Vikings To Sign CB Shaquill Griffin
Waived during the 2023 season, Shaquill Griffin has now played for three teams since his Seahawks rookie contract expired. He now has a chance to add another team to his resume.
The Vikings will add Griffin, per the Minneapolis Star Tribune’s Ben Goessling. A former multiyear Seahawks and Jaguars starter, Griffin spent last season with the Texans and Panthers.
Griffin’s stock has certainly dipped over the past few years. The Jaguars gave him a three-year, $40MM deal in 2021, bringing him over after a successful run with the Seahawks. A back injury in 2022 led to Griffin being a cap casualty after the season, as no guaranteed money remained on the deal for 2023. The Texans then waived Griffin, whom they used as a Derek Stingley Jr. injury replacement, in November. The Panthers claimed the former third-round pick, but he only played in three games with the team.
For his career, Griffin has 79 starts. He made six last season. This included a Bengals game in which Griffin notched a key interception in the team’s road win over a team that still had Joe Burrow healthy. Pro Football Focus ranks Griffin 53rd among corners last year. That is a mid-pack mark. While Griffin only allowed a 71.4 passer rating as the closest defender, Stingley’s return prompted the Texans to relegate him to the bench. After only playing on special teams in his final Houston weeks, Griffin hit the waiver wire.
A steady starter with the Seahawks to close out his rookie contract, Griffin will join a Vikings team that features Byron Murphy as its top corner. The team returns auxiliary options Josh Metellus, Mekhi Blackmon and Akayleb Evans. While the Vikes have made bigger commitments to bolstering their front seven in free agency — from signing Jonathan Greenard to Blake Cashman to Andrew Van Ginkel — Griffin represents their most notable DB addition thus far.
Cardinals To Add C Evan Brown
A 16-game starter for the Seahawks last season, Evan Brown has a deal in place to relocate within the NFC West. The Cardinals are signing the veteran interior O-lineman, NFL.com’s Tom Pelissero tweets.
Brown agreed to a one-year, $2.35MM Cardinals contract, one that can max out at $2.9MM. Brown worked as a low-cost solution for the Seahawks up front, and while that season did not elevate the ex-Lions blocker into the upper echelon of this year’s center market, he will have another opportunity in 2024.
While the Seahawks used Brown at center, he has extensive experience at guard as well. The Lions plugged in Brown at guard in 2022, using him as their primary fill-in option for Halapoulivaati Vaitai that year. He had previously worked as Frank Ragnow‘s center replacement in 2021. Brown has made 40 career starts. This signing will give the Cardinals another option inside.
Pro Football Focus rated Brown as its No. 27 overall center last season — eight spots behind Cardinals starter Hjalte Froholdt. The latter remains under contract with the Cardinals, who also re-signed guard starter Elijah Wilkinson. Brown could compete for either position, with both starters attached to low-end contracts. Wilkinson re-signed on a one-year, $1.83MM deal, per CardsWire’s Howard Balzer, who adds $1.58MM is guaranteed. Froholdt is attached to a two-year, $4.6MM deal he signed in 2023. PFF rated Arizona’s O-line 25th last season, and the unit will be without D.J. Humphries — a recent post-June 1 cut — next season.
PFF rated Brown 17th among centers in 2021 and viewed him as a mid-pack guard in 2022. At worst, the Cardinals have a player capable of providing swing depth. A former UDFA going into his age-28 season, Brown will attempt to commandeer a starting job and use this season as a chance to command a better payday down the line.
Colts To Re-Sign DT Taven Bryan
For the first time since his Jaguars rookie contract expired, Taven Bryan has a deal in place that would allow him to play for the same team in consecutive seasons.
The Colts are re-signing the former first-round defensive tackle on a one-year deal, ESPN.com’s Jeremy Fowler tweets. This follows a 2023 agreement between the parties. The Colts continue to be active in retaining talent, with this move coming after the team re-signed Kenny Moore, Grover Stewart and Tyquan Lewis.
