Chiefs, Creed Humphrey Agree To Center-Record Extension

The Chiefs are set to raise the center market by a considerable margin. They have a deal in place with standout snapper Creed Humphrey, according to NFL.com’s Ian Rapoport. The terms are quite notable.

Humphrey agreed to a four-year deal worth $72MM, ESPN.com’s Adam Schefter tweets. This makes the fourth-year blocker the NFL’s highest-paid center — by a lot. Entering Thursday, the NFL’s center ceiling rested at $13.5MM per year. Humphrey will take that to $18MM, with Schefter adding $50MM will be guaranteed on this contract. On a deal that ties the 25-year-old center to the Chiefs through 2028, the guarantee figure also comes in well north of any other snapper.

This deal moves Humphrey closer to the guard ceiling than where the center market has stood. Coming into today, Frank Ragnow‘s four-year, $54MM deal topped the market. The Lions blocker’s $42MM guarantee represented the only center guarantee higher than $34MM. After three promising seasons, Humphrey moved the Chiefs to create a new level among center contracts. This convinced the former second-round pick to pass on a run at free agency in 2025.

A Humphrey extension loomed on Kansas City’s radar for a bit, with both he and breakthrough right guard Trey Smith eligible for new deals in 2024. Smith remains attached to his rookie contract, and Humphrey’s payday stands to impact the Chiefs’ ability to keep their other standout interior blocker. Joe Thuney remains on an upper-echelon guard pact (five years, $80MM; the All-Pro LG’s contract runs through the 2025 season.

The Chiefs did not see high-priced right tackle Jawaan Taylor pan out in Year 1 of his deal, calling into question his long-term Missouri future. The two-time reigning champions also are transitioning at left tackle, not re-signing 2023 starter Donovan Smith. Inside, however, the Chiefs may have the NFL’s best trio. ESPN’s pass block win rate metric ranked Thuney, Humphrey and Smith first, second and fourth among interior O-linemen last season. This group played a key role in keeping the Chiefs on track during an uncharacteristically clunky season on offense.

Pro Football Focus has graded all three Humphrey seasons as top-class offerings, ranking him first among centers in 2021 and ’22 and fourth last season. PFF viewed Humphrey’s work in the run game as superior to his pass-blocking skills last season. It is clear the Chiefs agree with the Oklahoma alum’s standing, as this contract clearly became required to convince Humphrey — an unrealistic candidate for a 2025 franchise tag due to all O-linemen being grouped under one umbrella — to pass on moving toward free agency. Humphrey, who has never missed a game, is a two-time Pro Bowler; Jason Kelce‘s retirement also clears the way for other centers to begin earning first-team All-Pro distinctions.

The Chiefs had kept costs low at center throughout not only the Patrick Mahomes era but the Alex Smith years as well. Kansas City did not re-sign four-year starter Mitch Morse in 2019 and primarily used Austin Reiter at the pivot in 2020. The Buccaneers’ Super Bowl LV romp prompted GM Brett Veach to drastically overhaul the line, and Humphrey, Smith and Orlando Brown Jr. arrived. Brown’s decision to pass on a six-year Chiefs extension offer at the July 2022 franchise tag deadline helps make this Humphrey accord possible.

Thursday evening’s agreement marks the first salvo in a Chiefs effort regarding their strong 2021 draft class. The team also added Nick Bolton in that year’s second round. The off-ball linebacker joins Smith as an extension candidate. It will also be interesting to see how the Chiefs move forward with Thuney post-2024, as his deal includes no guarantees. Clearing out Thuney’s contract would open the door for a Smith payment. Taylor’s contract pays out its guarantees in 2024, giving the NFL’s top 2020s franchise some flexibility as it determines its O-line future.

