Vikings would draft 6th overall if season ended today

The odds say the Vikings will likely finish with a top-10 pick.

The Vikings are 1-5 after Week 7.

That’s a huge disappointment for a team that will almost certainly miss out on the playoffs after signing Kirk Cousins to an extension this offseason.

If the 2020 season ended today, the Vikings would draft sixth overall, behind the Jets, Giants, Jaguars, Falcons and Dolphins.

The top three isn’t great, assuming you want the Vikings to draft a quarterback with their first pick. You could make a case for the Jets, Giants and Jaguars for taking a quarterback. Heck, even the Falcons could plan their next era by taking a quarterback to take over whenever they move on from Matt Ryan.

Right now, the top-10 quarterback hopefuls are Trevor Lawrence (who will go first overall), Justin Fields and Trey Lance.

Per Tankathon, the Vikings have the sixth-hardest schedule in the NFL, so it seems realistic they could draft in the top-10.

The gathering storm: How will scouting season handle prospects who opted-out or pushed for change?

Draft season, and by extension anonymous scout season, will be here soon. How will the league handle the moment?

Sometimes there is nothing more calming than standing on a beach and watching a storm roll in along with the tide.

A few weeks ago my family took a vacation to the Outer Banks in North Carolina. Fear not, social distancing was practiced during the entire trip. On more than a few nights, I would sit outside on the balcony of the place we were staying and watch thunderstorms on the horizon, build up strength and either come ashore or pass by, just off in the distance of the Atlantic.

Sadly the vacation came to an end, as all do, and it was time to return to work. That is, if you can call what I get to do for a living “work.” After all, I’m lucky and honored to cover the game of football professionally. As this return unfolds, I often find myself back on that balcony in my mind, gazing at the horizon, watching storm after storm build strength and threaten the shoreline.

The storm on my mind right now is the 2021 NFL Draft.

That might seem like a lifetime away given how time works in 2020, but the truth of the matter is that the next NFL Draft is approaching faster than you might think. In the past week two potential first-round players, wide receiver Rashod Bateman from Minnesota and Virginia Tech cornerback Caleb Farley, announced their intention to opt-out of the upcoming season and focus on that very draft. A third player, Penn State linebacker Micah Parsons, is reported to be announcing the same decision within days. Parsons is perhaps a top five selection, even as a linebacker.

They might not be the only players to reach such a decision as the college football season – however that looks – draws near.

The storm is not the decision to opt-out.

The storm is how that might be viewed.

The National Football League is not the most progressive organization, at least in terms of how it views those who step outside the lines and/or challenge the conventional wisdom and balance of power. Coaches want a roster of players who “do their jobs,” who “row the boat in the same direction,” who “pull their weight.” Insert your favorite bit of coach-speak as your see fit.

That means that come draft evaluation time, scouting departments want to know how well the players will fit into an organization. If they are “team players” or not. Can they be counted on to be one of the 53 when it matters most?

Recently, some high-profile draft prospects have begun skipping bowl games to avoid an injury, like the one suffered by current Dallas Cowboys linebacker Jaylon Smith when he was with Notre Dame. One such example is running back Christian McCaffrey, who sat out Stanford’s appearance at the Sun Bowl during his final season in college, a decision that he had to explain to general managers while in Indianapolis for the Scouting Combine. Fellow Stanford alum and Denver Broncos general manager John Elway had this to say about the move:

Obviously when I thought about it, kind of the old school in me wanted to come out and say, ‘Why? Why would those guys not play? It’s their last game,’ and this and that. But I tell you what, when you look at where the league is now and you talk about the value of these contracts for these players coming out and the risks that they’re taking, the old salty guy in me got flipped back to understanding. I understand why they didn’t play.

Another general manager, John Lynch of the San Francisco 49ers, framed the decision this way:

As a Stanford fan, I wasn’t a huge fan of that. … I think you understand their perspective, but I don’t necessarily think it’s a positive thing for college football. This is such a team sport — I know there are people that I’ve talked to here that that really bothers. I’m fortunate. With one of those players, I happen to know the young man (McCaffrey). So I would never question his commitment to team, but other people will.

Put it this way, they were willing to go on the record.

How are teams going to handle players who avoided a season because of – and you know this language is coming – a “virus that’s no worse than the flu?”

