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NFL

Cousins: Signing with Vikings 'a lifetime deal'

EAGAN, Minn. — Kirk Cousins not only reset the bar as the highest-paid player in NFL history when he inked a three-year, $84 million contract with the Minnesota Vikings on Thursday, he also set a new precedent for veteran players by signing a fully-guaranteed deal.

A contract of this magnitude — one that also contains another $6 million in incentives that could elevate the total value to $90 million, according to ESPN’s Adam Schefter — was the focus of conversations with Cousins and his agent, Mike McCartney, for the past two and a half years.

While the deal is short term in nature, it carries long-term importance in providing stability for the Vikings at the quarterback position and for the next chapter of Cousins’ career.

  • With the major 2018 NFL offseason QB movement having run its course even before free agency officially began Wednesday, we consider which passers around the league stand to benefit from the initial wave of roster activity. Three stand out in particular.

  • Tyler Eifert is staying in Cincinnati. Plus: Nate Solder to the Giants. Trumaine Johnson to the Jets. Jerick McKinnon to the 49ers. Bill Barnwell evaluates every big move of the offseason.

  • Kirk Cousins is headed to Minnesota. Jimmy Graham to Green Bay. Andrew Norwell to Jacksonville. Here are the best players still on the market and the latest news.

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“As Rick said yesterday, this is a lifetime deal,” Cousins said. “That’s the goal. This is a three-year deal but the expectation from both sides is we raise our kids here and then if everything goes as planned that I’d be here for a long, long time.”

Joined by Vikings owner Mark Wilf, coach Mike Zimmer and general manager Rick Spielman at his introductory news conference, Cousins became the franchise’s next quarterback, a role Minnesota allocated many financial resources toward in free agency. The Vikings had over $50 million in available cap space ahead of when Cousins signed his contract. He carries a $24 million cap hit in 2018, which leaves Minnesota with just over $26 million for the rest of their free agency needs and to structure contract extensions this offseason.

Cousins earned $44 million playing under the franchise tag in each of his past two seasons in Washington and was a rare commodity as a proven, sub-30-year-old quarterback with very little injury history when he hit the open market.

Only two other times have proven veteran quarterbacks become free agents in the salary-cap era: in 2006, when Drew Brees transitioned from the Chargers to the Saints, and again in 2012, when Peyton Manning signed with the Denver Broncos.

But injuries played a role in each of those circumstances. Brees became a free agent months after he suffered a serious shoulder injury. Manning missed the entire 2011 season with a neck injury.

In each of the past three seasons where he threw for more than 4,000 yards, Cousins made every start (49 games, including one playoff appearance). With a proven track record and that kind of durability, the Vikings were all in.

“If you have an opportunity to go out and potentially get a franchise quarterback or a quarterback that’s going to be leading you for years to come,” Spielman said. “He’s right now in the prime of his career. Our history tells us if we hit on a player, we’re going to do everything we can to keep that player here. Especially at that quarterback position. That’s why this was so unique. “The fully guaranteed part, I know it’s the first time, but also when you have an opportunity to get a potential franchise quarterback, you know where the leverage is going. We respected that and I respected that.”

Cousins only visit this week was to Minnesota. After the quarterback landscape began to take shape on Tuesday with three ex-Vikings quarterbacks finding jobs elsewhere between Case Keenum and Denver, Sam Bradford and Arizona and Teddy Bridgewater and the New York Jets, Cousins and McCartney decided against any other visits.

“We had intentions to potentially consider a second visit and, as I said, on that Tuesday, it was a mad scramble for every team to fill that quarterback slot,” McCartney said. “It wasn’t necessary at that point.”

McCartney said Minnesota was “not even close” to the best offer Cousins received, but he would not detail which team chose to offer Cousins more money.

“It’s not easy doing business,” he said. “Sometimes it’s hard to tell teams no, but I have a lot of respect for how everybody handled it, and we’re just thrilled to have Kirk here in Minnesota.”

For now, Cousins will hold the title as the league’s highest paid player with an average salary of $28 million a year. There’s the assumption that he’ll be passed up on that figure when Aaron Rodgers and Matt Ryan ink their extensions in the near future. Understanding the importance of his role as a pioneer with this historic deal, one sets a new precedent for other NFL players to sign similar contracts, isn’t lost on Cousins. But he echoed the need for others to follow suit.

