Tennessee Titans waive OL Bobby Hart, DL Amani Bledsoe

The Titans made a pair of roster moves on Monday.

The Tennessee Titans made a pair of roster moves on Monday, waiving offensive lineman Bobby Hart and defensive lineman Amani Bledsoe.

Hart played in three games for the Titans after signing with them in October. He started in Week 9 against the Los Angeles Rams after left tackle Taylor Lewan was active but didn’t play. Hart struggled, though, posting a PFF grade of 25.5 and 39.6 in pass protection and run-blocking, respectively.

Bledsoe, a 2019 undrafted free agent signing of the Titans, appeared in five games for Tennessee this season, totaling one tackle and one pass defensed.

The Titans’ move to waive both likely means the team is confident in the health of both Lewan and defensive lineman Teair Tart, who has missed two of the past three games as well.

Tennessee does have two open spots on its practice squad, so it’s possible the team could bring Hart and Bledsoe back there. The Titans host the Houston Texans in Week 11.

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Titans sign Bobby Hart, Greg Mabin among 4 roster moves

The Titans also designated Larrell Murchison and Daniel Munyer to return from IR.

The Tennessee Titans made four roster moves on Wednesday afternoon, including the signings of cornerback Greg Mabin and offensive tackle Bobby Hart to the active roster.

In addition, the team also designated defensive lineman Larrell Murchison and center Daniel Munyer to return from Injured Reserve. This opens their 21-day window to return to practice and be activated.

Mabin has spent multiple stints on the Titans’ practice squad since 2020, and was with the team in training camp this year before going on IR and being cut.

He was most recently on the Arizona Cardinals’ practice squad but didn’t play a snap with the team. He figures to factor into the equation as depth with the Titans being very thin at the cornerback position.

Hart is a six-year veteran, having spent time with the New York Giants and Cincinnati Bengals. He has appeared in 79 games during his career, 66 of which have been starts. He’ll provide depth upfront for Tennessee.

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Buffalo Bills fill practice squad with Bobby Hart

#Bills fill practice squad with Bobby Hart:

The Buffalo Bills have quickly filled the vacant spot on their practice squad with offensive lineman Bobby Hart. The team announced the transaction on Wednesday.

On Tuesday, the Bills had an opening created on their taxi unit as another offensive lineman was lost. The Philadelphia Eagles signed rookie seventh-round pick Jack Anderson to their 53-man roster. 

In Hart, we have a familiar name.

He spent the summer and preseason with the Bills after signing a one-year deal with the team this spring. However, Hart was eventually among their roster cuts.

Hart did struggle on the field with the Bills during the preseason. Still, he’s an addition that makes sense because he has familiarity with the team’s scheme on offense.

Additionally, Hart has extensive experience as a starter in the NFL, making 66 starts between time with the New York Giants and Cincinnati Bengals.

With Hart signed, Buffalo’s 16-man practice squad is now filled.

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Miami Dolphins add veteran OT Bobby Hart to practice squad

Miami Dolphins add veteran OT Bobby Hart to practice squad

The Miami Dolphins’ hunt for quality offensive line depth continues. The Dolphins’ latest transaction and addition to the offensive line comes as an even more low-risk investment than any of the other additions Miami has made this offseason — as they’ve added veteran offensive tackle and former local product Bobby Hart into the mix as a practice squad addition. Hart played his football locally at St. Thomas Aquinas before going on to play for the Florida State Seminoles.

And now he’s back with the Dolphins as a member of the practice squad.

Despite Hart’s pedigree as a multi-year starter in the NFL, it should be acknowledged that the team is in deep trouble if Hart is ever needed to be called into action as a player on the field for the Dolphins. Hart is, effectively, the team’s No. 4 option at right tackle behind Jesse Davis, Liam Eichenberg and Robert Hunt (at right guard).

But for what Hart is as a practice squad player, he does bring a significant level of experience to the offensive line room. That can be valuable — even if the lessons he offers can be what not to do in a given situation.

Consider this: Miami’s offensive line currently features seven players who have started less than 16 games and have been in the league for two seasons of tenure or less:

  • Michael Deiter: 15 starts (2 seasons of NFL play)
  • Solomon Kindley: 13 starts (1 season of NFL play)
  • Austin Jackson: 12 starts (1 season of NFL play)
  • Robert Hunt: 11 starts (1 season of NFL play)
  • Greg Little: 6 starts (2 seasons of NFL play)
  • Liam Eichenberg: 0 starts (2021 rookie)
  • Robert Jones: 0 starts (2021 rookie)

Only Jesse Davis (56 starts) and Greg Mancz (28 starts) serve as active roster linemen with more than one season worth of starting action and more than 2 years of tenure entering into the season. Hart offers six years of tenure and 66 career starts as a 4th-string practice squad presence. And from that standpoint, why wouldn’t the Dolphins bring him into the picture with that role and expectation?

