Impact of Jets’ pending decision on exclusive rights free agent Austin Deculus

Austin Deculus is the Jets’ lone exclusive rights free agent and have a decision to make on his future. Here is what you need to know.

We are all familiar with how things work for the NFL’s unrestricted free agents, who are free to negotiate and sign wherever they please. The New York Jets have 21 players who fit into that category this offseason.

However, what about the exclusive rights free agent (ERFA) and the impact of that decision? Offensive lineman Austin Deculus is the Jets’ lone ERFA, and the team needs to make a decision about his future by the start of the new league year on Wednesday.

An ERFA is a player with fewer than three accrued NFL seasons. Although the term ERFA has the words “free agent” in it, these players don’t have the same ability as unrestricted free agents to negotiate with whomever they please.

Instead, if their current team offers them a league minimum contract, they have no choice but to accept it. The only way an ERFA can become an unrestricted free agent is if they are not offered a new deal–essentially, it’s not their decision.

The Jets claimed Deculus off waivers in mid-November after he was released by the Houston Texans.

Deculus did not play any snaps for the Jets and has played only 39 offensive snaps in total over his first two NFL seasons. All of those snaps came at left tackle, where he allowed three quarterback hits.

Deculus was a sixth-round pick by Houston in the 2022 NFL Draft out of LSU. There, he was a very experienced player with nearly 3,400 career snaps over five college seasons, most of which came at right tackle.

The 2021 season, Deculus’ last at LSU, was his best, as he did not surrender a sack and gave up only 17 total pressures. Out of 159 eligible offensive tackles that season, Deculus ranked 32nd in PFF’s pass-blocking efficiency.

For a closer look at what Deculus can offer, here is what The Athletic’s Dane Brugler had to say about him in his pre-draft scouting report:

“Deculus checks boxes for his size and arm length, and his technique showed important maturation as a super-senior as his sacks allowed went from four in 2020 to zero in 2021. However, his stiff knees and lack of lower-body flexibility create pad level and balance issues as he lacks the lateral quickness to match speed.

“Overall, Deculus has played a lot of football and has functional length and handwork, but his ceiling is likely capped by average athleticism, which will be tough to mask versus NFL pass rushers. He is a potential NFL backup at right tackle.”

The decision on whether or not to re-sign Deculus will probably be an easy one for the Jets: they should do it.

The purpose of this re-signing isn’t so Deculus can compete for starting snaps at tackle. Hopefully, between having Alijah Vera-Tucker as an option, along with some key additions in free agency and the draft, Joe Douglas addresses that need elsewhere.

But for a thin Jets’ offensive line room, what Deculus provides is depth and competition on the back end of the roster during training camp and the preseason.

Re-signing him is a low-risk move for the Jets. The league minimum contract for a third-year player is only $1.05 million with what I’m guessing will include little or likely no guaranteed dollars.

If Deculus performs well this summer and makes the roster, then the Jets bolstered their in-season tackle depth. If he doesn’t do that, then they release him with really no salary cap impact.

Jets Week 11 inactives: Michael Carter II out vs. Bills

Jets Week 11 inactives: Michael Carter II out vs. Bills

The Jets released one Michael Carter a few days ago and now will be without the other for Week 11 against the Buffalo Bills.

Nickel cornerback Michael Carter II is among the inactives Sunday. Carter was a late addition to the injury report with a hamstring injury and was questionable for Sunday. He is now officially out. Look for Brandin Echols to step in at the slot corner position in place of Carter.

The rest of the Jets’ inactives:

WR Randall Cobb
LB Sam Eguavoen
OL Billy Turner
LB Chazz Surratt
DL Carl Lawson
OL Austin Deculus

The Jets are indeed starting to go a bit younger Sunday. Israel Abanikanda and Jason Brownlee are both active Sunday and it wouldn’t be surprising to see the Jets start using Jeremy Ruckert more as well.

But on a day where the Jets really could use all hands on deck as they look for the season sweep of Buffalo, not having Carter in the defensive backfield will certainly sting.

Texans sign OT Austin Deculus to active roster among other Week 4 transactions

The Houston Texans have signed tackle Austin Deculus to the active roster among other moves for Week 4 against the Pittsburgh Steelers.

The Houston Texans have made a bevy of moves as they get ready to take on the Pittsburgh Steelers Sunday at 12:00 p.m. Central Time at NRG Stadium.

The Texans signed tackle Austin Deculus and defensive tackle Khalil Davis from the practice squad to the active roster.