Minor NFL Transactions: 8/22/24

Here are Thursday’s minor moves:

Atlanta Falcons

Buffalo Bills

Carolina Panthers

  • Activated from active/PUP list: OL Yosh Nijman
  • Signed: LB Aaron Beasley

Chicago Bears

  • Signed: WR Peter LeBlanc, RB Jacob Saylors
  • Waived/injured: TE Giovanni Ricci

Cleveland Browns

  • Reverted to IR: LB Brandon Bouyer-Randle

Dallas Cowboys

  • Released from IR via injury settlement: DE Shaka Toney

Green Bay Packers

  • Signed: DL Keonte Schad

Kansas City Chiefs

  • Reverted to IR: WR Jaaron Hayek

Las Vegas Raiders

Los Angeles Chargers

  • Signed: TE Isaac Rex
  • Waived: DL Micheal Mason

Los Angeles Rams

Minnesota Vikings

  • Signed: RB Mohamed Ibrahim, OL Chuck Filiaga
  • Reverted to IR: OL Jeremy Flax, S Najee Thompson

New Orleans Saints

  • Reverted to IR: C Sincere Haynesworth

Washington Commanders

Nijman underwent surgery to address a leg injury, and despite Dave Canales indicating the free agency pickup was a ways away from returning, he is back at practice barely a week later. It remains to be seen if Nijman will be able to suit up in Week 1, but he has some time here. The Panthers signed the ex-Packer blocker to be their swing tackle.

Grant will be able to suit up later this season, depending on the terms of the injury settlement. This transaction moves Grant off the Falcons’ roster. The former All-Pro return man has not played since the 2021 season, stacking the odds against him. He is going into what would be an age-32 season.

49ers Re-Sign TE Logan Thomas

Teams typically welcome back discarded veterans after roster-cutdown day, upon completing necessary roster gymnastics. The 49ers, however, will reunite with Logan Thomas before that point.

The defending NFC champions brought back the veteran tight end on another one-year deal Thursday. San Francisco waived safety Tayler Hawkins from their 90-man roster to make room for the returning Thomas. A former UDFA, Hawkins has one NFL game under his belt — a Week 18 start for the 49ers last season.

The 49ers cut Thomas on August 9, so he will have ended up missing roughly two weeks of practice. Given the team’s decision to move on early in camp, it should not be considered a lock Thomas will end up on San Francisco’s 53-man roster. That said, the longtime Washington pass catcher could be a candidate for the practice squad, seeing as he was available for two weeks and is back with the 49ers. Teams are allotted six spots for vested veterans on their 16-man P-squads.

Thomas has been cut twice this year, with the Commanders jettisoning a more lucrative contract (three years, $24MM) compared to the 49ers, who had signed him to a one-year, $1.21MM deal ($300K guaranteed) contract in June. The converted quarterback started 49 games for the Commanders from 2020-23, posting 670 receiving yards in 2020 — to set up a Washington extension — and 496 last season. Thomas added four TDs in Eric Bieniemy‘s offense. The new Commanders regime bailed, however. Thomas, 33, is well removed from the November 2021 ACL tear that sidetracked his Washington stay.

San Francisco has George Kittle signed through the 2025 season, and while the team lost Charlie Woerner and Ross Dwelley (both to the Falcons), veteran Eric Saubert and 2023 draftees Cameron Latu and Brayden Willis are on the roster. Jake Tonges, a 2022 Bears UDFA, and rookie undrafted player Mason Pline round out the 49ers’ tight end room. Teams typically keep three or four TEs, outlining where San Francisco will be at this point next week.

Randy Gregory Expected To Retire

In the wake of his Buccaneers release officially taking place on Thursday, Randy Gregory‘s NFL career may well be over. The veteran edge rusher is expected to retire, Aaron Wilson of KPRC2 notes.

Gregory joined the Bucs in April after his brief stint with the 49ers to close out the 2023 campaign. He was dealt to San Francisco following the end of his highly underwhelming Broncos tenure. A five-year, $69.5MM Denver contract signed in 2022 only resulted in three sacks across 10 games played. The Tampa Bay deal represented an opportunity for a fresh start, but it did not work out.

The former second-rounder signed for $3MM, and his Buccaneers pact included a $1.3MM roster bonus. Since Gregory never reported to the team, though, Tampa Bay was in position to collect that payment. The bonus has indeed been paid back, per Greg Auman of Fox Sports. Between never keeping that money and the $50K in daily fines he accumulated, the Nebraska product’s financial situation was notably worsened during his (essentially) non-existent Tampa Bay tenure.

In June, it was learned Gregory filed a lawsuit against the Broncos and the NFL after being fined more than $500K for the use of a prescription medication containing THC. No developments on that front have taken place in recent months, but today’s news points to Gregory’s ability to add to his career earnings coming to an end. The cause for his ongoing absence remains unknown.

