Broncos acquire LB Austin Calitro in trade with Bengals

The Broncos have traded a defensive lineman to the Bengals in exchange for linebacker Cincinnati Bengals.

The Denver Broncos have agreed to trade defensive lineman Christian Covington to the Cincinnati Bengals in exchange for linebacker Austin Calitro, according to ESPN’s Dianna Russini.

Unless more details emerge regarding swapped draft picks, this was a straight player-for-player trade ahead of roster cuts on Saturday. Covington was unlikely to make Denver’s 53-man roster and Calitro probably wasn’t going to survive cuts in Cincinnati given that they were willing to trade him.

The Bengals needed more depth on the defensive line and the Broncos were able to give up Covington because they are deep at the position. Denver needed more depth at linebacker with Todd Davis still recovering from a calf injury.

It remains to be seen if Calitro’s arrival will impact the roster status of linebacker Mark Barron, who signed with the Broncos earlier this week. Barron might still be safe as Denver’s coverage linebacker given that Calitro seems to be a better fit to defend the run and play on special teams.

Calitro, 26, totaled 39 tackles and one sack with the Jacksonville Jaguars in 13 games last season. He played in all 16 games with the Seattle Seahawks in 2019, totaling 42 tackles and half a sack.

The Broncos’ six-man defensive line now appears to be set with Jurrell Casey, Mike Purcell, Shelby Harris, Dre’Mont Jones, DeMarcus Walker and McTelvin Agim. Denver’s linebacker depth chart will be sorted out after roster cuts this weekend.

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Tracking Packers’ cuts down to initial 53-man roster

Tracking all the cuts as the Packers trim their roster from 80 players to 53 before Saturday’s deadline.

The Green Bay Packers must make 27 cuts – going from 80 players to an initial 53-man roster – before Saturday’s 3:00 p.m. CT deadline.

GM Brian Gutekunst and coach Matt LaFleur will have hard decisions to make, but it’s not all bad news: Practice squads have been increased from 10 players to 16 this year, so although the team will cut 27 players between now and Saturday, there’s a good chance the Packers will retain a big chunk of their current roster ahead of Week 1’s trip to Minnesota to play the Vikings.

Follow along below as we track all the cuts made by the Packers over the next day or so:

Cuts

Current roster

QB: Aaron Rodgers, Tim Boyle, Jordan Love
RB: Aaron Jones, Jamaal Williams, A.J. Dillon, Tyler Ervin, Dexter Williams, Damarea Crockett, Patrick Taylor
FB: John Lovett
WR: Davante Adams, Allen Lazard, Marquez Valdes-Scantling, Jake Kumerow, Equanimeous St. Brown, Darrius Shepherd, Malik Taylor, Reggie Begelton, Malik Turner
TE: Marcedes Lewis, Robert Tonyan, Jace Sternberger, Josiah Deguara, Evan Baylis
OT: David Bakhtiari, Rick Wagner, Billy Turner, Alex Light, Yosh Nijman, John Leglue, Cody Conway
IOL: Corey Linsley, Elgton Jenkins, Lane Taylor, Lucas Patrick, Jon Runyan, Jake Hanson, Simon Stepaniak, Zack Johnson
DL: Kenny Clark, Dean Lowry, Tyler Lancaster, Montravius Adams, Kingsley Keke, Treyvon Hester, Willington Previlion
OLB: Za’Darius Smith, Preston Smith, Rashan Gary, Tim Williams, Randy Ramsey, Jonathan Garvin, Tipa Galeai, Greg Roberts, Delontae Scott
ILB: Christian Kirksey, Oren Burks, Ty Summers, Kamal Martin, Curtis Bolton, Krys Barnes
CB: Jaire Alexander, Kevin King, Chandon Sullivan, Josh Jackson, Ka’dar Hollman, Stanford Samuels, Kabion Ento, Will Sunderland, Dashaun Amos
S: Adrian Amos, Darnell Savage, Raven Greene, Will Redmond, Vernon Scott, Henry Black
K: Mason Crosby
P: JK Scott
LS: Hunter Bradley

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Seahawks have tough choices to make to trim roster to 53 by deadline

The Seattle Seahawks have tough choices to make to trim their roster to 53 players by the deadline of Saturday, Sept. 5 at 1:00 p.m. PT.

