Broncos made several roster moves this week

The Broncos elevated QB Ben DiNucci and OLB Ronnie Perkins to the game-day roster for Week 16. Denver did not activate DB Kareem Jackson.

The Denver Broncos made several roster moves this week ahead of their Christmas Eve showdown with the New England Patriots on Sunday.

The moves started on Tuesday when the Broncos signed defensive back Keidron Smith to the practice squad. To make room for Smith, Denver waived safety Dallin Leavitt from the practice squad.

Later in the week, the Broncos elevated quarterback Ben DiNucci and outside linebacker Ronnie Perkins from the practice squad to the game-day roster on Saturday. Denver did not activate safety Kareem Jackson to the 53-man roster following his return from a four-game suspension.

The Broncos have a roster exemption for Jackson that expires on Monday. Once the exemption expires, Denver will need to either make a roster move to make room for Jackson, or release Jackson.

In addition to not activating Jackson, the Broncos also did not activate tight end Greg Dulcich (hamstring/foot) from injured reserve. Dulcich was ruled out on Friday and will now miss another game.

Broncos buzz: 2 roster moves and Shaquille Leonard update

Broncos signed DB Dallin Leavitt and cut OLB Marcus Haynes. Meanwhile, free agent LB Shaquille Leonard has visits with Dallas and Philly.

The Denver Broncos made two changes to their practice squad ahead of a Week 13 showdown with the Houston Texans.

First, the Broncos released outside linebacker Marcus Haynes from the practice squad on Monday. Denver made that move to be able to add more depth at safety during Kareem Jackson’s four-game suspension.

After cutting Haynes on Monday, the Broncos signed safety Dallin Leavitt to the practice squad on Tuesday, the team announced.

Leavitt (5-10, 195 pounds) entered the league as an undrafted free agent out of Utah State with the Oakland (now Las Vegas) Raiders in 2018. After four years with the Raiders, Leavitt spent time with the Green Bay Packers over the last two seasons.

Leavitt has appeared in 69 career games, playing primarily on special teams. He has 1,339 career snaps on special teams and 378 snaps on defense.

Meanwhile, on the free agent front, linebacker Shaquille Leonard had a visit with the Dallas Cowboys on Tuesday and he is now set to visit the Philadelphia Eagles on Wednesday.

At the time of publication, there’s been no word on a potential trip to Denver, but ESPN reported that week that the Broncos are interested in Leonard. Denver still has an open spot on the 53-man roster following Jackson’s suspension.

Instant analysis of Packers signing RB Patrick Taylor, releasing S Dallin Leavitt

Breaking down the Packers’ signing of RB Patrick Taylor and releasing of S Dallin Leavitt.

Along with adding James Robinson to the practice squad, the Green Bay Packers continued to bolster their running back depth to combat injuries to Aaron Jones and Emanuel Wilson by claiming old friend Patrick Taylor off the New England Patriots practice squad.

Predicting how a team is going to fill a void on their roster can often be a challenging task. However, bringing back Taylor is about as obvious of a move as we will see take place. Taylor, of course, knows the offense well. With AJ Dillon expected to be the lead back in Detroit, Taylor can fill that third down role for Green Bay, being utilized in pass protection and has proven to be a reliable option in the passing game as well.

Taylor appeared in four games for the Packers this season, and while his primary role came on special teams, he played 70 snaps on offense, holding up well as a blocker, catching five passes for 28 yards, including some key fourth quarter receptions in the Packers comeback win over New Orleans. As a ball carrier, he has averaged 2.8 yards per rush on 11 attempts.

“The thing about it, he’s got better from where he was,” said running backs coach Ben Sirmans about Taylor earlier in the season. “He’s a guy that definitely you rely on because we trust him in those situations. Any time he gets his opportunity, he’s going to go all out. That’s one of the things you do appreciate about him.”

With Dillon and Taylor on the 53-man roster, Robinson will likely be one of the Packers practice squad elevations on Thursday to provide depth.