Entering the NFL as a Cowboys second-rounder, Gregory’s most productive season came with Dallas in 2018 (six sacks). The early portion of his career was marred by suspensions, though, and four substance abuse bans left him sidelined for the 2017 and ’19 campaigns. A deal seemed to be in place to remain with the Cowboys in 2022, but that agreement was soon replaced the Broncos one which included the same terms.

If Gregory, 31, does indeed hang up his cleats he will depart the league with 78 combined regular and postseason games to his name. His career earnings check in at roughly $33MM. It would come as a surprise if teams showed interest in him as a free agent given the nature of his Buccaneers exit.

Seahawks Trade CB Michael Jackson To Panthers For LB Michael Barrett

Thursday has seen its third NFL trade take place. The Seahawks have dealt cornerback Michael Jackson to the Panthers in return for rookie linebacker Michael Barrett. The move has been announced by both teams.

Jackson is a veteran of five seasons, having spent time with three different teams. The former fifth-rounder was selected by the Cowboys, but his regular season debut came during his rookie season with the Lions. After making a single appearance with Detroit, he played in only one game the following season with the Patriots. Jackson had found a regular role in Seattle over the past three years, though.

The 27-year-old played sparingly during his debut season in the Emerald City, but in 2022 he served as a full-time starter. Logging over 1,000 defensive snaps, Jackson collected 75 tackles, 12 pass deflections and the lone interception of his career. After the Seahawks drafted Devon Witherspoon with their top pick in last year’s draft, though, Jackson lost his first-team gig. Witherspoon and Riq Woolen will remain in place as starters this season, and Seattle’s latest rookie additions at the CB spot (Nehemiah Pritchett and DJ James) will join Artie Burns, who re-signed this offseason.

Jackson agreed to a restructured contract in May, providing him with a six-figure signing bonus. None of his $1.06MM base salary is guaranteed, though, which led to questions about his grip on a roster spot. The pending free agent will have a strong chance of finding a role in Carolina given the team’s need in the secondary. The Panthers have long been mentioned as a candidate to add a corner, and the team made an offer to Stephon Gilmore before he signed with the Vikings.

Carolina traded away Donte Jackson this offseason, leaving free agent pickup Dane Jackson as a key member of the CB room. The latter is dealing with a hamstring injury, and he could begin the season on injured reserve. That ailment drove the Panthers to pursue an addition, and today’s move will meet that goal while marking the rare move of trading a rookie before they have made their debut.

Barrett was selected in the seventh round of this year’s draft, and he will now turn his attention to landing a roster spot in Seattle. Jerome Baker – signed in free agency – is currently on the mend from a hamstring injury of his own, leaving the Seahawks on the lookout for depth. As a Michigan alum, Barrett is a familiar face to head coach Mike Macdonald, who served as the Wolverines’ defensive coordinator in 2021.

Commanders To Trade For Browns K Cade York, Waive K Riley Patterson

Known to be on the lookout for a change at the kicker position, the Commanders have a pair of moves in place. Washington is trading for Cade York, sending the Browns a conditional seventh-round pick, SI’s Albert Breer reports.

In a corresponding move, the Commanders have released Riley Patterson. That leaves York as the only kicker on Washington’s roster with the start of the regular season looming. The 2022 Browns draftee connected on 75% of his field goal attempts during his rookie season, suggesting he could remain in place over the long term. Struggles last offseason led Cleveland to bring in Dustin Hopkins as competition, however, and the veteran handled kicking duties in 2023.

Hopkins exceled during his debut Browns campaign, and he landed a three-year, $15.3MM extension last month. Cleveland wanted to keep York in the fold last year, and the team’s decision to bring him back this offseason proved that was still the case. Instead of risking the former fourth-rounder on waivers again, though, the Browns have elected to take back minimal draft compensation while moving forward with only Hopkins in place for the time being.

The Commanders had Brandon McManus in the fold earlier this offseason, but allegations of sexual assault made in a civil suit dating back to his time with the Jaguars led to Washington releasing him. That move was followed by the signing of Ramiz Ahmedwho entered training camp as the lone kicker on the roster. Patterson was claimed off waivers at the end of July, though, which led to Ahmed’s release.

