Saints designate Kiko Alonso, Johnson Bademosi to PUP list

The New Orleans Saints will open their 2020 training camp with Kiko Alonso and Johnson Bademosi on the physically unable to perform list.

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The New Orleans Saints had two transactions listed on the daily NFL wire, designating linebacker Kiko Alonso and cornerback Johnson Bademosi to the physically unable to perform (PUP) list on Saturday. Both players will count against the 90-man roster limit.

Alonso suffered a torn ACL in the Saints’ postseason loss to the Minnesota Vikings back in January, and has spent the offseason recovering from surgery. While there were optimistic reports about his availability to open training camp earlier this summer, the Saints are going to be cautious in working him back onto the practice field. Alonso renegotiated his contract with the Saints, saving them salary cap space and guaranteeing him the opportunity to compete for a job. He played well when healthy last season, filling in as the team’s go-to third linebacker behind Demario Davis and A.J. Klein.

Bademosi re-signed with the Saints after testing free agency; in 2019, he joined the squad near mid-season and was a big part of their success on special teams. But a December foot injury in practice landed him on injured reserve. The Saints have several competitors for their fourth and fifth cornerback spots behind Marshon Lattimore, Janoris Jenkins, and P.J. Williams, so Bademosi has his work cut out for him, once healthy. He’ll have to displace either Patrick Robinson or Justin Hardee on the depth chart, not to mention newcomers like Deatrick Nichols, Keith Washington Jr., and Tino Ellis.

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Updated Chiefs depth chart projections for August 2020

Our latest depth chart projections for the players currently on the Kansas City Chiefs’ 80-man offseason roster.

A lot has changed for the Kansas City Chiefs since our last offseason depth chart projection.

As part of the new agreement between the NFL and NFLPA, teams are required to cut down their roster to 80 players ahead of August 16. The Chiefs are already down to 80 players. Two starters from Super Bowl LIV have opted out of the 2020 season. The Chiefs have also added two free agents to the fold. We still haven’t had an opportunity to see players hit the field, but we are just a few weeks away from that finally happening.

For the purposes of this depth chart projection, three players (Martinas Rankin, BoPete Keyes, and Juan Thornhill) won’t be listed as they’re currently on the non-football injury or physically unable to perform list. They all still count on the active roster and can be activated at any time ahead of the start of the season.

Here are our latest updated projections for the offseason depth chart:

AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez

Offense (38)

Pos. First Second Third Fourth
QB Patrick Mahomes Matt Moore Chad Henne Jordan Ta’amu
RB Clyde Edwards-Helaire Darrel Williams, Darwin Thompson DeAndre Washington Elijah McGuire
FB Anthony Sherman
WR Tyreek Hill Demarcus Robinson, Byron Pringle Kalija Lipscomb, Maurice Ffrench  Andre Baccellia
WR Sammy Watkins Mecole Hardman, Gehrig Dieter Jody Fortson Justice Shelton-Mosley
TE Travis Kelce Deon Yelder Ricky Seals-Jones Nick Keizer
LT Eric Fisher Greg Senat Yasir Durant
LG Kelechi Osemele Andrew Wylie Nick Allegretti
C Austin Reiter Nick Allegretti Darryl Williams
RG Mike Remmers Ryan Hunter Lucas Niang
RT Mitchell Schwartz Lucas Niang Jackson Barton

Observations:

  • The Chiefs’ starting RB in Super Bowl LIV, Damien Williams opted out of the 2020 season following his mother’s cancer diagnosis. That means RB Clyde Edwards-Helaire, the Chiefs’ first-round pick in the 2020 NFL Draft, gets the bump to the first team.
  • Coming in behind Edwards-Helaire are Darrel Williams and Darwin Thompson. They’ll battle for snaps behind the rookie running back as the two most veteran running backs in Kansas City.
  • The Chiefs added free agent Kelechi Osemele. This came following the news that RG Laurent Duvernay-Tardif would opt out of the 2020 season and continue working as an orderly in Canada. Osemele has played at LG for most of his career. I anticipate that he’ll play there in Kansas City given both starting guard spots are open.
  • Mike Remmers is my choice for the Chiefs’ starter at the RG position. He played 2018 at RG for the Vikings, finishing the season with a 58.9 grade according to PFF. That’s better than the grade that Laurent Duvernay-Tardif finished with during 2019.
  • At backup guard spots, I have Andrew Wylie and Ryan Hunter. We’ll see if the Chiefs play Nick Allegretti, Yasir Durant or Darryl Williams at guard at all during training camp.
  • Wide receivers Aleva Hifo and Cody White were both waived, leaving only four UDFA receivers from the 2020 class.
  • H-Back John Lovett was waived and OG Jovahn Fair was also waived.

