Saints To Send OL Trevor Penning To Bolts

Minutes before the trade deadline, the Chargers struck a deal to address their depleted offensive line. They are acquiring Trevor Penning from the Saints, ESPN’s Adam Schefter reports. The Bolts will send the Saints a 2027 sixth-rounder, NFL.com’s Ian Rapoport adds.

Penning has logged extensive time at three positions along the Saints’ O-line, spending full seasons at both tackle positions before kicking inside to guard this year. New Orleans is moving on from its left guard starter after not picking up his fifth-year option this offseason.

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Despite not coming up in trade rumors, Penning loomed as a logical candidate to be moved thanks to his starting experience at premium positions and walk-year status. The Saints did not see Penning become the left tackle mainstay they hoped when they drafted him in 2022, and passing on his 2026 guarantee made him a free agent-to-be. Now, the Chargers will evaluate him. Though, their situation points to Penning still making it to the market come March.

Los Angeles has lost both its starting tackles — Rashawn Slater and Joe Alt — to season-ending injuries. Alt has battled a high ankle sprain for much of the year, and the fast-emerging tackle aggravating it in Week 9 prompted the Chargers to shut him down. The 2024 top-five pick is set for season-ending ankle surgery, creating a glaring void on Justin Herbert‘s blind side. It appears the Saints will ask Penning to shift back to his original NFL position.

The Saints bailed on the Penning-at-LT plan in 2024, drafting Taliese Fuaga in the first round and moving the Oregon State product from right tackle to Derek Carr‘s blind side. Penning then slid to right tackle and started 17 games there. After being quickly benched at LT in 2023, the Northern Iowa alum fared better at RT. But the Saints did not view him as a keeper there, either, using their No. 9 overall pick on Kelvin Banks. The Texas product kicked Fuaga to RT and Penning to yet another position. The Saints had him train at left guard this offseason, and he won the job — before temporarily ceding it after a turf toe bout.

L.A. is in decent shape on its interior, despite Mekhi Becton missing time recently. Becton is not on IR, and Zion Johnson is healthy at LG. The team could use immediate help at tackle, and Penning has started 23 tames at those spots in his pro career. The 26-year-old blocker has made six guard starts this season.

Pro Football Focus rates Penning’s guard work 64th at guard this season; the advanced metrics site graded Penning 60th among tackles during his RT experiment year. The underwhelming first-rounder did not grade well during his five-game LT sample in 2023. Being asked to move around the line certainly is not an easy task, but Penning could have an immediate chance to create some free agency value by providing decent LT work as a stopgap.

The Chargers have primarily been using summer trade pickup Austin Deculus at left tackle when Alt has missed time. He has been one of the Bolts’ blockers to look overmatched this season. PFF has graded Deculus, emergency add Bobby Hart and Trey Pipkins outside the top 65 at tackle this season.

This has left the Bolts scrambling, as they have been unable to field a healthy O-line. The team also has ex-Slater LT fill-in Jamaree Salyer, but Jim Harbaugh has opted for Deculus instead. While Penning may not be plugged in immediately, it would surprise if the Division I-FCS product was not seeing tackle work fairly soon given the Chargers’ status as a playoff contender.

Falcons To Sign K Zane Gonzalez, Waive K Parker Romo

For the second time this year, the Falcons are making a kicker change. They are waiving Parker Romo after a crucial missed extra point, and a more experienced option will replace him.

Zane Gonzalez resurfaced in Atlanta today for a workout, according to NFL.com’s Mike Garafolo and Ian Rapoport, who reports the team will make a Romo-for-Gonzalez switch at kicker. Gonzalez, who will follow Younghoe Koo and Romo as Falcons kickers this season, last kicked for the Commanders in 2024.

It took Gonzalez three years to find another gig following his 2021 Panthers cameo; he did not kick during the 2022 or ’23 seasons. But the persistent specialist became part of Washington’s kicker carousel last year. The Commanders stuck with Gonzalez to close the season and re-signed him in March, but they moved on for Matt Gay in free agency this past offseason.

