Author: nfltalk

  • Where does Chicago stand at tight end?

    Where does Chicago stand at tight end?

    The 2023 offseason is officially in full swing, and the Chicago Bears are gearing up for what should be one of the busiest springs in recent memory.

    Armed with $98.6 million in cap space, general manager Ryan Poles and head coach Matt Eberflus will have plenty of opportunities to improve the team roster in free agency, while also needing to make key decisions on which players they should let walk.

    Here at Bears Wire, we’re going position by position to break down where Chicago stands entering the 2023 offseason. Next up is tight end, a position that needs some depth behind Cole Kmet.

    Who’s on the roster?

    Michael Reaves/Getty Images

    Cole Kmet

    Jake Tonges

    Chase Allen

    Kmet is coming off a breakout season with the Bears, despite it being a down year in the passing game. Kmet led the Bears in receptions (50), receiving yards (544) and touchdowns (7) — also a career high. More than that, he proved to be the most reliable pass catcher for quarterback Justin Fields. While Kmet certainly needs to improve as a blocker, he’s proven to be a valuable asset for Luke Getsy’s offense. And he’s someone who’s proven to be a security blanket of sorts for Fields. Now, Kmet is heading into a contract year, where he’s one of three members from the 2020 draft class expected to earn contract extensions.

    The other tight ends on the roster are last year’s undrafted rookies, Tonges and Allen, who spent most of the 2022 season on the practice squad. Tonges appeared in four games, where he saw limited action, while Allen appeared in one game against the Bills. Tonges and Allen should provide depth and serve as training camp bodies. But they’re not expected to impact contributors in 2023.

    Who’s slated to hit free agency?

    Michael Reaves/Getty Images

    While Kmet had an impressive season, there was a significant drop-off from him to backs Griffin and Wesco. Griffin was signed in free agency with the expectation that he would be Kmet’s primary backup. Unfortunately, Griffin failed to get…

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  • Mario Cristobal hits reset button with new coordinators as he approaches significant Year 2 at Miami

    Mario Cristobal hits reset button with new coordinators as he approaches significant Year 2 at Miami

    Upon his introduction as Miami’s new coach, former Hurricanes player, assistant and hometown favorite Mario Cristobal said he coudn’t wait to “compete for championships.” The Hurricanes flopped in his debut, however, finishing 5-7 for the worst season since 2007. Hoping for a Year 2 leap like he had at Oregon, Cristobal is pressing the reset button on his tenure with a pair of pivotal coordinator hires. 

    Defensive coordinator Lance Guidry arrives from Marshall to replace Kevin Steele, who left for the same job with Alabama. Houston offensive coordinator Shannon Dawson is reportedly not far behind after the Hurricanes moved on from Josh Gattis. For Cristobal to surpass recent standards in Coral Gables, the three of them will need to mesh quickly. Not since the arrival of Howard Schnellenberger in 1979 has a second-year ‘Canes coach failed to reach at least seven wins. (Schnellenberger’s predecessor, Lou Saban, went 6-5 in his second and last year in 1978.) 

    If Cristobal can’t reach that modest threshold, then it will raise serious questions over whether competing for championships is truly in the cards for the program under his direction.

    Cristobal led Oregon to a Pac-12 championship and Rose Bowl victory with a final record of 12-2 in his second season in Eugene. He is also precisely 67-67 over 12 seasons at three different jobs, but that 2019 effort stands out as a beacon of hope on his résumé that perhaps good things are ahead for Miami. 

    New identity on offense?

    A Broyles Award winner in 2021 as Michigan’s offensive coordinator, Gattis guided the Wolverines to a Big Ten championship and College Football Playoff appearance. Those credentials seemingly made him a rockstar hire for Cristobal, but Miami’s offense flopped in…

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  • Steelers legend Jerome Bettis celebrates 51st birthday: 5 fast facts about Hall of Fame RB known as ‘The Bus’

    Steelers legend Jerome Bettis celebrates 51st birthday: 5 fast facts about Hall of Fame RB known as ‘The Bus’

    It’s been 17 years since Jerome Bettis retired at the podium after helping the Steelers win Super Bowl XL. Since then, the player known affectionately as “The Bus” has been inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame as well as the Steelers Hall of Honor. Bettis also hosts a show in Pittsburgh, where he has continued to work with his foundation. 