Patterson, 24, has seen game action with three teams in his brief NFL career despite going 53-for-59 on field goals to date. He struggled in the Commanders’ first two preseason contests, however, leading head coach Dan Quinn to state another move was being targeted. With one more exhibition contest on the slate, York will have a small window of opportunity to earn the Week 1 gig.

The LSU alum spent time on the Titans’ and Giants’ practice squads last year, but he was not used in the regular season. York’s return to Cleveland has proven to be short-lived, but this Commanders deal will allow him to find a full-time position for the 2024 campaign provided he does not disappoint in the build-up to the season. If he does, Washington’s willingness to move on from kickers quickly would make another change at the position a distinct possibility.

Patriots Release DT Mike Purcell

Veteran defensive tackle Mike Purcell‘s stay in New England was a short one. After signing with the Patriots only three weeks ago, Purcell’s tenure with the team came to an end today as New England announced his release.

Purcell began his NFL career as an undrafted free agent out of Wyoming, signing with the 49ers. While not appearing as a rookie and only playing two games in his sophomore campaign, Purcell earned a role in San Francisco, starting eight games over his final two years with the team.

Over the next two years he would shuffle around on different practice squads, eventually landing in the short-lived Alliance of American Football in 2019. Following his performance in the AAF, Purcell signed on with the Broncos. Originally a veteran, depth addition, Purcell ended up starting 37 games while appearing in 65 of a potential 67 contests.

His short reunion with the Patriots, who were one of the several teams who hosted him on their practice squad, was only slightly long than his first stint with the team. He was signed to help make up for the lost production of Christian Barmore as he dealt with his blood clots diagnosis. According to ESPN’s Mike Reiss, Purcell was running behind Davon Godchaux, Jeremiah Pharms, Daniel Ekuale, and Trysten Hill this preseason.

With Purcell off the roster, New England is more likely to test some of the youthful depth pieces on the roster like Armon Watts or Josiah Bronson. Purcell, on the other hand, will be back on the free agent market. At 32 years old, he may be running out of opportunities to remain in the NFL.

Minor NFL Transactions: 8/21/24

Today’s mid-week minor moves:

Arizona Cardinals

Carolina Panthers

Chicago Bears

Cleveland Browns

Detroit Lions

Green Bay Packers

Houston Texans

Kansas City Chiefs

  • Waived (with injury designation): WR Jaaron Hayek

Las Vegas Raiders

Minnesota Vikings

New York Giants

Philadelphia Eagles

  • Released (with injury settlement): CB Tyler Hall

Washington Commanders

Interesting move up in Green Bay, where the Packers are essentially swapping out which player will qualify as the 17th member of their practice squad through the International Player Pathway program. They’ll waive the Nigerian, Odumegwu, who joined through the league’s IPP program last year, and assign the international exemption to the Australian kicker, Hale.

It’s unfortunate news for Keene, who doubled in his offensive duties as fullback at times for the Texans. Keene reportedly tore his ACL in Houston’s second preseason game last weekend, per Aaron Wilson of KPRC 2. His placement on injured reserve today will end his 2024 season.

Cowboys To Sign DT Linval Joseph

Jerry Jones recently hinted at more defensive line additions coming; the Cowboys appear to be following through on that. They are preparing to give Linval Joseph a shot to play a 15th NFL season.

The experienced D-lineman is signing with the Cowboys, veteran NFL reporter Josina Anderson tweets. Joseph spent last season with the Bills, playing in seven games. This is earlier than Joseph caught on with teams over the past two years. He signed with Buffalo in November 2023 and joined Philadelphia’s Super Bowl LVII team in November 2022.

[RELATED: Cowboys Acquire DT Jordan Phillips From Giants]

Joseph will do better than he did with Buffalo or Philly, though that should perhaps be understandable since Dallas is giving him a full-season deal rather than a prorated arrangement. According to NFL.com’s Mike Garafolo, the Cowboys are signing Joseph to a one-year deal with $2.5MM guaranteed. Joseph can earn up to $4MM on the contract.