Although short-handed at running back, finding a way to get going on the ground against the Lions will be an absolute must. As we saw in Week 4 where the Detroit pass rush dominated the line of scrimmage, if Green Bay’s offense is routinely in obvious passing situations, moving the ball through the air becomes a very difficult task against this defense, especially with their ability to get after the quarterback with Aidan Hutchinson.

During the last game, Jordan Love was pressured on nearly 50 percent of his dropbacks, according to PFF. When under that much duress, it doesn’t much matter what the play call is or where the ball is supposed to go—it isn’t going to end well.

In order to make room for Taylor on the 53-man roster, the Packers released safety and core special teams player Dallin Leavitt. There are likely a few contributing factors that went into this decision.

For one, the circumstances that the Packers find themselves in and needing to bolster their running back depth. But in addition to that, Leavitt had a pair of special teams penalties on the opening kickoff that backed the offense up inside its own 5-yard line. As ESPN’s Rob Demovsky put it, that drew the “ire” of Matt LaFleur.

The recent play of Zayne Anderson likely made this move easier to make. Similarly to Leavitt, Anderson is a safety and his primary role comes on special teams. Having both on the roster was a bit redundant to a degree. Anderson is younger and over the last three games, he has made three special teams tackles. For some context, Jonathan Owens is the Packers season leader in that category and he has made five.

Also, and while not the be-all-end-all, Leavitt’s special teams grade from PFF ranked 47th out of 52 eligible Packers. Not ideal for a player whose calling card is special teams and isn’t asked to contribute on defense.

The Packers also announced that the corresponding practice squad move to make room for Robinson was releasing linebacker Christian Young. With five linebackers on the 53-man roster, all of which either contribute on defense, special teams, or both, this is a position of depth for Green Bay.

Dallin Leavitt compares Packers rookie TE Luke Musgrave to Travis Kelce

The Packers veteran safety sees a legitimate comparison between rookie Luke Musgrave and future Hall of Famer Travis Kelce.

Former Las Vegas Raiders and current Green Bay Packers safety Dallin Leavitt played with Pro Bowl tight end Darren Waller and often played against future Hall of Famer Travis Kelce, so the sixth-year NFL veteran has a good understanding of what dominant tight end play looks like on the field.

While comparisons to special and unique players like Kelce are often unfair, especially to young players, that fact didn’t stop Leavitt from directly comparing Packers rookie Luke Musgrave to Kelce in a recent interview with Rob Demovsky of ESPN.

Leavitt called Musgrave a “special talent” who has “wiggle” and impressive “speed” plus the ability to make contested catches. While he sees some of Waller in Musgrave’s game, Leavitt liked the comparison — at least in terms of athleticism and body type — to Kelce.

Relative Athletic Score helps emphasize the comparison:

Size and athleticism are only pieces of the puzzle. Musgrave must now prove an all-around ability on the field; Kelce catches everything, is near impossible to tackle in the open field and blocks like hell in the run game. Musgrave has had some drop issues, needs to be more elusive after the catch and must get a lot better as a blocker, but the baseline ability is all there. He can be a special receiver, his size/athleticism combination give him the tools to avoid tackles and his run-blocking experience at Oregon State gives him a chance to survive in the run game while he learns what he needs to know as a blocker.

Musgrave looks like he’ll be a focal point of the Packers passing game in 2023. He’s locked in as the starting tight end, and Jordan Love — over just 10 attempts in the preseason opener — targeted him three times. The Packers are ready to feature the big, fast tight end in Love’s offense this season.

These comparisons are tough because it’s unlikley Musgrave will reach Kelce-level heights. But it’s hard to dismiss the size and movement ability, and Leavitt has seen Musgrave in action for several weeks dating back to the offseason workout program. The next question: Can the rookie translate the ability to the field as a rookie and realize his incredible potential?

Packers to re-sign safety/special teamer Dallin Leavitt

The Packers are bringing back safety Dallin Leavitt, who finished last season ranked second on the team in special teams snaps.