“There’s nothing I can pave unless people come after me,” Cousins said. “I guess history will probably write that more than right now. We’ll have to look back and see how this league goes from here.”

NFL

Bills sign QB McCarron to two-year contract

The Buffalo Bills have signed quarterback AJ McCarron to a two-year deal, the team announced Wednesday.

McCarron joins 2017 fifth-round pick Nathan Peterman on the Bills’ QB depth chart after Buffalo’s trade of Tyrod Taylor to the Cleveland Browns was made official Wednesday.

  • We’re keeping track of every notable signing throughout March right here, as the new league year begins Wednesday.

  • If wide receiver Anquan Boldin wants to resume his playing career, his team options opened up Wednesday after the Bills released him from the retired list.

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McCarron, 27, was a free agent after winning a grievance filed against the Cincinnati Bengals last year to determine whether he had been incorrectly put on the non-football injury list as a rookie. He not only won his grievance for the incorrect designation, but he also was owed back pay for the time spent on the list in 2014.

McCarron played in five regular-season games in the 2015 season and started three, completing 66.4 percent of his passes for 854 yards and six touchdowns. He also started an AFC wild-card playoff game that season, completing 56.1 percent of his passes for one touchdown and one interception in an eventual a loss to the Pittsburgh Steelers.

AJ McCarron will join Nathan Peterman on the Bills’ QB depth chart, but the signing is unlikely to change the team’s apparent plans to draft a quarterback next month. Photo by Joe Robbins/Getty Image

McCarron has contended several times that he wants his chance to start somewhere, and it almost happened when the Browns attempted to send a second- and third-round pick to the Bengals in the fall. However, the paperwork didn’t go through before the trade deadline and McCarron remained with Cincinnati for the 2017 season.

McCarron’s signing comes after several veteran quarterbacks had found new teams in free agency this week, leaving Buffalo as perhaps the only remaining team that could offer him a chance to start this season.

The signing is unlikely to change the Bills’ apparent plans to draft a quarterback next month. Buffalo owns the Nos. 12 and 21 overall picks, as well as two selections in each of the second and third rounds. The Bills could package those picks to trade up for one of the draft’s top quarterbacks.

ESPN’s Katherine Terrell contributed to this report.

NFL

Source: Jets to sign top free-agent CB Johnson

The New York Jets have landed arguably the top cornerback on the free-agent market, with a league source telling ESPN’s Adam Schefter the team is expected to sign former Los Angeles Rams “franchise” player Trumaine Johnson.

The contract terms weren’t immediately available. Johnson intends to sign his deal after 4 p.m. Wednesday, when the league year begins, according to the source.

  • Sam Bradford to Arizona. Kirk Cousins to Minnesota. Sammy Watkins to Kansas City. Allen Robinson to Chicago. Bill Barnwell evaluates every big move of the offseason.

  • Kirk Cousins is headed to Minnesota. Jimmy Graham to Green Bay. Andrew Norwell to Jacksonville. Here are the best players still on the market and the latest news.

  • The New York Jets have agreed to re-sign quarterback Josh McCown, according to his agent. The team also is in talks with quarterback Teddy Bridgewater, a source told ESPN.

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The addition of Johnson was an important one for the Jets, whose system is predicated on man-to-man coverage by the corners. Before landing Johnson, they had only one starting-caliber corner under contract, Buster Skrine, who is best suited to the No. 3 role.

The Jets also have been in talks with Morris Claiborne, who started 15 games last season. There’s still a chance they could re-sign Claiborne, which would fortify a secondary that allowed 30 touchdown passes last season.

Johnson posted a farewell to the Rams on his Instagram account Monday. He will be reunited with secondary coach Dennard Wilson, who was his position coach with the Rams through 2016.

Johnson, 28, spent the past two years as the Rams’ primary cornerback and played under the franchise tag in both those seasons, his salary jumping to $16.74 million in 2017. He was arguably the best corner available on the free-agent market this offseason, mainly because of his size, his ability to match up with elite receivers and his track record for staying healthy.

Among 86 cornerbacks with at least 325 coverage snaps, Pro Football Focus had Johnson ranked 35th in opponents’ completion percentage (57.3) and 36th in opponents’ passer rating (79.8) when targeted. He allowed 1.33 yards per coverage snap, which put him within the bottom 20 percent of qualified cornerbacks.