Parallel with the decision by some players to opt-out is another track. The players who will opt-in, but only if changes are made to the structure of the NCAA and by the individual schools in terms of protecting players.

In the past few days we have seen first players from the Pac-12, and now the Big Ten, release statement with demands for their conferences, schools and the NCAA at large for some perhaps overdue changes, both in light of the global pandemic as well as how athletes are treated on campus.

One of the first stories to emerge in the wake of the Pac-12 request from players? Speculation that Washington State head coach Nick Rolovich was taking some of that school’s players who signed on and/or supported that letter off campus. It turned out to be a misunderstanding, thankfully, but given how we have seen college coaches handle their athletes, the idea was at least plausible when first reported.

Draft prospects who step out of line in this way, in terms of questioning authority or toeing a “non-company line,” get hit with some red flags of their own. A few draft cycles ago Josh Rosen’s desire to play the game, given his interests “outside the game of football,” was questioned. The red flags popped up, and the anonymous scouts provided their quotes.

What happens when some of these players, pushing for change, then look to the draft?

Remember what was said of Rosen, when he committed the dual sins of golfing with a hat with a derogatory message about then-candidate Donald J. Trump as well as opining about the disconnect between the NCAA and the idea of the student-athlete:

What Rosen’s personality questions refer to are incidents like when he wore a derogatory reference to President Trump on a hat while playing at a Trump golf course or when he opined that the demands of college football were incompatible with a college course load. And Rosen’s not wrong on that point. Nor was the economics major off base when he took to Instagram to note the incongruity of his college signing a record $280 million shoe deal while still claiming amateurism.

Rosen’s UCLA coach, Jim Mora, told him that such a statement distracted from what should’ve been an important day for the university. The problem, to Rosen’s critics, is that he deviates from orthodoxy. In the hidebound world of football, such deviations are what gets labeled baggage. Mora tried to explain Rosen’s behavior by saying he needs to be challenged intellectually so he doesn’t get bored; he’s a millennial; he wants to know why; millennials, once they know why – they’re good. Seems insightful to me, but to the NFL establishment, it was as if Mora said, Josh is a fairly committed satanist, but his ritual slaughter of goats can occasionally lead touchdowns.

Millennials as suspect, millennial as privileged, non-team-players – now, here’s the thing. Of almost 2,000 players who appeared in an NFL game last year, all but 10 are millennials. If Josh Rosen weren’t a millennial, he would be worthless, a 37-year-old NFL rookie. Actually, a demographic case can be made that some of the younger NFL players, including those of Rosen’s age, aren’t millennials at all, but post-millennials, Generation Z. A lot of NFL fans and media members want their players, especially quarterbacks, to stand athwart societal trends and embody traditional virtues, which do not include Instagram or disrespectful hats on the golf course.

Then the anonymous scouts began to question his love of the game:

According to sources who have spoken with people close to Rosen, he has been focused since high school on using football to make money and support the type of lifestyle he wants. He’s OK with challenging the system and being a mouthpiece for divisiveness because he appreciates the attention it draws.

Rosen slid a bit in the draft, and now is looking to find a hold in the league after failing to keep a starting role in both Arizona and Miami. Of course, that has more to do with his play on the field than anything else, but if these stories were written about Rosen, you know what is coming in a few months: Reports about players who pushed for change, and how they too might not love the game as much, and could pose a problem in an NFL locker room.

Now it seems absurd, that these decisions to opt-out for medical reasons, or to push for changes in college athletics, would be viewed as potential red flags come draft season. But consider history. Should expressing a political opinion be considered a red flag? Looking out for one’s interests? What about “having poor body language” or being compared to Willie Beamen from ‘Any Given Sunday,’ both things that happened with Teddy Bridgewater during his draft class.

Or perhaps the best example: Marcus Mariota. Scouts could not find a red flag on him, which became a red flag of its own:

NFL evaluators are a meticulous bunch, and the homework compiled in the evaluation of draft prospects is extensive, if not excessive. So it’s not surprising that a clean review of a relatively complete prospect like Mariota would more likely arouse suspicion about what is being missed than any sort of affirmation.

If there is a need to go to the ends of the earth to uncover “red flags,” then the players either opting-out or signing on for change are going to face these issues during the draft process. From the scout’s point of view, a failure to at least address them when meeting with the prospect and/or compiling a scouting report is going to be viewed as a failure to “do the homework.”

The gathering storm.

