Saints announce they have agreed to terms with Derek Carr

Derek Carr is moving from Sin City to the Big Easy, agreeing to terms with the Saints

The drama ended early Monday. All it took was for Derek Carr and the New Orleans Saints to make it official.

And the NFC South team did just that in the early afternoon, announcing it has agreed to terms with the former quarterback of the Las Vegas Raiders.

In New Orleans, Carr is reunited with his former coach with the Raiders, Dennis Allen.

Derek Carr, Saints close in on 4-year contract

It will be a reunion for Dennis Allen and Derek Carr in New Orleans

Derek Carr has left the Raiders to play for Dennis Allen, who once coached him as a Raider.

Numerous reports on Monday have the veteran quarterback close to a 4-year contract with the New Orleans Saints.

In the Big Easy, Carr will be reunited with Dennis Allen, who was his coach in Oakland.

Derek Carr paying visit to the New Orleans Saints

Derek Carr is going to meet his old Raiders coach Dennis Allen and other current Saints brass in New Orleans

The quarterback carousel is going to be busy in the off-season.

The wheels are turning already and the Super Bowl hasn’t been played.

Derek Carr, who spent his entire career as a Raider, is heading to the Big Easy for a visit with the New Orleans on Wednesday.

The veteran quarterback’s ability to meet with New Orleans means the Saints and Las Vegas Raiders have come to an agreement on compensation if the NFC South team is able to work out a deal with Carr.

The Saints went through a sub-.500 season with Jameis Winston and Andy Dalton at quarterback so they are looking to upgrade.

If the Saints are able to land Carr, it would be a reunion of sorts for the quarterback.

He started his career in Oakland with the Raiders when current Saint coach Dennis Allen was the head mean of the AFC West team.

Allen compiled an 8-28 record as the Raiders’ head coach from 2012-2014. He was fired after the club started the 2014 season 0-4 with Carr — a second-round rookie — at quarterback.

Raiderswire.com says there is intrigue in the timing:

The Raiders have a hard deadline to reach an agreement on trading Carr to a new team before Feb. 15, when more than $40 million guarantees on his contract. If no trade agreement is reached prior to that deadline, he’ll be released and become a free agent.

 

 

Effective salary cap space for all 32 NFL teams in the 2023 league year

How much is your favorite team over or under the 2023 salary cap of $224.8 million?

When the NFL announces the salary cap for the upcoming league year, which it did on Monday, some teams are very excited by the prospect of that number.

For other teams, the accounting/reckoning is soon coming due.

As Tom Pelissero of the NFL Network reported, the 2023 salary cap will be $224.8 million, an all-time high, and quite a bump from 2022’s $208.2 million. You would think that this would have every NFL team in high cotton from a player payroll perspective, but as our friends at OverTheCap.com point out, there are just 15 teams — just under half the league — under that number in Effective Salary Cap Space (the cap number against the actual payroll, plus what it will take to sign at least 51 players and the rookie class) as we stand today.

Of course, all kinds of things are coming for the team in need of offsets. Players will be released, contracts will be restructured, and cans will be kicked down the road so that all teams can be in compliance with the cap when the new league year begins.

So, there’s a lot that’s going to happen, but as it stands now, here’s how all 32 NFL teams stand on either side of 2023’s $224.8 million salary cap, from the most under the cap to the most over. Teams over the cap have their totals represented in parentheses as negatives.

(All salary cap numbers courtesy of OverTheCap.com).

NFL announces 2023 regular-season opponents for all teams

The NFL has announced 2023 regular-season opponents for all teams. Here’s a breakdown for each of the league’s 32 teams.

On Monday, the NFL announced opponents for all 32 teams in the 2023 schedule. Per the league, the formula for the schedule is as follows:

  • Home and away against its three division opponents (six games).
  • The four teams from another division within its conference on a rotating, three-year cycle (four games).
  • The four teams from a division in the other conference on a rotating, four-year cycle (four games).
  • Two intraconference games based on the prior year’s standings (two games). These games match a first-place team against the first-place teams in the two same-conference divisions the team is not scheduled to play that season. The second-place, third-place and fourth-place teams in a conference are matched in the same way each year.

