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NFL

32 NFL teams, 32 big offseason questions: Intel on what each team will do this spring

Feb 15, 2024, 06:30 AM ET

Now that the 2023 NFL season is behind us and the 2024 offseason has begun, every team has a big question to face.

Can the Bengals find a way to keep Tee Higgins? How will the Broncos, Bears, Commanders, Falcons, Giants and Vikings address their quarterback conundrums? And which teams could surprise the league and release veterans to help get under the salary cap?

We asked our NFL Nation reporters to take a closer look at the biggest question each team will face this offseason and give their insight on what could happen over the next few months.

Jump to:
ARI | ATL | BAL | BUF | CAR | CHI | CIN
CLE | DAL | DEN | DET | GB | HOU | IND
JAX | KC | LAC | LAR | LV | MIA | MIN
NE | NO | NYG | NYJ | PHI | PIT | SF
SEA | TB | TEN | WSH

AFC EAST

How will the Bills keep their roster competitive and try to compete with the Chiefs despite a tough cap situation?

The challenge for the Bills this offseason is continuing to build a roster that can compete in a tough division and conference, while not pushing too much money down the road or creating future issues. While the official cap number for 2024 hasn’t come out yet, the Bills are estimated to be $51.8 million over, according to Roster Management System, with big contracts that could be restructured and some tough decisions to be made.

There are currently a variety of key contributors set to leave in free agency, including defensive end Leonard Floyd and defensive tackle DaQuan Jones. This is a team that is going to be trying yet again to get past the Chiefs in the postseason, and building the roster amid their cap concerns will be quite the task. — Alaina Getzenberg


Will the Dolphins extend quarterback Tua Tagovailoa’s contract?

The NFL’s 2023 passing yards leader says he expects a deal to get done, and general manager Chris Grier said the goal is to have Tagovailoa playing with the Dolphins at a high level for a long time. But the Dolphins are currently $56.7 million over the projected salary cap entering the final year of his rookie contract and have several critical players set to be free agents.

Tagovailoa’s performance against Miami’s better opponents this season was suboptimal, and his physical limitations were apparent late in the season. But he is capable of running the Dolphins’ offense with machine-like precision, and his accuracy and anticipation are among the best in the league. We will see exactly how much the Dolphins value those qualities. — Marcel Louis-Jacques


Editor’s Picks

2 Related

What position will the Patriots target with the No. 3 pick?

In a letter to season-ticket holders, owner Robert Kraft and team president Jonathan Kraft called 2024 the “most anticipated NFL draft of our [31-year] tenure” — mainly because they have never had a pick

Can the Jets repair their broken offense enough to save coach Robert Saleh’s job?

A healthy quarterback Aaron Rodgers is a big step in the right direction, but the offensive line needs an overhaul. They likely need two tackles and a guard, so look for them to sign at least one starter in free agency. They can draft a tackle with the No. 10 pick, perhaps Penn State’s Olumuyiwa Fashanu or Oregon State’s Taliese Fuaga.

The Jets also need a WR2, who could come in free agency or via trade. They have two young stars in running back Breece Hall and wide receiver Garrett Wilson. If they fail to build around them and take a major leap from last season — they ranked 31st in total yards — Saleh will likely be out of a job. — Rich Cimini

AFC NORTH

How much more change will the Ravens’ defense undergo?

The Ravens, who led the NFL in fewest points allowed, have a new defensive coordinator in Zachary Orr after Mike Macdonald became the Seahawks’ coach. Baltimore also lost defensive line coach Anthony Weaver (new Dolphins defensive coordinator) and defensive backs coach Dennard Wilson (new Titans D-coordinator). Now, the Ravens have to figure out how much of their defensive personnel they can retain. There are 13 unrestricted free agents on the Baltimore defense, including two Pro Bowl players (defensive tackle Justin Madubuike and linebacker Patrick Queen) and their two most productive edge rushers (Jadeveon Clowney and Kyle Van Noy). — Jamison Hensley


What’s going to happen with wide receiver Tee Higgins?

Since drafting Ja’Marr Chase in 2021, the Bengals have boasted one of the league’s best receiver tandems. That future is in jeopardy, however, with Higgins set to enter free agency. How the Bengals approach his employment status — franchise tag, long-term deal, no action — will shape the future of a Cincinnati franchise that has one of the few quarterbacks (Joe Burrow) who can go toe-to-toe with Patrick Mahomes and Kansas City. Several other teams should be keeping tabs on this situation. If Higgins is available via free agency or trade, he could become a team’s No. 1 option in 2024 and beyond. — Ben Baby


Can the Browns land another big-time playmaker?

Last offseason, the Browns focused on bolstering what was the league’s worst run defense in 2022. They accomplished just that, signing free agent defensive tackle Dalvin Tomlinson, who played a huge role in their defensive turnaround. This offseason, they could focus on adding a prominent receiver. The Browns already have two Pro Bowl pass-catchers in Amari Cooper and David Njoku. Cooper, however, will turn 30 this summer. Getting one more proven receiver could be what helps quarterback Deshaun Watson regain his form and elevate the Cleveland offense to another level. — Jake Trotter


Who will be Kenny Pickett’s competition for QB1?

Coach Mike Tomlin and owner and president Art Rooney II expressed a desire to bring in competition for their 2022 first-round pick to elevate the team’s overall quarterback play. Though Tomlin said Pickett would resume his status as QB1 in the offseason, he was also quick to say that no one is “anointed” the starter — that means new O-coordinator Arthur Smith should have the opportunity to fill out the quarterback room.