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The Seattle Seahawks wrapped up their final practice of training camp on Thursday and the players now break for a long weekend. For some, however, it could have been the final practice of their NFL careers.

Seattle, like all 31 other teams around the league, must trim their rosters to 53 players by Saturday’s deadline of 1:00 p.m. PT.

While coach Pete Carroll is pleased at how the team was able to come together in spite of the pandemic, the decisions on who stays and who goes are going to be difficult.

“We haven’t had enough competition at this time of the year to really make the evaluations the way we’d like to; we’d like to have all those game snaps and all,” Carroll said Thursday. “We’ve told you a million times that you’ve got to wait until you see guys in games, well we weren’t afforded that in the evaluation process, so that’s the only setback. But other than that, it has been a really solid camp.”

This offseason was so different than most – with all learning virtual until camp and no exhibition games to test the waters. The Seahawks feel as prepared as they could be, led by coach Carroll, the eternal optimist.

“We hung on there we didn’t give up and shy away from it at all,” Carroll continued. “Our coaches did a fantastic job, the players stayed with it, and it helped us throughout this camp where we were zooming a lot. So they felt like there was kind of a continuity that was different than usual, and to some degrees better. I don’t know what to tell you about that, but I’m really pleased with how it’s turned out.”

Be sure and follow our coverage all weekend as the Seahawks trim their roster and form their practice squad ahead of Week 1 in Atlanta.

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Saints GM Mickey Loomis anxious about upcoming roster cuts

New Orleans Saints general manager Mickey Loomis is worried some good players might get away in NFL roster cuts without preseason game tape.

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So far, the 2020 NFL season has not looked like any that came before it. And that will continue to be the case underneath the COVID-19 pandemic. For New Orleans Saints general manager Mickey Loomis, the next challenge is clear: evaluating his roster without preseason games.

While final say on personnel decisions comes down to Saints coach Sean Payton, Loomis and his front office staff do an important job in assembling the roster for Payton and his coaches to parse through. The more information gathered, the better; so it’s going to be difficult to do that without preseason game tape to study.

Because the NFL canceled its 2020 preseason series due to the pandemic, decision-makers around the league are sweating tough calls on who to keep and who to release after training camp.

Loomis appeared on Sirius XM NFL Radio on Thursday to take stock of the situation. When asked whether he’s feeling concerned about thinning the roster, he replied with the affirmative.

“My biggest fear,” Loomis said, via Luke Johnson of the Times-Picayune | New Orelans Advocate, “is you let a good player get out of the building, and that guy ends up getting on with someone else, and performing.”

Half the players the Saints released at the start of training camp — when new NFL rules mandated that depth charts be trimmed from 90 players to just 80 — already signed with new teams, and others that started games in New Orleans in previous years are competing on other rosters around the NFL. Loomis and the Saints are well aware that they’ve built a strong team; the question is how to keep the right pieces together.

Fortunately, he knows that other general managers and coaches are second-guessing themselves just like he might be. The lack of preseason game tape means everyone is working with a limited reference pool. Loomis continued, “It’s the same thing (for rival teams). Those teams that let a good player get out of the building, we don’t have as much information about that (decision).”

We’ll see if it ends up mattering. Teams must cut their rosters down to just 53 players by 3 p.m. CT on Sept. 5, giving them a crucial final week of training camp practices to evaluate. After released players test waivers, they will be eligible to re-sign with the practice squad. So don’t be shocked if some last-minute trades get worked out as teams seek to get the jump on their rivals.

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Former Saints, XFL defensive back Deatrick Nichols has a new team

The Miami Dolphins added defensive back Deatrick Nichols, formerly of the New Orleans Saints and the XFL’s Houston Roughnecks.

