Broncos Rework WR KJ Hamler’s Contract
KJ Hamler is entering the final year of his rookie contract, one which he and the Broncos hope will involve a clean bill of health for the first time in his career. Tweaks to his deal reflect the injuries which have marred his NFL tenure to date. 
The Broncos have agreed to an adjusted pact with the wideout, as detailed by ESPN’s Field Yates (Twitter link). Hamler’s base salary ($1.58MM) will remain the same, but $417K in incentives have been added, giving him extra earning potential ahead of free agency next March. Protections for the team are present as well, however.
An IR split specific to a particular injury has been included in the new deal, Yates adds. As a result, Hamler’s cap hit will be lowered if he spends time on injured reserve with the particular injury mentioned in the clause. The 23-year-old has battled a number of ailments since being drafted by the Broncos, including ACL, hip and hamstring issues.
As a result, he has played just 23 games across his three years in the NFL, including 10 in the past two seasons. Hamler has made 12 receptions over that span, and his 52.5% career catch percentage, coupled with his availability issues, have left his future with the team in doubt. Denver has Jerry Jeudy and Courtland Sutton at the top of the WR depth chart, as well as returnee Tim Patrick. The Broncos also signed Marquez Callaway in free agency and selected Marvin Mims in the second round of this year’s draft to give themselves protection against further injury issues.
Hamler is currently recovering from a torn pec suffered in March. The Penn State product is expected to be healthy in time for training camp next month, but injuries will no doubt be a talking point ahead of his fourth (and potentially final) season in the Mile High City. He will enter 2023 with a new contract in hand, while the team will have insurance against a repeat of his previous missed time.
Colts Waive Isaiah Rodgers, Rashod Berry
The two Colts to receive indefinite suspensions for violating the NFL’s gambling policy are no longer with the team. Indianapolis waived cornerback Isaiah Rodgers and defensive end Rashod Berry on Thursday.
Both were found to have bet on NFL games; as a result, each player is banned for the entire 2023 season. Rodgers and Berry cannot return to the league without being reinstated, with 2024 representing the earliest reinstatement window.
While Berry only joined the Colts after being added off the Jaguars’ practice squad in January, Rodgers has been a key contributor on the team throughout his career. Indianapolis’ primary kick returner over the past three seasons, Rodgers also started nine games at corner in 2022. The Colts were planning to make Rodgers a key part of their 2023 secondary as well.
“We have made the following roster moves as a consequence of the determination that these players violated the league’s gambling policy,” Colts GM Chris Ballard said. “The integrity of the game is of the utmost importance. As an organization we will continue to educate our players, coaches, and staff on the policies in place and the significant consequences that may occur with violations.”
A 2020 sixth-round pick, Rodgers is believed to have made “hundreds” of wagers; some of those were reportedly bets on Colts games. Rodgers, 25, was tied to a $2.7MM base salary this season. This suspension not only will cost the UMass alum that money; it threatens his career. Rodgers working as a starter for a second straight season would have put him on the radar for a notable free agency payday in 2024 — or possibly a Colts extension — but he is now in NFL limbo.
Unaware of this investigation until recently, the Colts had already made big-picture decisions at cornerback this offseason. They traded Stephon Gilmore to the Cowboys in March and let part-time 2022 starter Brandon Facyson walk in free agency. Facyson, who competed with Rodgers for the boundary job opposite Gilmore during training camp last year, started four games in 2022. He has since rejoined the Raiders.
Although Rodgers is a 5-foot-10 cover man out of the Division I-FCS level, this is a notable loss for Indianapolis. Pro Football Focus ranked Rodgers as the fifth-best cornerback during the 2022 season. This assessment came on just 283 defensive snaps, but Rodgers had shown promise in limited duty. The 170-pound defender intercepted three passes in 2021 and recovered four fumbles last season. He also returned a kick for a score in 2020.
The Colts did use a second-round pick on Kansas State corner Julius Brents, and standout slot defender Kenny Moore remains with the team. Indianapolis also used fifth- and seventh-round picks on corners (Darius Rush, Jaylon Jones) but may need to add a veteran to replace Rodgers.
While the Lions have cut four of the five players on their roster who received gambling suspensions, Rodgers is the most notable player to be cut because of a gambling suspension. Jameson Williams, who received a six-game ban for betting on non-NFL games on team grounds, remains with the Lions. The Titans are not moving on from starting right tackle Nicholas Petit-Frere, who was also handed a six-game suspension. Shaka Toney remains with the Commanders, though he is the only player thus far to receive an indefinite suspension and not be cut.