The team already mutually parted ways with Mitch Trubisky, and late-season hero Mason Rudolph is scheduled to be a free agent. Expect new players to be added through the draft and/or free agency at a position that has been largely unchanged the past two seasons. — Brooke Pryor

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1:36

Justin Fields or Russell Wilson: Who’s a better fit for the Steelers?

The “Get Up” crew examines the potential quarterback options for the Pittsburgh Steelers next season.

AFC SOUTH

Will the Texans pay Jonathan Greenard?

The edge rusher led the team in sacks (12.5), and coach DeMeco Ryans loves him. It’s more about the price, however. Teams covet pass-rushers, and those who can get double-digit sacks and are in their mid-20s could demand contracts in the range of $20 million annually.

For example, Carl Lawson received a three-year, $45 million deal with the Jets in 2020 despite never having a 10-plus-sack season. Last offseason, the Seahawks signed Dre’Mont Jones to a three-year, $51 million contract, and he has never had more than 6.5 sacks in a season. Will the Texans pay up for Greenard? — DJ Bien-Aime


How will negotiations with Michael Pittman Jr. play out?

The Colts have several free agents, including defensive tackle Grover Stewart and cornerback Kenny Moore II. But with nearly $57 million in salary cap space projected to be at their disposal, they can certainly retain Pittman, their top wide receiver. The question, however, is what a potential new deal will look like. General manager Chris Ballard has rarely invested heavily at receiver. Meanwhile, Pittman is cognizant of his value and is looking to maximize his deal. Can the two sides find common ground? — Stephen Holder


Welcome to the NFL offseason

• Team-by-team offseason guide (ESPN+)
• Key people (ESPN+) | Priorities, dates
• Tracking coach openings, hirings
• Ranking top 50 free agents (ESPN+)
• NFL draft order | Top draft prospects

How do the Jaguars handle free agents Josh Allen and Calvin Ridley?

Allen had a franchise-record 17.5 sacks last season, and Ridley caught the second-most passes (76) for the second-most yards (1,016) in his career. There’s only one franchise tag, so which player is general manager Trent Baalke willing to let hit free agency? If he gets a long-term contract done with either player before the tag window expires March 5, he could use the tag on the other, but that’s unlikely. He’s going to have to risk losing one. With pass-rushers at a premium, it’s likely to be Ridley, but how would being tagged impact negotiations with Allen’s camp? — Michael DiRocco


Has Derrick Henry played his last game for the Titans?

Henry’s 9,502 career rushing yards are 507 behind Eddie George for the most in Titans/Oilers franchise history. At 30 years old, he is set to hit free agency for the first time. The Titans have a new staff with a new offensive philosophy that will focus on passing the ball more. New coach Brian Callahan said Henry could absolutely fit into the scheme, though. Henry’s quest for a Super Bowl ring is something he has talked about frequently when asked about free agency. He added that he would love to win with the Titans. Will the two parties be able to come to an agreement? — Turron Davenport

AFC WEST

What is the plan at quarterback?

The Broncos have said multiple times, most recently at the Super Bowl, that a formal decision on quarterback Russell Wilson will come “sooner rather than later.” And while almost no one in the league believes that will mean anything other than the Broncos releasing Wilson, doing so would leave plenty of salary cap damage — $85 million in dead money, according to Roster Management System — and an enormous question mark at quarterback.

In the short term, the big issue would be whether the Broncos can find an upgrade over Wilson’s 26 touchdown passes in 15 games in ’23. The long-term question is whether a squeezed salary cap and just six picks in April’s draft will allow them to find a permanent solution. — Jeff Legwold


Can the Chiefs keep their defense together?

Kansas City ranked second in scoring defense this season but could be losing several key players. Defensive tackle Chris Jones, end Mike Danna, linebackers Willie Gay and Drue Tranquill and cornerback L’Jarius Sneed are free agents, and the Chiefs won’t be able to retain them all. They wouldn’t give Jones the contract extension he sought last year when he was holding out, so there’s no reason to believe they would do it in March, meaning Jones — who will turn 30 in July — could be moving on. — Adam Teicher

play

2:19

How will the Chiefs approach free agency this offseason?

The “Get Up” crew wonders how the Kansas City Chiefs can find the money to keep their team among the NFL’s elite next season.


How will general manager Tom Telesco and coach Antonio Pierce vibe in Las Vegas?

Raiders owner Mark Davis told ESPN that the general manager will have final say on all personnel decisions, and the biggest one is at quarterback, where rookie Aidan O’Connell was inconsistent after taking over for Jimmy Garoppolo midseason. Pierce wants a franchise signal-caller, and he has a relationship with Heisman winner Jayden Daniels (LSU) from when they were both at Arizona State. But jumping from the No. 13 pick in the draft to No. 2 or No. 3 might be too rich for Telesco’s taste. — Paul Gutierrez


How will the Chargers navigate their salary cap constraints?

The Chargers are projected to be $55 million over the salary cap, according to Roster Management System, with edge rushers Khalil Mack and Joey Bosa and wide receivers Keenan Allen and Mike Williams projected to have cap hits upward of $30 million next season.

These four are among the Chargers’ best players and would be essential to turning this team around quickly under new coach Jim Harbaugh, but bringing all of them back isn’t financially feasible. How the Chargers navigate the cap and what they do with these players will be the focus of this offseason. — Kris Rhim

NFC EAST

How will team owner Jerry Jones define ‘all-in’ in 2024?

Jones told reporters at the Senior Bowl in January that the Cowboys will be all-in and thinking less about the future when they’re putting together their 2024 roster. Does that mean taking a larger interest in key players in free agency rather than filling holes with low-cost fixes? Does that mean being more proactive in giving extensions to their own players early, such as wideout CeeDee Lamb, quarterback Dak Prescott and edge rusher Micah Parsons?