    The 10th overall pick in the 1993 NFL Draft, Bettis entered the league as a fullback before quickly making the transition to running back. He had an extremely rare combination of size (5-foot-11 and about 250 pounds), agility and speed that allowed him to rush for 13,662 yards and 91 touchdowns during his 13-year career. Bettis’ physicality and energetic personality made him an instant fan favorite in Pittsburgh, where he helped the franchise win five division titles as well as the franchise’s fifth Lombardi Trophy. 

    As he celebrates his 51st birthday, here are five fast facts about Bettis’ NFL career. 

    Rookie of the Year 

    Bettis overcame a slow start to capture Offensive Rookie of the Year honors during the 1993 season. Bettis won the award despite making just one start in the season’s first five weeks. He got the ball rolling with a 102-yard performance against the Saints in Week 5. Bettis would record six more 100-yard rushing performances that season that included a career-high 212 yards in New Orleans in Week 15. Bettis also tallied the longest run of his career in that game, a 72-yard touchdown. Ironically, Bettis’ first-career touchdown was a 29-yard run against the Steelers in Week 2. 

    Bettis finished the season with 1,429 yards, the second-highest total in the NFL behind Emmitt Smith, who won league and Super Bowl MVP honors that season. 

    Almost an Oiler 

    The Rams agreed to trade Bettis following his third season in Los Angeles. When looking for his next team, Bettis narrowed his choices down to either the Oilers or the…

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  • NFL insider believes Lamar Jackson could end up with Patriots division rival

    NFL insider believes Lamar Jackson could end up with Patriots division rival

    One NFL insider is predicting that Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson may end up with a New England Patriots AFC East division rival. The Miami Dolphins already have Tua Tagovailoa, and the Buffalo Bills have Josh Allen.

    That leaves the New York Jets.

    NBC Sports’ Peter King said he believes the New York Jets will consider making a move for Lamar Jackson if they are unable to land Aaron Rodgers.

    Jackson is coming off a 2022 season that saw him play in 12 games. He recorded 2,242 passing yards, 17 touchdowns, and seven interceptions. Injury issues bothered him throughout the course of last season, but he was still able to remain productive for the majority of the year.

    Jackson has already accomplished several things in his five-year career. He has been named to two Pro Bowls and was the 2019 NFL MVP. He was also named to an Associated Press All-Pro First-Team in 2019.

    King considers Jackson a logical option for the Jets, as the organization looks for stability at the quarterback position.

    “Obviously, anybody would want Lamar Jackson to be the quarterback of the team,” said King, during an appearance on the Rich Eisen Show. “But how much guaranteed money are you willing to give a player who in the last two years has missed 34 percent of the snaps because of injury? It’s easy to sit here and say, ‘Get Lamar. Sign Lamar. Pay Lamar.’ Of course. But what does that mean exactly?

    “So to me, I think the Jets are going to have a very tough decision on their hands, and I think they will go after Rodgers if he does play. And if they don’t get him, I think they will at least put their sniffers out and seriously consider Lamar Jackson.”

    The Jets have the potential to be an explosive offense, as rookie wide receiver Garrett Wilson undoubtedly gives them a major weapon at the position.

    However, quarterback was an issue for them last season, as Zach Wilson was inconsistent. Jackson could give the Jets that explosive quarterback needed to take them to the top of…

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  • Michigan football, LBs coach George Helow reportedly parting ways

    Michigan football, LBs coach George Helow reportedly parting ways

    Michigan football and linebackers coach George Helow have mutually agreed to part ways, according to Fox Sports college football reporter Bruce Feldman.

    A message seeking comment from the U-M football spokesperson has not yet been returned.

    Last week, U-M brought back former assistant coach Chris Partridge to the staff in an undisclosed role. Partridge coached linebackers in Ann Arbor from 2016-17.

    Helow, 26, was hired by U-M before the 2021 season from Maryland, where he was special teams coordinator and inside linebackers coach. Since then, the Michigan defense was ranked in the top five in points allowed in 2021 and last season. The Wolverines won the Big Ten and reached the College Football Playoff both years.

    Last month, Michigan fired co-offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach Matt Weiss days after he was placed on administrative leave while being investigated for possible computer crimes that took place at Schembechler Hall. The new quarterbacks coach is Kirk Campbell, who served as an off-field analyst for U-M last season.

    This article originally appeared on Detroit Free Press: Michigan football, LBs coach George Helow reportedly parting ways

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  • Agent’s Take: Aaron Rodgers, Joe Mixon among 15 players who could be on new teams via trade, as cap casualty

    Agent’s Take: Aaron Rodgers, Joe Mixon among 15 players who could be on new teams via trade, as cap casualty

    An offseason roster purge is an annual occurrence in the NFL. Players are often released when salaries aren’t deemed to match production.