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Another player released by the New Orleans Saints in their opening wave of roster cuts has found a new squad: defensive back Deatrick Nichols, who will join the Miami Dolphins. The move was announced by Nichols’ representatives at Agency 1 Sports Group and the Dolphins on Twitter.

Nichols starred for the short-lived XFL’s Houston Roughnecks earlier this year, pacing the upstart league with three interceptions in five games. When the XFL shuttered its 2020 season due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Nichols landed with the Saints. But he didn’t get a fair shake in training camp, having been released weeks before practices began in earnest.

Now he has a new opportunity with the Dolphins, playing in his Miami hometown. But he’ll have to seriously impress in training camp to crack their opening-day roster: the Dolphins boast one of the best three-deep depth charts at cornerback around the league between Xavien Howard, splashy free agent signing Byron Jones, and first-round draft pick Noah Igbinoghene.

He’ll join backup nose tackle Taylor Stallworth as the second player released by the Saints this month to land on his feet. Stallworth accepted an offer with the Indianapolis Colts after being courted by half a dozen teams in free agency.

From a purely analytical perspective, it’s a shame that the Saints weren’t able to trade either player for a late-round draft pick if there was so much interest in their services; but it’s in the players’ interest to decide their own future and choose the best option for them. Hopefully it works out for them.

 


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Broncos camp notes: Early cuts, opt outs and rookie watch

Here’s a quick recap of the first week of Broncos training camp.

With training camp underway, here’s a quick recap of the first week for the Denver Broncos.

Early cuts: Denver cut 9 players before camp even started and then parted ways with TE Jeff Heuerman just three days after veterans reported for testing. Releasing Heuerman will save the team about $3.875 million in salary cap space. Because the NFL’s salary cap will be lower in 2021, Broncos GM John Elway will likely try to roll over as much cap space from this year as possible. After placing TE/FB Andrew Beck on the Reserve/COVID-19 list, the Broncos have two open spots on the roster. Denver will likely continue trimming the roster well ahead of the 53-man roster deadline of Sept. 5.

Broncos RT Ja’Wuan James joined DL Kyle Peko on the opt-out list.

Rookie watch: After getting in some unofficial work with QB Drew Lock at a local park during the offseason, Broncos WR Jerry Jeudy will now get to work with his quarterback under the supervision and instruction of coaches. Jeudy and fellow rookie WR KJ Hamler will add speed and explosiveness to a Denver offense that ranked 28th in scoring last season. Jeudy ran a 4.46 40-yard dash at the combine and Hamler says he ran a sub-4.3 earlier this year.

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Saints cut Taylor Stallworth, training camp roster down to 80 players

The New Orleans Saints released defensive tackle Taylor Stallworth, who appeared in five games in 2019, trimming their training camp roster.

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The New Orleans Saints have brought their roster down to 80 players from 90 ahead of the NFL’s new Aug. 16 deadline, with third-year pro Taylor Stallworth being cut on Monday. Stallworth’s release was first reported by Pro Football Talk’s Josh Alper and confirmed by The Athletic’s Katherine Terrell.

Stallworth signed with the Saints as an undrafted rookie back in 2018 out of South Carolina, playing well enough during training camp and in preseason games to earn a spot on the opening-day roster as a backup nose tackle. He played intermittently in 2019 as teammates higher on the depth chart entered and left the lineup, spending much of the season on the practice squad while logging 119 snaps in five games (including the playoffs).

So this may not be the last we see of Stallworth. The Saints brought in more new additions this offseason in veteran lineman Margus Hunt and undrafted free agent Malcolm Roach, with Jalen Dalton returning from last year’s Saints practice squad. They’ll each get an opportunity to show out in practice, but the Saints know they can call up Stallworth if they fail to move the needle.

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New rules, important dates to know for 2020 Saints training camp

The COVID-19 coronavirus pandemic has radically changed the NFL offseason, and New Orleans Saints training camp will also have to adjust.