With coach Mike McCarthy in the final year of his contract, Prescott set to become a free agent after the 2024 season and the inability to use the franchise tag on their quarterback, Jones could view this as the last best chance to get a Super Bowl he so craves. — Todd Archer


What to know for the 2024 NFL draft

• Mocks:

What will the Giants do at quarterback?

Daniel Jones isn’t going anywhere this season, but the Giants set up his contract so they can get out after 2024. It’s hard to build a team around a quarterback who has had three relatively serious injuries in three years. With the No. 6 pick, will the Giants pass on a signal-caller in what is considered a strong quarterback draft? Or will they use their two second-round picks to move into the back end of the first round for a QB? The position is, at the very least, on the table for the Giants in this draft. — Jordan Raanan


Can the Eagles retool on the fly under coach Nick Sirianni?

Sirianni’s staff has been overhauled, most notably with offensive coordinator Brian Johnson and defensive coordinator Sean Desai being replaced by Kellen Moore and Vic Fangio. It can take up to a full season for players to adjust to new schemes, yet time is of the essence for the Eagles and Sirianni, whose seat has warmed up following a 1-6 finish.

It is particularly important that quarterback Jalen Hurts and Moore sync up after a year in which Hurts, Sirianni and Johnson were not in complete lockstep, which negatively impacted the offense. — Tim McManus


Which quarterback will they target to be their new starter?

Washington hired a new general manager (Adam Peters) and coach (Dan Quinn) but now needs its quarterback. The Commanders hold the No. 2 pick, which means they could stay put and likely choose between Jayden Daniels (LSU) and Drake Maye (North Carolina). Or they could explore moving into the top spot to take Caleb Williams (USC) — if the pick is even for sale and if they feel like parting with the necessary draft capital to move up a spot.

A seemingly less likely option — if they don’t like these quarterbacks — would be to sign a free agent, let him compete with incumbent Sam Howell, then trade back and acquire more draft picks so they can try again in 2025. But with a decades-long need for a stable quarterback situation, it’s hard to imagine the Commanders passing on a QB. — John Keim

NFC NORTH

What would it take for the Bears not to draft a quarterback at No. 1?

The Bears are the first team of the common draft era to land the No. 1 pick one year after trading it away. In 2023, Chicago passed on drafting quarterback C.J. Stroud, who went on to become the NFL’s Offensive Rookie of the Year. Can the Bears afford to not take a QB at No. 1, especially with USC’s Caleb Williams headlining a strong class?

If the Bears are dead set on drafting a QB, the asking price for the No. 1 pick will inevitably be higher than what they got from Carolina in 2023 (four picks and wide receiver DJ Moore). If another team is audacious enough to mortgage its future for the top pick, how far is Chicago willing to move back in the first round, and could that present a path for the franchise to still draft a QB on Day 1? — Courtney Cronin

play

1:43

McAfee: ‘There’s a lot of smoke’ with Caleb Williams, Bears

Pat McAfee and A.J. Hawk discuss recent rumors regarding Caleb Williams and his team preferences ahead of the NFL draft.


Will the Lions extend Jared Goff’s contract?

Coming off one of the best seasons of his career, Goff will be a free agent in 2025. General manager Brad Holmes said during his end-of-season news conference that the team hasn’t started communicating about Goff’s future yet, but it’ll be interesting to see whether they lock him down as their guy for the short term or the long term based on his recent play.

He’s definitely deserving of an extension, though. Goff became the third quarterback in franchise history to record multiple playoff wins (as well as the team’s first playoff wins in more than three decades) in leading the Lions to an NFC Championship Game appearance. — Eric Woodyard


What to do with David Bakhtiari?

When healthy, Bakhtiari showed he’s still one of the league’s top left tackles. The problem, however, is his health: specifically, his left knee. This fall, he had his fifth surgery on the knee since he tore his ACL on Dec. 31, 2020, and he probably won’t be able to get back on the field until training camp at the earliest.

He’s also set to cost $40.57 million against the cap next season, according to Roster Management System, although none of it is guaranteed and the Packers would pick up $21.5 million in cap space if they moved on. Rasheed Walker was a serviceable replacement after Bakhtiari’s season ended after the 2023 opener, but it’s not a sure thing that he’s the long-term answer. “We are still at the very beginning stages of looking at how we are going to move forward with all of that,” Packers GM Brian Gutekunst said recently. — Rob Demovsky


What is the future at quarterback?

The Vikings have a two-front challenge at the game’s most important position. First, they need to find out whether they’ll be able to re-sign incumbent Kirk Cousins, whose contract automatically voids on March 13. If they can’t, they’ll likely have to find a veteran to serve as at least a short-term starter. And whether they bring back Cousins, they have to decide whether the time has come to identify and (try to) acquire a longer-term answer through the draft. Cousins will be 36 this summer. — Kevin Seifert

NFC SOUTH

What will the Falcons do at quarterback?

One thing became obvious from coach Raheem Morris’ introductory news conference on Feb. 5: Atlanta is in the market for a quarterback, and perhaps a new quarterback room entirely. The Falcons haven’t had many big discussions yet about the position — Morris was working on filling out his staff and moving across the country — but he said they’ll explore free agency, trades and the draft to find an upgrade at QB. A signal-caller’s ability to process decisions will be a prime factor for the Falcons in deciding which direction to go. — Michael Rothstein


How will Dave Canales fix Bryce Young?

