Chiefs to sign former Pro Bowl QB Carson Wentz

The Kansas City #Chiefs are expected to sign Carson Wentz to serve as Patrick Mahomes’ backup in 2024.

The Kansas City Chiefs are adding extra Pro Bowl experience to their quarterback room this offseason.

According to NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport, former Pro Bowl quarterback Carson Wentz is signing with the Chiefs. The contract is reportedly a one-year deal, and complete details haven’t been released yet.

Wentz was the second overall pick in the 2016 NFL draft by the Philadelphia Eagles, earning Pro Bowl honors in 2017. The Eagles won Super Bowl LII that season after Wentz went down with a season-ending knee injury in Week 14.

Wentz spent last season as a backup for the Los Angeles Rams, appearing in two games after being signed on Nov. 8. He won his lone start and was 17 of 24 with two passing touchdowns and a rushing score.

After five seasons in Philadelphia, he had one-season stops with the Indianapolis Colts and Washington Commanders.

The Chiefs had Blaine Gabbert as the backup quarterback last season behind Patrick Mahomes, and the veteran victoriously started the regular-season finale. Wentz has significant game experience and should do a sufficient job, assuming Brett Veach doesn’t bring in anyone else before training camp.

Former Bengals QB joins Commanders in free agency

A former Bengals QB is on the move.

A former Cincinnati Bengals quarterback has joined the Washington Commanders via free agency.

According to ESPN’s Adam Schefter, Jeff Driskel inked a deal with Washington, joining a depth chart that includes Marcus Maritoa after the trade of Sam Howell — a depth chart that might see more changes very soon.

Driskel was a waiver claim by the Bengals in 2016 and eventually made his debut with the team in 2018, replacing an injured Andy Dalton.

Funny enough, after bouncing around with a few different teams starting in 2019, Driskel actually started for the Cleveland Browns against the Bengals in last season’s finale, with the Browns resting starters en route to the playoffs.

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Commanders sign veteran QB Jeff Driskel

The Commanders now have three quarterbacks on the roster.

Washington general manager Adam Peters added another veteran quarterback to the roster on Monday, signing Jeff Driskel the day before the Commanders open the offseason program.

Washington now has three quarterbacks on the roster, as Driskel joins Marcus Mariota (signed last month) and Jake Fromm. The Commanders are expected to select a quarterback at No. 2 overall in this month’s 2024 NFL draft.

Driskel, who will turn 31 this month, has been in the NFL since 2016, when he entered the league as an undrafted free agent from Louisiana Tech. Before his lone season at Louisiana Tech, Driskel spent four seasons at the University of Florida, where he started on and off for his final three seasons.

The 6-foot-4, 235-pound Driskel was a sixth-round pick of the 49ers in 2016, which was Peters’ first season there. San Francisco waived him during final cuts, and he was claimed by the Cincinnati Bengals. He spent two years with the Bengals, some of which he was injured, but he did start the final five games of the 2018 season.

The Bengals waived Driskel, and the Detroit Lions claimed him. He started three games for the Lions in 2019 and finished the season on injured reserve. He spent the 2020 season with the Denver Broncos, appearing in three games and making one start. After the Broncos waived him in May, he signed with the Houston Texans.

Driskel played for the Texans for two seasons, playing in eight games with one start. He spent most of the 2023 season on the Arizona Cardinals practice squad before he was signed to the Cleveland Browns’ 53-man roster in December. He would start in Cleveland’s regular-season finale.

For his career, Driskel has appeared in 24 games with 12 starts. He was one career win as a starting quarterback, completing 229 of his 391 passing attempts (58.6%) for 2,394 yards (6.4 YPA), with 16 touchdowns and 10 interceptions. He has rushed for 417 yards and three touchdowns.

Driskel was likely signed as an extra quarterback for the offseason program in training camp. Once Washington drafts a quarterback, Driskel isn’t likely to make the roster, or he’ll compete with Fromm for the Commanders’ third quarterback position.

Commanders sign running back Jeremy McNichols

The Commanders add another veteran to the running back room.

The Washington Commanders added to their backfield on Monday, signing veteran running back Jeremy McNichols.

McNichols, 28, was a fifth-round pick of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in the 2017 NFL draft out of Boise State. McNichols was released during final cuts and signed to the 49ers’ practice squad. He was promoted to the active roster in November and released during San Francisco’s final cuts in 2018.

He split the 2018 season between the Indianapolis Colts, Denver Broncos and Tennessee Titans. He was again waived during Tennessee’s final roster cuts in 2019 and signed with the Chicago Bears. The Bears waived him in December, and he signed with the Jacksonville Jaguars for the remainder of the season.