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New Orleans Saints veterans reported to the team practice facility for COVID-19 testing on Tuesday, with rookie players having made the trip on Monday and now waiting on their results. The public health crisis has played havoc on the NFL’s offseason calendar, and it’ll continue to impact training camp as we approach the regular season.

Some players have chosen to opt out; one of them is Saints tight end Cole Wick, who returned from the 2019 practice squad but chose to pass on the 2020 season, citing asthma and heightened health risk. While none of his teammates have yet joined him in opting out, it’s very much a fluid situation.

The NFL and the NFL Players Associated hammered out a new training camp structure and many new rules for the remainder of the 2020 offseason, which we’ve detailed below:

  • Aug. 4: Players must submit written notice to their teams that they will be opting out of the 2020 season, either voluntarily or due to elevated risk to their personal health. The NFL and NFLPA are still finalizing this process, so players have until Aug. 4 to file with their teams.
  • Players who opt out because of heightened risk for infection can earn $350,000 instead of their non-guaranteed salary. Voluntary opt-outs will receive $150,000, though this does not extend to undrafted rookies.
  • Once training camp begins, the first phase will include a 20-day “ramp-up” period, starting with four days of COVID-19 testing and two additional days of conventional physicals. Players will not be allowed into the team practice facility until they have received two negative tests, and will not count against the roster limit while testing positive.
  • The second phase of the “ramp-up” period will feature a week of strength and conditioning drills, with players working in small groups of no more than 15 individuals. Teams may practice with helmets and shells, but no pads, during the final five days of this period.
  • Aug. 16: All teams must cut their rosters down to 80 players, the day before padded practices begin. With Wick opting out, the Saints currently have 89 players under contract, so some of them won’t have much of a shot at making an impression before things heat up on the practice field. We’ve highlighted ten names to watch for this first wave of roster cuts.
  • Aug. 17: Teams may begin holding padded practices, with no more than 14 sessions total before the start of the regular season. Padded practice sessions will last no more than 90 minutes at first, with 15-minute increments added onto each subsequent practice until they reach a total of 120 minutes. Players will be given one day off for seven days of work.
  • The 2020 preseason series has been canceled.
  • Sept. 4: Teams must cut their rosters down from 80 players to just 53, and file waivers claims in order to fill out their practice squads. The 2020 practice squad will expand to 16 players to accommodate expected absences due to COVID-19 infections.
  • The NFL’s 2020 salary cap will remain stable at $198.2 million, but the 2021 salary cap will fall no lower than $175 million due to expected revenue losses. It may rise depending to changes in leaguewide revenue, but any losses will be divided up through 2024.
  • If the NFL season is canceled after games are played, players that were on the 53-man roster will receive a $300,000 stipend. But if the season is canceled before final roster cuts, only those players who were on teams in 2019 will receive a stipend of $250,000.
  • The NFL and NFLPA agreed to start a fund to pay back benefits lost to declines in revenue, which will run through 2023.

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Big 12 Football: Without football, huge changes could be on the way

As college football hangs in the balance, no fall season could result in the Big 12 schools like Texas making drastic cuts to the budget.

Not exactly breaking in news here, but in the south football is king. Especially the state of Texas. The term Friday Night Lights inspired a movie and tv show. College football is also a huge part of the weekend culture. However in today’s climate the game we love so much is at risk. Due to the coronavirus pandemic we lost college basketball tournaments, baseball and softball. Many of our favorite college pastimes were cancelled. Now football hangs in the balance almost a full six months later.

According to the Dallas Business Journal, schools may have to cut other sports just to survive. Here is how the revenue breaks down for each school.