Young had a historically bad rookie season for quarterbacks taken with the top pick. His 11 touchdown passes were tied for the fewest of any quarterback with at least 500 pass attempts, and he had eight games without a touchdown pass, the second most ever for a No. 1 pick.

Canales, his new coach, has a track record of getting the best out of quarterbacks. Geno Smith (with Seattle) and Baker Mayfield (with Tampa Bay) had career years under his guidance. The Panthers need a lot of new players offensively, so the focus will be on what Canales does to give Young what he needs to succeed. — David Newton


Will the Saints trade cornerback Marshon Lattimore?

The team restructured Lattimore’s contract “for a reason,” according to general manager Mickey Loomis. While Loomis didn’t give details, the restructure paved the way for the Saints to potentially trade their star cornerback, who was hurt for a significant portion of the past two seasons. If Lattimore goes to a new team, it’ll represent a significant defensive shift for the Saints, as the 2017 Defensive Rookie of the Year has started 90 games in New Orleans. — Katherine Terrell


Will the Bucs re-sign wide receiver Mike Evans?

Despite Evans and his agent pressing the Bucs to get a new contract before the start of the 2023 regular season, no deal was offered. Evans tied for a league-leading 13 touchdowns in 2023, so the price likely went up. The Bucs most certainly want him back, and Evans wants to return, too — if the compensation is right. They also still need to have enough money to re-sign quarterback Baker Mayfield, safety Antoine Winfield Jr. and linebacker Lavonte David. — Jenna Laine

NFC WEST

Will the Cardinals draft Marvin Harrison Jr. with the No. 4 pick?

The Cardinals need a top wide receiver who can instantly upgrade the offense alongside Kyler Murray. Since Arizona is set at quarterback, it won’t be in the conversation to trade up to get one and can stand pat at No. 4.

Should quarterbacks go in the top three picks, Arizona will likely find itself looking at the star Ohio State receiver at No. 4. The only reason Arizona wouldn’t be around at No. 4 to take him would be if general manager Monti Ossenfort trades down for what could be a haul of picks, both in this draft and in 2025. — Josh Weinfuss


How will the Rams build on their 2023 season?

The Rams surprised many people outside the building by making the 2023 playoffs, especially doing it in a year in which they took on a lot of dead money and didn’t have the financial flexibility they had in the past. Now, they have to decide how they want to build on that success.

They still have their three “weight-bearing walls” — quarterback Matthew Stafford, defensive tackle Aaron Donald and wide receiver Cooper Kupp — and added promising young talent as well. General manager Les Snead said he doesn’t anticipate making significant moves immediately in free agency, but that the Rams do have the flexibility to “take a look.” The Rams also — at least for now — have a first-round pick for the first time since 2016. — Sarah Barshop


What can the 49ers do to get over the hump and finally win the Super Bowl?

If this feels like a repeat of recent years, it’s because it is. But the clock is ticking on the Niners’ chances at winning the franchise’s sixth Lombardi Trophy with this core of players, especially because quarterback Brock Purdy will be eligible for an extension in 2025. They are unlikely to spend big money to make any big additions in free agency, but they’re going to have to explore every possible avenue to try to conquer the final boss: Patrick Mahomes and the Chiefs. — Nick Wagoner

play

1:21

Schefter to McAfee: Purdy’s contract ‘a huge advantage’ for 49ers

Adam Schefter explains how Brock Purdy’s rookie contract gives the 49ers flexibility for one more season before he is eligible to sign a long-term deal.


What will GM John Schneider and new coach Mike Macdonald do at quarterback?

The Seahawks have a new coach and a new top decision-maker, with Schneider now holding final say over personnel decisions in their post-Pete Carroll power structure. Could that mean a new quarterback in 2024? Geno Smith is set to make a reasonable $22.5 million next season and has been excellent in spurts, but he was up and down last season and no longer has Carroll — perhaps his biggest supporter in the organization — calling the shots. The hiring of former University of Washington offensive coordinator Ryan Grubb has led to speculation that the Seahawks could draft Michael Penix Jr., but if they do move on from Smith, don’t discount Drew Lock being in the mix to replace him. — Brady Henderson

NFL

Committee: NFL injuries similar across surfaces

  • Kevin Seifert

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    ESPN Staff Writer
      Kevin Seifert is a staff writer who covers the Minnesota Vikings and the NFL at ESPN. Kevin has covered the NFL for over 20 years, joining ESPN in 2008. He was previously a beat reporter for the Minneapolis Star Tribune and Washington Times. He is a graduate of the University of Virginia. You can follow him via Twitter @SeifertESPN.
  • Dan Graziano

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    senior NFL national reporter
      Dan Graziano is a senior NFL national reporter for ESPN, covering the entire league and breaking news. Dan also contributes to Get Up, NFL Live, SportsCenter, ESPN Radio, Sunday NFL Countdown and Fantasy Football Now. He is a New Jersey native who joined ESPN in 2011, and he is also the author of two published novels. You can follow Dan on Twitter via @DanGrazianoESPN.

Feb 2, 2024, 06:00 AM ET

The NFL’s rate of noncontact lower-extremity injuries was nearly the same on synthetic and natural turf in 2023, league officials told ESPN, the second time in three years those trend lines have essentially intersected.

The data, collected via a joint NFL/NFL Players Association committee, helps inform the ongoing debate over the safety of playing surfaces at the NFL’s 30 stadiums.

Jeff Miller, the NFL’s executive vice president for communications, public affairs and policy, said the similar rates point to a “need to look at all surfaces” for ways to improve. NFLPA executive director Lloyd Howell last fall called on all teams to convert to grass fields after New York Jets quarterback Aaron Rodgers tore his left Achilles tendon on MetLife Stadium’s synthetic turf. In a statement released to ESPN this week, the union said the numbers were close in 2023 only because injuries on grass fields increased.