Tuesday marked Gonzalez’s second Falcons audition this season; he was part of the contingent that worked out in September, as the team considered replacing Koo. The Falcons did end up cutting Koo, their kicker since 2019, but Romo became their replacement. Romo went 11 of 14 on field goals and made 12 of 13 extra points. Of course, the miss proved costly in a 24-23 loss to the Patriots. Romo also missed a field goal inside of 40 yards this season. Last year as a Vikings fill-in, Romo 11-for-12 and 7-for-8 on PATs.

Gonzalez, 30, was 5-for-7 on field goal tries with the Commanders last year. In the playoffs, he was 7-for-8. Between the regular season and the playoffs, the journeyman specialist was 27-for-27 on PATs. The league moving the PAT line back many years ago has created a complication for kickers, and teams have made changes — the Giants also among them — based on close-range misfires.

This will be Gonzalez’s fifth NFL team. Prior to Carolina, he kicked with Cleveland and Arizona. The Falcons going in this direction is interesting, considering they have two kickers — Lenny Krieg and Ben Sauls — on their practice squad. The rare three-kicker commitment does feature only one (Gonzalez) with any game experience. Koo had beaten out Krieg, a German import, for the Week 1 job.

Colts WR Adonai Mitchell Drawing Interest

Sitting a surprising 7-2 at the deadline, the Colts have been connected to adding help at cornerback and edge rusher by today’s trade endpoint. But Indianapolis also could deal an asset as a seller.

The team has not seen Adonai Mitchell carve out a big role in its offense, minus a memorable fill-in effort in Los Angeles, this season. Teams are monitoring the 2024 second-round pick in a potential deal, according to CBS Sports’ Jonathan Jones.

Mitchell only has two receptions since the start of October, seeing both Alec Pierce and Josh Downs play in front of him as Michael Pittman Jr. complementary pieces. Tyler Warren has also become an immediate contributor, while Mitchell — chosen 52nd overall last year — has been quiet for the AFC South leaders.

Ninety-six of Mitchell’s 152 yards came in a three-catch game in L.A., but the Texas and Georgia product following Jonathan Taylor‘s 2024 goal-line drop sequence (among Colts to commit this bizarre blunder) also came in a game in which a Mitchell blocking infraction negated a Taylor touchdown. The Colts narrowly lost, and they have their Nos. 2 and 3 wideouts back in uniform after each missed time earlier this season. That has relegated Taylor to the periphery.

That said, the Colts giving up so early on a second-round WR — who almost definitely would not fetch nearly that much in a trade — would be surprising. Pittman also battled a back injury last season. Mitchell represents an important depth piece for Indy, which did not have much of a chance to evaluate him last year due to Anthony Richardson‘s accuracy-challenged season. Still, Mitchell produced a 23-catch, 312-yard rookie season. He competed with Pierce for a starting spot last year; while Pierce has been a far more important contributor, Mitchell still started seven games last year.

It would be out of character for the Colts to cut the cord early, but teams appear to be asking about such a move. Mitchell’s rookie contract runs through the 2027 season. If the Colts were to make a surprising trade here, they have special-teamer Ashton Dulin and rookie fifth-rounder Anthony Gould rounding out their receiving corps.

Packers Unlikely To Make TE Trade

The Tucker Kraft ACL tear dealt the Packers a tough blow, though the timing of the fast-emerging tight end’s setback does open the door for a potential emergency addition.

Not known as an especially aggressive team in terms of outside acquisitions, the Packers have changed their stripes to a degree under Brian Gutekunst. Josh Jacobs and Xavier McKinney arrived via big-ticket free agency accords last year, with Aaron Banks and Nate Hobbs following suit this offseason. The Micah Parsons trade brought a considerable swerve from the Packers as well, but it appears more likely than not Gutekunst will call it a day after that Parsons blockbuster.

Green Bay is likely to stand pat at the deadline with respect to a tight end pickup, CBS Sports’ Jonathan Jones notes. The Pack already roster Luke Musgrave, drafted ahead of Kraft in 2023, and he figures to be given more run for the contending team.

Musgrave arrived as the No. 42 overall pick out of Oregon State in 2023, and his rookie season included nine starts. Musgrave tallied 34 receptions for 352 yards in Year 1, but injuries began to intervene early in his career. A lacerated kidney required a hospital trip and then an IR stay during the 2023 season, and an ankle injury sustained during the ’24 season’s first half hindered his development — while also allowing a quicker Kraft emergence. As Musgrave played only seven games last season, Kraft took off and usurped him as Green Bay’s top TE target.