Those anonymous scout red flags are coming.

Now of course, we can laugh them off and make the case that the talent on the field will win out. After all, the examples cited herein are of three quarterbacks – Bridgewater, Mariota and Rosen – who ended up picked in the first round.

But what about the fringe players? Those who do not have a first-round grade on them, who decide to opt-out for health concerns or sign onto a letter demanding change from institutions?

When a team is on the clock in the fifth round deciding between two hypothetical linebackers, and one of them made such a decision while the other has not, what happens then?

That is the storm that is gathering. How those players will be treated in the upcoming draft cycle. Not the stars.

Here’s hoping that these decisions, made in the midst of a year filled with uncertainty and change, will not be used as red flags against them in the draft.

 

Saints use their first-round pick on an LSU prospect in 2021 mock draft

The New Orleans Saints selected LSU Tigers prospect Tyler Shelvin, a top nose tackle in the 2021 NFL Draft class, in the latest mock draft.

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There’s a big overlap in fans of the New Orleans Saints and the LSU Tigers, the college football powerhouse in their backyard. But the Saints haven’t picked up many playmakers from their neighbors up the river, leading many fans to wonder when they’re going to start. Sure, the Saints have taken fliers on late-round draft picks like Will Clapp and the occasional undrafted rookie (Adrian Magee, Travin Dural among them), but it’s been years since they invested a premium selection in some homegrown talent.

If the latest 2021 NFL mock draft holds true, it might happen in a big way next summer. The Saints were connected to LSU prospect Tyler Shelvin, an underclassman looking to take his game to the next level in 2020. Here’s the thought behind the pick from Jacob Infante over at Draft Wire:

It’s tough to project what the Saints might do in next year’s draft since they have talented players essentially everywhere on their roster. While taking a big-bodied, run-stuffing defensive tackle with limited pass-rushing value might not be the sexiest pick in the world, a massive interior defender like Shelvin could help further improve New Orleans’ run defense.

Shelvin fits the textbook definition of a big body (listed at 6-foot-3 and 346 pounds) committed to stopping the run, often tasked with occupying multiple blockers for the Tigers. He’s graded out very well in that role by Pro Football Focus, where he is the highest-rated nose tackle in the country ahead of the 2020 season.

Conversely, he doesn’t have the skills yet to play all three downs in the NFL. PFF’s snap-by-snap charting had Shelvin with only six pressures on more than 300 pass rushes last year, which just isn’t good enough for the pro game’s standards. Hopefully he can show a lot of improvement in his upcoming junior year.

So why would the Saints use their first-round pick on such a limited defender? They have their other starting defensive tackle spot locked down with David Onyemata (who inked a three-year contract extension earlier this offseason), though Sheldon Rankins and Shy Tuttle will push for snaps in the rotation.

Malcom Brown has been a very underrated nose tackle for the Saints and did a lot to help maintain their stout run defense last season, but he’ll be a free agent after the 2021 season and the Saints could free up $5 million by releasing him next summer. If the salary cap takes a big fall expected, they’ll have to pinch every penny they can just to field a team.

There’s some logic to the Saints drafting a quality nose tackle highly, and their roster is so deep that they have the luxury of picking just about any position. But they might be better served waiting for a later round to add someone who would be a part-time player even beyond his rookie year.

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Way-too-early 2021 NFL draft crushes for Chiefs

A look at five college football players who we’ll be watching for the Kansas City Chiefs.

There are less than 70 days until the Kansas City Chiefs’ season opener is scheduled to take place. There are even fewer days until the 2020 college football season is scheduled to begin. With football rapidly approaching, it’s time to take a way-too-early look at some of our favorite college football players who might declare for the 2021 NFL Draft.

The Chiefs have a first-round draft pick in 2021. They are also projected to receive a pair of compensatory picks on Day 3, so they’ll have some extra draft capital to play with. That’ll make this draft a bit more impactful for the team and potentially exciting for fans.

Kansas City needs to nail the next few draft classes with a mega-contract coming up for star QB Patrick Mahomes. They need to do a good job acquiring cheap talent on rookie deals for the foreseeable future.