    Trades can occur for a variety of reasons. Sometimes, a Pro Bowl-caliber player wants a change of scenery. A new regime might look to move high-priced veterans who aren’t a good scheme fit.

    A majority of the time when a player is traded, released or retires, there is a residual salary cap charge. This cap charge for a player who is no longer on a team’s roster is commonly referred to as dead money. It exists because the remaining proration of the salary components that are treated like signing bonus immediately accelerate into his team’s current salary cap with a trade, release or retirement. Dead money is typically a sunk cost where money isn’t owed to a player. Only if there are salary guarantees when a player is released will there be a payment associated with dead money.

    There are two major exceptions to this general rule of bonus proration accelerating: 

    1. Only the current year’s proration counts toward the salary cap with transactions occurring after June 1. The bonus proration in future contract years is delayed until the next league year beginning in the following March.

    2. A team can also release two players each league year prior to June 1 (known as a post-June 1 designation) that will be treated under the cap as if they were released after June 1. With a post-June 1 designation, a team is required to carry the player’s full cap number until June 2 even though he is no longer a part of the roster. The player’s salary comes off the books at that time unless it is guaranteed.

    Here’s a look at 15 noteworthy players who could be in different uniforms next season because of a trade or as salary cap casualties.

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  • No. 10 Tennessee tops No. 1 Alabama, handing Crimson Tide first SEC loss and snapping two-game slide

    No. 10 Tennessee tops No. 1 Alabama, handing Crimson Tide first SEC loss and snapping two-game slide

    USATSI

    No. 1 Alabama spent just two days atop the AP Top 25 college basketball rankings before taking a loss in the very next game, falling 68-59 at No. 10 Tennessee on Wednesday night in Knoxville. The loss drops Alabama to 22-4 overall, but more importantly marks the team’s first SEC loss of the 2022-23 season.  

    While the win sours what has been a celebration of the Crimson Tide’s highest ranking in 20 years, the game also marks an impressive response from Tennessee after losing two straight games in buzzer-beating fashion. Even more notable is how the Vols dug deep despite being shorthanded. With senior Josiah Jordan-James and freshman forward Julian Phillips unavailable due to injury, Tennessee had just an eight-player rotation to battle a deep. talented and athletic Alabama side. But Tennessee relied on its elite defense to carry it, holding Alabama to just 35.4% shooting from the field. 

    The Vols established an edge early with their defense, forcing Alabama into turnovers and then turning those errors into points. Of Tennessee’s 29 points at the half of a tied game, 22 came off turnovers. The Crimson Tide tightened up after halftime and finished with 19 turnovers, but they proved insurmountable when coupled with the poor shooting effort. 

    For a rivalry between fanbases that extends through generations and recently included an iconic Tennessee win on the football field, there was already going to be plenty of jubilation for a home win against the hated Tide. When you factor in the buzzer-beater…

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  • Patriots waive WR Kristian Wilkerson, two others

    Patriots waive WR Kristian Wilkerson, two others

    Patriots waive WR Kristian Wilkerson, two others originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

    The New England Patriots parted ways with three players on Wednesday.

    Wide receiver Kristian Wilkerson, kicker Quinn Nordin, and defensive back Tae Hayes were waived, the team announced in a press release.

    Perry’s Mailbag: How utilizing empty sets under O’Brien can elevate Jones

    Wilkerson originally signed to the Patriots practice squad in 2020. The 27-year-old played one game in 2020, three in 2021, and spent the entire 2022 season on injured reserve. He caught four passes for 42 yards with two touchdowns vs. the Jacksonville Jaguars on Jan. 2, 2023.

    Nordin signed with New England as a rookie free agent out of Michigan before the 2021 season. He made the 53-man roster but was inactive for the season opener and did not appear in a regular-season game. He finished the year on injured reserve and signed a futures contract in 2022, but spent the season on the reserve/non-football injury list.

    Hayes signed to the Patriots practice squad on Dec. 27 and joined the 53-man roster on Dec. 31. The 25-year-old played the final two games of the 2022 season for New England and tallied three tackles. He previously spent time with the Carolina Panthers, Jaguars, Miami Dolphins, Minnesota Vikings, and Arizona Cardinals.

    The Patriots’ cuts come one month ahead of the start of the new NFL league year. The free-agent and trade markets open March 15.

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