Miami’s offensive line gets knocked constantly for their quality of play. They’ll need to be better, there’s no arguing that. But the youth of the group, as illustrated above, should offer optimism that it can be done. And with Hart as a practice squad mentor, hopefully he can help provide some experienced perspective to the Dolphins’ starters and developing players in the trenches.

Contract details for Bills OL Bobby Hart

Buffalo Bills OL Bobby Hart contract details.

Bobby Hart won’t be guaranteed much with the Bills based his contract details.

Previously a lightning rod for opinion because of his play with the Giants and Bengals, respectively, Hart got a minimum deal in Buffalo. Per Spotrac, Hart signed a one-year, veteran minimum contract recently with the team.

His base pay will be $900,000 with $137.5K guaranteed as a signing bonus. If cut, the Bills would only endure a dead cap of $350K as well, so he’ll have to earn any roster spot he takes up.

Overall, it’s a bit of a mixed contract. Hart is essentially on a “prove-it deal.” Buffalo lost tackle Ty Nsekhe to the Cowboys this offseason, so Hart will get a look to prove he’s worthy of the swing tackle spot behind Dion Dawkins and Daryl Williams.

As of now, only former undrafted rookie Trey Adams stands between him and that job, but Adams was once a touted prospect. The Bills could also draft another rookie at the 2021 draft as well.

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Bills sign former Bengals OL Bobby Hart to one-year deal

Buffalo Bills sign OL Bobby Hart to one-year deal.

The Buffalo Bills have started to build some depth along their offensive line. According to NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport, the Bills have signed former Bengals offensive tackle Bobby Hart to a one-year deal on Tuesday. The team went on to confirm the signing.

The Bills had previously re-signed a couple of key starters along the offensive line such as Jon Feliciano and Daryl Williams. However, depth skipped town.

Among those include Brian Winters, who signed with the Cardinals, and Ty Nsekhe, who inked a deal with the Cowboys.

Hart, 26, was a seventh-round pick of the Giants in 2015. After starting on and off with the Giants, he signed as a free agent with the Bengals in 2018 and the follow year he signed a three-year, $16.5 million extension.

Despite that, and a decent Pro Football Focus grade of 66.3 overall last season, Hart was cut in recent weeks in a move that Bengals Wire described as a predictable one because of his struggles.

Because of inconsistent play and the strong starting caliber tackles the Bills sport in Williams and Dion Dawkins, Hart will look to lock up a depth spot during training camp. The Bills’ only true depth tackle at this time behind their starters is Trey Adams, an undrafted rookie from 2020.

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Bengals cut Bobby Hart after free-agency spending spree

The Cincinnati Bengals made a move with offensive tackle Bobby Hart.

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The Cincinnati Bengals have released offensive tackle Bobby Hart.

NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport reported the move.

The move comes right on the heels of the Bengals adding Riley Reiff in free agency and will save the team roughly $5.8 million against the cap.

Tabbed by the coaching staff as a player still worth developing over the long-term despite years of trouble, the Bengals hit Hart with a three-year extension worth about $16 million in March of 2019. He was again a problem area for the line in 2019, grading at a 57.6 at PFF while allowing six sacks and getting flagged seven times. He improved in 2020 to the tune of a 66.3 grade, but with the draft presenting prospects like Penei Sewell and his bloated contract, the writing was on the wall.

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Zac Taylor provides injury updates on Jonah Williams, Bobby Hart and more

Cincinnati Bengals head coach Zac Taylor talked about his team’s latest round of injuries.

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The Cincinnati Bengals are starting to provide a little more clarity on the state of the injured offensive line tasked with protecting Joe Burrow.

After a Sunday loss in which Jonah Williams, Trey Hopkins and Bobby Hart went down with injuries, head coach Zac Taylor met with the media and provided some updates.

According to The Athletic’s Paul Dehner Jr., Hart will miss Week 8 against the Tennessee Titans with a knee injury. But Williams, despite leaving with a neck issue and not returning, is only classified as day-to-day, per ESPN’s Ben Baby. Taylor also noted Hopkins will enter concussion protocol.