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“As we have said repeatedly,” the statement read, “injury data in a one-year time capsule does not account for what we have known since we started tracking these injuries: that a well-maintained, consistent grass surface is still simply safer for players than any synthetic field. The story of last year’s injury data is that, unfortunately, injury rates on grass have increased from last year.

“The data cannot, however, account for what players have shared with the NFL for years: that we feel much worse after playing on synthetic surfaces and overwhelmingly prefer consistent, high-quality grass fields.

“This year’s injury data also does not explain how quick they are to flip NFL stadium surfaces from bad synthetic to better grass for international soccer friendlies and tournaments.”

The NFL/NFLPA committee defines injuries that could be attributed to the playing surface as those that occur in the lower extremities, without contact from another player, and are serious enough to force missed games. They represent about one-third of all NFL injuries and about half of all lower-extremity injuries, according to Dr. Mackenzie Herzog, an epidemiologist at IQVIA and an adviser to the NFL and NFLPA.

In 2023, the incidence rate (per 100 plays) for such injuries was 0.001 higher on synthetic turf (0.043) compared with natural (0.042). That represented a total of six to eight injuries over the course of the 17-week season, Herzog said, making the rates “virtually identical.” There was a similar difference between the rates in 2021.

In 2022, the rate for synthetic turf was 0.048 and the rate for natural was 0.035.

“Sometimes the line for synthetic injuries goes up, and sometimes it goes down,” the NFL’s Miller said, “and the same for the natural turf line. We need to have a better appreciation for why that could be over time so that both lines are heading in the same direction, and both of them are going down.”

After the uproar over Rodgers’ injury, 10 other NFL players suffered Achilles tears during regular-season games. There were another 12 during preseason games and practices, and the total of 23 was in line with previous seasons. According to NFL chief medical officer Dr. Allen Sills, the NFL’s number of Achilles injuries has been between 20 and 22 since the league moved to a 17-game regular season.

“We did not see an epidemic of Achilles injuries this year,” Sills said.

Several teams replaced a type of synthetic turf called “slit film” after the 2022 season, noting that it had produced higher injury rates than other forms of turf and grass. Two others will do so after the 2023 season, leaving Cincinnati’s Paycor Stadium as the only facility without plans to replace slit-film turf before the 2024 season.

Despite the data, and as the NFLPA said in its statement, many players say they feel less sore after games on grass than they do after playing on turf. Sills and Miller said this week that the NFL/NFLPA committee has several research initiatives underway to address surface conditions, including the possibility of growing grass for indoor stadiums.

“We think that’s important work,” Sills said. “It has not been done to the level that we think would withstand the kind of forces that NFL players put on those fields right now, but that is a very active research stream as well.

In the meantime, the committee is researching the impact of establishing a consistent set of turf management and style protocols to reduce the adjustments players must make from stadium to stadium.

“We think that’s going to be an important driver in the reduction of injuries,” Sills said.

Independent of the playing surface, the NFL experienced an unquestioned decrease in serious injuries during the 2023 season, Miller said. Missed games due to all injuries were down by about 700 from 2022, largely because of a drop in lower-extremity injuries.

The NFL believes its intervention efforts — working with team medical and coaching staffs in the early weeks of spring training on ways to manage the “ramp-up” period and reduce training camp lower-extremity injuries — are paying off.

The NFL’s numbers show a 29% reduction in lower-extremity injuries during training camp and a 50% reduction in recurrence of those injuries throughout the year. Herzog said the number of regular-season games missed due to lower-extremity strains — which represent the league’s No. 1 injury burden — was down 24% from the previous two years.

“We’ve really focused on that — made it an offseason priority to talk with coaches, strength coaches, performance directors about trends and observations, particularly on how we bring players back,” Sills said. “We’ve seen the first two weeks of training camp really provide an opportunity to reduce strains.”

The NFL also said ACL injuries were down in 2023. It registered 52 ACL injuries across the preseason and regular-season games and practices, which the league said is down 24% from the average of the previous two seasons.

Meanwhile, concussion numbers were relatively stable. The NFL had 219 concussions across the preseason and regular-season games and practices, up from 213 in 2022.

The NFL did accomplish its goal of reducing concussions on kickoffs, with the number dropping from 20 in 2022 to eight in 2023, but Miller said that’s a direct result of fewer kicks being returned because of a rule change that spotted fair catches at the 25-yard line. The concussion rate on returned kickoffs, Sills said, remained the same as in previous years.

Miller said the competition committee plans to examine the kickoff again this offseason with the goal of keeping the play in the game but making it safer. He said the committee has studied the XFL rule and will continue to look for ways to alter the play to make it safer without making it go away.

NFL

'They deserve it': Members of 0-16 Lions on Dan Campbell, long-suffering fans and Super Bowl dreams

  • Eric Woodyard, ESPNJan 26, 2024, 06:00 AM ET

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      Eric Woodyard covers the Detroit Lions for ESPN. He joined ESPN in September 2019 as an NBA reporter dedicated to the Midwest region before switching to his current role in April 2021. The Flint, Mich. native is a graduate of Western Michigan University and has authored/co-authored three books: “Wasted, Ethan’s Talent Search” and “All In: The Kelvin Torbert Story”. He is a proud parent of one son, Ethan. You can follow him on Twitter: @E_Woodyard

DETROIT — There are two numbers Detroiters will never forget: 0 and 16.