One interconference game based on the prior year’s standings on a rotating four-year cycle (one game). These games match a first-place team from one division against a first-place team in an opposite-conference division that the team is not scheduled to play that season. The second-place, third-place and fourth-place teams in each division are matched in the same way each year. The home conference for this game will rotate each season, with the AFC teams hosting the game in 2023.

The scheduling formula implemented in 2002 with realignment guarantees that all teams play each other on a regular, rotating basis.

The 2023 schedule, with playing dates and times, will be announced in the spring.

Broncos request, receive permission to speak with Sean Payton about head coaching job

The Denver Broncos have asked for, and received permission from, the New Orleans Saints to talk to Sean Payton about a head coaching job.

The Denver Broncos came into the 2022 season with a great defense, one of the NFL’s best running backs in Javonte Williams, a talented group of receivers, and a new quarterback in Russell Wilson who was supposed to put them over the top.

Needless to say, that didn’t happen. The Broncos, who fired head coach Nathaniel Hackett on December 26, are playing out the string with a 4-12 record. They would, if the 2023 NFL draft happened today, have the third overall pick, but they traded that pick to the Seattle Seahawks for Wilson’s services. And Wilson, who has had an absolutely disastrous season, ranks 30th in DYAR and 28th in DVOA among qualifying NFL starting quarterbacks. He had never ranked lower than 15th in either metric before this season.

Now, it appears that the Broncos are swinging for the fences in trying to turn things around with the possibility of Sean Payton as their next head coach. Per ESPN’s Adam Schefter:

Payton retired before the 2022 season after putting up a 152-89 regular-season record and a 9-8 postseason mark (including a win in Super Bowl XLIV at the end of the 2009 season. Payton is rightly regarded as one of the most brilliant offensive minds of the modern era, and the idea here is to align Payton with Wilson to try and get the most out of their high-priced quarterback.

The complication is that Payton is still under contract with the Saints, so compensation will be an issue. The Broncos did slip back into the first round by trading edge-rusher Bradley Chubb to the Miami Dolphins, and it may take that to pry Payton loose. For the Broncos, it might be worth the price.

Jalen Hurts may win the NFL’s Most Valuable Player award in his absence

Jalen Hurts became an NFL MVP candidate with his presence. He may win the award in his absence.

Remember when Philadelphia Eagles quarterback Jalen Hurts was throwing dimes all over the field, and running all over the field, and people were insisting that with all the talent around him, Hurts was a completely replaceable cog in a system?

Jalen Hurts is the system, and the system is Jalen Hurts

Yeah, that’s out the door now.

Hurts has missed the Eagles’ last two games with a shoulder injury he suffered in Philly’s Week 15 win over the Chicago Bears. That was also the last time the Eagles won a game. In losses to the Dallas Cowboys and New Orleans Saints, the Eagles have gone from the NFL’s seemingly automatic one-seed at 13-1, to a 13-3 team that had better win their Week 18 game against the New York Giants if they want to get to the top of the mountain.

This is not a shot at backup quarterback Gardner Minshew — Minshew has done the best he can with his own skill set, but we have now seen what happens to this offense when Hurts isn’t in there, and it ain’t pretty. In last week’s 40-37 loss to the Cowboys, Philly’s offense had just 87 rushing yards on 29 carries. And Minshew’s two interceptions helped to seal the deal for Dallas.

But the obvious loss to this offense with Hurts out is Hurts’ impact on the Eagles’ rushing attack. He had gained 747 yards and scored 13 touchdowns on 156 carries, and that rushing ability allowed the Eagles to hang in 11 personnel (one tight end, one running back, three receivers) personnel at an abnormal rate, choosing to run or pass out of that package with equally abnormal success.

Now, we’re finding out that without Hurts as the epicenter of that run game, the Eagles’ offense starts to look… pretty normal. Minshew is a scrambler, and a pretty good one when he needs to be, but he’s not the guy you want when it’d time to fool a defense with a designed QB Power run on third-and-whatever.

As Hurts showed on this 22-yard touchdown run against the Bears, all it takes is one defender to take the wrong angle (in this case, it was safety Jaquan Brisker, who ran to the wrong A-Gap), and it might just be ballgame.