Add another one to Rich Bisaccia’s pile: The Green Bay Packers are re-signing safety Dallin Leavitt, according to Mike Garafolo of NFL Network.

With Leavitt returning, the Packers will retain the team’s top eight players in special teams snaps from a year ago.

Leavitt, now in his sixth NFL season, played in all 17 games and was on the field for 308 special teams snaps for the Packers in 2022, his first season in Green Bay. He played 72 percent of special teams snaps and finished the year ranked second on the team in total special teams snaps, trailing only Tyler Davis, who was also re-signed.

Leavitt finished the season with 12 total tackles (seven solo, five assisted) and only one penalty and one missed tackle. He played snaps on kickoff return, punt return, kickoff coverage, punt coverage and field goal block.

The Packers signed Leavitt as a free agent on July 25 of last year. He followed Bisaccia from Las Vegas to Green Bay and immediately became a special teams leader for the Packers, who improved significantly in the third phase in 2022.

Special teams have been a clear priority this offseason. The Packers re-signed Leavitt, Davis, Keisean Nixon, Rudy Ford, Corey Ballentine and Eric Wilson and signed long snapper Matt Orzech and safety Tarvarius Moore.

Leavitt’s role is special teams related only. He did not play a snap on defense in 2022 and has only 369 career defensive snaps over five seasons, compared to 1,1147 special teams snaps.

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Rich Bisaccia on Dallin Leavitt: ‘He’s the Energizer Bunny, the Tasmanian Devil’

Dallin Leavitt brings the juice and the crazy for the Packers special teams.

“I think the first game, the official came over and said, ‘What is the matter with No. 6?”

Core special teams players at the NFL level need to bring the juice and have a little crazy coursing through their veins. Dallin Leavitt of the Green Bay Packers fits the description perfectly, according to the endearing terms bestowed upon him by special teams coordinator Rich Bisaccia.

“He’s that guy, right? He’s the Energizer Bunny. He’s the Tasmanian Devil,” Bisaccia said Wednesday.

The Packers signed Leavitt this offseason to help Bisaccia bolster the special teams. Through four games, the former Raider has played 75 special teams – the second-most on the team – and delivered three total tackles.

Leavitt, a feisty safety who stands 5-11 and weighs 195 pounds, participates on kickoff return, kickoff coverage, punt return, punt coverage and field goal block for the Packers.

In terms of leaders in the special teams room, Leavitt has quickly assumed the role for Bisaccia in Green Bay.

“He’s just one of those guys that has a great sense of his job, has a great sense of his role, and what he’s being asked to do. And he plays in a way in which I think people respect his work. He’s an angry worker but he’s really a bright guy. Some of his things I think are probably calculated. He’s well-prepared, and I think the players, especially the younger players, they see how he prepares. He has to make a lot of the calls in the meetings so I think the guys get a certain level of comfort, I know Pat does, that he’s going to put them in the right protection at the right time and hopefully he can keep doing that.”

A little crazy helps on special teams, especially in terms of getting under the skin of opponents.

“He pisses me off a lot, so I’m sure he gets after them a little bit as well,” Bisaccia said. “I think the first game, the official came over and said, ‘What is the matter with No. 6? It’s the start of the game, it’s just how he is.”

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Shoulder injury for Packers S Dallin Leavitt could be serious

Coach Matt LaFleur said Packers S Dallin Leavitt is expected to be out ‘a while’ after injuring his shoulder against the 49ers.

Green Bay Packers coach Matt LaFleur confirmed a shoulder injury for safety Dallin Leavitt and provided an ominous timeline for his return when asked before practice on Sunday.

Per LaFleur, Leavitt is expected to be out “a while” after he left Friday’s preseason opener against the 49ers with a shoulder injury.

Leavitt, who was signed with the Packers on July 25, was injured while making a tackle late in the first half. He was down on the field for some time in visible pain while trainers attended to his injury.

It’s unclear what specific shoulder injury Leavitt suffered. The timeline suggests surgery could be in the cards.