Bryan’s disappointing stint in Jacksonville saw him serve as mostly a backup. He had a one-year stop in Cleveland in 2022 and started a career-high 16 games, earning him a contract from the Colts last offseason.
He got into all 17 games for his new squad, starting seven contests in 2023. He finished the campaign with 22 tackles, two sacks, and one forced fumble. Pro Football Focus ranked him only 99th among 130 qualifying interior defenders, although he did land in the top-half of his position for his pass-rush ability.
The Colts should return most of their defensive tackle corps in 2024, with DeForest Buckner and Grover Stewart getting the bulk of the snaps at the position. Bryan and Eric Johnson II pretty much split the leftover snaps in 2023, but the team has since brought in Raekwon Davis for even more depth.
Texans, DL Mario Edwards Agree To Deal
Mario Edwards will be returning to the AFC South in 2024. The veteran defensive lineman has agreed to a one-year deal with the Texans, ESPN’s Jeremy Fowler reports. 
Edwards has seen time with six teams during his NFL career, including a one-year stint in Tennessee in 2022. After a single campaign in Seattle, the 30-year-old will join a Houston front which has made a number of changes during the early portions of free agency. Edwards visited the Texans on Monday, as noted by Fowler’s colleague Field Yates.
Houston has seen the departures of D-linemen Maliek Collins (traded to the 49ers) and Sheldon Rankins (signed with the Bengals) in recent days. Coupled with the departure of Jonathan Greenard on the edge, those absences – along with those of Jerry Hughes, Teair Tart and Derek Barnett, presuming no member of that trio is re-signed – have left several vacancies for the Texans. Some of them, of course, have already been filled.
The team worked out two-year deals with Denico Autry and Tim Settle last week, and Danielle Hunter was added as Greenard’s replacement. The latter will give Houston a high-profile edge tandem opposite 2023 Defensive Rookie of the Year Will Anderson. Edwards could fill in as a rotational pass rusher behind that pair, as he has for much of his career. The former second-rounder has seen a defensive snap share above 50% only three times (and once since 2017).
Edwards (who attended high school in Denton, Texas) has demonstrated an ability to chip in as a pass rusher in a number of stops, though. The Florida State alum has posted between two and four sacks in each of the past seven seasons, and a repeat of that production should be expected in 2024. The Texans ranked 17th in sacks last year, and Edwards’ addition will of course not impact that figure next season to the degree Hunter’s will. Still, the former will be counted on as an experienced depth option as head coach DeMeco Ryans aims to guide the team’s defense to an improvement from 2023’s showing.
Commanders To Re-Sign T Cornelius Lucas
Cornelius Lucas is set to continue his time in the nation’s capital. The veteran offensive tackle has agreed to a one-year deal worth up to $4MM, ESPN’s Jeremy Fowler reports. 
Lucas bounced around to four different teams during the first six years of his career. He played with the Lions, Rams, Saints and Bears between 2014-19, establishing himself as a spot-starter during that time. The 32-year-old primarily played at right tackle before arriving in Washington, but his Commanders spell has also included time on the blindside.
Playing on a two-year contract to begin his time in Washington, Lucas started eight games in 2020 and another seven the following season. He earned his two best PFF grades during that span (78.2 and 75,2), so it came as little surprise when the team re-upped him on another two-year pact. The former UDFA was used exclusively at right tackle in 2022, but last season he saw four starts on the left side (including the final three weeks of the season when he filled in for an injured Charles Leno).
The latter will not return to the Commanders this season, and the team has made a number of changes up front this offseason. That has included free agent deals with center Tyler Biadasz and guard Nick Allegretti, but this Lucas agreement represents the first move with respect to a tackle. A full-time starter on the blindside will likely be a priority during next month’s draft.
With Lucas still in the fold, though, the Commanders will have stability at the swing tackle spot. The Kansas State product has been charged with seven sacks allowed by PFF between the past two seasons, and as a result his overall grades have dipped compared over that time to his best showings. Still, Lucas will be in place as a familiar and experienced spot-start option for 2024.