If it turns out Williams can’t go against the Titans, the Bengals will be looking at starting Fred Johnson at left tackle and sixth-round rookie Hakeem Adeniji at right tackle.

It’s a sour state of affairs for a Bengals line that was finally starting to get some strong performances out of guys like Hart. Now the coaches have to hope a well-positioned bye after the game against the Titans helps the line get back to full strength for the season’s second half.

A head-scratching Jim Turner interview and defense of Bobby Hart point to Bengals’ biggest problems

The Cincinnati Bengals seem to have a Jim Turner and Bobby Hart problem.

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A few days removed from No. 1 overall pick Joe Burrow suffering eight sacks and 12 pressures, bumping his season totals to 14 and 34 in those areas over just three games, Cincinnati Bengals offensive line coach Jim Turner sat down with the media for an eye-brow raising affair.

And to Turner’s credit, he was very up front with the theme that his line just has to play better for Burrow. As he put it, “we couldn’t ask for anymore from our quarterback than we’re getting, for a young player the way he is, as far as handling the offense, it has nothing to do with him,” according to WCPO’s Richard Skinner.

But as far as good commentary from Turner goes, it seems to end there.

The elephant in the room is Bobby Hart, the embattled right tackle with some interesting upside who has never been able to put it all together on the field.

Turner was effusive in his defensive of Hart, going as far as saying the following, per Skinner:

“Hart is the most underappreciated player and the most picked-on player by everybody from the media to whoever wants to talk football. It’s like every pressure we’ve ever had gets blamed on that kid.”

Two problems: Trey Hopkins is the most underappreciated player on the line, an amazing undrafted, surpassing-injuries story to finally steal the starting job (one of our very first articles in 2017 was saying he needed to be a starter). Two: Hart doesn’t get blamed for every pressure, but he sure seems like the guy giving up the most.

And Turner wasn’t done there:

“I think Bobby’s playing the best football I’ve seen him play in his career right now. I think mentally, he’s a great place right now. I think he’s unaffected by anything that’s said about him, and I think he knows, like if you watch his side of the line, it’s solid.

The “if you watch his side of the line” comment, for lack of a better term, feels like gaslighting. Onlookers watch it and see, for the most part, consistent struggles.

And to say Hart is playing the best football of his career is also problematic. Here are his grades at Pro Football Focus annually since entering the league:

  • 2015: 60.3
  • 2016: 56.4
  • 2017: 44.8
  • 2018: 57.1
  • 2019: 57.6
  • 2020: 65.6

Is PFF the only metric that matters? Absolutely not. Are we in the room at Paul Brown Stadium and understanding every little responsibility and intention of each play? Of course not. And if a pro coach can lean into this line of thinking after three games, why do we berate fans for overreacting after three games again? But the above grades are pretty telling. For context, the Bengals finally threw in the towel on someone like Cedric Ogbuehi after grades of 56.6 and 51.9 over his last two seasons in town.

One of the biggest problems here is the tone-deaf nature of the offensive assault from Turner here. He admitted the right guards struggled. He hinted Fred Johnson has to want it. He said the line as a whole has struggled. But instead of just saying the same things about Hart, he lashed out at Hart’s critics, media, fans or otherwise, and defended him. It’s a whole lot of talk about what outsiders are saying while also saying Hart isn’t impacted by the talk at all, right?

So we have to ask: What is it about Bobby Hart?

Hart might be playing the best ball of his career, but he’s still one of the worst tackles in football. Hart showcased these same things after joining the Bengals, then got a three-year extension worth $21 million anyway and the coaching staff has made it very clear he’s untouchable and nobody will challenge for his job. Who did the Bengals think they were competing with for Hart’s services to justify that number at the time? It also brings us to this:

What is it? What has tied the Bengals to a former seventh-round pick who couldn’t make it on a New York Giants team desperate to turn things around who hasn’t shown any meaningful improvement under multiple line coaches?

Turner’s affection with Hart seemed to start in part due to chats with Jimbo Fisher.  But he’s clearly taking baby steps in progression in a results-oriented league with little patience for this sort of thing.

It doesn’t help that Turner told Jay Morrison of The Athletic the following this past May:

“I think this group understands that we will bench you. We will sit you down if the guy behind you is better than you. It’s not a big tough guy act or anything. It’s real.”

Right tackle has clearly been an exception. And the excuse about the right guard is merely the latest to cover for Hart too. In September of 2019, Bengals coaches blamed Hart’s nine false starts of the team’s 31 in 2018 on…crowd noise messing with a quiet cadence from quarterback. The solution was to have then-quarterback Andy Dalton whisper his counts in practice and Turner played loud music in the offensive line meeting rooms while linemen put their hands on the desk. This isn’t satire. Hart did get called for fewer penalties last season, but leash on his job security and the fact this was a problem to begin with is puzzling, much like the rest of this.

