it can be expected Thibodeaux’s 2026 option will be picked up (subscription required).
The 24-year-old immediately took on a starting role as a rookie, notching four sacks and 18 pressures. Thibodeaux took a notable step forward in Year 2, increasing those figures to 11.5 and 35, respectively. The Giants added to their OLB contingent last offseason by trading for Brian Burns, an accomplished sack artist who added to his total in that department with 8.5 in 2024. Thibodeaux’s output regressed compared to last year, although being limited to 12 games obviously played a role in that.
Without a Pro Bowl to his name, the Oregon product would be in line for $16.06MM in 2026 in the event the Giants picked up his option (h/t Over the Cap). That figure would be fully guaranteed, but it would fall well short of where many of the league’s top edge rushers will find themselves in terms of annual compensation by that point (especially considering where the market is likely headed this offseason). Still, such a commitment would be much easier on the team’s part if Thibodeaux had managed to make a larger impact in the early stages of his career.
New York has had Azeez Ojulari in the fold for the past four years, but given the presence of Thibodeaux and Burns, he was considered a logical trade candidate at the deadline. The Giants elected to retain Ojulari, although he is still in position to depart on the open market in pursuit of a larger role on a new team. Provided that takes place, Thibodeaux will be in line to remain a key starter for years to come and exercising his option would no doubt become an easier decision for the Giants.
Teams have until May 1 to pick up or decline the options on their 2022 first-round picks. Plenty of time therefore remains for the Giants to contemplate Thibodeaux’s future with free agency and the draft approaching. Still, his situation will be one to monitor as the offseason unfolds.