But Johnson also spent a lot of time shadowing the likes of Pierre Garcon, Dez Bryant, Marqise Lee, Larry Fitzgerald, DeAndre Hopkins, Michael Thomas and Alshon Jeffery in 2017. Those seven combined to catch only 57.7 percent of their targets when Johnson was responsible for covering them, nearly 8 percentage points below the NFL average, according to numbers compiled by ESPN.

A third-round pick out of Montana in 2012, Johnson has 18 interceptions and 42 pass breakups over the past six seasons, playing in 85 of a potential 96 regular-season games. During that time, he has proved capable of playing on both sides of the field.

ESPN’s Alden Gonzalez contributed to this report.

NFL

Longtime Saints RT Strief calls it a career

METAIRIE, La. — Zach Strief operated in the shadows for most of his 12-year career with the New Orleans Saints. But the 34-year-old right tackle got the grand send-off he deserved when he officially announced his retirement Monday at the team’s practice facility.

Past and present teammates including Drew Brees, Steve Gleason, Deuce McAllister, Mark Ingram and Cameron Jordan were in attendance, as well as team owner Gayle Benson, general manager Mickey Loomis, coach Sean Payton, and Strief’s parents, wife and newborn son.

“My career here has exceeded my wildest imagination. I didn’t think this was going to last through my first August, never mind 12 years,” said Strief, who was drafted in the seventh round out of Northwestern in 2006 and became a full-time starter five years later — finishing with 98 career starts, including the playoffs.

Zach Strief said his 12-year career with the Saints was beyond his “wildest imagination.” Stephen Lew/Icon Sportswire

Strief lasted less than five minutes into his opening statement before he started choking up while talking about longtime strength and conditioning coach Dan Dalrymple. Then the tears picked up as he directly addressed Payton, Loomis and Brees.

“You took a chance on me when no one else would. Your faith in me has changed my life forever. … Thank you from the bottom of my heart,” Strief said to Payton.

He called Brees “the single greatest motivation for me as a player” while talking about his tireless work ethic.

“My greatest drive as a player was not to let you down,” Strief told Brees. “Being a small part of your Hall of Fame career has been my greatest honor as a player.”

Brees also praised Strief in an Instagram post:

Strief’s retirement wasn’t a surprise, since he tore his ACL and MCL last year. He has also repeatedly expressed his confidence (and relief) that first-round draft pick Ryan Ramczyk is ready to take over his job.

“I knew if I was at home watching TV and Drew was getting hit and I felt like I could’ve helped, I wouldn’t have been able to live with myself,” Strief said. “It’s much easier knowing that there’s someone there that’s going to play at a high level for him. So this is all Ryan Ramczyk’s fault.”

Strief retires with one year and $4 million in salary and bonuses left on his contract.

He also spent time Monday praising former Saints right tackle Jon Stinchcomb for being a mentor and former Northwestern coach Randy Walker, who recommended Strief to Payton in 2006 just two months before Walker’s unexpected death.

Strief wasn’t on the Saints’ draft board until Walker insisted that he would be a 10-year player in the NFL. Strief has talked before about how much it meant to him to prove his coach right.

“It would be easy to say he ‘overachieved’ in his career. But I would say with his strength, his size, his experience and all of those things, he became one of the best right tackles in our game over the past five years. And consistent. You knew what you were getting,” said Payton, who credited Strief for perfecting his craft and endearing himself to his teammates among many other positive traits. “He became an expert at that position.”

Strief, who was always a media darling in New Orleans, also injected plenty of humor into the 45-minute event, including self-deprecating comments about his unimpressive vertical and 40-yard dash times, plugs for the new brewery he co-owns, and lumping in his failed opportunity at a touchdown pass with his other most lasting memories.

Strief said he felt “indebted” to Payton and Loomis for giving him the opportunity. He added that he never seriously considered leaving for any other teams when he had the chance — even before he married a New Orleans native.

Strief arrived in New Orleans months after Hurricane Katrina and got to be part of the rebirth of both the city and the team, which won its first Super Bowl in the 2009 season.

“What’s been special is I’ve gotten to be a part of not only this organization kind of growing to where it is today, but also this city,” Strief said. “So it’s very hard not to become attached to that.”

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“If you think about it, I've never held a job in my life. I went from being an NFL player to a coach to a broadcaster. I haven't worked a day in my life.”
-John Madden


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