2021 free agency: 10 under-the-radar targets for the Bills

Under-the-radar free agents for the Buffalo Bills at the start of 2021 NFL free agency.

On Monday. the NFL’s tampering period for free agency begins. During this time, clubs can talk to pending free agents from other teams ahead of Wednesday, when free agents are officially allowed to sign contracts.

However, the Bills have recently been very active in regards to free agency already. Buffalo made a couple of roster cuts and restructured the contracts of a few other players. That led to linebacker Matt Milano and offensive linemen Daryl Williams and Jon Feliciano re-signing with the club.

Because of those important moves and a dip in the salary cap to $182.5 million this year, Buffalo general manager Brandon Beane won’t have the big dollars to shell out to free agents. But there’s still dough to go around.

With that, here are 10 under-the-radar free agents the Bills could sign when the free agent market opens this week:

Fantasy football free agency roundup

NFL free agency will drastically help reshape the fantasy football landscape as the new league year begins.

Now that NFL free agency is upon us, here is where we’ll run through the fantasy football outlooks for trades, re-signings, midrange players, and tag recipients.

This analysis will be updated as players sign/re-sign in free agency, so be sure to check back regularly.

Signed with new team or traded

RB Mark Ingram, Houston Texans: The 31-year-old inked a one-year, $2.5 million deal in Houston to pair with fellow well-aged runner David Johnson. The duo will create a one-two punch, so long as what we saw from Baltimore making Ingram a healthy scratch late last year wasn’t foreshadowing. Some of that was due to him not playing special teams and the team wanting to get a closer look at rookie J.K. Dobbins. Presuming quarterback Deshaun Watson returns, Ingram still has a dicey outlook. The Texans’ porous defense has so many needs that it’s tough to see the offense being able to consistently run the ball if the other side cannot contain opposing offenses. Ingram needs bulk to make a mark in fantasy lineups, which rarely will be the case, unless he finds regular success around the goal line, consider the veteran merely roster depth or a handcuff to Johnson.

Re-signed/extensions

QB Dak Prescott, Dallas Cowboys: There’s no surprise associated with the four-year, $160 million extension Prescott signed prior to free agency opening. He wasn’t ever going to be allowed to leave the building, as evidenced by a formality of being tagged again. As long as his ankle rehab goes according to plan, this potential No. 1 overall fantasy quarterback has the tools to pick up where he left off.

QB Ben Roethlisberger, Pittsburgh Steelers:While it’s technically an extension, Big Ben’s deal was reworked to provide cap relief for the Steelers and keep him in a black-and-yellow uni for one last go of it. Roethlisberger will almost assuredly be without WR JuJu Smith-Schuster, and Pittsburgh has a new offensive coordinator in Matt Canada, but there’s still enough to like about the situation for Roethlisberger to be in the conversation of a low-tier rotational starter.

QB Cam Newton, New England Patriots: The knee-jerk reaction is to scoff at Newton getting a one-year, $14 million deal to re-sign with the Pats. A closer look should elicit a more measured response. Last year, just about everything worked against Cam finding success. He signed late (June 28), there was no offseason program, the offensive system is intricate, New England lost several key players to the opt-out, the offensive line had to shuffle talent several times, no receivers to speak of, zero tight ends of consequence, an erratic rushing attack, and Newton was returning from foot surgery prior to joining New England. Excuses, you may say … perhaps, but all of those factors are undeniable reality. Newton is finally healthy after three straight offseasons of rehabbing from surgery. Wait to see how the Patriots address wide receiver and tight end concerns, but it’s unwise to entirely dismiss a rebound by Newton.

[lawrence-related id=457182]

QB Taylor Heinicke, Washington Football Team: The former Panther parlayed an admirable playoff start into a two-year extension in Washington. He knows the system and the brain trust’s nucleus from his time in Carolina. Alex Smith’s release opens the door for Heinicke to compete for a starting job while having the upper hand against a newcomer who won’t be as familiar with the playbook. It’s unlikely, however, Heinicke is the season-long starter for this offense as an incoming rookie or free-agent acquisition will have that momentum on his side.

Franchise/transition tagged

WR Chris Godwin, Tampa Bay Buccaneers: No one paying attention expected the Buccaneers to allow Godwin to walk into free agency. Look for a stronger showing in 2021 after an injury-pocked season a year ago derailed Godwin’s campaign from nearly the onset. He’s a legit WR2 in all settings, but his upside is capped at that position overall with the bevy of talent around him in the passing game.