Houston also declared tackle Geron Christian and center Jimmy Morrissey as their two standard elevations from the practice squad. Following Week 4, both Christian and Morrissey will have two additional standard elevations the Texans can use before needing to sign them to the active roster from the practice squad.

The Texans also released safety DeAndre Carter-Houston from the active roster while signing defensive end Derek Rivers to the practice squad.

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Texans OC Bobby Slowik vouches for OT Austin Deculus

Houston Texans offensive coordinator Bobby Slowik has confidence in second-year tackle Austin Deculus heading into Week 4.

The Houston Texans weren’t supposed to need Austin Deculus so soon.

As the organization formed its offensive line throughout the offseason, three-time Pro Bowler Laremy Tunsil was to man left tackle with former 2019 first-rounder Tytus Howard locking down right tackle.

In a series of training camp and regular season injuries, Tunsil and Howard have played just one game between the two of them. The reserves are starting to take on attrition as backup Josh Jones has not practiced all week with a hand injury.

The Texans brought back Geron Christian, who started eight of 14 games active in 2021. However, Houston may have to rely on their final pick of the 2022 NFL draft to anchor the left side in Week 4.

Offensive coordinator Bobby Slowik expressed to reporters Sept. 28 a sense of confidence in the former sixth-rounder from LSU.

“He’s been putting the work in over the first three weeks,” Slowik said. “We’ve noticed — we don’t really take — a lot of teams call it a scout team — guys that are out there doing cards. We don’t take that for granted. We coach that pretty hard. We evaluate it, we’re constantly talking to our guys about it to make sure their fundamentals and techniques can improve on a week-to-week basis.”

Deculus has been active for two games for Houston, although all 12 of his snaps were on special teams. Should the Texans use the Cy-Fair High School alumnus extensively on offense, he can count on support.

“Obviously, we’re not just going to put him out there,” said Slowik. “We’re going to make sure we help him in the run game and the pass game and that’s all the way across the board.”

The Texans face the Pittsburgh Steelers Sunday at 12:00 p.m. Central Time at NRG Stadium. Pittsburgh (2-1) enters Week 4 with the most sacks with 13.

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Texans elevate OT Austin Deculus from practice squad for Week 2 against the Colts

The Houston Texans have elevated OT Austin Deculus as part of their two practice squad elevations in anticipation for Week 2.

The Houston Texans are getting ready for a series of outcomes if Laremy Tunsil is unable to go in Week 2 against the Indianapolis Colts.

The Texans signed center-guard Michael Deiter from the practice squad to the active roster. That should give Houston options along the interior as they possibly slide Josh Jones, who debuted last week at left guard, out to left tackle to replace the three-time Pro Bowler.

Houston also declared second-year tackle Austin Deculus as one of their two standard practice squad elevations. The other elevation is seven-year safety DeAndre Houston-Carson due to starters Jalen Pitre and Jimmie Ward being out.

The Texans also waived defensive end Derek Rivers from the active roster.

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4 facts to remember about the Texans’ practice squad

The Houston Texans completed their practice squad. Here are four facts to keep an eye on.

The Houston Texans completed their practice squad Wednesday. While the bulk of the Texans’ construction centers around the 53-man roster, assembling a practice squad that can supplement the needs of the main roster is also key.

Khalil Davis

DT

6-1

308

27

3

Nebraska

Austin Deculus

T

6-5

321

24

2

LSU

Cobi Francis

CB

5-11

193

24

2

Memphis

Ali Gaye

DE

6-6

265

25

R

LSU

Brandon Hill

S

5-11

195

22

R

Pittsburgh

Johnny Johnson III

WR

6-1

199

24

1

Oregon

Dalton Keene

TE

6-4

251

24

2

Virginia Tech

Jimmy Morrissey

C

6-3

303

25

3

Pittsburgh

Adedayo Odeleye*

DE

6-5

271

25

1

Loughborough (U.K.)

Steven Sims

WR

5-10

176

26

4

Kansas

Garret Wallow

LB

6-2

230

24

3

TCU

Ty Zentner

P

6-2

199

25

R

Kansas State

Derek Rivers

DE

6-5

250

29

7

Youngstown State

Michael Deiter

C-G

6-6

315

26

5

Wisconsin

Dieter Eiselen

G

6-4

320

27

2

Yale

Lance McCutcheon

WR

6-3

202

24

2

Montana State

Here are four facts to keep in mind regarding the formation of the Texans’ practice squad.