Both a tight end and defensive end at Ohio State, Berry played in eight games — with the Patriots and Lions — between the 2020 and ’21 seasons. While the Lions connection is notable given their lead role in 2023’s NFL gambling saga, Berry spent much of the 2022 season on the Jags’ practice squad. Detroit waived Berry in May 2022; the NFL investigation indicated Berry, Rodgers and free agent Demetrius Taylor bet on NFL games during the ’22 season.
Panthers Sign DL Taylor Stallworth
The Panthers have added some defensive line depth. Agent Brett Tessler tweeted that defensive tackle Taylor Stallworth has signed a one-year deal with the organization.
Despite going undrafted out of South Carolina in 2018, Stallworth has managed to put together a productive five-year career. The defensive lineman got into 18 games through two seasons with the Saints to begin his career, and he later appeared in 32 games for the Colts between 2020 and 2021.
Stallworth split this past season with the Chiefs and Texans, compiling 10 tackles in seven games. He landed on Houston’s IR back in May, but he was released via injury settlement a few weeks later. In 57 career games (two starts), the 27-year-old has collected 52 tackles, 4.5 sacks, and 14 QB hits. He’s also seen time in four postseason contests.
In Carolina, Stallworth will be reunited with head coach Frank Reich, who spent two years coaching the defensive lineman in Indy. Listed at six-foot-two and 300 pounds, Stallworth could play a role at either defensive tackle or nose tackle for the Panthers. He’ll be competing with the likes of 2020 sixth-round pick Bravvion Roy and 2022 UDFA Marquan McCall for reps behind projected starters Shy Tuttle and Derrick Brown.
Rams, CB Ahkello Witherspoon Agree To Deal
The Rams are set to add a veteran presence to their secondary. Los Angeles is signing Ahkello Witherspoon, as first reported by Jordan Schultz of the Score (Twitter link). The Athletic’s Jourdan Rodrigue adds (via Twitter) that it is a one-year deal. 
The 28-year-old began his career in San Francisco, starting 33 of 47 contests there. His performance with the 49ers eventually led him to Pittsburgh in 2021, where he was a key member of the team’s secondary. Expectations were high heading into the following campaign, but things did not go according to plan.
Witherspoon was limited to just four games played in 2022 due to hamstring injuries. Despite having recently signed a two-year extension in Pittsburgh, he was released last month. That left the former third-rounder in search of a new home, and the Rams could represent an intriguing opportunity for him to rebuild his value.
In an offseason filled with cost-shedding moves, Los Angeles has seen a number of corners depart in one form or another. The Jalen Ramsey trade created a signficant vacancy on the backend, and David Long signed with the Raiders as part of the latter team’s efforts to re-tool their secondary. 2022 Rams contributors Troy Hill and Grant Haley remain unsigned, while special teamer Shaun Jolly was re-upped.
Witherspoon started all four of his Steelers appearances last season, recording one interception and a pair of pass deflections. His coverage statistics in terms of completion percentage and passer rating allowed were the worst of his career, however, which helped inform Pittsburgh’s decision to move on and contributed to the Colorado alum’s wait on the open market. In Los Angeles, he should compete for signficant playing time.
The Rams lack experience at the CB spot heading into 2023, a season in which plenty of expectations will be placed on recent draftees Robert Rochell and Cobie Durant. The team’s only investment at the position in this year’s sizeable draft class was sixth-rounder Tre’Vius Hodges-Tomlinson. At 6-2, Witherspoon will provide not only a veteran presence but also length among the Rams’ cornerbacks contingent.
L.A. ranked top-10 in interceptions last season, but the team struggled as a whole against the pass in their underwhelming Super Bowl defense. Witherspoon will aim to assist their new-look secondary in taking a needed step forward, while remaining healthy and boosting his free agent stock along with way.
Patriots To Extend LB Ja’Whaun Bentley
For a second straight day, the Patriots agreed to terms on an extension with one of their veteran contributors. Linebacker Ja’Whaun Bentley is signing a two-year deal, Ian Rapoport of NFL.com tweets. 
Following DeVante Parker‘s three-year re-up, Bentley will sign a deal that can max out at $18.75MM. The sixth-year defender will collect $9MM fully guaranteed. This is Bentley’s third Patriots contract.
