Top 3 Offseason Needs: Miami Dolphins
In advance of March 9, the start of free agency in the NFL, Pro Football Rumors will detail each team’s three most glaring roster issues. We’ll continue this year’s series with the Miami Dolphins, who earned a postseason berth for the first time since 2008 after finishing 10-6 under new head coach Adam Gase.
Depth Chart (via Roster Resource)
Pending free agents:
- Kiko Alonso, LB (RFA)
- Andre Branch, DE
- Jermon Bushrod, G
- Donald Butler, LB
- Jordan Cameron, TE
- Chimdi Chekwa, CB
- John Denney, LS
- Thomas Duarte, TE (ERFA)
- Mike Hull, LB (ERFA)
- Jelani Jenkins, LB
- Dominique Jones, TE (RFA)
- Jason Jones, DE
- Spencer Paysinger, LB
- Lafayette Pitts, CB (ERFA)
- Bacarri Rambo, S
- Dion Sims, TE
- Anthony Steen, C (ERFA)
- Kenny Stills, WR
- Michael Thomas, S (RFA)
- Damien Williams, RB (RFA)
- Nicholas Williams, DE (RFA)
- T.J. Yates, QB
Top 10 Cap Hits for 2017:
- Ryan Tannehill, QB: $20,300,000
- Ndamukong Suh, DT: $19,100,000
- Branden Albert, T: $10,600,000
- Mario Williams, DE: $10,500,000
- Mike Pouncey, C: $8,975,000
- Byron Maxwell, CB: $8,500,000
- Reshad Jones, S: $8,037,938
- Cameron Wake, DE: $7,000,000
- Isa Abdul-Quddus, S: $5,083,333
- Koa Misi, LB: $4,778,000
Other:
- Projected cap space (via Over the Cap): $30,734,458
- 22nd pick in draft
- Must exercise or decline 2018 fifth-year option for T Ja’Wuan James
Three Needs:
1) Find a tight end: The Dolphins offense as a whole managed to grow under Adam Gase, as the unit improved from 22nd in DVOA in 2015 to 14th last season. Ryan Tannehill posted the highest quarterback rating of his career, second-year running back Jay Ajayi emerged as a legitimate threat by registering three 200+ yard rushing performances, and receivers Jarvis Landry, DeVante Parker, and Kenny Stills each put up more than 700 yards through the air. The one component missing from Miami’s newly-potent offense? A legitimate threat at tight end.
Veteran Jordan Cameron has been a free agent bust since signing a two-year, $15MM deal prior to the 2015 season, but it’s been no fault of his own that he’s struggled to produce after leaving the Browns for the Dolphins. In 2016, Cameron suffered the fourth reported concussion of his career, and was sidelined for the majority of the year by his most recent brain injury. Cameron, 28, is now considering retirement due to the repeated head trauma, and Miami isn’t expected to be interested in a reunion even if Cameron does decide to continue playing.
Given that Cameron only played in three games last year, the Dolphins’ tight end cadre was headlined by Dion Sims, who posted 26 receptions for 256 yards and four touchdowns in 11 starts. Though Sims has never topped 30 catches or 300 yards during his four-year NFL career, Miami reportedly views him as its starter going forward, and as such, intends to re-sign him this offseason. Indeed, despite the club’s interest in retaining Sims, nearly every tight end currently on the roster is a free agent of some kind, so the unit figures to see a good deal of turnover during the next few months.
One place to look for a new weapon at tight end could be the free agent market, where the No. 1 option available figures to be the Patriots’ Martellus Bennett. The 29-year-old recently turned down a $7MM per year extension offer from New England, and while details were scant as to the structure or guarantees in the deal, the rejection does give some indication as to what Bennett’s asking price could be. Bennett figures to be an offseason priority for the Pats, and the Dolphins likely won’t be the only team competing for his services. However, Bennett does have a connection to Gase, as the veteran tight end played under the current Fins head coach while the latter served as Bears OC in 2015 (alas, Bennett posted his worst statistics in recent memory under the tutelage of Gase).
