The 51 best NFL free agents left on the open market

After the Dak Prescott and J.J. Watt deals, and eight franchise tag designations, here are the NFL’s 51 best upcoming free agents.

The 2021 NFL free-agency period, which officially begins at 4 p.m. ET on March 17, promises to be like few others in the league’s history. Due to projected revenue shortfalls in the age of COVID, the league has anticipated that the 2021 salary cap will be somewhere between $180 million and $185 million per team.

That’s down from $198.2 million in the 2020 league year, which obviously puts several teams in a major pinch. Right now, per OverTheCap.com, there are 12 NFL teams over a projected salary cap of $180.5 million, and teams like the Saints ($58,718,146 over before franchising safety Marcus Williams), Rams ($35,136,331 over), Eagles ($34,146,468 over, which is mostly the Carson Wentz aftermath), Chiefs ($22,984,019 over), and Steelers (from $26,131,664 over to $3,617,086 over after a lot of pruning), will have to engage in some highly creative accounting just to get into compliance — forget about making any big splashes.

On the other hand, we have teams like the Jaguars ($71,821,714 under the cap), Jets ($67,341,082 under), Patriots ($62,211,837 under before the Trent Brown trade), Colts ($44,681,614 under), and Bengals ($40,979,130 under). The radical disparity between the haves and the have-nots when it comes to the capacity to spend in free agency could lead to an unusually constricted market, especially for those players who are more rank-and-file than sheer superstar. Not that those players won’t have offers; but those offers might not be what they may have been in previous years. It’s not the fault of the players; it’s simply how the market lands in this particular time. This could result in a lot of free agents taking one-year contracts and shining it on until new television deals and the hope of a more “normal” world make things more equitable in the 2022 league year.

After the Cowboys signed Dak Prescott to a four-year, $160 million contract, the Cardinals signed J.J. Watt to a two-year, $28 million free-agent deal, the Buccaneers signed Lavonte David to a two-year, $25 million contract, and franchise tags were handed out to eight different players (Broncos safety Justin Simmons, Jets safety Marcus Maye, Saints safety Marcus Williams, Bears receiver Allen Robinson, Buccaneers receiver Chris Godwin, Panthers offensive tackle Taylor Moton, Jaguars offensive tackle Cam Robinson, and Washington guard Brandon Scherff), the free agency picture got shaken up, especially at or near the top of everybody’s lists.

So, let’s talk about remaining free-agent value, at least how we see it at Touchdown Wire. Doug Farrar and Mark Schofield have compiled their list of the top 51 players who should be available as unrestricted free agents, after tags have been applied and new deals were signed. Mark assembled the offensive players, Doug put together the defensive list, and they then compiled the top remaining free agents in the upcoming 2021 league year, regardless of position.

Lakers free agency: Avery Bradley officially opts out, becomes free agent

The Los Angeles Lakers have quite a bit of work to do to fill out their backcourt in the upcoming free-agent period.

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The Los Angeles Lakers have their work cut out for them as they look to remake their backcourt and roster ahead of their 2020-21 title defense. Of course, they already have a starting caliber guard in Dennis Schröder, who was acquired for No. 28 pick Jaden McDaniels and veteran wing Danny Green. But they have serious concerns on the wings and in their guard depth, especially now that Avery Bradley will opt out of his contract to become an unrestricted free agent, according to Yahoo’s Chris Haynes.

Bradley turned down the final year of a 2-year, $9 million deal which he signed with the Lakers in the summer of 2019.

The Lakers are going for a full renovation of their backcourt with the Schröder trade and their decision earlier on Thursday to waive reserve guard Quinn Cook. Rajon Rondo is drawing interest from the Atlanta Hawks and the Los Angeles Clippers, while Kentavious Caldwell-Pope is also expected to see interest from various teams in the marketplace.

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Chargers listed as dark-horse destination for premiere blindside blocker in 2021

Could the Chargers look to add another lineman from the Packers?

The Chargers did a fine job upgrading the offensive line this offseason with the acquisitions of tackle Bryan Bulaga and guard Trai Turner.

While the right side is solidified for the next couple of seasons, the left side remains a mystery, particularly the left tackle position.

Even though we don’t know how the spot will shape up between Trey Pipkins and Sam Tevi, there’s a good chance that it may not be up to standards.

If the production is underwhelming, Los Angeles could be searching for a new blindside blocker next offseason. One that might interest them is Packers’ David Bakhtiari.

Bleacher Report’s Brent Sobleski predicted where the biggest free agents of 2021 could sign. Sobleski believes L.A. would be the perfect destination for Bakhtiari.

The Los Angeles Chargers should follow the path that the Los Angeles Rams took when they signed an aging Andrew Whitworth to protect young and developing quarterback Jared Goff. Whitworth provided an anchor up front to stabilize the entire unit. Bakhtiari can do the same with the Chargers, who are going into this year’s training camp with an open competition at left tackle.

Bakhtiari, 28, would reunite with his old offensive line coach, James Campen and former teammate, Bryan Bulaga.

Over the last five seasons, no other offensive tackle had a higher pass-blocking grade than Bakhtiari, per Pro Football Focus. He has made two Pro Bowl appearances and was a first-team All-Pro selection.

If the Chargers want to make sure rookie Justin Herbert optimal protection for years to come (if Pipkins or Tevi are underwhelming this season), their best bet is to invest into premiere left tackle, even if it requires them dishing out a large paycheck.

Bakhtiari would cost quite a bit of money, but he would be worth every penny.