Saints reserve tight end Cole Wick opts out of 2020 season

Backup New Orleans Saints tight end Cole Wick opted out of the 2020 season due to the COVID-19 novel coronavirus pandemic, citing asthma.

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A wave of NFL players are opting out of the 2020 season due to the COVID-19 novel coronavirus pandemic, and at least one member of the New Orleans Saints is among them. Tight end Cole Wick spent part of 2019 on the Saints practice squad before signing a reserve/futures contract in January, but he’s chosen to opt out and return for 2021. His decision was first reported by NFL Network’s Tom Pelissero, with Eric Edholm of Yahoo! Sports adding that Wick opted out due to an asthma condition.

Wick faced long odds of cracking the Saints depth chart behind Jared Cook, Josh Hill, and rookie draft pick Adam Trautman, but his experience on the practice squad might have given him an edge in training camp over other backups competing for a roster spot. He was slated to earn a non-guaranteed $750,000 base salary in 2020, but will instead receive a $150,000 salary advance.

Big names around the NFL like New England Patriots linebacker Dont’a Hightower and Kansas City Chiefs guard Laurent Duvernay-Tardiff have also opted out of the 2020 season, a right which the NFL Players Association secured in negotiations with the league. While Wick is the first Saints player to choose to sit out this season during the public health crisis, he may not be the last. Stay tuned for updates.

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Everything the Saints have done so far in 2020

The New Orleans Saints made every move to improve their 2020 roster through free agency and the NFL draft, setting up for training camp.

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The last time New Orleans Saints fans tuned in to watch their team play a football game, it ended a bit quieter than expected. Kirk Cousins drove the Minnesota Vikings offense over a gassed Saints defense to lob a touchdown pass in overtime, ending what had been one of the most entertaining seasons in recent memory with a whimper, not a bang.

So what happened next?

Well, things got off to a strange start when the COVID-19 coronavirus pandemic struck the nation. Travel restrictions due to the public health crisis canceled pro day workouts for college draft prospects around the country, and postponed in-person physicals for veteran free agents.

And for good reason; it was proven right away that anyone could be vulnerable to infection, including Saints coach Sean Payton. Payton made a full recovery and has since used his platform to encourage others to make better decisions. Payton and the Saints ended up working remotely from home for much of the offseason, just like the rest of the NFL.

First Wave of Free Agency

However, that didn’t keep the Saints from getting busy in free agency. They started out by retaining many of their own free agents to-be, like reserve safety J.T. Gray (recognized at the Pro Bowl and as an All-Pro for his efforts on special teams). Multi-year contract extensions were signed to long snapper Zach Wood, defensive tackle David Onyemata, guard Andrus Peat, and quarterbacks Drew Brees and Taysom Hill. Defensive backs P.J. Williams, Justin Hardee, and D.J. Swearinger also returned on one-year deals.

But the Saints couldn’t keep everyone. Starting linebacker A.J. Klein was signed away to the Buffalo Bills, reuniting him with a familiar coaching staff from his Carolina Panthers days. The Panthers ended up signing a host of former Saints, inking backup quarterback Teddy Bridgewater to a lucrative $60 million contract while also poaching cornerback Eli Apple and practice squad wideout Keith Kirkwood. Breakout safety Vonn Bell signed with the Cincinnati Bengals after talks broke down with the Saints in a sequence that eerily recalled last year’s fallout with Mark Ingram.

So who did the Saints add? They made two big splashes early in free agency by bringing back former first-round pick Malcolm Jenkins, who rose to prominence during six years with the Philadelphia Eagles. But the biggest move was the arrival of Emmanuel Sanders, a Pro Bowl receiver who should pair excellently with Michael Thomas. The Saints also signed underrated fullback Michael Burton, who knows the playbook after spending the 2019 offseason in New Orleans. He’ll replace the retired Zach Line.

2020 NFL Draft, Rookie Free Agents

That wide-ranging strategy positioned the Saints to take the best players available in the 2020 NFL Draft, which they did early by picking Michigan center Cesar Ruiz with their first selection. But lacking many holes on the roster didn’t mean the Saints were content to sit on their hands throughout the draft. Instead, they aggressively traded up for Wisconsin linebacker Zack Baun and Dayton tight end Adam Trautman, betting on a quality-over-quantity approach. To top it off, the Saints traded back into the final round for Mississippi State quarterback Tommy Stevens, an athlete in Taysom Hill’s mold.

And that led to a busy couple of hours in recruiting undrafted free agents. The Saints guaranteed large chunks of their contracts in rookie deals with Michigan State linebacker Joe Bachie, Oregon offensive lineman Calvin Throckmorton, and Tennessee receiver Marquez Callaway, while adding some other intriguing options to take into training camp. And somehow, their biggest move was still ahead.