Titans Sign DT Sebastian Joseph-Day
Not long after a free agent visit with the Titans, Sebastian Joseph-Day has a deal in place. The veteran defensive tackle is signing with Tennessee on a one-year deal, per an announcement from his agency. 
Joseph-Day met with the Titans on Monday, as noted by ESPN’s Field Yates. That, in turn, came shortly after the 28-year-old visited the Bills, per Yates. He has elected to head to Nashville after beginning his career on the West Coast. The Titans will be Joseph-Day’s fourth NFL team.
The former sixth-rounder spent three seasons with the Rams, serving as a full-time starter throughout that period. His play in Los Angeles landed him a three-year, $24MM Chargers pact, but he found himself on the waiver wire well before that contract had been played out in full. Joseph-Day was waived in December shortly after the firings of head coach Brandon Staley and general manager Tom Telesco.
The 49ers moved quickly in signing him to finish out the campaign, part of the team’s overall efforts to add along the defensive line in advance of what turned out to be a run to the Super Bowl. Joseph-Day took on a much smaller workload in San Francisco than he did with both L.A. franchises, so it comes as no surprise he has departed in free agency. The Rutgers product has posted 11 sacks in 71 career games while recording between 36 and 56 tackles each season to date.
Joseph-Day will likely take on a starting role alongside Jeffery Simmons on Tennessee’s D-line. The Titans lost Denico Autry to the division-rival Texans in free agency last week, and Jaleel Johnson and Kyle Peko are unsigned. Tennessee ranked 13th against the run in 2023, and Joseph-Day’s arrival should help the team maintain (or improve upon) that success next year. The Titans entered Tuesday with more than $46MM in cap space, and this deal will likely represent a low-cost addition, meaning the team will still have considerable spending power moving forward.
Saints Sign DE Chase Young
Chase Young‘s free agent period is likely to come to an end. The former No. 2 pick is set to visit the Saints today with the intention of signing, as first reported by Jordan Schultz of Bleacher Report. 
Young will receive $13MM fully guaranteed on a one-year deal, ESPN’s Adam Schefter adds. That represents quite the ‘prove-it’ commitment on the part of New Orleans, a team which has shown interest in the former Defensive Rookie of the Year. Young’s visit with New Orleans was rescheduled to today, per Nick Underhill of NewOrleans.Football. With that process having gone according to plan, the sides have a deal in place. The team has now announced the signing.
A trio of teams quickly emerged as Young suitors – New Orleans, Carolina and Tennessee. It thus comes as little surprise that the Saints appear to have won out the competition for his services as he profiled as one of the more intriguing free agents on the market. Young will be 25 at the start of the 2024 season, meaning he could have more upside and runway for high-end play than many other veterans who landed big-money deals last week.
The Ohio State product entered the league with massive expectations, but for the most part he did not deliver during his time in Washington. Injuries in 2021 and ’22, along with perception of freelancing during his time with the Commanders, hindered Young’s trade value leading up to this year’s deadline. Washington appeared committed to retaining one of he and fellow first-rounder Montez Sweat at that point. As such, Young’s contract year could have ended with him remaining in the nation’s capital.
However, he (like Sweat) was traded, finding himself in a deal which allowed him to reunite with former college teammate Nick Bosa in San Francisco. Young recorded five sacks in seven regular season games with the 49ers, adding one in the team’s postseason run. A deal keeping him on the Bay Area was in the cards, but Young made it clear upon arrival he would test the market. That suggested a departure could be coming, and he will now join a Saints team making another investment along the edge.
New Orleans has Cameron Jordan and Carl Granderson in the fold, with both veterans having signed extensions last offseason. The team has also spent significant draft capital at the defensive end spot in recent years, including a first-round pick in 2021 (Payton Turner) and a second-rounder last April (Isaiah Foskey). Young will join that edge group for at least one season ahead of another potential trip to free agency.
