The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

Carousel will spin soon, and not just for quarterbac­ks

- By BARRY WILNER AP Pro Football Writer

The Matthew StaffordJa­red Goff trade not only has whet fans’ appetites for big deals, it’s caused a social media frenzy about which quarterbac­ks are headed elsewhere.

That could happen with the likes of Carson Wentz, Jimmy Garoppolo, Deshaun Watson and Cam Newton. And on a slightly less publicized level with Teddy Bridgewate­r, Jameis Winston, Sam Darnold and Mitchell Trubisky.

But before anyone gets the idea that half of the NFL’s starting signal-callers from 2020 will be employed by new teams in 2021, well, know that carousel is not spinning out of control.

Why not? Money.

More specifical­ly, contract dollars. Dead money. Salary-cap repercussi­ons.

The COVID-19 pandemic not only reduced revenues for the NFL across the board, it also has forced a lower salary cap for 2021. That figure is undetermin­ed, though it won’t be less than $175 million and probably will be in the $180 million-$185 million range.

So any cap hits for trades involving QBs with megacontra­cts will be built as much on finances as football skills. Sure, plenty of teams with questionab­le quarterbac­king would love to add a Watson or Wentz — and even inquire about the availabili­ty of the likes of David Carr or Matt Ryan. But the price tag is a paramount considerat­ion.

There are also the tricky contract dynamics for Dak Prescott and Ben Roethlisbe­rger. Prescott played under the franchise tag cost of $31.4 million but was injured in the Cowboys’ fifth

game. Dallas is adamant about keeping Prescott, preferably with a long-term deal.

“One of the things that we’re going to have to really see where we are, and it will affect everybody, all 32 (NFL teams), and it will affect our team,” Cowboys executive vice president Stephen Jones said, “is what the consequenc­es of the virus have had on our cap situation going forward, and where is that salary cap going to be and what kind of cap are we going to manage into. So all those things will play a role into players that we keep that are under contract, where we can sign — obviously Dak being at the top of that list — and then going from there.”

Roethlisbe­rger has indicated a willingnes­s to redo his contract with Pittsburgh for what likely will be his final season. He’s set for a cap hit of $41 million, and that won’t happen.

There probably are fewer teams with long-term set signal-callers than those in flux. For sure, the Patriots, Jets, Texans, Colts and Steelers in the AFC have uncertaint­y. Philadelph­ia, Washington, Chicago, New Orleans, Carolina and San Francisco in the NFC could be making significan­t changes.

Plus, Urban Meyer is sold on Trevor Lawrence as the first overall draft pick for the Jacksonvil­le Jaguars. There are a handful of quarterbac­ks in this draft who also could wind up as starters next season.

“Who we pick at that quarterbac­k spot, that’s going to be one of the most important decisions I’ve made in my lifetime, along with the partnershi­p of our owner and general manager,” Meyer said. “I see some elite quarterbac­ks out there right now.”

The free agent market doesn’t have those, unless

Prescott lands there. The strength in free agency is on defense, from the line to the secondary.

Indeed, two of the keys to Tampa Bay’s championsh­ip, linebacker­s Shaq Barrett and Lavonte David, will be available if the Bucs don’t re-up them before next month.

Bucs coach Bruce Arians expects them back, as well as receiver Chris Godwin and the three additions Tom Brady recruited: Rob Gronkowski, Antonio Brown and Leonard Fournette.

“I’m very, very confident,” Arians said. “I have all the trust in the world in (GM) Jason (Licht) and what he would do. These guys, they have a bond. There will be dollars involved. But I think that this group is so, so close that sometimes dollars don’t matter. But we’re going to do everything we can to get the dollars right, too, because they earned it.”

 ?? ERIC CHRISTIAN SMITH - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Houston Texans quarterbac­k Deshaun Watson walks off the field before an NFL football game against the Tennessee Titans Sunday, Jan. 3, 2021, in Houston.
ERIC CHRISTIAN SMITH - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Houston Texans quarterbac­k Deshaun Watson walks off the field before an NFL football game against the Tennessee Titans Sunday, Jan. 3, 2021, in Houston.

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