Commanders a winner on day 1 of the NFL’s legal tampering period

The Commanders made no headlines, but did well on the first day of the legal tampering period.

The Washington Commanders made headlines on Sunday by agreeing to a new four-year deal with defensive tackle Daron Payne for four years and $90 million. That would likely be Washington’s free-agent “splash,” and the money saved from extending Payne would be used to improve the rest of the roster.

That was precisely what the Commanders did Monday.

Washington made multiple moves Monday, agreeing to terms with offensive linemen Nick Gates [Giants] and Andrew Wylie [Chiefs] on three-year deals. The Commanders re-signed veteran cornerback Danny Johnson for two years and also signed linebacker Cody Barton [Seahawks] to a one-year contract.

There were certainly no headliners Monday, but two likely starters on the offensive line, a key reserve cornerback who always plays well and a one-year flier on a linebacker who was a third-round pick a few years ago.

CBS graded winners and losers from day one of the legal tampering period and named the Commanders as one of three winners on the day.

Until QB is addressed, they’ll obviously be a wild card overall, but they wisely declined to outbid the Raiders for another stopgap QB in Jimmy Garoppolo. More importantly, they prioritized the trenches on both sides of the ball. A day after locking up All-Pro defender Daron Payne, they secured an underrated offensive bookend, Chiefs Super Bowl starter Andrew Wylie, for borderline top-10 right tackle money (3 years, $24M). They also added both sterling character and positional versatility by poaching interior man Nick Gates (3 years, $16.5M) from the rival Giants.

While winning any part of free agency can’t be determined in March, as Washington fans know all too well, the Commanders made some smart moves that improved a position that needed a virtual overhaul.

How many more players will Washington add in the coming days?

Grading Washington’s signing of QB Ryan Fitzpatrick

With the signing of QB Ryan Fitzpatrick, Washington ensured a fun QB competition this offseason, but kick the QB can down the road until next year.

Though the day was late, the Washington Football Team mananged to sneak a free-agent signing in just before the buzzer, agreeing to a 1-year, $10 million contract with former Miami Dolphins QB Ryan Fitzpatrick.

He may not be the franchise player that everyone wanted, but Fitzpatrick has absolutely shown an ability to step up to the plate and wow fans in the past.

In his career, Fitz has a 59-86-1 QB record with 223 touchdowns and 169 interceptions. The longevity of his career has been impressive if the winning hasn’t.

So how does it deal grade out for Washington?  We’re willing to give it a B-.

As the weeks went on this offseason, it became clear that a top-end QB wasn’t going to fall in the lap of Ron Rivera. It seemed unlikely that they trade for a Deshaun Watson or a Russell Wilson, and rumors about guys like Sam Darnold never really sparked. With the 19th pick in the NFL draft, it was unlikely that they’d be able to take that route as well.

So in the end, why not grab a proven stop-gap veteran and throw him into a QB competition? That’s exactly what Rivera did, and now Fitzpatrick, who battled Tua Tagovailoa for the starting QB spot in Miami last season, will go up against both Taylor Heinicke and Kyle Allen this summer in D.C.

Who will come out on top? That’s a question that we absolutely don’t have the answer to. What we can hope for, though, is a solid competition where the winner is able to stay healthy throughout the season and provide some stability to the team. It may not be the Super-Bowl contending year that we all hoped for, but Washington can definitely make some noise, and kick the QB-problem can down the road until we get to do this all again next offseason.

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