WR Allen Robinson, Chicago Bears: It seemed for quite some time that Chicago wouldn’t have the cap space to tag Robinson, but he was indeed slapped with the tender of $17-plus million for 2021. While he would like a long-term deal, and the team may still yet find a way to meet his demands by July 15, there also remains a chance this could get ugly. Robinson doesn’t want to play on the tag, nor must he sign the tender. He then wouldn’t play or get paid, so there’s that, and $17.89 mill is nothing to sneeze at during an offseason in which the salary cap actually goes down. At 27, Robinson could put his John Hancock on the offer sheet and still hit free agency in 2022 young enough to get one last shot at a huge deal when teams will have more money to throw around. Long story short, he mostly is quarterback-proof, but Chicago still needs to put a better product on the field. Whether it is Nick Foles or someone else under center in 2021, A-Rob is a viable PPR WR1 with a hint of downside.

Remains unsigned

  • Quarterbacks: Alex Smith, Mitchell Trubisky, Ryan Fitzpatrick, Jameis Winston, Jacoby Brissett
  • Running backs: Aaron Jones, Chris Carson, Kenyan Drake, Todd Gurley, Duke Johnson, Tevin Coleman, James White, Matt Breida, Brian Hill, Leonard Fournette, Malcolm Brown, Jerick McKinnon, Adrian Peterson, Le’Veon Bell, Kalen Ballage, James Conner, Marlon Mack, Wayne Gallman, Jamaal Williams, Mike Davis
  • Wide receivers: A.J. Green, T.Y. Hilton, Emmanuel Sanders, Larry Fitzgerald, Golden Tate, DeSean Jackson, Adam Humphries, Sammy Watkins, Marvin Jones, John Brown, Breshad Perriman, Corey Davis, Willie Snead, John Ross, Keelan Cole, Kendrick Bourne, Will Fuller, Demarcus Robinson, Antonio Brown, Curtis Samuel, Damiere Byrd, JuJu Smith-Schuster, Nelson Agholor, Rashard Higgins, David Moore, Kenny Golladay
  • Tight ends: Hunter Henry, Rob Gronkowski, Kyle Rudolph, Jared Cook, Tyler Eifert, Gerald Everett, Jordan Reed, Jonnu Smith, Trey Burton

Four directions the Vikings can go after Kyle Rudolph’s release

There are a lot of different things the Minnesota Vikings can do now that Kyle Rudolph is released. Do you want them to draft TE Kyle Pitts, sign a free agent in 2021, or do something else?

On Tuesday, the Vikings released their longest-tenured player: tight end Kyle Rudolph.

Rudolph will be missed for his highlights on the field and his overall impact in the community. He was a part of many different, fun Vikings teams. His game-winning touchdown reception against the Saints in the 2019 postseason will live on.

That said, this move did not seem all that surprising, given Minnesota’s salary cap situation and what Rudolph said publicly earlier in the offseason.

It will certainly be strange to see the Vikings’ tight end unit without Rudolph leading it. Here are some directions the team can go now with its tight end unit for the 2021 NFL season:

Browns GM Andrew Berry offers thoughts on David Njoku, Kyle Rudolph

Berry didn’t take the bait and instead talked up Njoku

[jwplayer qx09kiQ6-ThvAeFxT]

On Wednesday, March 3, 2021, Cleveland Browns GM Andrew Berry addressed the media in a press conference talking about the team’s current direction.

In the press conference, Andrew Berry was asked about David Njoku’s status on the roster moving forward and if the Browns would explore adding to their tight end room.

While this looked like an attempt to stir up drama between the Browns and Njoku, Berry responded and shared the Browns will explore every available option to improve their team. Berry continued sharing how the tight end room performed well in 2020 and mentioned Njoku’s performance specifically. He also brought up Kyle Rudolph.

Rudolph, 31, was drafted in the second round of the 2011 NFL draft by the Minnesota Vikings. His time with the Vikings overlapped with current Browns head coach, Kevin Stefanski.

While signing Rudolph would add talent to the team, I don’t feel this would optimize roster spots unless something else happened. Rudolph, like Austin Hooper and David Njoku, would not likely play special teams. Either Hooper or Njoku would have to be moved for this signing to make sense, and Hooper does not have an easily movable deal, and it is unclear what Njoku could return in a trade scenario.