If Bennett proves to be too costly, there are certainly other options available in free agency, though only a few offer the relative youth and perceived upside that does Sims. Houston’s Ryan Griffin (27), Indianapolis’ Jack Doyle (26), Green Bay’s Jared Cook (29), and Dallas’ Gavin Escobar (26) all jump off the page as potential second-tier tight ends who might have a lower price tag than Bennett. If Miami wants a veteran presence to replace Cameron, the club could take a look at Vernon Davis, who just finished a solid first campaign with the Redskins, or Jacob Tamme, who should come cheaply given the nature of his recent shoulder injury.
The Dolphins, who hold the 22nd overall pick in the draft, are situated right in the wheelhouse where a tight end selection might make sense. Alabama’s O.J. Howard is generally regarded as the nation’s best collegiate TE, but Daniel Jeremiah of NFL.com recently ranked Miami’s David Njoku slightly ahead of Howard, listing the Hurricanes pass-catcher as the draft’s 13th overall player. Both Howard and Njoku could be in consideration during the first round, while Evan Engram (Mississippi), Jake Butt (Michigan), and Gerald Everett (South Alabama) could make sense farther down the line.
Draft Rumors: Mixon, Quarterbacks, Lamp
Earlier today, the NFL announced 103 underclassmen have officially declared for the 2017 NFL draft. While that figure represents a small decrease from 2016, the fact remains that a decent number of those prospects won’t get selected in April. If recent trends hold, roughly 30% of underclassmen will go undrafted this year, meaning that ~30 collegiate players will need to rely on UDFA contracts this spring, as Joel Corry of CBSSports.com tweets.
Here’s more on the draft:
- Although he considered returning to Oklahoma after a video surfaced of him striking a female, running back Joe Mixon officially declared for the draft earlier this month. While some personnel men believe Mixon won’t be drafted, other scouts tell Charles Robinson of Yahoo! Sports otherwise. One executive called Mixon the third-best back in the draft and predicted that he will be chosen, while another evaluator summed up the paradox of a player like Mixon: “It’s still a bottom-line business. It’s people saying, ‘I’m paid to win games. Either I take Mixon or someone else takes him and beats me with him.’ That’s the business. I know people don’t want to hear that, but it’s how some guys get drafted.”
- Scouts continue to believe the 2017 crop of quarterbacks is one of the worst in recent memory, as one personnel director tells Matt Miller of Bleacher Report that the scribe has “way too many” quarterbacks (three) in his top-30 overall players. Similarly, an AFC executive tells Bucky Brooks of NFL.com that he’s “scared to death” by this year’s signal-callers. “They have talent and upside, but there aren’t any sure things in this [draft] class,” said the VP of player personnel.
- Western Kentucky guard Forrest Lamp could soon become a household name, as one scout compared to him to the Cowboys’ Zack Martin, one of the best interior lineman in the NFL, according to Miller. Lamp, who, like Martin, played tackle in college but will shift inside once he reaches the pros, graded as one of the best offensive lineman in 2015 per Pro Football Focus‘ metrics, and should have only improved since.
Chargers To Hire Gus Bradley As DC
Former Jaguars head coach Gus Bradley has agreed to become the Chargers’ defensive coordinator, according to Adam Schefter of ESPN.com (Twitter link).
[RELATED: 2017 Offensive/Defensive Coordinator Tracker]
Bradley had been one of the most-coveted coordinators in the league during this year’s hiring cycle, as both the Redskins and the 49ers — in addition to the Chargers — had expressed interest in adding him to their staff. Considered something of a “domino,” as Schefter tweets, Bradley’s hiring in Los Angeles means that Washington and San Francisco will likely move rapidly in their searches for their next DCs.
While other teams are moving onto additional candidates, the Chargers and new head coach Anthony Lynn will land in Bradley the candidate they’ve targeted from the beginning of their search, but the club did have a backup plan. Incumbent defensive backs coach Ron Milus was the Chargers’ second choice, per Schefter (Twitter link) , and would have been hired as DC if Bradley had rebuffed Los Angeles. Instead, Bradley will inherit a Chargers defense that ranked eighth in DVOA under former coordinator John Pagano, and boasts talent — including Joey Bosa, Denzel Perryman, Casey Hayward, and Jason Verrett — at every level.