Second Wave of Free Agency

That would be the signing of Jameis Winston to a one-year deal valued at little more than $1 million. It’s not every day that a team rounds out its quarterbacks room with a former Heisman Trophy winner and first-overall draft pick who led the NFL in passing yards a year earlier. But Winston is here to learn from the best and maybe take over for Brees someday soon (which will be sooner than later, with Brees having a broadcasting job with NBC Sports waiting on him), and he’s already made his millions. He can take a pay cut for a year.

Winston wasn’t the only veteran free agent the Saints signed after the draft (and, conveniently, after the NFL’s compensatory draft pick cutoff date), though. They padded out the depth chart with defensive lineman Margus Hunt, pass-catching running back Ty Montgomery, linebacker Anthony Chickillo, and offensive lineman James Hurst. All of those additions qualified for the veteran salary benefit, helping the Saints work around the salary cap.

Coaching Staff Changes

There were minimal changes to the coaching staff, with linebackers coach Mike Nolan leaving for the Dallas Cowboys coordinator job. He was replaced by his assistant Michael Hodges, who had been preparing for the opportunity after several years on Payton’s staff. On the whole, the Saints are returning the same coaches who worked with last year’s team.

So that’s where we are now: these free agency moves and rookie acquisitions have resulted in maybe the deepest, most talented roster in Saints history on both sides of the ball. And at the end of the day, many of these players have been around for the last year or two, winning many games together — that’s important continuity in a normal year, much less one ravaged by COVID-19. With less practice time available, the most-experienced teams that are used to working together have a definite edge.

And that should have Saints fans excited on the eve of training camp.

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Vols’ projected 2020 defensive depth chart 8.0

Vols’ projected 2020 defensive depth chart 8.0.

KNOXVILLE — Jeremy Pruitt enters his third season as head coach at Tennessee.

Tennessee ended the 2019 campaign with a six-game winning streak that included victories over South Carolina, UAB, Kentucky, Missouri, Vanderbilt and Indiana.

The Vols held two practices in 2020 before spring football was canceled due to the coronavirus pandemic.

Tennessee players returned to campus for voluntary workouts on June 8.

On June 17, the NCAA DI Council approved a football summer and preseason model.

Assuming a school’s first scheduled football contest is on Saturday, Sept. 5, schools may conduct up to eight hours of weight training, conditioning and film review per week (with not more than two hours of film review per week) from July 13-23.

Then, from July 24 through Aug. 6, schools may conduct up to 20 hours of countable athletically related activities per week (not more than four hours per day) as follows:

  • Up to eight hours per week for weight training and conditioning.
  • Up to six hours per week for walk-throughs, which may include the use of a football.
  • Up to six hours per week for meetings, which may include film review, team meetings, position meetings, one-on-one meetings, etc.

During this 14-day period, student-athletes are required to get at least two days off.

The model does not make any adjustments to the legislated 29-day preseason practice period.

The Vols are scheduled to kick off the 2020 season against Charlotte on Sept. 5 at Neyland Stadium.

Vols Wire looks at depth chart projections ahead of the season opener. Projections are based on current player personnel on roster for Tennessee’s defense.

NEXT: Tennessee’s 2020 defensive depth chart projection 8.0

Vols’ projected 2020 special teams depth chart 2.0

Vols’ projected 2020 special teams depth chart 2.0.

KNOXVILLE — Jeremy Pruitt enters his third season as head coach at Tennessee.

Tennessee ended the 2019 campaign with a six-game winning streak against South Carolina, UAB, Kentucky, Missouri, Vanderbilt and Indiana.

The Vols held two practices in 2020 before spring football was canceled due to the coronavirus pandemic.

Tennessee is scheduled to kickoff the 2020 season against Charlotte on Sept. 5 at Neyland Stadium.

Vols Wire looks at depth chart projections ahead of the season opener.

Projections are based on current player personnel on roster, including 2020 signees, for Tennessee’s special teams.

NEXT: Tennessee’s 2020 special teams depth chart projection 2.0

Vols’ projected 2020 defensive depth chart 7.0

Vols’ projected 2020 defensive depth chart 7.0.

KNOXVILLE — Jeremy Pruitt enters his third season as head coach at Tennessee.

Tennessee ended the 2019 campaign with a six-game winning streak that included victories over South Carolina, UAB, Kentucky, Missouri, Vanderbilt and Indiana.

The Vols held two practices in 2020 before spring football was canceled due to the coronavirus pandemic.

Tennessee players returned to campus for voluntary workouts on June 8.

On June 17, the NCAA DI Council approved a football summer and preseason model.

Assuming a school’s first scheduled football contest is on Saturday, Sept. 5, schools may conduct up to eight hours of weight training, conditioning and film review per week (with not more than two hours of film review per week) from July 13-23.