The Saints – following yet another offseason filled with restructures and cuts needed to achieve cap compliance – entered Monday with $18.6MM in cap space. Young’s deal being fully guaranteed will eat into that figure considerably, although void years will no doubt be in place. It will be interesting to see how he fares in New Orleans and how his performance affects his value ahead of next offseason.
Cowboys Restructure Dak Prescott’s Contract
Talks on a Dak Prescott extension are ongoing, and the Cowboys would likely see significant cap savings in 2024 by working out a new deal. The team’s alternative, of course, has remained a restructure to lower Prescott’s cap charge in case a long-term arrangement cannot be worked out. 
Dallas has indeed taken the latter route, as detailed by ESPN’s Field Yates. The Cowboys converted a $5MM roster bonus Prescott was owed on Sunday into a signing bonus, creating $4MM in cap space. As a result, the 2023 MVP runner-up’s cap charge now sits at $55.46MM, a figure which more than doubles the amount from last season.
Two void years were tacked onto Prescott’s deal, Yates adds. As a result, void years now extend into 2028 on the contract as currently structured. Yates’ colleague Dan Graziano notes Prescott’s permission was required to add void years, so this short-term agreement is a sign the parties remain willing to work out more permanent solution. The parties are discussing a deal, although owner Jerry Jones has publicly stated he is prepared to carry out the season with Prescott carrying a massive cap hit. The latter has considerable leverage given his no-tag and no-trade clauses coupled with the 2024 cap relief an extension would yield.
The $4MM in immediate savings will become dead money next year in the event Prescott were to depart in free agency. If that were to be the case, the Cowboys would be hit with roughly $40MM in cap charges, another factor which will no doubt influence extension efforts on the team’s part. Dallas also has monster second contracts to work out with wideout CeeDee Lamb and edge rusher Micah Parsons, both of whom are now eligible for a deal keeping them in place beyond their respective rookie pacts.
2023 trade acquisition Trey Lance will remain in place for the coming season, and he is set to occupy the backup quarterback role as a result. Prescott’s play as Dallas’ starter in 2024 will be a key determinant in the value of his next contract if he and the Cowboys are not able to agree to a new deal this spring. Even with this small move aimed at providing short-term flexibility, though, an extension remains firmly on the table.
Falcons Re-Sign DL Kentavius Street
The Falcons have made their first defensive transaction of the offseason. The team announced that they’ve re-signed defensive lineman Kentavius Street.
The former journeyman seemed to settle in with the Falcons down the stretch of the 2023 campaign. After getting traded to Atlanta in October, Street proceeded to start all five of his appearances for his new squad. He compiled 14 tackles, four tackles for loss, and one sack before getting shut down early with a pectoral injury. Pro Football Focus only ranked Street 82nd among 130 qualifying interior defenders, although his grade was partly brought down by a dreadful coverage grade.
The former fourth-round pick played out his rookie contract in San Francisco but only got into 35 games across those four seasons. He had a career year off the bench for the Saints in 2022, finishing with 29 tackles and 3.5 sacks. That performance earned him a contract with the Eagles last offseason, but Philly shipped him to Atlanta in a swap for late-round picks.
The Falcons have made headlines this offseason with their offensive moves, but the front office has been quiet on the defensive side of the ball, with Street representing their first signing. The 27-year-old probably won’t step back into the starting lineup in 2024 since Grady Jarrett should be back to full health, but he could still see an important role as a rotational piece for the Falcons.
Minor NFL Transactions: 3/18/24
Today’s minor moves:
Chicago Bears
- Signed: DE Byron Cowart
Green Bay Packers
- Re-signed: CB Robert Rochell
Los Angeles Chargers
- Signed: LB Troy Dye
Miami Dolphins
- Signed: OL Jack Driscoll
Seattle Seahawks
- Signed: G Tremayne Anchrum Jr.