Bentley, 26, has been a regular Pats starter for the past three seasons. The Purdue alum agreed to terms on a two-year, $6MM deal during free agency in 2022. Considering the guarantee here, Bentley will secure a nice payout compared to his previous pact. The new deal will tie Bentley to the Patriots through the 2025 season.
This is an interesting decision from Bentley, who was going into a contract year. The former fifth-round pick could have pursued a more lucrative pact as a 2024 free agent, but this year’s market was not particularly fruitful for off-ball linebackers. Beyond the monster deal given to Tremaine Edmunds ($18MM per year) and the Giants’ Bobby Okereke pact ($10MM AAV), a host of contracts in the $5-7MM-per-year range came to pass. Bentley’s guarantee puts him at the top of that mix of recently signed ILB vets.
Thursday’s agreement also could represent solid value for the Patriots. Pro Football Focus tabbed Bentley as a top-10 off-ball ‘backer in 2022. Last season, Bentley started all 17 Pats games and made a career-high 125 tackles. He added three sacks and six quarterback hits, notching an interception as well. New England keeping its post-Dont’a Hightower linebacking anchor will bring good continuity on a perennially stout defense.
Like Parker’s accord, Bentley’s may create 2023 cap space as well. The Pats had Bentley tied to a $5.1MM cap hit this year. Spreading bonus money out would free up some funds. The Patriots’ Parker agreement will not lead to them standing down re: DeAndre Hopkins. Veteran NFL reporter Mike Giardi tweets that the Bentley extension will indeed give New England more spending power for the immediate future.
The Patriots were relatively quiet with respect to additions at linebacker spot this offseason. Veteran Chris Board was signed, though he is best known for his work on special teams rather than defense. Further depth was added during the draft with Marte Mapu, who has seen time both at LB as well as safety so far. Regardless of how the team chooses to align its options at the second level of the defense, Bentley will be a mainstay there for years to come.
Patriots, DeVante Parker Agree On Extension
Previously attached to a Dolphins-designed extension, DeVante Parker is no longer in a Patriots contract year.
The Patriots are giving the ninth-year wide receiver a three-year deal worth up to $33MM, Ian Rapoport of NFL.com tweets. The contract includes $14MM between guarantees and per-game roster bonuses. No guaranteed money remained on Parker’s previous contract.
Parker’s previous deal — a three-year, $30.5MM pact agreed to in 2019 — was set to expire after the 2023 season. He was only carrying a $6.2MM cap number in his second Patriots campaign. The Dolphins traded Parker to the Patriots last year. In 13 Pats games, the former first-round pick caught 31 passes for 539 yards and three touchdowns.
New England has been busy at wide receiver this offseason, signing JuJu Smith-Schuster to a three-year deal and hosting DeAndre Hopkins on a visit. The Pats made a push reach a deal with Hopkins while he was in Foxborough, but the former All-Pro remains a free agent. New England did join Tennessee in extending an offer to Hopkins, but Wednesday’s development shows the organization has notable plans for Parker as well.
Neither Hopkins nor Parker are known for their speed. Parker, 30, has finished last in Next Gen Stats’ average separation metric in each of the past three seasons. During Parker’s belated 2019 Dolphins breakout, the metric slotted the 6-foot-3 receiver in the bottom five. Parker still averaged 17.4 yards per reception during his first Patriots season. The Louisville product has one 1,000-yard season on his NFL resume — a 1,202-yard 2019 — but has been a starter for most of his career.
Parker profiles as an auxiliary pass catcher on team that now rosters Smith-Schuster and Mike Gesicki. Considering Smith-Schuster’s contract contains $16MM fully guaranteed and checked in at $8.5MM per year, it will be interesting to see if the Pats’ Parker deal outpaces both numbers in terms of base value.
The big-bodied weapon now joins Smith-Schuster in being signed beyond 2023. The Pats have Kendrick Bourne going into a contract year and selected Tyquan Thornton in last year’s second round. Parker went to the Pats in a pick-swap trade, one that sent the receiver and a fifth-rounder to New England and a third-rounder to Miami. Other teams pursued Parker, who wanted to land in Foxborough. The Patriots may be in better position to generate Parker production in 2023, seeing as Bill O’Brien — and not career-long defensive coach Matt Patricia — will be calling plays.
