The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Nobody comes for free in NFL signing period that begins today

- By Barry Wilner

The term in use these days is “legal tampering.” Doesn’t seem sensible, and some might call it the “cheating period” instead.

Regardless, today, two days before the NFL’S 2021 business year begins, the 32 teams and agents for the players will be making deals. Lots of deals, even if they aren’t official until Wednesday.

“I hate calling it the legal tampering period because that just seems like that’s a debacle of the English language,” Rams general manager Les Snead says. “Legal tampering, and tampering is illegal? But we’ll have to adjust based on that because there’s no guarantee that you can re-sign (players).”

Even at a time when the salary cap has plummeted by $16 million because of lost revenues during the Covid19-impacted 2020 season, lots of money will be going to the most prized players.

That likely will include Tampa Bay pass-rusher Shaq Barrett; Green Bay center Corey Linsley; Detroit WR Kenny Golladay; San Francisco tackle Trent Williams; and Chargers TE Hunter Henry. No superstars about to break the bank, but plenty of proven talent to help teams before turning attention to next month’s draft.

Of course, free agency always is a buyer-beware situation. “We want talented players; but we want a good cohesive unit and guys who fit well together,” Dolphins coach Brian Flores says. “That’s not always 11 stars. It’s almost never that way.

“So we’ve scoured free agency, the draft, and I think we have a pretty good feel for the types of guys we are looking for from a skill set standpoint, but also from a locker room standpoint.”

Nine players have been given franchise tags: receivers Chris Godwin (Tampa Bay) and Allen Robinson (Chicago); offensive linemen Taylor Moton (Carolina), Cam Robinson ( Jacksonvil­le) and All-pro Brandon Scherff (Washington); safeties Marcus Maye (New York Jets), Marcus Williams (New Orleans) and Justin Simmons (Denver); and defensive tackle Leonard Williams (New York Giants).

Dallas locked up quarterbac­k Dak Prescott with a four-year deal, and J.J. Watt, released this offseason by Houston, signed with Arizona. Those were the biggest names potentiall­y available.

Snead’s Rams didn’t use the tag, which could mean losing solid safety John Johnson, revitalize­d linebacker Leonard Floyd or center Austin Blythe.

“Strategica­lly, probably philosophi­cally, you’d love to be able to not utilize the franchise tag and work to get something done long-term,” Snead says, “just because usually when there’s a franchise tag used, the history of it says it’s very hard to get something done longer term off of that tag.”

Thus far, the Super Bowl champion Buccaneers have played the free agency game best this month. It helps when your high-priced quarterbac­k is willing to redo his deal to open up spending room, something Tom Brady did frequently in New England, then again last week in Tampa Bay. Voila: Lavonte David, a key linebacker, was re-signed, and several other key guys in the title run could be back.

Another star, Panthers running back Christian Mccaffrey, followed Brady’s lead in reworking his contract.

Players in a strong position to land a nice payday include Saints defensive end Trey Hendrickso­n; Steelers wideout Juju Smith-schuster and edge-rusher Bud Dupree; Ravens edge-rusher Yannick Ngakoue and linebacker Matthew Judon; Patriots guard Joe Thuney; Titans tight end Jonnu Smith; Bengals defensive end Carl Lawson; Chargers linebacker Melvin Ingram; and Bucs running back Leonard Fournette.

And yes, there are quarterbac­ks on the market, some of whom could wind up starting in new locales. Will Jameis Winston leave New Orleans now that Drew Brees is retiring? Teddy Bridgewate­r seems destined for somewhere other than Carolina in 2021, though he still belongs to the Panthers. The same could be true with the Jets’ Sam Darnold. Free agent Jacoby Brissett will be leaving Indianapol­is, and Ryan Fitzpatric­k possibly will find yet another team to help as a mentor/backup/starter. Same thing for Alex Smith.

Mitchell Trubisky is out there. So are Andy Dalton and Joe Flacco.

Long-term deals will occur, but with a reduced salary cap this year and the promise of rising caps through the rest of the decade after the NFL’S new broadcasti­ng contracts kick in, a more than usual number of one-year deals are possible.

Packers keep Jones

Pro Bowl RB Aaron Jones agreed to a new deal with Green Bay and won’t be exploring free agency. Drew Rosenhaus, Jones’ agent, said his client agreed on a four-year deal worth $48 million. Jones, 26, rushed for 1,104 yards and nine TDS and also caught 47 passes for 355 yards and two TDS last season.

 ?? STEVE LUCIANO/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Tampa Bay Buccaneers pass-rusher Shaq Barrett is likely to be among the most prized free agents during this signing period.
STEVE LUCIANO/ASSOCIATED PRESS Tampa Bay Buccaneers pass-rusher Shaq Barrett is likely to be among the most prized free agents during this signing period.
 ?? JEFF ROBERSON/AP ?? The Carolina Panthers restructur­ed the contracts of running back Christian Mccaffrey and linebacker Shaq Thompson, freeing up more than $11 million.
JEFF ROBERSON/AP The Carolina Panthers restructur­ed the contracts of running back Christian Mccaffrey and linebacker Shaq Thompson, freeing up more than $11 million.

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