Category: NFL Draft (Page 80 of 102)

Miami to shop Taylor

According to CBSSports.com, the Dolphins have turned their attention to shopping defensive end Jason Taylor after signing Jake Long to a contract.

Two clubs whom the Dolphins contacted confirmed Tuesday that Miami is shopping Taylor, looking for a mid-to-low first-round draft pick in return.

While that’s not surprising it does contradict statements made by team vice president of football operations Bill Parcells, who insisted last month that Taylor would not be dealt.

“The only way Jason Taylor doesn’t play for the Dolphins in 2008,” Parcells said last month, “is if he retires. The team is not going to trade him.”

And maybe that’s true. But Miami is reaching out to others to gauge interest in the 2006 NFL Defensive Player of the Year. According to someone close to the situation, that’s consistent with Parcells’ approach to building football teams.

Kind of interesting that the Dolphins committed to Long and now a day later are ready to ship Taylor out of town. One would have thought that they would only try to trade Taylor after deciding on which defensive end (either Chris Long or Vernon Gholston) would replace him at defensive end. It’ll be interesting to see if any teams bite on the 33-year old Taylor.

Allen to Vikes – draft ramifications?

The Vikings landed former Chiefs’ defensive end Jared Allen for their first round pick (No. 17) and two third round picks (No. 73 and No. 82). Allen will receive a new contract worth $74 million over six years.

Unsuccessful in landing an edge pass-rusher early in free agency, Minnesota acquired one of the best in the business at an extremely steep price Tuesday night when it agreed to terms on a trade with Kansas City for Jared Allen.

This obviously weakens the Vikings’ draft, but Allen is a stud. With the addition, Minny might have the best defensive line in all of football, equipped to stop the run and rush the passer. This move might help mask some of the Vikings’ deficiencies in the secondary.

In looking at this weekend’s draft, the departure of Allen might mean the Chiefs (who have the fifth overall pick) will look at a defensive end like Chris Long or Vernon Gholston. That could cause a ripple effect for teams like the Jets and Patriots, two teams reportedly looking to beef up their defensive front seven. A quality offensive tackle like Ryan Clady could now fall, as well, seeing as how most mock draft publications had the Chiefs taking an OT at No. 5. Having the No. 17 pick also means that KC can still get a quality cornerback if they don’t chose one with the No. 5 pick.

Bengals turn down Redskins’ big offer for CJ

ESPN is reporting that the Redskins offered their first-round pick in ’08 and a third-round pick in ’09 (that could escalate to a first-round pick if certain performance requirements are met) for disgruntled WR Chad Johnson. The Bengals have apparently turned them down.

Bengals coach Marvin Lewis — who disputed the report of trade offers for Johnson — says the disgruntled receiver should keep his word and sit out the season.

“I’ve stated our case with Chad,” Lewis said. “He has a contract through 2011. He’s stated without an opportunity to go to a different team and a new contract, he wasn’t going to play. I think he’s a man of his word and says he’s not going to play, so don’t play.”

The Bengals have not only rejected the Redskins, but two other NFC East suitors — the Dallas Cowboys and Philadelphia Eagles — have been informed that there has been no change in the team’s position that Johnson will not be traded.

The Bengals have noted to those suitors that Johnson has been the “second-highest paid receiver” in the NFL during the past three years, indignant about suggestions that Johnson also wants a new contract, the sources said.

This is a great deal. CJ is going to be a distraction as long as he’s on the Bengals’ roster, so getting two early picks for the luxury of getting rid of him seems like a smart move. I don’t know what the Bengals are thinking.

It’s official: Dolphins to take Long

According to sources at ESPN.com, the Miami Dolphins have reached a contract agreement with Michigan offensive tackle Jake Long and will select him with the first overall pick.

The announcement will come at a 1:45 p.m. ET news conference.

Despite speculation that Dolphins vice president of football operations Bill Parcells really had planned to select Ohio State defensive end Vernon Gholston or Virginia defensive end Chris Long, sources told ESPN’s Michael Smith that since the Dolphins opened negotiations with Jake Long they were talking to him exclusively.

So now the focus becomes what the Rams will do at No. 2. The talk thus far is that they’ll go with a defensive end (either Chris Long or Vernon Gholston), but reports surfaced last night that they might take DT Glenn Dorsey and move 2006 first round pick Adam Carriker back to his more natural end position.

Let the rumors fly!

Draft Day Blunders by the NFL Bottom Feeders

Ben Roethlisberger on the Lions? Bob Sanders in San Fran? Bullz-Eye.com took the worst five teams over the past five years and re-drafted the first three rounds for them in years 2005, 2004 and 2003. What would these five habitual losers look like these days with a draft makeover?

Arizona Cardinals 2003 Draft Re-Do

No. 17 – Larry Johnson, RB, Penn State (Originally selected by Kansas City at No. 27)
Original Pick: Bryant Johnson, WR, Penn State

No. 18 – Nnamdi Asomugha, CB, California (Originally selected by Oakland at No. 31)
Original Pick: Calvin Pace, DE, Wake Forest

No. 54 – Anquan Boldin, WR, Florida State (Originally selected by Arizona at No. 54)
Original Pick: Boldin

Instead of signing the over-the-hill Emmitt Smith in the 2003 offseason, the Cards could have drafted LJ (right) and kick- started his career two seasons earlier than it did in Kansas City. Plus, with their second pick in the first round, ‘Zona could have vastly upgraded a weak secondary with the incredibly well rounded Asomugha. The original selection of Boldin still makes sense given his amazing rookie season (101 receptions, 1,377 yards, 8 TDs) and the degree of success he’s had thus far as a pro.

That would have been one hell of a first day for the Cards back in 2003, assuming of course LJ and Asomugha panned out in ‘Zona like they did in Kansas City and Oakland, respectively.

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