University Football revenue Percentage of total revenue
Texas $156.1M 72%
Oklahoma $94.8M 60%
TCU $65.4M 55%
Oklahoma State $52.2M 57%
Iowa State S51.9M 65%
Texas Tech $51.1M 59%
Kansas State $46.2M 51%
Baylor $45.6M 45%
Kansas $38.2M 32%
West Virginia $24.7M 24%

No school in the conference generates anywhere near the amount of revenue dollars as the University of Texas. No other school generates as much of the total revenue from football as Texas. Without football, Texas will have to make some tough decisions due to how heavily reliant they are on football to generate revenue.

Schools like Baylor, Kansas and West Virginia are lower risks. None of these schools generate more than 45 percent of their revenue from the game of football. All three have good basketball programs that can help lighten the load a bit.

Around the country, schools and conference are having to eliminate programs due to these budget cuts. It is quite possible that if there is no football that Big 12 schools will have to follow suit in the coming weeks.

How Lions will likely approach potential roster cuts ahead of training camp

With potential roster cuts ahead of training camp looming, how would the Detroit Lions adjust their roster to maximize player evaluation?

As teams prepare to adjust to COVID-19 protocols, there are still several questions facing the NFL and NFLPA before teams open training camps at the end of the month. Will there be preseason games? How long will camps last? While agreed upon player safety protocols and a possible practice squad expansion also remain undecided.

One move that appears likely to happen ahead of July 28th is the reduction of roster sizes from its current maximum of 90 players down to a reported 75 or 80-players.

On the surface, it may seem pretty straight forward to just release the bottom 10-15 players on the roster, but the timing of these cuts make it a bit more complicated.

Teams use training camp to get into shape, work through existing injuries, absorb the playbook, develop team/positional chemistry, evaluate players, look for hidden talents, and many other things. By taking away players from this equation, teams will have to adjust their approach to training camp and in turn, they will have to be selective on where their team can afford to go lighter at a position.

When examining the Detroit Lions 90-man depth chart, general manager Bob Quinn and coach Matt Patricia will have to consider several factors including:

  • Is there a position group where they have an excess of players?
  • Do they want more youth at one position?
  • More veteran leadership at another?
  • Are there players who are practice squad eligible that they may want to keep around for long-term development?
  • Keeping balanced groups on each side of the ball for one-on-one training sessions

At quarterback, the Lions only have three players — Matthew Stafford, Chase Daniel, and David Blough — and it would be shocking to see them move on from any of them at this point, but the offensive skill players will surely take some hits.

With six running backs, two fullbacks, 12 wide receivers, and five tight ends, the Lions could lose three of four players from these skill groups. Do they need two fullbacks? How about a fifth tight end? The wide receiver group would surely see losses but with the amount of running they do in training camp, they can’t afford to lose too many or they won’t have enough bodies to run routes if they are all gassed.

The offensive and defensive lines will also likely see two to three losses on each side of the ball, which will impede the Lions’ ability to roll through three lines — as they typically do this time of year.

The Lions currently have 13 linebackers — 11 off-the-ball and two JACK linebackers — for two main reasons. First, they are trying to shore up a previously weak position group by adding multiple players and looking for standouts. And secondly, because this is where teams are typically finding players who can excel on special teams under the recent rule changes.

Based purely on numbers alone, the Lions can afford to lose two to three players from the linebacker group, but it will surely impact their ability to train on special teams.

Corners may be the most important position group on defense, and with the Lions having nine on the current roster, can they lose any of them? They have eight safeties, but with three of them being undrafted rookies, this seems like a more vulnerable group.

Again, special teams come into play here and the defensive backs with the least amount of experience could be on the chopping block, which is a shame. We may not get the chance to find out if there another C.J. Moore-type in this group.

On the kicking team the Lions have a punting battle brewing between Jack Fox and Aaron Siposs, which means the Lions are likely to keep both, but can they also afford to keep two long snappers where there is less of a battle?

In my latest Roster Stack: Summer edition, I identified 21 players in the final “have work to do” group, and while the cuts will likely come from this group, it’s worth noting that occasionally there are players who rise up out of this group during training camp — hello, Kevin Strong –, but unfortunately this year they may not get that chance.