Chargers Sign Round 2 OLB Tuli Tuipulotu, Wrap Draft Class Deals
Playing at a Los Angeles-area high school and then at USC, Tuli Tuipulotu will make a smooth transition to the NFL. The Chargers chose the pass rusher at No. 54 overall. He is now set to start training camp on time.
The AFC’s Los Angeles franchise signed its second-round pick Monday. This completes the Bolts’ latest round of draft class deals. First-rounder Quentin Johnston signed last month. Like Johnston, Tuipulotu joins a position group housing two entrenched veterans.
Joey Bosa is entering his seventh NFL season, and his big-ticket contract remains a top-five pact among edge rushers. The Bolts still have Khalil Mack, a 2022 trade acquisition, as well. But the team played much of last season without Bosa, who has battled a number of injuries as a pro. Tuipulotu brings a proven track record as a college pass rusher. Barring another major injury to one of their starters, the Chargers figure to work in the young player as a rotational option behind Bosa and Mack.
Tuipulotu recorded 13.5 sacks with the Trojans last season, soaring to Pac-12 Defensive Player of the Year acclaim and All-American honors. That sack count led the Pac-12 and ranked third in Division I-FBS; the accomplished edge defender added 22 tackles for loss. Tuipulotu worked as a 28-game starter in college. Given Mack’s status, it is not out of the question the rookie will begin a lengthy NFL first-string run in the not-too-distant future.
Mack is still tied to the contract the Bears gave him upon acquiring him from the Raiders in 2018’s late-summer blockbuster. That six-year extension runs through the 2024 season, but Mack’s cap number — thanks to yet another restructure this offseason — shoots to $38.5MM next year. With no guarantees left on the deal, it is not hard to see the Chargers evaluating Tulipulotu’s rookie year with Mack’s future in mind. For this year, however, the Bolts boast an intriguing setup that should allow for the rookie to develop behind two standouts. The team has not re-signed 2022 cog Kyle Van Noy.
Here is the Chargers’ 2023 draft class:
Round 1, No. 21: Quentin Johnston, WR (TCU) (signed)
Round 2, No. 54: Tuli Tuipulotu, OLB (USC) (signed)
Round 3, No. 85: Daiyan Henley, LB (Washington State) (signed)
Round 4, No. 125: Derius Davis, WR (TCU) (signed)
Round 5, No. 156: Jordan McFadden, G (Clemson) (signed)
Round 6, No. 200: Scott Matlock, DT (Boise State) (signed)
Round 7, No. 239: Max Duggan, QB (TCU) (signed)
Falcons Promote Kyle Smith To Assistant GM, Ryan Pace To Pro Personnel Director
The Falcons have made a pair of internal moves in their front office. Both Kyle Smith and Ryan Pace have received promotions, reports Jonathan Jones of CBS Sports (Twitter link). 
Smith’s position is now assistant general manager, a step up from the role he had upon his arrival in Atlanta in 2021. He worked as the Falcons’ VP of player personnel for the past two years, the same position he held at the time of his Washington departure. Now, he will have a larger voice in Atlanta’s front office, which has been led by GM Terry Fontenot since 2021.
Smith drew interest from other teams before joining Atlanta, so his lateral move in terms of title was seen as a potential stepping stone toward a promotion in short order. The 38-year-old has been viewed as a serious future GM candidate, and this move will bring him closer to that possibility down the road. He will continue supporting Fontenot’s efforts to move the Falcons back into contender status after the team’s recent financial reset.
Pace, meanwhile, will hold the title of director of player personnel moving forward. The ex-Chicago general manager quickly found his next gig by joining the Falcons last winter after being fired by the Bears. Heading to Atlanta allowed Pace, 46, to reunite with Fontenot after the pair worked together in New Orleans before their respective GM hires. The former worked as a senior personnel executive last season.
Smith and Pace will look to use their new, advanced roles to help guide the Falcons to a postseason berth in what should be a wide-open NFC South in 2023. Their success in that endeavor could be a key part of the evaluation of Fontenot moving forward.
NFC Front Office Updates: Vikings, Cowboys, Packers, Lions
The Vikings announced a number of front office adjustments last week, finalizing their staff moving into 2023. Five employees got promotions and another ten were added to the team’s staff. Some of these changes have been noted in previous posts.