Leavitt, a favorite of special teams coordinator Rich Bisaccia, arrived in Green Bay as a front runner to win a backup spot at safety, mostly due to his ability on special teams. He led the Raiders in special teams tackles a year ago.

His injury could open the door for a player such as Vernon Scott, Shawn Davis, Innis Gaines or rookie Tariq Carpenter to make the team as one of the backup safeties.

Before his injury, Leavitt gave up a long touchdown pass to rookie Danny Gray in the first half of the Packers’ 28-21 loss to the 49ers.

LaFleur did confirm that none of the other injuries suffered during the preseason opener are expected to be long term.

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Can newcomer Dallin Leavitt be an elite special teams player for Packers?

The Packers need help on special teams. Newcomer Dallin Leavitt could be one part of the answer for Rich Bisaccia.

By the start of the regular season, there’s a chance that the Green Bay Packers will have three players on the 53-man roster with experience playing special teams for new coordinator Rich Bisaccia.

Cornerbacks Keisean Nixon and Rico Gafford have been in Green Bay for months. They were recently joined by safety Dallin Leavitt, who is quickly carving out a key role on special teams for Bisaccia and the Packers through his first week of training camp.

According to Wes Hodkiewicz of Packers.com, Leavitt has worked with the first-team groups on kickoff return, kickoff coverage, punt return and punt coverage through the first four practices of camp.

There’s no quicker way to this year’s roster than becoming an important player for the third phase, especially for a Packers team coming off a disastrous 2021 season and in need of impact players on special teams.

Leavitt led the Raiders with 12 special teams tackles last season. Over the last three seasons, he’s played over 800 snaps on special teams. He’s experienced and has the right playmaking mindset for special teams.

General manager Brian Gutekunst was more than happy to listen to Bisaccia’s recommendation on adding Leavitt to the roster. The hope is he can be a core special teams asset while also adding depth at safety, where the Packers are thin.

“Dallin has been a pretty elite special teams player there for a few years, so certainly (Bisaccia) was excited to get him in the building,” Gutekunst said to start training camp. “Had him for a couple of days here, but he seems like a great kid and were excited about what he can do for us there. Played a bunch of snaps at safety too, so getting some more depth there is helpful.”

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Packers sign former Raiders safety Dallin Leavitt

The Packers filled their 90-man roster by signing Dallin Leavitt, a former Raiders safety and special teams who played for Rich Bisaccia.

The Green Bay Packers filled their 90-man roster by signing former Las Vegas Raiders safety Dallin Leavitt on Monday.

Leavitt, an undrafted free agent out of Utah State, played in 42 games for the Raiders between 2018 and 2021. He produced 56 total tackles and two fumble recoveries, including 24 tackles on special teams. Last season, he led the Raiders in special teams tackles.

Leavitt, who turns 28 next month, was released by the Raiders on July 20.

Over 42 games with the Raiders, Leavitt (5-10, 195) played 369 snaps on defense and 839 snaps on special teams, including career-highs of 249 defensive snaps and 348 special teams snaps last season.

Leavitt’s experience playing for new Packers special teams coordinator Rich Bisaccia almost certainly influenced the signing. In Green Bay, Leavitt will get a legitimate chance to win a backup job at safety and play multiple roles for Bisaccia on special teams.

Leavitt will wear No. 6 with the Packers.

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Raiders sign CB Isiah Brown, announce two other moves

Raiders makes three more roster moves on eve of training camp

For a second consecutive day the Raiders signed a former USFL player. Today they announced they have added Isiah “Ike” Brown ahead of the start to camp. This after adding WR Isaiah Zuber on Tuesday.

Brown recently played with the New Orleans Breakers where he had two interceptions, one returned for a touchdown.

The former undrafted free agent out of Florida International originally signed with the Buffalo Bills in 2020 before being placed on the reserve/retired list during training camp.

Along with the addition of Brown, the Raiders announced the release of veteran safety Dallin Leavitt and the waiving of guard Jordan Meredith.

Leavitt had announced his release earlier in the day on this instagram page, thanking the team with which he spent the past four seasons.