This season, Musgrave has operated as a clear second banana to Kraft at the position. In eight games, he has nine catches for 88 yards. But a role uptick is almost certainly coming. The Packers have already seen Christian Watson return from his ACL tear, and Jayden Reed is eligible to be activated from IR. Both players, along with Matthew Golden, figure to be part of the Pack’s collective Kraft replacement effort.

The Browns have a potentially attainable piece at tight end, with David Njoku in a contract year. The right offer could convince Cleveland to move on, especially with third-round rookie Harold Fannin playing well. It will be interesting to see if the Browns pull the trigger on a player who may not be part of the team’s future, but a fire sale is not viewed as likely in Cleveland. And the Packers appear set to retool from within.

Bengals Still Eyeing First-Round Pick For Trey Hendrickson

Two previous waves of Trey Hendrickson trade rumors emerged this year. The Bengals let the All-Pro defensive end seek a trade in March, but they set a high asking price. With no traction on an extension in August, trade buzz resurfaced. Again, Cincinnati did not budge far from its asking price — and the parties regrouped on a 2025 raise.

The Bengals are now 3-6, and their defense has not improved from a rough 2024 season. The team is now the first since the 1970 merger to score a combined 80 points in a two-game span and lose both contests. The second of those setbacks, though, came without Hendrickson in the lineup. But the Bengals are now close to falling out of contention. With Hendrickson not tied to the team beyond 2025, clubs are naturally interested in seeing (again) what it will take to pry the sack ace from Cincinnati.

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Even though we are halfway through the season and Hendrickson is a rental chip, The Athletic’s Dianna Russini indicates the Bengals are still informing teams it will take a first-round pick to add Hendrickson. Several teams — including the 49ers, Cowboys and Colts — have inquired, and it appears the Bengals will keep listening. The Eagles also asked on Hendrickson but moved to Jaelan Phillips.

That is a high cost for a rental chip — one that may scuttle any deal — even after Phillips brought back a third. Like Montez Sweat (who fetched the Commanders a second-round pick in 2023, Phillips is on a rookie contract and is in his mid-20s. Hendrickson will turn 31 before season’s end. Bradley Chubb fetched a first-rounder in a 2022 rental trade, and the Bengals are probably eyeing that as a comp. Chubb, though, was 26 when that Broncos-Dolphins trade unfolded. Miami extended Chubb soon after. Hendrickson has been seeking an extension for years, but the Bengals have been reluctant to include guaranteed money beyond Year 1 — a franchise sticking point that has caused drama in this relationship.

In March, it was believed the Bengals were asking for a first-rounder and more for Hendrickson. Teams viewed that as too steep. In August, it was believed Cincy had lowered its asking price. Though, nothing happened. The Bengals had even rejected a trade offer including a second-rounder and change before the draft. The sides then huddled up on a raise, which effectively tabled negotiations until 2026 — when a pricey franchise tag could be in play.

While tagging Hendrickson at $30MM-plus might be a long shot at his age, the Bengals used a tag on A.J. Green when he was 31. Dealing Hendrickson now would end the sides’ five-year partnership and give another team exclusive negotiating rights ahead of free agency. The Bengals, who were believed more likely to retain Hendrickson than dangle him in deals once again, are clearly still planning to place a high price on the decorated EDGE to pass on a potential tag and re-up talks.

A first-rounder will still be too steep, in all likelihood, for interested teams — especially now that Hendrickson has missed two of the past three games with a hip injury. It will be interesting to see if more comes from this, as a price drop could reignite this market. Hendrickson is not the only Bengal drawing interest, per Russini, and Outkick.com’s Armando Salguero adds the view inside the team’s building appears to be shifting toward listening to trade offers — including a potential Hendrickson swap. This echoes a recent report about increased flexibility on the Hendrickson front.

Hendrickson has four sacks this season and posted an NFL-high 35 between the 2023 and ’24 slates, but unless the Bengals reduce their asking price again, he will almost definitely finish a fifth season in western Ohio.

Browns Hand Play-Calling Duties To OC Tommy Rees

Coming out of the Browns’ bye week, Tommy Rees will no longer be a non-play-calling offensive coordinator. Kevin Stefanski is shifting gears, revealing (via cleveland.com’s Mary Kay Cabot) he will hand his first-year OC the call sheet.