In 2020, McNichols returned to the Titans, where he’d remain for two seasons. He had brief stints on the offseason rosters of the Falcons and Steelers in 2022 before returning to San Francisco in 2023. He spent time on the 49ers’ practice squad and 53-man roster last season and was released in January.

McNichols has 90 rushing attempts for 364 yards and a touchdown in his NFL career. He has appeared in 37 career games and all but two of his rushing attempts came with the Titans. He also has 40 receptions for 295 yards and a touchdown.

Washington has starting running back Brian Robinson Jr. and 2023 sixth-round pick Chris Rodriguez Jr. returning in 2024. The Commanders also signed veteran Austin Ekeler to be more of Washington’s 1b to Robinson’s 1a in 2024.

McNichols’ connections to Washington are general manager Adam Peters and running backs coach Anthony Lynn.

Commanders coach Dan Quinn on Bobby Wagner: ‘He’s all that I love about football’

Dan Quinn has been a massive Bobby Wagner fan for over a decade.

New Washington Commanders head coach Dan Quinn only spent two seasons with linebacker Bobby Wagner in Seattle. But those two seasons were in Wagner’s formative years (2013-14), and the future Hall of Fame linebacker left quite the impression on his former defensive coordinator.

Quinn left to become the head coach of the Atlanta Falcons, while Wagner remained with Seattle for the next eight seasons. In 2022, the Seahawks released Wagner after 10 seasons. He suddenly became a sought-after free agent, despite his age and rarely ever leaving the field.

At this time, Quinn was the defensive coordinator of the Dallas Cowboys and he wanted Wagner. However, Wagner signed with the Los Angeles Rams, where he was terrific again, making the Pro Bowl and was named a second-team All-Pro. Unfortunately, after the 2022 season, the Rams decided to shed salaries after a Super Bowl run and released Wagner.

Quinn tried to get the Cowboys to sign him again. He chose a return to Seattle.

Earlier this month, in free agency, Quinn finally got his man when Wagner signed a one-year deal with the Commanders. Wagner, who will turn 34 in June, remains one of the NFL’s best inside linebackers and leaders.

Wagner discussed his reasons for signing with Washington, which included Quinn.

“I think DQ (Dan Quinn) does an amazing job of just putting all the players in right positions, and you know, getting the best out of everybody,” Wagner said. “N’s (LB coach Ken Norton) one of my favorite coaches of all time, so that was enough for me.”

This week, Quinn was a guest on Moving the Chains on SiriusXM NFL Radio and discussed the Commanders signing Wagner.

“He’s all that I love about football,” Quinn said. “Like, he’s a tackler; he’s aggressive; he’s tough; he’s smart; he takes care of himself. And, so, what I’m hopeful to see — and I’m certain it’ll happen — he’s a multiplier. Wags is. Because this is how the standard is, this is how I operate, this is a process to go through. If you were a young linebacker being around somebody, this is the exact type of linebacker you’d want to be around. A defensive ballplayer in that instance. Seeing that standard of how we operate. I thought that was really important, and so that’s why I’m so lit up about getting him here.”

Quinn said he’s coached against Wagner a lot and how the offense would always need to game plan around Wagner.

The Commanders have struggled to find consistent linebacker play for years. The previous regime ignored the position, but Quinn and general manager Adam Peters quickly changed that, signing Wagner and former Panthers LB Frankie Luvu. Wagner may not be the same player he was five years ago, but he remains one of the best. His presence in 2024 will be as impactful for Washington in the offseason and on the practice field as it will be on the field in the fall.

 

Bengals were always Mike Gesicki’s target in free agency

Mike Gesicki gave one big reason, too — Joe Burrow.

New Cincinnati Bengals tight end Mike Gesicki seemed to have the team in mind well before the free agency market opened.

Gesicki himself appeared to suggest as much recently after his stint in New England on a rough offense that produced a career-low 45 targets.

Paul Dehner Jr. of The Athletic summed up the situation nicely while looking at the signing:

After spending last year in the offensive trainwreck that was the New England Patriots, Gesicki knew exactly what his career needed and his skill set demanded. That’s why since the moment the season ended, he’d been talking to his wife, Halle, about going to Cincinnati. When the Bengals called, he knew where it would end.

Now Gesicki gets to become the latest one-year, prove-it target for Joe Burrow.

And he says that No. 9 factored more than anything in the thought process, per Dehner: “They could have said it was the worst place in the world, but when you got No. 9 at quarterback, I was like, ‘That is the place I want to go.’”

And go he did, with the potential to contribute more than the last few guys to hold the No. 1 spot on the depth chart over the last few years. With Gesicki’s skill in the slot well proven and Tyler Boyd gone, his initial gut feeling about Cincinnati could be proven right in a hurry.