This will reunite Joseph with former Vikings HC Mike Zimmer. The Vikings added Joseph in free agency during Zimmer’s first offseason as HC and employed him for six seasons. Joseph started 88 games under Zimmer. While the former second-round pick was part of the Giants’ Super Bowl XLVI-winning team back in 2011, his most notable NFL period came in Minnesota under Zimmer. With the Vikes featuring little QB continuity, Joseph was part of three Zimmer-led playoff teams during that span.

More of a rotational DT-for-hire at this point in his career, Joseph is now on team No. 6. While he worked exclusively as a Bills backup, the former Giants and Vikings regular was a full-time starter during his Eagles stint. Philly’s NFC championship team turned to the big man for eight regular-season starts and three in the playoffs that season, doing so despite not adding him until Nov. 16.

Last season, Joseph played 35% of the Bills’ defensive snaps (during his time with the team). Prior to his two rental years in the northeast, Joseph was attached to notable Chargers and Vikings contracts. The veteran run stuffer inked two Vikings deals — the second a four-year, $50.35MM pact — and landed a two-year, $17MM Chargers accord ahead of his age-32 season. Joseph will turn 36 in October, but the Cowboys will see if he can help their effort.

The Cowboys had been adding defensive ends as of late, with Carl Lawson the latest in the team’s effort to cover for Sam Williamsseason-ending injury. The team traded for 2023 Joseph-teammate Phillips last week. The 30-somethings join 2023 first-rounder Mazi Smith and contract-year DT Osa Odighizuwa among Dallas’ interior stoppers. The team has certainly prioritized bulk as of late, with Zimmer presumably concerned about his run defense ahead of his first NFL season since being fired as Minnesota’s HC.

Steelers Place LB Markus Golden On Reserve/Retired List

AUGUST 21: The nine-year veteran made it official Wednesday, turning to Instagram to announce he is indeed done playing. The Steelers have not yet made a notable move to replace Golden, making next week’s waiver frenzy worth monitoring.

AUGUST 9: Markus Golden did not make it too far into his second Steelers contract. Eight days after re-signing, the veteran pass rusher has shifted course. The Steelers placed him on the reserve/retired list Friday.

Producing three seasons of double-digit sacks, Golden operated as a Steelers rotational rusher last season. The former Cardinals and Giants edge player racked up four sacks and 10 QB hits as a Steeler in 2023, but the team will need a different plan behind T.J. Watt and Alex Highsmith now.

The Steelers gave Golden a one-year, $1.32MM deal to play behind their standout OLBs, and he suited up for 16 games. Now, Golden follows Titans guard Saahdiq Charles by reversing course into retirement during camp. Though, Golden logged nine NFL seasons; Charles was going into Year 5. Golden is also 33, having entered the league at 24 out of Missouri.

The 2015 second-round pick will be best remembered for his two Cardinals stints. Two of Golden’s three 10-plus-sack seasons occurred in Arizona — each coming as a Chandler Jones sidekick. Golden produced a 12.5-sack season in 2016, and after an October 2017 ACL tear threw off his career trajectory, he totaled 10 sacks (and a career-high 27 QB hits) as a Giant in 2019. Following a midseason trade back to Arizona in 2020, Golden accumulated 11 sacks for a ’21 Cardinals team that — despite losing J.J. Watt and DeAndre Hopkins to injuries — snapped a lengthy playoff drought.

Golden did not fare too well — at least, given his production — financially, never signing a deal worth more than $10MM. The Giants gave him a one-year, $3.75MM accord in 2019 and slapped a UFA tender on him a year later. He signed a two-year, $9MM deal to stay in Arizona in 2021 and agreed to a short-term extension in 2022. A retooling Cards regime cut him a year later, leading to the Pittsburgh agreement. For his career, Golden registered 51 career sacks and did run his string of short-term contracts past $22MM in career earnings.

The Steelers did not draft any outside linebackers and again have a question regarding production behind Highsmith and Watt. Nick Herbig does remain on the roster after a three-sack season, and the team will expect a bounce-back effort from stalwart D-lineman Cameron Heyward — after an injury-plagued 2023. Still, it would not necessarily surprise to see the Steelers keep looking. They made a late-summer trade for Malik Reed two Augusts ago; a similar move to replace Golden may be necessary for this defense-oriented squad.

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