Bradley, of course, was fired before he could finish out his fourth season as Jacksonville’s head coach. While his time with the Jaguars certainly can’t be considered successful (it’s hard to argue with a 14-48 record), Bradley had seemingly begun to assemble an interesting defense that looked primed for a breakout. And the 50-year-old’s coordinating chops speak for themselves, as Bradley helped develop the Legion of Boom during his days leading the Seattle defense from 2009-12.
While Bradley’s hire will lead to a shakeup of the Chargers’ defense, the Bolts’ offensive staff will largely remain intact after Lynn agreed to retain incumbent OC Ken Whisenhunt.
Ravens Audition QB Austin Davis
The Ravens worked out free agent quarterback Austin Davis today, according to Jamison Hensley of ESPN.com. Baltimore would presumably have interest in a futures deal with Davis, who was waived by the Broncos in late December.
[RELATED: Ravens LB Zach Orr Retires]
Davis, 27, didn’t appear in a single game for Denver during his nearly fourth-month stay with the club, as he was relegated to clipboard duty behind Trevor Siemian and Paxton Lynch. While he played in three games for the Browns in 2015, Davis’ last significant starting experience came in 2014, when he threw for more than 2,000 yards, 12 touchdowns, and nine interceptions in eight starts for the Rams.
In Baltimore, Davis could compete for a backup spot behind starting quarterback Joe Flacco, one of only two QBs the Ravens currently have under contract for 2017. While No. 2 signal-caller Ryan Mallett is scheduled to hit unrestricted free agency in March, Dustin Vaughan — who briefly latched onto Baltimore’s practice squad at the tail end of last season — was one of six players the Ravens signed to a futures deal earlier this month.
In addition to Davis, the Ravens also auditioned safeties Tony Burnett and Otha Foster; linebackers Kyler Elsworth and Boseko Lokombo; defensive tackle Robert Smith; and wide receivers Terrence Toliver and Brian Tyms, reports Howard Balzer of BalzerFootball.com (Twitter links).
103 Underclassmen Enter 2017 NFL Draft
95 underclassmen who met the NFL’s three-year eligibility rule and formally applied to enter the 2017 draft have been granted special eligibility, the league announced today. In addition to those 95, another eight players who have graduated with college football eligibility remaining have also entered this year’s draft class.
This year’s total of 103 early entrants is a step down from last year’s record — in 2016, 96 underclassmen were granted special eligibility and 11 more were eligible after graduating early, for a total of 107.
Here’s the full list of underclassmen eligible for the 2017 draft, in alphabetical order:
- Jamal Adams, DB (LSU)
- Alex Anzalone, LB (Florida)
- Budda Baker, DB (Washington)
- Derek Barnett, DE (Tennessee)
- Garett Bolles, T (Utah)
- Caleb Brantley, DT (Florida)
- Noah Brown, WR (Ohio State)
- KD Cannon, WR (Baylor)
- Devin Childress, WR (North Park)
- Michael Clark, WR (Marshall)
- Gareon Conley, DB, Ohio State
- James Conner, RB (Pittsburgh)
- Dalvin Cook, RB (Florida State)
- Zach Cunningham, LB (Vanderbilt)
- Malachi Dupre, WR (LSU)
- Jerod Evans, QB (Virginia Tech)
- Jeremy Faulk, DT (Garden City Community College)
- Tarean Folston, RB (Notre Dame)
- Isaiah Ford, WR (Virginia Tech)
- D’Onta Foreman, RB (Texas)
- Leonard Fournette, RB (LSU)
- Wayne Gallman, RB, (Clemson)
- Myles Garrett, DE (Texas A&M)
- Shelton Gibson, WR (West Virginia)
- Davon Godchaux, DT (LSU)