This marks the second straight year the two-time Coach of the Year has given up play-calling duties. Barely a year ago, Stefanski gave then-OC Ken Dorsey play-calling responsibilities. The Browns finished 3-14, and Stefanski reclaimed the role he had otherwise held since 2020. Cleveland’s offense is scuffling again, and the team’s 33-year-old OC will be sending Dillon Gabriel the plays beginning in Week 10.

The Browns rank 30th in scoring and 31st in both total offense and EPA per play. Gabriel is averaging a nonfunctional 4.9 yards per attempt, doing so after Joe Flacco was demoted with a 5.1-yard average per pass. The Browns have shown no signs they are considering another benching at QB; instead, Stefanski has again benched himself. The 2-6 team will hope this can ignite the third-round rookie.

Rees called plays at Alabama during his 2023 OC season, Nick Saban‘s last in Tuscaloosa. The Crimson Tide ranked 24th in points per game in Saban’s finale, a 12-2 season. Jalen Milroe‘s first year as Alabama’s starting QB produced better numbers — from a passing standpoint — than his second. The eventual Seahawks third-rounder averaged 10.0 yards per attempt as a sophomore and completed 65.8% of his passes. In 2024, those numbers dipped slightly, though Milroe’s rushing work bettered his 2023 numbers in that department.

Stefanski, who hired Rees as his tight ends coach in 2024, giving up play-calling duties in back-to-back years certainly does not provide a portrait of HC stability in Cleveland. It is worth wondering if the Browns simply have poor quarterback talent, as Stefanski’s offense has worked with Flacco (2023 version) and Baker Mayfield at the controls.

Despite Deshaun Watson being at the helm for much of the 2023 season, the Browns ranked 10th offensively. They hovered between 14th and 20th during Stefanski’s first three seasons, with Mayfield’s final healthy Cleveland campaign (2020) producing a 14th-place ranking and the franchise’s first playoff berth since 2002. Cleveland’s offense has been unreliable, outside of Flacco 1.0, since Mayfield’s 2021 shoulder injury.

Jimmy Haslam has largely taken ownership of the Watson trade, even though GM Andrew Berry said he and Stefanski were both onboard with it at the time. The catastrophic misstep would seemingly have both power brokers on hot seats, but the once-trigger-happy owner has stuck with this partnership — which is now in Year 6. The Browns not turning things around during the second half will invite more scrutiny about the state of their HC-GM duo, but for now, Stefanski will try another play-calling switch to provide a spark.

Chargers T Joe Alt Out For Season

Bitten by injuries in many recent seasons, the Chargers have run into tremendous trouble along their offensive line in this one. Playing the full season without left tackle Rashawn Slater, the Bolts will now be without his replacement the rest of the way.

Being carted off with an ankle injury Sunday, Joe Alt is not returning this year. The Chargers announced the standout blocker is set to undergo season-ending surgery on his right high ankle sprain — an injury that has given him trouble at multiple points during his second NFL campaign.

The Chargers quickly slid Alt to left tackle to replace Slater for this season. They had lost Slater to a torn patellar tendon during training camp, seeing that development unfold days after reaching an extension agreement. The Bolts had a prime option to fill in, as Alt had earned two All-American honors while playing left tackle at Notre Dame. But Alt’s season on Justin Herbert‘s blind side has been bumpy due to this injury.

Alt first went down in Week 4 and missed the next three games. He returned in Week 8, and the Bolts dominated the Vikings. The team eked out a win over the woeful Titans on Sunday, and its tackle situation now looks dire.

When Alt was healthy, backup tackle Trey Pipkins filled in at right tackle. When Alt went down in September, backup tackle Austin Deculus was called up to the first-team offense. Pipkins went down in Week 5, and Jamaree Salyer finished the game at right tackle, but a practice squad addition, Bobby Hart, ended up making the subsequent start opposite Deculus. When Pipkins returned from his injury, however, Hart remained in the starting lineup across from Alt in his return last week.