Take a look down below to find out five of the college football players we’ll be keeping an eye on for the Chiefs this season:

Reinhold Matay-USA TODAY Sports

UCF OG Parker Boudreaux

Boudreaux is a redshirt senior who transferred to UCF from Notre Dame.  Boudreaux was phenomenal at the right guard during 2019, playing in over 400 pass-blocking snaps, allowing just five pressures and no sacks per Pro Football Focus. He boasts a strong anchor in pass protection, bringing energy, punch and active hands every snap.

Boudreaux is very strong at the point of attack, dominating players in the ground game. He gets great movement off the line of scrimmage, and when he gets to the second level, linebackers have a tough time getting away from him. Ultimately, this is the type of guy you want protecting Chiefs QB Patrick Mahomes and clearing rushing lanes for RB Clyde Edwards-Helaire.

Recapping All Notre Dame NFL Draft Picks

Cole Kmet “stays home” during quarantine and lands with hometown Chicago Bears.  Just how bad have things gone at tight end there that he’ll be counted on to fix?

This weekend saw six players from Notre Dame selected in the 2020 NFL Draft with another hand-full being signed to free agent deals.  Who landed in the best places to find success and which of the later picks or free agent signings will have the best chance of making a roster?

In our podcast with myself and Jeff Feyerer we discuss the landing spot of every Notre Dame player this draft season.

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Cole Kmet “stays home” during quarantine and lands with hometown Chicago Bears.  Just how bad have things gone at tight end there that he’ll be counted on to fix?

Did Chase Claypool get selected by the best franchise in football to get drafted by if you’re a wide receiver?

How much did Julian Okwara’s injury effect him falling to the third round and how many stories were better this weekend than him getting to play pro ball with his brother in Detroit?

We also analyze the rest of the picks:  Troy Pride, Jr., Khalid Kareem and Alohi Gilman before breaking down all of the undrafted free agents as well. Take a listen and on Apple Podcasts go ahead and hit subscribe.  Hope you enjoy what you hear and we’ll be doing this a lot more in the near future.

(Any feedback we are happy to take on Twitter at @NickShepkowski and @JF_Fey)

Timing is everything in the Saints-Jameis Winston deal

The New Orleans Saints are expected to sign Tampa Bay Buccaneers free agent QB Jameis Winston, but may wait until after a critical deadline.

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The New Orleans Saints wanted another backup quarterback behind Drew Brees, and they found one in Jameis Winston. The former first-overall draft pick became one of the few quarterbacks in NFL history to throw for 5,000 yards last season with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, but the 30 interceptions he lobbed caused his former team to move on from him.

While no deal has been signed by Winston with the Saints just yet, it’s expected to be a one-year contract that lets him compete for the backup job with Taysom Hill. And that’s smart — nothing should be handed out freely in the NFL, much less the right to go into a game in relief of Drew Brees. But the timing on this arrangement is a critical factor.

Per the new league collective bargaining agreement, veteran free agents signed after the Monday following the NFL draft will not factor into the next year’s compensatory pick formula: that puts the cutoff at 3:00 p.m. CT on Monday, April 27.

Normally, the Saints wouldn’t care about this. They’ve received the fewest comp picks in the NFL since the seven-round draft was created, owing to their proactive approach in free agency. But they’re projected to receive a third-round pick (for Teddy Bridgewater) and a sixth-round pick (for A.J. Klein) next season if nothing changes.

Per Nick Korte of Over The Cap, if the Saints do not wait until that deadline they will lose one of those two extra draft picks. If Winston’s contract averages more than $14 million per year, they would forfeit the third-round selection. If it’s less than that, the sixth rounder goes out the window.

That’s not ideal, and The Athletic’s Katherine Terrell suggests that the Saints are keenly aware of it, telling fans to not expect any movement until after the deadline. It makes sense considering the Saints already trading their 2021 draft picks in those rounds to move up in this year’s event, using those resources to help acquire linebacker Zack Baun and quarterback Tommy Stevens. That’s what you call strategic.

Obviously the Saints will hope they can coach some bad habits out of Winston. His previous career-high for interceptions was 18, with Bruce Arians’ aggressively vertical, “no risk it, no biscuit” philosophy aggravating the problems that Winston has struggled with since his college days. In New Orleans, he’ll be playing in an offense that stress ball security and making the throw on time. He wouldn’t be the first quarterback to thrive in a new environment.

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Touchdown Wire’s early 2021 NFL Draft watch list: Offense

Sure the 2020 NFL Draft just ended, but it is never too early to think about the next one. Here are the players to watch on offense.