- Chris Godwin, WR (Penn State)
- Isaiah Golden, DT (McNeese State)
- Jermaine Grace, LB (Miami)
- Derrick Griffin, WR (Texas Southern)
- Chad Hansen, WR (Clemson)
- Charles Harris, DE (Missouri)
- Carlos Henderson, WR (Louisiana Tech)
- Brian Hill, RB (Wyoming)
- Bucky Hodges, TE (Virginia Tech)
- Elijah Hood, RB (North Carolina)
- Malik Hooker, S (Ohio State)
- Titus Howard, DB (Slippery Rock)
- Marlon Humphrey, DB (Alabama)
- Adoree’ Jackson, DB (USC)
- Roderick Johnson, T (Florida State)
- Aaron Jones, RB (Texas-El Paso)
- Josh Jones, DB (North Carolina State)
- Nazair Jones, DT (North Carolina)
- Sidney Jones, DB (Washington)
- Brad Kaaya, QB (Miami)
- Alvin Kamara, RB (Tennessee)
- Tim Kimbrough, LB (Georgia)
- DeShone Kizer, QB (Notre Dame)
- Jerome Lane, WR (Akron)
- Marshon Lattimore, DB (Ohio State)
- Carl Lawson, DE (Auburn)
- Elijah Lee, LB (Kansas State)
- Keevan Lucas, WR (Tulsa)
- Marlon Mack, RB (USF)
- Patrick Mahomes, QB (Texas Tech)
- Josh Malone, WR (Tennessee)
- Damien Mama, G (USC)
- Christian McCaffrey, RB (Stanford)
- Malik McDowell, DT (Michigan State)
- Isaiah McKenzie, WR (Georgia)
- Deon-Tay McManus, WR (Marshall)
- Raekwon McMillan, LB (Ohio State)
- Jeremy McNichols, RB (Boise State)
- Joe Mixon, RB (Oklahoma)
- Al-Quadin Muhammad, DE (Miami)
- Montae Nicholson, DB (Michigan State)
- David Njoku, TE (Miami)
- Speedy Noil, WR (Texas A&M)
- Marcus Oliver, LB (Indiana)
- Aaron Peak, DB (Butler County Community College)
- Jabrill Peppers, LB (Michigan)
- Samaje Perine, RB (Oklahoma)
- Elijah Qualls, DT (Washington)
- Devine Redding, RB (Indiana)
- Cam Robinson, T (Alabama)
- John Ross, WR (Washington)
- Travis Rudolph, WR (Florida State)
- Curtis Samuel, WR (Ohio State)
- Artavis Scott, WR (Clemson)
- Ricky Seals-Jones, WR (Texas A&M)
- Adam Shaheen, TE (Ashland)
- David Sharpe, OL (Florida)
- Garrett Sickels, DE (Penn State)
- JuJu Smith-Schuster, WR (USC)
- ArDarius Stewart, WR (Alabama)
- Damore’ea Stringfellow, WR (Ole Miss)
- Teez Tabor, CB (Florida)
- Vincent Taylor, DT (Oklahoma State)
- Solomon Thomas, DL (Stanford)
- Mitch Trubisky, QB (North Carolina)
- Darius Victor, RB (Towson)
- Khari Waithe-Alexander, DE (Southern Illnois)
- Anthony Walker, LB (Northwestern)
- Charles Walker, DL (Oklahoma)
- Deshaun Watson, QB(Clemson)
- T.J. Watt, LB (Wisconsin)
- Marcus Williams, S (Utah)
- Mike Williams, WR (Clemson)
- Stanley Williams, RB (Kentucky)
- Howard Wilson, CB (Houston)
- Quincy Wilson, CB (Florida)
- Joe Yearby, RB (Miami)
- Ishmael Zamora, WR (Baylor)
NFL Reserve/Futures Contracts: 1/20/17
Here are the latest reserve/futures contract signings from around the NFL. These deals will go into effect on the first day of the 2017 league year, with players joining their respective clubs’ offseason 90-man rosters:
Cincinnati Bengals
- K Jon Brown
Seattle Seahawks
- G Robert Myers
Tampa Bay Buccaneers
- QB Sean Renfree
- C James Stone
Browns, LB Jamie Collins Close To Extension
FRIDAY, 11:04am: The looming extension for Collins will establish a new high ground for non-rush linebackers, with Ian Rapoport of NFL.com reporting (on Twitter) Collins’ new deal will be worth more than Kuechly’s $12.36MM-per-year average. The Browns are projected to possess a staggering $109MM in cap space, according to OverTheCap, so they could afford this despite a number of glaring needs.
THURSDAY, 6:55pm: The Browns are nearing an extension with linebacker Jamie Collins and should have an agreement in place by the weekend, tweets Jason La Canfora of CBSSports.com.