They represent the Detroit Lions’ 2008 season — the one in which they became the first team in NFL history to play a 16-game schedule without winning a game (though the 2017 Cleveland Browns eventually joined them).

The team set a record for most losses in a season, while allowing the third-most points, the fourth-most touchdowns and the second-most rushing touchdowns in league history. Those Lions were eliminated from playoff contention in Week 11, which was tied for the earliest a team’s postseason hopes had been dashed since 1990.

Five different quarterbacks threw at least one pass for Detroit — Dan Orlovsky, Jon Kitna, Daunte Culpepper, Drew Stanton and Drew Henson — with one of them making the most emblematic play of that miserable season.

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Things were bleak in Detroit toward the end of the winless 2008 season. AP Photo/Paul Sancya

What do you think of Dan Campbell, and what does it mean that he — a member of the 2008 team — is now leading the turnaround?

Jon Kitna, Lions QB: When you experience something like that, you’ve got one of two things you can do: You can tuck tail and run, or you can just continue to approach life head on, and that’s who Dan is. He has a feeling for the city of Detroit and the organization of Detroit and what it’s been through. It’s one thing to see it from afar, but when you’ve sat in it, went through it, to where we were at halfway through the season in 2007 [at 6-2] and feeling like we had things turning in the right direction then to see it fall apart, I think that certainly has been something that helps him be more of the right guy for that job.

Calvin Johnson, Lions WR: It’s just going full circle from the 0-16 team as a player on that team to being a head coach and leading your team in the whole opposite direction of where we went back then. A big part of that is Dan himself, being a player turned coach and surrounding himself with a bunch of player-coaches on his staff. … You kind of dial in a little more when you have a player-coach, and you see that happening. You saw it when it happened last year and it kind of clicked for them halfway through the season.

Drew Henson, Lions QB: To have someone from that group to be on the other side of the one of the greatest runs in Lions history, sports sometimes have a great way of telling stories and having narratives, and I certainly think that every guy from that 2008 team is front and center, wherever they’re at, cheering for these guys with a big smile on their face … because it’s been a long time coming and they deserve it.

Dan Orlovsky, Lions QB: Dan was lunch pail every day. Just a show up to work, do your absolute very best at work, work as hard as you possibly can every single day, and that stood out. I was somewhat younger, and as a young guy when you watched a pro, he was one of those guys that you watched and said “That’s what it looks like. That’s how a pro goes about it on a day-to-day basis.” He didn’t let circumstances control him or emotions control him, he was just there to work.

Rod Marinelli, Lions head coach: I’ll tell you what, there’s no doubt in my mind that he’s going to succeed or would succeed because the type of player he was, he’s the same type of coach — exactly. Hard-nosed. Everything he had. Every day. He had a bad elbow and I mean; he was all bandaged up every day and the pride he took, winning a one-on-one in either a pass block or a route and the intensity of it. You got everything he had every second. And that team is reflecting Dan’s personality.

Rod Marinelli, coach of the 2008 Lions, says tight end Dan Campbell was a hard-nosed player who gave his all every day. Leon Halip-US PRESSWIRE

Looking back, did you have any idea Campbell would become a coach and be good at it?

Johnson: I don’t even know if Dan knew he would be a coach back then, but he’s a leader of men. He led by example back then. Now, he can lead by example, he can lead with words because he’s been there and done that and he’s had some great examples, whether it’s some players around him or coaches that he’s been around, and you can see that paying off. He’s surrounded himself with good company.

Mike Furrey, Lions WR: When you played with him, he was probably one of the best teammates that you could ask for because he was sincere. He helped out the younger guys and he just had a passion to do whatever he could to help the team win. And he played like that, he acted like that, and it was every day. So, it’s not surprising that that locker room has bought into who he is because he’s very genuine.

Orlovsky: I was never surprised that he got hired or that he climbed so quickly because of his self-accountability and the personal pride that he carried. I wasn’t surprised in that regard. I wasn’t surprised by the press conference [when Campbell famously talked about biting kneecaps]. This is probably not the right thing to say, but I’m just being honest: I guess my surprise with him is how well-coached they seem and how intelligent and detailed they seem.

What’s the biggest difference about the organization from then to now?

Henson: They drafted really well. They know what they want to be. They’ve got almost all former players as coaches and their ability to have guys that have been there and done it and can relate to the players and the players can relate and trust them goes a long way.

Marinelli: I see incredible leadership from the top of the organization, and I see that leadership come down, and I think how they pick players and I know that Dan is involved in that, and they listen to him. That thing starts from the top down, and Dan’s the perfect guy and perfect fit for that organization and they’ve done a terrific job in hiring good coaches and making it a place where guys want to stay.

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Kitna: To me, it seems like there’s vertical alignment. From ownership, straight on down your roster, your coaching staff, the people that work in the building. It just feels like there’s complete alignment there.

Johnson: A lot of it has to do with what [Lions general manager] Brad Holmes and Dan are bringing to the team. We’ve seen Brad build a Super Bowl-caliber team coming from out west, from [the Los Angeles Rams], and we know what Dan does as a player-coach. All we want is a player-coach because he gets us. He understands the struggle. So when you have somebody that understands the struggle, but at the same time, understands where Detroit has been and understands the grit that represents Detroit, that is nothing but his authentic self. He is Detroit.

Furrey: It always felt like everything was against you back then, and now it just feels like, watching the game, it feels like everything is starting to fit the right way and go the Lions’ way. Ever since the hypothetical Bobby Layne Curse, it feels like it’s gone the opposite direction.

What does this season mean for Lions fans?