(and if the worry about right guard is really the case, a guy like Kevin Zeitler should’ve never been allowed to leave or the organization should’ve taken guard positions more seriously after years of practicing against Geno Atkins, but that’s a different, longer conversation).

Zac Taylor, for what it’s worth, also had a presser this week and followed some similar lines of thought:

Some of it is fair. Joe Mixon has again looked hesitant instead of attacking openings, which seems to be an early-season trend now. That’s probably the line’s fault, but we’ll float it out there. And Joe Burrow is a rookie who at times is clearly going to hang onto the ball too long and take sacks and hits that make the line look bad when it’s really on him.

But Turner’s interview was pretty much universally panned for a reason. It’s the latest in a long line of defenses for struggling players from a guy who was a controversial hiring to begin with for many reasons, perhaps chief among them the fact his recent resume just wasn’t that good to begin with. Taylor has seemed to make it clear he’ll go down with the ship rather than make a change, though.

The sad reality is we can’t know what’s really going on inside the building. Is Taylor blind to the issues? Are his brilliant play ideas (and there have been flashes!) being hampered by a line coach he’s needlessly defending, potentially leading to the loss of his job with a team that was more than happy to employ his predecessor for 16 years?

And considering Hart’s play has only taken a very minor uptick in quality and the rest of the line hasn’t improved much, if at all, do the Bengals really want to trust this staff to develop Jonah Williams?

Maybe that’s what is so frustrating for Bengals fans. It was easy to wave off national commentary suggesting Taylor’s staff picks stunk or weren’t qualified. It was borderline offensive when national pundits suggested the Bengals were going to ruin Burrow, espeically compared to a perennsial loser like Miami.

But here we are going over the same old problems since roughly 2015, this time with a controverisal postional coach somewhat oddly, if not personally defended by a second-year head coach.

Were this not a reoccurring theme since Taylor’s arrival and were it not about an organization blatantly lost when it comes to offensive line evaluation and development for so long now, this might be considered an overreaction. But this staff spent the offseason telling fans the line would be better and it looks just as bad as the year prior (it’s now dangling Xavier Su’a-Filo as some sort of savior for the whole unit). If it doesn’t improve, it endangers Burrow further.

And that’s the biggest issue of all: The Bengals backed into a generational quarterback prospect and could outright ruin the whole opportunity — and the homecoming kid storyline — while the coaching staff publicly goes on the offensive for some of the worst linemen in the league.

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Joey Bosa’s comments show Bengals might have a Bobby Hart problem

The Cincinnati Bengals might need more from the offensive line.

The Week 1 performance by the Cincinanti Bengals offensive line in front of Joe Burrow wasn’t exactly a banner showing for the unit.

Burrow was often on the run, especially early against the Los Angeles Chargers pass rush, ultimately resulting in a loss.

And while guys like Mike Jordan had bright spots at times, Bobby Hart at right tackle notably stuck out as an issue.

It’s a little more concerning in hindsight, especially when realizing Chargers’ star Joey Bosa was in his post-game presser chuckling about the fact the Bengals left the right tackle alone with him at times, according to Gilbert Manzano of the Orange County Register.

“I was kinda expecting a lot of chips, back chips and some max protections, but I had to take advantage of my opportunities with the 1-on-1s,” Bosa said. “I think I did a good job, but yeah, they kinda left (Hart) on an island over there, but I’m not going to complain about that.”

Bosa also told Manzano he went after Hart after the whistle because the Bengals tackle had been talking trash. This one got backed up plenty on social media:

It’s hard to put this all on Hart (besides chirping at one of the best defenders in the NFL — that’s foolish). Bengals coaches seemingly didn’t do right by him, especially in the first half before things settled down.

Hart graded at a 63.9 PFF performance for his Week 1 showing, up slightly from his season-long grades of 57.1 in 2018 and 57.6 in 2019, a span in which he accounted for 16 sacks and 18 penalties.

It’s a little concerning Bengals coaches were content to put the struggling Hart on an island at all, let alone against Bosa while trying to protect the new face of their franchise. Maybe some of it falls on the quarterback too, but the task doesn’t get easier with Myles Garrett up next.

Rolling more help to Hart’s side, at the very least, is probably something the coaches should be prioritizing ahead of Thursday’s game.

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