Hart actually left today’s game with an injury before Alt, getting replaced by Pipkins early in the contest. Deculus — a late-summer trade pickup — had already been ruled out with an ankle injury before the game. The Chargers called upon Salyer, this time to play left tackle across from Pipkins. This came as right guard Mekhi Becton missed another game. Because of the timing here, the Bolts may have a decision to make. Pro Football Focus ranks Alt 11th among tackles; Hart, Pipkins and Deculus are all outside the top 60.

Los Angeles has managed to reach 6-3 despite myriad O-line issues, but Alt’s return had been a silver lining previously. The prospect of playing without their best two blockers changes the equation, and the Bolts have until 3pm CT Tuesday to make a trade. Although Salyer and Pipkins have extensive starting experience, with both players seeing extended stretches at tackle and guard, they entered the season as backups for a reason. Will the Chargers try to trade for an Alt replacement by the deadline?

It took only a swap of conditional sixth-round picks for the Vikings to add Cam Robinson following Christian Darrisaw‘s injury last year, providing some optimism the Chargers could complete a deal without giving up too much. Robinson now resides in Cleveland, following a trade with Houston; Cornelius Lucas (34) is his backup. Chukwuma Okorafor, who left the Patriots one week into last season, resides as a Jets swing tackle. Injury-prone Trent Brown is stationed behind the Texans’ starting tackles.

One interesting solution could reside in Washington, where Andrew Wylie is available. The Commanders’ right tackle starter in 2023 and ’24, Wylie previously played right tackle for the Chiefs. He does not have nearly as much LT experience, however. But the Bolts have been rearranging their O-line since Slater’s injury. It will take more of that moving forward, as the Slater-Alt duo will not be back together until next season.

Bucs Designate RT Luke Goedeke For Return

The Buccaneers have continued to withstand body blows on offense, but they may be getting some help after the bye. Tampa Bay will see right tackle Luke Goedeke back at practice this week.

Down since aggravating a foot injury in Week 2, Goedeke received a return designation, according to the Tampa Bay Times’ Rick Stroud. This injury came before the spree of skill-position maladies — affecting Mike Evans, Bucky Irving, Chris Godwin and Emeka Egbuka — to plague the NFC South leaders. A Goedeke return would help a Bucs O-line that has missed other pieces at points.

While Goedeke has been sidelined, the Bucs lost right guard Cody Mauch for the season. They have yet to deploy Goedeke and starting left tackle Tristan Wirfs in a game together this season, with the All-Pro not debuting until Goedeke landed on IR. Having that duo back together would give Tampa Bay four of its five starting O-linemen — along with left guard Ben Bredeson and center Graham Barton — together. This would certainly benefit Baker Mayfield, whose MVP push has included a shorthanded squad throughout.

Goedeke made a second-year move from guard to tackle, and his work on the edge moved him into position to secure a late-summer extension. The Bucs gave Goedeke a four-year, $90MM extension, locking him in through the 2029 season a year after extending Wirfs through 2030 at a then-record tackle rate. The Bucs have 21 days to activate Goedeke, and it certainly sounds like the team will have him available soon.

Tampa Bay is hoping to have Evans back at some point in December; the future Hall of Fame wideout suffered a broken clavicle last month. The team has not used IR for Godwin or Irving, but each has missed extensive time. Irving has been out for four games with foot and shoulder injuries, while Godwin — who did not debut until Week 5 due to his fractured ankle — has missed the past three contests with a fibula issue. Neither is assured to be back for Week 10, but the running back and wide receiver landing on IR remains a positive sign regarding near-future returns.

While Evans’ reemergence is a long way off, the Bucs could have nine of their 11 offensive starters back fairly soon. Goedeke, who will turn 27 this month, has started 40 career games. This will be his third season as a Wirfs bookend, with the Bucs having kicked the standout to left tackle in 2023. That duo helped Mayfield stabilize his career, and the resurgent quarterback having played well without several key pieces on offense bodes well for his form when most are back.

Patriots Shopping OLB Anfernee Jennings

Mike Vrabel‘s run as Patriots HC has produced a six-game win streak, restoring the team as a contender after a few down years. The Vrabel period has also produced a number of separations, as previous-regime players have been either demoted or shown the door (or both).