[RELATED: Top 3 Offseason Needs — Cleveland Browns]
Cleveland, of course, acquired Collins from the Patriots in the fall, sacrificing a conditional third- or fourth-round pick (depending on the circumstances) to do so. New England presumably traded Collins, in part, due to his contractual demands, as he was due to hit unrestricted free agency this March. Collins reportedly turned down an $11MM per/year extension offer from the Patriots, and was intent on topping fellow linebacker Luke Kuechly‘s $12.36MM yearly average.
While those figures may have presented a problem for New England, the Browns are in prime position to meet Collins’ requests, as they’re projected to head into the offseason with a league-high $110MM in cap space. As such, Cleveland has more than enough financial wiggle room to extend Collins, re-sign fellow pending free agent Terrelle Pryor, and explore the open market for upgrades. Of course, by extending Collins, the Browns have afforded themselves the opportunity to use the franchise tag on Pryor if extension talks fail.
Ranking seventh on PFR’s 2017 Free Agents Power Rankings, Collins had expressed an interest in re-signing with Cleveland before hitting free agency this spring. “(Losing is a deterrent) but at the same time, money comes into play around that time,” Collins said last month. “If the money is right then I could stay here. Obviously I’m not going to turn it down.”
Collins, 27, started eight games for the Browns after being shipped to Cleveland, posting 48 tackles, two sacks, and a forced fumble during that time. All told, Collins graded as just the 44th-best edge defender in the league, per Pro Football Focus, a far lower rating that he’d attained in years past. Reports indicated that Collins had begun “freelancing” in New England’s defense, but clearly the Browns were impressed enough by his half-season stint to retain him for the long haul.
Ravens, LB Zach Orr Progressing Towards Deal
The Ravens and linebacker Zach Orr have made “considerable progress” towards an extension agreement, tweets Jason La Canfora of CBSSports.com. Baltimore has a press conference scheduled for Friday, leading La Canfora to speculate that the club could announce the new contract at that time.
[RELATED: Baltimore Ravens Depth Chart]
Orr, 24, is a former undrafted free agent, meaning that although his three-year UDFA deal was set to expire this spring, he still would have been under the Ravens’ control as a restricted free agent. As such, Baltimore would have had the option of extending him a first-round tender (worth around $3.8MM), a second-rounder tender (~$2.75MM), or a right of first refusal tender (~$1.75MM). The first two offers would have entitled the Ravens to draft pick compensation if Orr signed with another club, while the latter tender would have given Baltimore the right to match any offer sheet, but would not have netted the club a pick if it opted not to equal a rival’s overture.
Instead, the Ravens are close to locking up Orr for (presumably) several years following a 2016 campaign that saw the North Texas alum become a starter for the first time in his career. Chosen to replace the departed veteran Daryl Smith next to C.J. Mosley in the starting lineup, Orr appeared in 15 games and played the most defensive snaps of any Baltimore ‘backer. In that span, Orr racked up 89 tackles, three interceptions, and five passes defensed, but didn’t grade out well according to Pro Football Focus, which ranked him as the NFL’s seventh-worst linebacker among 87 qualifiers.
Top 3 Offseason Needs: Washington Redskins
In advance of March 9, the start of free agency in the NFL, Pro Football Rumors will detail each team’s three most glaring roster issues. We’ll continue this year’s series with the Washington Redskins, who narrowly missed a Wild Card berth after finishing with a 8-7-1 record.