Then, from July 24 through Aug. 6, schools may conduct up to 20 hours of countable athletically related activities per week (not more than four hours per day) as follows:

  • Up to eight hours per week for weight training and conditioning.
  • Up to six hours per week for walk-throughs, which may include the use of a football.
  • Up to six hours per week for meetings, which may include film review, team meetings, position meetings, one-on-one meetings, etc.

During this 14-day period, student-athletes are required to get at least two days off.

The model does not make any adjustments to the legislated 29-day preseason practice period.

The Vols are scheduled to kick off the 2020 season against Charlotte on Sept. 5 at Neyland Stadium.

Vols Wire looks at depth chart projections ahead of the season opener. Projections are based on current player personnel on roster for Tennessee’s defense.

NEXT: Tennessee’s 2020 defensive depth chart projection 7.0

Vols’ projected 2020 offensive depth chart 7.0

Vols’ projected 2020 offensive depth chart 7.0.

KNOXVILLE — Jeremy Pruitt enters his third season as head coach at Tennessee.

Tennessee ended the 2019 campaign with a six-game winning streak that included victories over South Carolina, UAB, Kentucky, Missouri, Vanderbilt and Indiana.

The Vols held two practices in 2020 before spring football was canceled due to the coronavirus pandemic.

Tennessee players returned to campus for voluntary workouts on June 8.

On June 17, the NCAA DI Council approved a football summer and preseason model.

Assuming a school’s first scheduled football contest is on Saturday, Sept. 5, schools may conduct up to eight hours of weight training, conditioning and film review per week (with not more than two hours of film review per week) from July 13-23.

Then, from July 24 through Aug. 6, schools may conduct up to 20 hours of countable athletically related activities per week (not more than four hours per day) as follows:

  • Up to eight hours per week for weight training and conditioning.
  • Up to six hours per week for walk-throughs, which may include the use of a football.
  • Up to six hours per week for meetings, which may include film review, team meetings, position meetings, one-on-one meetings, etc.

During this 14-day period, student-athletes are required to get at least two days off.

The model does not make any adjustments to the legislated 29-day preseason practice period.

The Vols are scheduled to kick off the 2020 season against Charlotte on Sept. 5 at Neyland Stadium.

Vols Wire looks at depth chart projections ahead of the season opener. Projections are based on current player personnel on roster for Tennessee’s offense.

NEXT: Tennessee’s 2020 offensive depth chart projection 7.0

Updated Chiefs depth chart projections for July 2020

Our latest depth chart projections for the players currently on the Kansas City Chiefs’ 90-man offseason roster.

The Kansas City Chiefs made a pair of roster moves, so it’s time to update our 90-man offseason depth chart for this month.

We still haven’t had an opportunity to see players hit the field, but we are getting closer to training camp. Holdovers from the 2019 season will still have an advantage in our depth chart projections. Some draft picks and undrafted free agents will also have an advantage based on draft status and what we’ve learned about them thus far from the players, coaches and staff.

Here are our latest updated projections for the offseason depth chart:

Photo by Peter Aiken/Getty Images

Offense (44)

Pos. First Second Third Fourth
QB Patrick Mahomes Matt Moore Chad Henne Jordan Ta’amu
RB Damien Williams Clyde Edwards-Helaire Darrel Williams, Darwin Thompson, DeAndre Washington Eljiah McGuire
FB Anthony Sherman John Lovett
WR Tyreek Hill Demarcus Robinson, Byron Pringle Kalija Lipscomb, Maurice Ffrench Aleva Hifo, Andre Bacellia
WR Sammy Watkins Mecole Hardman, Gehrig Dieter Jody Fortson, Justice Shelton-Mosley  Cody White
TE Travis Kelce Deon Yelder Ricky Seals-Jones Nick Keizer
LT Eric Fisher Greg Senat Yasir Durant
LG Andrew Wylie Martinas Rankin Jovahn Fair
C Austin Reiter Nick Allegretti Darryl Williams
RG Laurent Duvernay-Tardif Lucas Niang Ryan Hunter
RT Mitchell Schwartz Mike Remmers Jackson Barton

Observations:

  • The Chiefs re-signed veteran QB Matt Moore on Friday. He finished out the season as the backup in Kansas City after going 1-1 during the regular season when Patrick Mahomes suffered a kneecap injury. It’s safe to assume that he’ll jump Chad Henne on the depth chart in his return.
  • The Chiefs also released Shea Patterson and with the addition of Moore, Jordan Ta’amu moves down to fourth-string in our depth chart projection. It’s not ideal for his chances of making the 53-man roster.

Texas football roster breakdown: Quarterbacks

Let’s take a look at the 2020 outlook for all four quarterbacks on Texas’ current roster.

Texas is in great shape at the quarterback position for the foreseeable future. Continue reading “Texas football roster breakdown: Quarterbacks”