Over the past three days 32 NFL teams did everything they could to improve their odds for a Super Bowl title. Surprise selections were made, some teams filled big needs while others looked to the future, and a good time was had by all. In fact, it was so enjoyable that maybe we should think about doing it again.

And we will, in about a year for now.

We do not know yet what form the next college football season will take. Are we going to see games in the fall, or will there be a winter/spring college football season? Are we going to see crowded stadiums, or empty venues. Regardless of how that plays out, there is always a new crop of new prospects to get to know over the summer. In that spirit, here is a way-too-early 2021 NFL Draft watchlist, starting on the offensive side of the football.

Quarterbacks

Trevor Lawrence Clemson Tigers
(Joshua S. Kelly-USA TODAY Sports)

1. Trevor Lawrence, Clemson

2. Justin Fields, Ohio State

3. Jamie Newman, Georgia

4. Trey Lance, North Dakota State

5. K. J. Costello, Mississippi State

6. Sam Ehlinger, Texas

7. Kellen Mond, Texas A&M

8. Kyle Trask, Florida

9. Sean Clifford, Penn State

10. Tanner Morgan, Minnesota

Trevor Lawrence and Justin Fields are obviously the headliners, but do not overlook the other names on this list. Lawrence has looked every bit the part of a future first-overall selection since his time on campus, leading the Clemson Tigers to a national championship as a true freshman, and then back to the title game as a sophomore. He has the arm, processing speed and athleticism that NFL teams covet. Fields stepped into the Ohio State lineup and was impressive last season, throwing 41 touchdown and just three interceptions. K.J. Costello might be in a position to put up huge numbers, after transferring to Mississippi State to play for Mike Leach in his Air Raid system. But keep an eye on NDSU passer Trey Lance. The rising redshirt sophomore threw 28 touchdowns last year for the Bison, without an interception, and he also ran for 1,100 yards and 14 touchdowns. He became the first freshman to win the Walter Payton Award, given to the top offensive player in FCS. He might not enter the draft, but another year like last season could find him making the leap.

The clock is ticking on a Saints compensatory draft pick for Eli Apple

The Saints projected to receive a compensatory draft pick in 2021 after Eli Apple left, but he’s a free agent again before the NFL deadline.

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We were so close to the New Orleans Saints reversing a decades-long trend when it comes to compensatory draft picks. Usually too active in adding free agents to qualify, the Saints finally lost more than they gained in the 2020 offseason following the departures of quarterback Teddy Bridgewater, linebacker A.J. Klein, safety Vonn Bell, and cornerback Eli Apple.

When matched against the addition of wide receiver Emmanuel Sanders, that left the Saints with a +3 value in Over The Cap’s cancellation chart, projecting them to receive three compensatory picks in the 2021 draft. That would mean an extra selection in the third round (for Bridgewater) and a pair of sixth-round picks (for Bell and Apple, having lost another one by signing Sanders).

But Apple’s verbal agreement with the Las Vegas Raiders fell apart before he could put pen to paper, and he’s still a free agent. That cost the Saints a possible sixth-round pick in next year’s draft, and if he doesn’t sign with a new team at a comparable salary before the NFL’s deadline, they won’t get anything back for him.

The new collective bargaining agreement stipulates that veteran free agents may only qualify for the compensatory draft pick formula until 4 p.m. ET on the Monday following the draft; that puts this year’s deadline on April 27. With the first round of the draft set to begin on Thursday night, odds are slim that Apple will land with a new team before the deadline.

That means the Saints swapped a 2019 fourth-round pick and their seventh rounder in 2020 for just 27 games with Apple (including the playoffs). He was just as inconsistent in New Orleans as he was with the New York Giants, the team that drafted him, but Apple’s brightest moments far surpassed those with his first team.

So where does he go next? He might face a more active market after the draft, once teams around the league will have had an opportunity to address their needs at the position. If they weren’t able to do so, Apple should receive more interest as one of the few starting-quality options available.

But if he doesn’t get any offers to his liking, could a reunion with the Saints be in the cards? Stranger things have happened. Apple has said before that he enjoyed his experience in New Orleans, playing with old Ohio State teammates like Marshon Lattimore, and he would offer great depth behind Lattimore and Janoris Jenkins (who he also played with in New York).

But Apple’s best shot at a big NFL payday might come after he proves he can turn in 16 strong games as a starter, and he shouldn’t expect that sort of opportunity with the Saints this year.