Of the five, four promotions four were administrative, analytics, or personnel positions. Formerly the manager of football information systems, Luke Burson was promoted to director of football information systems in the analytics department. Emily Badis was elevated from football administration coordinator to manager of football administration. In personnel, Alex Dale, previously a scouting associate, was promoted to pro scout, and Mitch Johnson-Martin‘s title was updated to player personnel analyst-pro scouting.
As for the new hires, seven of the announcements were new information to the analytics and personnel staffs. In analytics, Anthony Caron was hired to the role of football information systems developer. In personnel, Minnesota brought in Salli Clavelle, who has spent the past five years in the 49ers’ personnel department. She will come on as a pro scout for the Vikings. The team has brought on a new area scout in Steve Sabo, as well. Sabo is a veteran who, last year, stepped down from his role as director of pro personnel of the Falcons. Jack Murphy joins the staff as a BLESTO/college scout. Lastly, the team added three scouting associates in Michelle Mankoff, Shantell Rodgers, and N’Tare Williamson. Rodgers is getting her first official NFL opportunity after spending a week as the team’s Nunn-Wooten Scouting Fellow last August. This will be Williamson’s first NFL job, as well.
Here are a few other front office updates from around the NFC:
- The Cowboys have made two additions to their analytics staff this offseason. After adding John Park as the team’s new director of strategic football operations earlier this month, the analytics staff added Sarah Mallepalle as strategic football analyst, according to Seth Walder of ESPN.
- The Packers handed out two promotions last week, according to Neil Stratton. Previously a pro scouting intern, Daric Whipple has been elevated to scout. Another pro scouting intern, Quandon Christian, also received a promotion, earning the role of pro scout.
- Lastly, the Lions promoted former assistant director of college scouting Brian Hudspeth to director of college scouting. The veteran is entering his 23rd season in the NFL, including six in Detroit. He spent four seasons as a national scout before being promoted to his previous position last year. He takes the position in place of Dave Sears, who took the assistant general manager job in Arizona this January.
Bills Extend HC Sean McDermott, GM Brandon Beane
Two pillars of the Bills’ run of recent success will remain in place for years to come. The team announced on Friday that extensions have been signed by both head coach Sean McDermott and general manager Brandon Beane.
These new deals will run through 2027, the year which will mark one decade since their joint arrival in Buffalo. Both McDermott and Beane had previously signed extensions in 2020, but now their contractual futures will be aligned with one another. NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport tweets that these new contracts had been agreed to “for some time,” but now long-term stability has been ensured well in advance of training camp and another season in which the franchise faces considerable expectations. 
The Bills snapped an 18-year playoff drought during McDermott and Beane’s first season at the helm, and the team has been among the league’s most successful since that point. The selection of Josh Allen as a franchise quarterback has provided sustained performances in the regular season in particular, and only one campaign (Allen’s rookie year in 2018) outside the postseason. Overall, McDermott has posted a 62-35 record with the Bills.
The maturation of Allen (especially after the trade acquisition of wideout Stefon Diggs in 2020) has seen the Bills become one of the league’s elite offenses. Over the past three seasons, the team has ranked in the top five in both total and scoring offense, while generally delivering strong defensive performances as well. Buffalo has ranked in the top six in total defense four times under McDermott, whose first head coaching gig came after defensive coordinator stints with the Eagles and Panthers.
McDermott’s background on that side of the ball will become increasingly important in 2023, since former DC Lezlie Frazier has stepped away from his position, leaving McDermott in place as defensive play-caller. On offense, continued success under Brian Daboll successor Ken Dorsey will be a key goal after the latter led the Bills to a second-place finish in scoring last year.
Overall, this coming season (and those in the short- to intermediate future, given the franchise’s current core) will of course be judged by postseason success. The Bills have advanced to the AFC title game once under the McDermott/Beane regime, coming within 13 seconds of a Super Bowl appearance in 2020. Moves such as the signing of edge rusher Von Miller to a six-year, $120MM deal last offseason show the team’s willingness to commit to a win-now approach through Allen’s prime. They will once again face a plethora of strong competitors in their division and the AFC as a whole, though.
Much remains to be seen regarding McDermott’s and Beane’s ability to remain in Buffalo through the duration of these new pacts, of course. Continued strong showings in the regular season (like the four consecutive double-digit win seasons the team has strung together) will go a long way in ensuring stability on the sidelines and in the front office, however. A breakthrough in the playoffs would only add to the recognition both individuals have received during their tenure so far, and confirm the franchise’s latest investment in them as a sound one.