Texans sign LSU OT Austin Deculus

The Houston Texans have signed former LSU Tigers tackle Austin Deculus to a four-year contract.

The Houston Texans have added another one of their 2022 NFL draft class to the 90-man roster.

According to Aaron Wilson from the Pro Football Network, the Texans have signed former LSU tackle Austin Deculus to a four-year deal worth $3.822 million. Deculus earns a $162,756 signing bonus, and the former Bayou Bengal gets base salaries of $705,000, $870,000, $985,000, and $1.1 million.

General manager Nick Caserio told reporters on April 30 that what appealed to them about Deculus was the fact he played in the SEC West and also had position flex.

“You’re talking about a guy that’s a four-year starter in the SEC and played, I don’t know, 50-some odd games, whatever the heck it was,” Caserio said. “Pretty consistent player. 6’5″, 310 pounds. Got 34 inch arms. Runs 5-flat, which I would say for an offensive lineman, that’s pretty good. Played mostly on the right side during his career, so whether or not he can kind of flip and play both sides, we’ll see.”

The Texans will get to see what Deculus is able to do as rookie minicamp is underway.

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Texans Talk Podcast: Is QB Davis Mills being slept on?

The “Texans Talk Podcast” ponders whether QB Davis Mills is being overlooked, and also looking at what storylines need to come out of rookie minicamp.

The “Texans Talk Podcast” is back and this week cohosts Mark Lane and John Crumpler take a look at why quarterback Davis Mills just seems to get ignored by the national media. This week’s episode also outlines what three storylines need to come out of rookie minicamp.

Eric Galko from the East-West Shrine Bowl also stops by to talk about the Texans’ final three picks of the 2022 NFL draft in Stanford DL Thomas Booker, Oregon State TE Teagan Quitoriano, and LSU OT Austin Deculus.

Be sure to subscribe to the Texans Talk Podcast on Apple, Google Podcasts, Spotify, and iHeart.

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Former LSU offensive guard Chasen Hines drafted by Patriots in sixth round

Hines is the ninth former Tiger to be drafted.

The Tigers have now seen five former players picked on Day 3 of the 2022 NFL draft as offensive guard [autotag]Chasen Hines[/autotag] became the latest to come off the board.

He was selected by the New England Patriots in the sixth round with the No. 210 pick, just five picks after his former teammate on the offensive line in [autotag]Austin Deculus[/autotag], who went to the Houston Texans. A veteran and four-year letter-winner for the Tigers, Hines appeared in 35 games with 17 starts.

Of those starts, 16 came at right guard with the other coming at left guard. It seems likely Hines will play on the right side in the NFL, but as a sixth-round pick, he will take the opportunities where they come to him.

Hines has tremendous size for an interior lineman, standing at 6-foot-3 and a whopping 350 pounds. That might not be his NFL playing weight, but it’s certainly a large frame for professional offensive line coaches to work with and makes him an interesting project player.

He’s the second guard the Patriots drafted, joining Chattanooga’s Cole Strange, who they took in the first round. Many saw that pick as a surprising reach, but New England needed help in that area and now have two new intriguing prospects, including a late-round player in Hines that could prove to be a smart pick.

Hines becomes the ninth player to be drafted from LSU so far.

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LSU offensive tackle Austin Deculus selected by Houston Texans in sixth round

Deculus was the eighth LSU player selected in the 2022 NFL draft, and he’ll reunite with Derek Stingley Jr.

The run of former LSU players on Day 3 of the 2022 NFL draft continued on Saturday, as offensive tackle [autotag]Austin Deculus[/autotag] was selected by the Houston Texans in the sixth round with the No. 205 pick.

A former four-star recruit and four-year starter with the Tigers, Deculus appeared in 61 games over the course of his career, starting 46 of them. He has excellent size at 6-foot-7 and 325 pounds, and it makes sense why a team like the Texans, which still need some depth pieces along the offensive line, would take a flyer on a player like Deculus.

Houston has now picked two LSU players, with Deculus joining [autotag]Derek Stingley Jr.[/autotag], who was the third overall pick.

LSU has had nine total players drafted, with Deculus being joined by fellow offensive lineman [autotag]Chasen Hines[/autotag] later in the sixth round. This may not have been the strongest Tigers draft class in recent years, but it was certainly deeper than many realized.

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Contact/Follow us @LSUTigersWire on Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Louisiana State news, notes, and opinions.

Follow Tyler to continue the conversation on Twitter: @TylerNettuno