Kitna: It’s everything. We know what sports does. Sports is a unifying thing. And when cities and communities and organizations get to experience some of the things that Detroit is experiencing now, coming off the heels of what happened right down the road in Ann Arbor [with the Michigan football team winning the national championship], it’s amazing.”

Johnson: This is almost up there with religion. This thing is bringing folks to tears. You’ve got folks crying out here. And I get it. It warmed my heart to see them dudes do it just because, even though we weren’t able to do it, we still bleed blue.

Henson: This is for the people in Michigan, this is for the fans of generations. They’ve been waiting on this and there’s no better sports town in the country, if you can get on the right side of things, and I think everybody’s seeing it. … I don’t think you can help but pull for the Lions because it stands for all the good in sports.

Furrey: Even back in the day in 2008, when we didn’t win any games, [the fans] didn’t quit. That town is legit. That town is full of a fan base that is real and deserving and I just couldn’t be more happy for everybody that’s been waiting for this to happen, and it’s been fun to watch.

Dan Campbell’s coaching success isn’t a huge surprise to his former teammates. Chris Graythen/Getty Images

What do you most like about the 2023 Lions?

Jim Colletto, Lions offensive coordinator: They play so hard. They’ve got a great quarterback. And defensively, they play with great intensity and effort and their offense functions well. They run the ball well and you can see that the attitude of the head coach that’s watching them on the sideline is [injected] into the team.

Furrey: You see a team. You see a bunch of guys that are unselfish. They’re working their rear ends off. They have a high passion for playing the game. They execute at a high level. They make huge plays in big moments, on both sides of the ball, and they play with that grit that I know that came from one person and Danny has instilled that.

Marinelli: They fight. I think they play like Dan played. They are tough. On defense they fly around. They have a good attitude, hustle, well-coached, all of those things. On offense, they run the ball with toughness, and he’s got the QB [

Johnson: What I like most about this squad is that, yeah, you have a couple stars on this team, but I feel like honestly we might have had more stars back on the team when I played, but you have some guys who have been around the league and you have some solid veterans. And what excites me most is that you’re starting to see some of these players that people might not have known about, start to emerge and make plays.

The play of QB Jared Goff earned high praise from the 2008 Lions. Nic Antaya/Getty Images

Is this the greatest Lions team of the Super Bowl era?

Johnson: There were stars on some of the other teams, like Barry [Sanders], and we had stars on our teams with Matthew [Stafford], myself and you can keep going on and on, but as far as just a team, what we’re seeing, the energy that we feel … Hey, I’ll tell you this, the conversations that I be having with all the guys that come back and that I played with, we just be thinking about, “Dog, if we were on this team, you know how good we would be?” Yeah, we had some talent, but it’s like with this coach, with this staff, with that culture.

Kitna: They’ve got a chance to do something that nobody’s ever done. So, yeah.

Furrey: That would be hard to debate trying to put somebody else in that picture with what they’ve put together with that whole offensive line and that defensive line. That front, those linebackers, the duo that they have in the backfield right now with

Calvin Johnson, star of the 2008 Lions, chats up the 2023 receivers group during training camp. AP Photo/Paul Sancya

After having suffered through the 0-16 season, do you have any advice for this team?

Marinelli: Do what you do. Just continue to do what you do and it’s good enough. And listen to your coach. That’s what they’ve created in that city.

Kitna: Listen to your coach, man. Listen to your coach.

Johnson: Live in the moment. Enjoy this moment. Don’t overlook the moment. … I only got to go to the playoffs twice, and you hear about guys talking about how they made it to the Super Bowl as a rookie and then they didn’t touch [it] again for the rest of their career. So just live in the moment and don’t overlook it because this is huge.

Furrey: Enjoy the moment but don’t miss it either. They got there because of their execution, their preparation and the goals that they’ve had. They’ve achieved everything they’ve set out to, and they did it the right way, so I wouldn’t change one bit. They’ve played in big games from Week 1. I would not change anything. It’s another game. It’s another big game. And just continue to do what you’re doing.

Henson: You’re carrying the torch for every squad that came before you. We’re in the history books for that year [2008] and they’ve got an opportunity to change the narrative of the whole franchise and I think they’ve done that to a point. And if they can finish it off, they would be obviously the greatest team in history, but one that’s remembered for generations.

NFL

Could Patriots coach Jerod Mayo revive Mac Jones' career?

  • Mike Reiss, ESPN Staff WriterJan 21, 2024, 06:00 AM ET

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      Mike Reiss is an NFL reporter at ESPN and covers the New England Patriots. Reiss has covered the Patriots since 1997 and joined ESPN in 2009. In 2019, he was named Massachusetts Sportswriter of the Year by the National Sports Media Association. You can follow Reiss on Twitter at @MikeReiss.

FOXBOROUGH, Mass. — Quick-hit thoughts and notes around the New England Patriots and NFL:

1. Mayo and Mac: On Wednesday, after Jerod Mayo was introduced as the 15th head coach in Patriots history, he walked into the weight room and saw a familiar face.

“Mac Jones was in there working out,” Mayo told ESPN. “That attitude, that mentality of changing the page, is something that I hold high.”

The page is turning in New England in dramatic fashion, with Mayo quickly tapped as Bill Belichick’s successor after 24 seasons. That has initially sparked more questions than answers, including this one: Could Jones’ once-promising career be revived, perhaps similar to what unfolded with the Miami Dolphins two years ago with quarterback Tua Tagovailoa when Mike McDaniel was hired to replace Brian Flores?

Jones was one of five active players who attended Mayo’s introduction Wednesday, joining linebackers Ja’Whaun Bentley and Josh Uche, cornerback Jonathan Jones and long-snapper Joe Cardona.