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Josh Reynolds signed with the Broncos for less than initially reported

Former Lions WR Josh Reynolds signed with the Broncos as a free agent for less than initially reported

Former Lions wide receiver Josh Reynolds is now a member of the Denver Broncos. The veteran wideout signed in Denver this week as a free agent.

Initially, reports indicated that Reynolds inked with the Broncos for a deal in the $7 million per season range for two years. The actual deal is considerably lower.

Per Over The Cap, Reynolds signed in Denver for $9 million over two seasons. He received a $2 million signing bonus and a total guaranteed salary of $2.245 million in 2024, with no guaranteed salary in 2025. There are also roster bonuses that total $765,000 in the two seasons.

Reynolds counts $3.5 million against Denver’s cap in 2024 and $5.5 million in 2025, though cutting him after one season would cost Denver just $1 million in dead salary cap room.

Bengals signing Geno Stone tabbed ‘steal of free agent class’

One expert loves the Bengals signing Geno Stone.

The Cincinnati Bengals got one of the steals of free agency by signing Geno Stone away from the Baltimore Ravens.

So says ESPN, where Matt Miller graded the move as an “A+” while pointing out that a weak safety class could mean one doesn’t get drafted over the opening two rounds:

This is the steal of the free agent class so far. Stone will be tied for the 11th-highest-paid safety in the game. Stone, who was drafted in the seventh round of the 2020 draft, gets rewarded after four years of league minimum pay. The 24-year-old has eight career interceptions … but notched seven in 2023 alone, playing in new defensive coordinator Mike MacDonald’s scheme.

The Bengals desperately needed to find safety help after a disastrous year following the loss of Vonn Bell and Jessie Bates.

So arrives Stone, a rangy playmaker who can be on the field with Dax Hill and Jordan Battle. Or, he can play that deep Bates-styled role and Hill can move to the slot.

Plus, given the contract details we now know, it’s a savvy deal along the same lines as Chidobe Awuzie the front office has pulled off in recent years.

So good value at the right time, hitting a major need and taking from a divisional rival — it certainly feels like one of the better moves of free agency.

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Details of Brock Wright’s offer with the 49ers

Details of Brock Wright’s offer with the 49ers that the Lions restricted free agent signed

Tight end Brock Wright has signed a contract with the San Francisco 49ers as a restricted free agent. Now the Detroit Lions must decide whether to match the deal or lose Wright for no compensation.

Per Dave Birkett, Wright signed a three-year contract worth $12 million with the 49ers. That’s a significant raise from the $2.9 million RFA tender offer the Lions placed on Wright. Because the Lions used an original round tender on Wright, who joined Detroit as an undrafted free agent in 2021, they won’t get any draft pick recompense for not matching San Francisco’s offer.

Detroit now has five days to match the deal. The $4 million per year average is a pretty hefty price tag for Wright, who caught 13 passes for 91 yards and a touchdown in 2023 as Sam LaPorta’s primary backup. However, Wright is a trusted blocker and sure-handed receiver–albeit a low-volume one.

The Lions do have James Mitchell and Shane Zylstra as reserve tight ends behind LaPorta. Neither has proven to be as steady as Wright yet in their young careers. Detroit has the available cap room to absorb the higher offer for Wright if the Lions so choose.

Commanders sign WR Olamide Zaccheaus

The Commanders add their first wide receiver of the offseason.

Not only were the Commanders meeting with Drake Maye at the UNC pro day on Thursday, but they also signed wide receiver Olamide Zaccheaus.

The former Virginia Cavalier was undrafted in 2019 but signed by the Falcons. During his four seasons with the Falcons (2019-2022), he started 23 games, contributing 94 receptions for 1,328 yards (14.1), 8 touchdowns, and 65 first downs. Here are some NFL highlights of Zaccheaus.

Zaccheaus’s signing with the Commanders might not be that much of a surprise, seeing as he spent the 2023 season with the Eagles. Brian Johnson, the Commanders’ passing game coordinator/assistant head coach, served as the Eagles’ offensive coordinator last season and must have developed a relationship with Zaccheaus.

Last season as an Eagle, Zaccheaus made one start and caught 10 passes for 164 yards (16.4), resulting in 2 touchdowns and 7 first downs. Following his 2022 season with the Falcons, he filed for free agency in March of 2023 and one month later signed with the Eagles.

Zaccheaus will turn 27 in July and has also spent considerable time on special teams. In the 2019 season, he recovered a fumble for a touchdown. He also achieved the longest reception during the 2019 season of 93 yards.