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2021 NFL Draft: Saints projected to add multiple compensatory picks

The analysts at Over The Cap project the New Orleans Saints to receive two compensatory picks in the 2021 NFL Draft.

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The New Orleans Saints have rarely qualified for compensatory draft picks since Sean Payton was hired to take over the team, owing to their always-aggressive approach in free agency to acquire veterans and eliminate roster needs before the draft. But that strategy changed in the 2020 offseason, and the Saints now stand to reap the benefits in 2021.

It’s difficult to pin down an exact process behind the NFL’s allotment for compensatory draft picks, which focuses on average annual salary as well as in-season playing time and postseason accolades like Pro Bowl appearances and All-Pro recognition.

But the analysts at Over The Cap have come closest to matching the NFL’s results, and they project the Saints to add two draft picks to their 2021 haul: third-rounder for quarterback Teddy Bridgewater and a sixth-round pick for linebacker A.J. Klein. The Saints canceled out their loss of safety Vonn Bell by adding wide receiver Emmanuel Sanders.

However, the Saints could qualify for another compensatory pick if cornerback Eli Apple signs with another team at a high enough salary. The one-year, $6 million deal he agreed to with the Las Vegas Raiders would have given the Saints another sixth-round pick, but he backed out of negotiations when the Raiders failed to seal the deal. Now back on the market in free agency, it’s uncertain whether Apple will get another offer of that magnitude.

There’s some confusion about safety Malcolm Jenkins, whose 2020 option was not picked up by the Philadelphia Eagles before he signed with the Saints. In the past, that would not have been treated the same as if Philadelphia had cut him outright, but the new collective bargaining agreement may have changed things. For now, the Over The Cap crew isn’t expecting him to factor in. But if Jenkins is counted against the Saints, he would wipe out their sixth-round compensatory pick for Klein.

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Details on Eli Apple’s Raiders contract, Saints comp pick implications

The Las Vegas Raiders inked New Orleans Saints free agent Eli Apple to a one-year prove-it contract, giving the Giants ex-pat another chance

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The New Orleans Saints lost starting cornerback Eli Apple to the Las Vegas Raiders, who signed the free agent to a one-year, $6 million contract. Per NFL Network’s Mike Garafolo, that $6 million is fully guaranteed with a further $500,000 available in incentives.

This is essentially a prove-it contract for Apple, who played at a decent level for the Saints for much of the 2019 season. But when injuries and suspensions struck the secondary — taking number-one cornerback Marshon Lattimore and nickel corner P.J. Williams off of the field — Apple folded under the added responsibilities and was fouled six times in three games, including three penalties for defensive pass interference on Thanksgiving against the Atlanta Falcons.

A late-season ankle injury and the pickup of Janoris Jenkins off the waiver wire pushed Apple further down the depth chart, and now off the Saints roster. It’s hardly the result the team imagined when they swapped a 2019 fourth-round pick and a seventh rounder in 2020 to acquire him from the New York Giants, who drafted him tenth overall out of Ohio State back in 2016. So how does his loss impact the compensatory draft pick formula?

Those selections are awarded based off of whether a team signs fewer unrestricted free agents than it loses, so Apple’s $6 million salary being valued as a sixth-round pick in 2021 cancels out the addition of Emmanuel Sanders at $8 million per year. The Saints have also lost quarterback Teddy Bridgewater (at $21 million per year, qualifying for a third-round pick) and linebacker A.J. Klein ($6 million per year, sixth rounder).

It’s unclear whether safety Malcolm Jenkins will factor in, but if he did his $8 million salary would wipe out the sixth-round selection garnered by losing Klein. Because Jenkins had his 2020 contract option declined by the Philadelphia Eagles, he should count against the Saints; if he had been cut instead, he would not factor into the equation. Changes in the new collective bargaining agreement make this a little more confusing than it’s been in the past.

The Saints also signed fullback Michael Burton, an unrestricted free agent, but his near-minimum salary will not count against the Saints’ other losses. For now, we’re conservatively predicting that the Saints will be awarded a third-round pick in 2021 for Bridgewater, while sixth-round selections for Klein and Apple will be wiped out by the signings of Sanders and Jenkins. Keep an eye out for Vonn Bell’s landing spot, which should also qualify for a compensatory pick in next year’s draft.

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