Mac Jones among the players present for Jerod Mayo’s introduction, along with snapper Joe Cardona and pass rusher Josh Uche. pic.twitter.com/h8v8Xhvijf

— Mike Reiss (@MikeReiss) January 17, 2024

Mayo is leaving all possibilities open, saying he is in the evaluation stage at every position, including coaches. Mentioning Jones and Bailey Zappe, who replaced Jones as the starter in mid-December, he said: “Those guys have things that they can do and it’s about improving and developing.”

Jones’ development went sideways after a 2021 rookie season that landed him in the Pro Bowl as an alternate selection (352-of-521 for 3,801 yards, 22 TDs, 13 INTs).

How much of that downfall was a result of his own doing or driven by Belichick’s decision-making with coaching, personnel and system changes over the past two years, might depend on whom you ask.

Belichick was clearly done with Jones based on his bottom-line actions in the Jan. 7 regular-season finale, when he demoted Jones to the emergency/third quarterback role behind Nathan Rourke, who had just joined the team 20 days prior.

Some wondered if it was a way to protect Jones’ health for future trade possibilities, but several players didn’t buy that explanation because it ran counter to what Belichick always told them about how every decision is to help the team win.

Those players hypothesized that Belichick was making a statement that game-day roster spots are earned and Jones’ scout-team work, which at one point included too many interceptions, didn’t meet his standard.

It was an icy ending to the Belichick-Jones pairing, with some, such as former NFL quarterback Ryan Fitzpatrick, having previously drawn a parallel to what unfolded with Flores (who came up as an assistant under Belichick) and Tagovailoa in Miami.

Fitzpatrick opined on Amazon Prime’s pregame show leading into the Dec. 7 Patriots-Steelers game that Jones was “definitely broken” as a quarterback from Belichick’s coaching. He compared it to how his former Miami teammate Tagovailoa was “broken by the way [Flores] treated him and coached him” before McDaniel “came in and restored his confidence.”

Whether that same dynamic could unfold in New England — with Mayo and a new offensive coordinator after Bill O’Brien departed for Ohio State — is among the lingering questions in a week of seismic change for the organization.

Mayo, who turns 38 on Feb. 23, highlighted the importance of personal connection to his coaching style.

“You have to develop the person before they’ll go out there and run through a brick wall for you. Players have to know that I care about you as a man, first and foremost,” he said.

“We check in all the time. Mental health is a real thing. If a guy comes in and obviously has something off the field, we try to lay off a little bit. I think having that flexibility, knowing what your group is going through, how they feel that day and really adjusting your coaching style based on that, I want coaches who kind of subscribe to that philosophy.”

2. Draft intel: Patriots owner Robert Kraft noted Wednesday that owning the No. 3 overall draft pick represents the highest selection in his 31-year ownership tenure, which highlights the importance of this year’s draft.

ESPN draft analyst Mel Kiper Jr., as part of the “First Draft” podcast with Field Yates, shared his belief that New England is well-positioned regardless of what happens with the Chicago Bears (No. 1) and Washington Commanders (No. 2), mainly because there isn’t a big drop-off from his second quarterback (North Carolina’s Drake Maye) to his third (LSU’s Jayden Daniels), with USC’s Caleb Williams expected to go No. 1.

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And if the Patriots aren’t thinking quarterback, he has a “nifty nine” group of offensive players at the top of the draft — including Ohio State receiver Marvin Harrison Jr. — who qualify as difference-makers. And that’s the side of the ball the Patriots need the most help.

3. Intrigue with OC: How Mayo fills out his offensive coaching staff remains a big question. O’Brien’s departure was expected and essentially wipes the slate clean, so there is intrigue in what direction Mayo wants to take the offense. Wide receivers coach Troy Brown, whose contract is set to expire and has been tapped to serve as offensive coordinator for the Senior Bowl, could be one of the few holdovers, given his history with the franchise (similar to assistant coach/Patriots Hall of Famer Dante Scarnecchia in the past).

4. Coach interviews: Mayo’s initial assistant coaching interviews have been more on defense and special teams. As of Friday night, sources confirmed he had video-conferenced with Broncos defensive backs coach Christian Parker, Saints linebackers coach Michael Hodges, Panthers outside linebackers coach Tem Lukabu, Falcons special teams coordinator Marquice Williams and former Giants special teams coordinator Thomas McGaughey, and there are plans to interview Rams assistant special teams coach Jeremy Springer and Patriots defensive line coach DeMarcus Covington (likely in person).

Some close to the situation say Covington, who attended Mayo’s introduction as coach Wednesday, is well-positioned to elevate to a defensive coordinator role. The interview with Hodges, who was co-defensive coordinator with Covington at Eastern Illinois in 2016, could be a tipoff that it might be headed in that direction.

5. Patriots-Falcons in 2025: Belichick had his second interview with the Atlanta Falcons Friday. If they hire him as head coach, it sets up a Gillette Stadium homecoming in 2025 as Atlanta is on New England’s home schedule that year. It would be right in the NFL’s wheelhouse to project when Belichick might break Don Shula’s all-time wins record and schedule the game so Belichick would have a chance to do so at Gillette.

6. Belichick sons: Steve Belichick and Brian Belichick, Bill’s sons, have been told they’ve earned the opportunity to remain with the Patriots if they choose to do so. Mayo and Steve have a close friendship, so the projected fit on staff would be as an assistant head coach/senior adviser type. Brian, who came up through scouting and most recently served as safeties coach from 2020 to 2023, was still showing up at Gillette Stadium late this past week.

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