Depth Chart (via Roster Resource)
Pending Free Agents:
- Chris Baker, DT
- Will Compton, LB (RFA)
- Kirk Cousins, QB
- Vernon Davis, TE
- Ziggy Hood, DT
- Junior Galette, LB
- Pierre Garcon, WR
- Terence Garvin, LB
- Kedric Golston, DT
- Duke Ihenacho, S
- DeSean Jackson, WR
- Cullen Jenkins, DL
- Ty Nsekhe, T (ERFA)
- Vinston Painter, T (ERFA)
- John Sullivan, C
- Nick Sundberg, LS
- Chris Thompson, RB (RFA)
- Greg Toler, CB
- Donte Whitner, S
Top 10 Cap Hits for 2017:
- Josh Norman, CB: $20,000,000
- Trent Williams, T: $15,200,000
- Ryan Kerrigan, LB: $11,700,000
- Jordan Reed, TE: $5,800,000
- Brandon Scherff, G: $5,786,083
- DeAngelo Hall, S: $5,062,500
- Shawn Lauvao, G: $5,000,000
- Kory Lichtensteiger, C: $4,050,000
- Ricky Jean-Francois, DL: $4,000,000
- Colt McCoy, QB: $3,600,000
Other:
- Projected cap space (via Over the Cap): $60,979,097
- 17th pick in draft
Three Needs:
1) Commit to Kirk Cousins: The Redskins are reportedly willing to use the franchise tag on quarterback Kirk Cousins for a second consecutive year, a move that would guarantee the sixth-year signal-caller nearly $24MM for the 2017 campaign. Cousins would likely sign the tender immediately (as he did last offseason), as the two one-year pacts would net him ~$44MM over a two-year period. From Washington’s perspective, however, continuing to employ the franchise tag doesn’t make much sense.
Had the Redskins worked out a long-term extension with Cousins last offseason, the club would have likely been forced to guarantee something in the neighborhood of $45MM — roughly the same total he’ll earn from 2016-17 if franchised again — over the life of the contract. Cam Newton received $41MM in guarantees under the terms of his extension signed in June 2015, while Andrew Luck got $47MM fully guaranteed one year later (Aaron Rodgers still ranks first among quarterbacks with $54MM guaranteed). Because Washington is clearly willing to hand Cousins a significant amount of guaranteed cash, an extension is the best outcome for both parties.
Clearly, however, hindsight is 20/20, and there were legitimate reasons not to extend Cousins at this time last year. Cousins was coming off an excellent season, to be sure, but it was his first year as a full-time NFL starter, and there was some concern that he was simply a product of an effectively-schemed Redskins offense. Had Washington locked up Cousins for the long haul, only to see him turn back into a pumpkin this season, management would have been the subject much scorn. But the 28-year-old Cousins largely backed up his results this year, completing 67% of his passes for nearly 5,000 yards, 25 touchdowns, and 12 interceptions, while ranking third in DYAR and fifth in DVOA.
Head coach Jay Gruden has found his franchise quarterback, and while Cousins may not a be a top-five signal-caller, he’s certainly among the league’s top-12 QBs, making him an extremely valuable asset. The Redskins aren’t going to start over the position — as usual, there is no quarterback talent available on the free agent market, and a win-now club like Washington isn’t going to turn over its fortunes over to a rookie passer. Getting Cousins, who places first on PFR’s 2017 Free Agent Power Rankings, under contract for the foreseeable future is the logical next step.
Cousins is reportedly targeting $23.94MM — the same total he’d garner under the franchise tag — annually, a figure that would make him the third-highest paid quarterback in the league on a per-year basis. Over the course of a five-year contract, Washington would be paying Cousins nearly $120MM, and given that recent quarterback contracts have included 35-40% fully guaranteed, Cousins would be looking at $45MM in guarantees. It’s a huge total, but contract negotiations are based as much on timing as they are on talent. Cousins has played the free agency game correctly by betting on himself, and he’s now poised to cash in.
Trent Baalke Could Join Packers Front Office
Former 49ers general manager Trent Baalke could land with the Packers in a front office role, according to Bob McGinn of the Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel, who adds that “speculation” has tied Baalke to Green Bay given his friendship with Packers GM Ted Thompson.
[RELATED: 2017 NFL GM Search Tracker]
Green Bay’s front office could soon be the site of upheaval, as Brian Gutekunst, the club’s director of college scouting, will take a second interview for the 49ers GM job (ironically, to replace Baalke), and is thought to be the leading contender for the position. Thomspon has also been rumored to be nearing retirement, and Chiefs general manager John Dorsey and Packers director of football operations Eliot Wolf have each been mentioned as candidates to replace him. Earlier today, Wolf signed a new contract to remain in Green Bay, removing himself from San Francisco’s search.
Baalke, meanwhile, has been linked to another club this winter, as a December report indicated that he could join the Broncos in some capacity after departing the Niners. Having enjoyed a working relationship with Denver GM John Elway as the Broncos and 49ers conducted recent joint practices, Baalke could make for a natural fit in the Denver front office.