Last week, the Pats unloaded Kyle Dugger and Keion WhiteBill Belichick draftees, one of whom (Dugger) current GM Eliot Wolf extended — and more assets could be dealt away despite a 7-2 record. One of those may well be Anfernee Jennings. The edge rusher is being shopped ahead of the deadline, per veteran insider Jordan Schultz.

Just more than 24 hours remain until this year’s trade endpoint, and the Patriots are trying to trade player who has fallen out of favor. This would be an interesting move, especially considering New England already dealt an edge rusher. White went to San Francisco in a Day 3 pick-swap agreement.

The Patriots are also not exactly deep on the edge, relying on late bloomer K’Lavon Chaisson as a starter opposite ex-Titan Harold Landry. Chaisson is making a reasonable attempt to shed the bust label this season. After notching five sacks in four Jaguars seasons, he has 11.5 over the past two seasons. Five and a half of those have come this year, tying Landry for the team lead. Free agency addition Milton Williams has 3.5, though no other Patriot has two. This has led to some rumors about the AFC East leaders being in the market for an EDGE addition. The team pursued Jaelan Phillips, as unrealistic as an intra-AFC East swap would have been, as well.

It would seem the Patriots are not satisfied with the quality of their edge-rushing situation, as they appear ready to add Jennings to the discard pile along with White. Jennings has been on the trade block for a bit, as rumors about his Foxborough departure came up in August — after he landed on Vrabel’s roster bubble — and October.

During Wolf’s year with Jerod Mayo, the Pats re-signed Jennings to a three-year, $12MM deal. Less than $1MM remains in 2025 base salary, and Jennings’ $3MM 2026 paragraph 5 number is nonguaranteed. He played well in 2023, notching 14 tackles for loss. Never a prolific sack artist (6.5 in his career), the former third-round pick has made 37 starts in a six-year career. Nevertheless, the Pats look to making final calls on unloading the Belichick-era player. It will be interesting to see if he is replaced on the trade market before Tuesday’s deadline.

Cowboys Activate C Cooper Beebe, Place LB Jack Sanborn On IR

The Cowboys’ 31st-ranked defense is losing another piece. The team is placing linebacker Jack Sanborn on IR, according to The Athletic’s Jon Machota. This move will make room for Cooper Beebe‘s return, however.

Beebe is being activated from IR ahead of tonight’s Dallas-Arizona game. The Cowboys’ starting center has been out since Week 2 with foot and ankle injuries. The second-year blocker suffered a lateral ankle sprain along with a bone fracture in his foot in September; his return comes within the initial recovery timeline.

Dallas has been using Brock Hoffman at center in place of Beebe, but the more experienced player will be set to return to backup status. Beebe has started all 18 games he has played as a pro. The Cowboys plugged he and fellow 2024 draftee Tyler Guyton into the lineup as rookies. They will now have three first- or second-year players, with Tyler Booker in the lineup, starting up front against the Cardinals. Beebe’s development will remain a priority for the Cowboys, who turned to their 2024 third-rounder to replace departed free agent Tyler Biadasz last year.

This activation will leave the Cowboys with four injury activations remaining. The team already activated cornerback Caelen Carson and used summer IR-return designations on wide receiver Jonathan Mingo and defensive end Payton Turner. The latter has not yet returned to practice, but by virtue of the summer IR-return move, he already counts toward Dallas’ eight-activation total.

Pro Football Focus has Hoffman rated 31st among centers, pointing to Beebe’s return providing a boost. The Cowboys have been wildly inconsistent this season, but they do sport one of the league’s best offenses. Beebe’s comeback figures to help Javonte Williams continue his bounce-back season.

Sanborn has started five of the six games he has played with Dallas. The team continues to wait on DeMarvion Overshown‘s return from a major knee injury. Overshown remains in the PUP-return window, having begun practicing late last month. PFF slots Sanborn 55th among qualified linebackers this season.

The former Bears defender is on a one-year, $1.5MM deal, coming over as one of a few low-cost Cowboys linebackers in recent years. A groin injury will move Sanborn off the 53-man roster for at least four games, per the Dallas Morning News’ Calvin Watkins. Sanborn started five games before coming off the bench in Week 7. He missed the team’s Week 8 Broncos matchup.

The Cowboys also signed running back Malik Davis from the practice squad and used their standard gameday elevations on defensive back Zion Childress and tight end Princeton Fant.