That’s a designed touchdown run out of passing personnel from your quarterback on third-and-8. Not many quarterbacks on whom you can regularly rely for such things.

Partially because they were down 13-0 in the first half, the Eagles relied less on their rushing attack against the Saints in Sunday’s 20-10 loss. They gained 67 yards on 15 attempts, and Kenneth Gainwell’s 28-yard first half touchdown run was negated by an inexcusably bad holding call on guard Landon Dickerson (take a bow as usual, Jerome Boger), and once again, this was not the run game we expect from this team.

Once again, that was because Jalen Hurts was not in the game.

The Eagles are obviously better when Hurts is on the field, but the extent to which they’re better should have people thinking that Hurts is right in contention for the NFL’s Most Valuable Player award, up there with Patrick Mahomes, and possibly Joe Burrow.

Sometimes, you don’t realize how valuable a player has become until you don’t have him for a while. This is the case for Jalen Hurts, and whether he’s able to play or not in the regular-season finale next Sunday, he’s proven beyond all doubt that he’s a lot more than a product of the system that maintains him.

Marshon Lattimore snags pick-six off Gardner Minshew for Saints

Marshon Lattimore returned and delivered a pick-six

The first interception of the season by a New Orleans Saints cornerback came Sunday at a huge time.

Marshon Lattimore, who hadn’t played in two months due to a lacerated kidney, picked Gardner Minshew in the fourth quarter at the Linc to give the Saints a 20-10 lead over the Philadelphia Eagles.

The Saints desperately needed the victory to keep their playoff hopes alive heading into Week 18. They needed a lot of help, including a Bucs loss to Carolina in Week 17.

Minshew telegraphed the pass and Lattimore jumped it and cruised into the end zone from 11 yards.

Eagles cheated out of must-have touchdown by bogus holding call on Landon Dickerson

The Eagles were cheated out of a crucial touchdown after Jerome Boger’s crew saw a holding call that wasn’t there.

Another week, another example of officials deciding plays, drives, and games in ways they should not. Perhaps it’s recency bias, but it seems to be happening this season more than ever. In this case, it happened with 11:12 left in the first half of the Philadelphia Eagles’ game against the New Orleans Saints. The Eagles had third-and-4 at the New Orleans 28-yard line, down 13-0, and it certainly appeared as if running back Kenneth Gainwell scored Philly’s first touchdown of the day on a 28-yard scamper.

Not so fast, as they say. It was decided by the officiating crew directed by referee Jerome Boger that guard Landon Dickerson somehow committed holding against defensive tackle Kentavius Street.

You tell us where the holding is there. On the next play after that should-have-been touchdown was negated, quarterback Gardner Minshew threw incomplete to receiver A.J. Brown, and it was up to kicker Jake Elliott to boot a 56-yard field goal, which he did.

The Eagles are trying to wrap up the NFC’s one-seed and home-field advantage through the playoffs, so it’s not as if this is an important game or anything.

If you’re familiar with Boger’s work in other areas, it should come as little surprise that his crew was on the wrong side of this one.

There isn’t a team in the AFC and NFC South divisions over .500

The AFC South and NFC South are embarrassing in 2022

The putrid play in the South divisions of the NFL in 2022 has been noted, over and over.

However, the divisions have gone about as South as teams can go.

After the results of Week 15, none of the 8 teams in the AFC South and NFC South are over .500.

That was sealed when Cameron Dicker kicked a field goal Sunday to lift the Los Angeles Chargers over the Tennessee Titans.

Mike Vrabel’s Titans are 7-7. They lead the 6-8 Jacksonville Jaguars by a game with the embarrassing Indianapolis Colts at 4-9-1 and the Houston Texans languishing in last at 1-12-1.

In the NFC South, the Tampa Bay Buccaneers collapsed against the Cincinnati Bengals to fall to 6-8. Trailing Tom Brady & Co. are the Carolina Panthers, New Orleans Saints, and Atlanta Falcons, who are each 5-9.

The NFC South collectively is 21-35, a .375 win percentage.

The AFC South is 18-36-2, somehow a lower percentage.

And not only will a team from each of these divisions wind up with a playoff spot, but each will also have a home playoff game.

Ooof.