A look at Kyle Rudolph’s career earnings

Rudolph has made a big chunk of his money over the last two seasons.

The Vikings announced on Tuesday that they have released long-time tight end Kyle Rudolph.

The move didn’t come as much of a surprise considering the Vikings saved more than $5 million.

During his 10-year career with the Vikings, Rudolph made $50.87 million per Spotrac. More than $16 million of that came in the last two seasons.

We’ll see if Rudolph, 31, decides to sign with a new team and add to that total.

In the meantime for the Vikings, we can expect to see 2019 second-round pick Irv Smith Jr. get the majority of the reps at tight end.

Report: TE Kyle Rudolph interested in joining Patriots this offseason

The Patriots need a tight end badly and Kyle Rudolph would be a great place to start.

Since the retirement of Rob Gronkowski in 2018, the New England have desperately needed help at the tight end position.

According to NESN.com’s sources, newly-available free agent Kyle Rupolph has interest in going the Patriots. Rudolph is 31-years-old and has had a very successful and mostly healthy career in the NFL. He’s never been a guy to record 1,000-plus yards in a season, but he hasn’t played less than eight games in a single season and hasn’t tallied less than 200 yards in a season over a 10-year career.

The Patriots have shown interest in Rudolph in the past and they now have the fourth-most cap space in the league, making a perfect scenario to lure him in.

Rudolph played in 12 games last season while accruing 38 catches for 334 yards and a touchdown. He’s a two-time Pro Bowler and his best season was in 2016 when he hauled in 83 receptions 840 yards and seven touchdowns.

The Patriots’ tight end depth currently consists of veterans Matt LaCosse and Ryan Izzo, along with 2020 third-round picks Devin Asiasi and Dalton Keene. Collectively, the tight end group only had 18 receptions for 254 yards over the course of the entire season.

Signing Rudolph would bring skilled veteran experience to a pair of second-year guys that have a ton of potential. With the excess amount of money and the dire need at tight end, the Patriots couldn’t go wrong with signing Rudolph.

[vertical-gallery id=102395]

Vikings release Kyle Rudolph: Three things to consider

The Minnesota Vikings announced that it released tight end Kyle Rudolph on Tuesday. Here are three things to know.

Signs were pointing towards the Vikings moving on from their longest-tenured player this offseason.

TE Kyle Rudolph said he was worth every dime of his contract this offseason and Minnesota appeared to be strapped for cash heading into 2021.

On Tuesday, the Vikings announced that they were releasing Rudolph from his contract. All of Rudolph’s 10 NFL seasons came with the Vikings. He has 4,488 receiving yards and 48 touchdown receptions in the regular season of his NFL career.

I’m sure Rudolph will find an NFL team this offseason and it will probably be weird for Vikings fans to see him in another jersey.

Here are three things to consider about the team releasing Rudolph:

How the Vikings cutting Kyle Rudolph affects the 2021 salary cap

With free agency, the Minnesota Vikings are going to have to keep cutting back on assets like Kyle Rudolph to save money on the 2021 salary cap.

With the way the 2021 salary cap will likely be structured, the Vikings are going to have to make some cutbacks.

The team wasted no time making one of those on Tuesday, announcing that it released Rudolph.

Rudolph was a key offensive player on many different Minnesota teams over the years. That said, the 31-year-old seemed likely to be leaving this offseason, on account of the team’s tight end depth and what he said about his contract.

With the team making it official, we can see that Minnesota saved just over $5 million in salary cap money and incurred $4.35 million in dead money, per Over The Cap.

Over The Cap — operating under the assumption that the 2021 base salary will be $180.5 million — has the Vikings a little more than $5 million above the salary cap even with cutting Rudolph.

So if the salary cap does end up being somewhere around there, the Vikings will most likely have to keep cutting back on assets.

Vikings part with Kyle Rudolph after 10 seasons

Rudolph would end up catching 453 passes as a Viking, going for 4488 yards and 48 touchdowns.

For the first time in his decade-long NFL career former Notre Dame star tight end Kyle Rudolph is headed towards free agency.

That’s because the Minnesota Vikings, who selected Rudolph in the second round of the 2011 NFL draft released the veteran on Tuesday in a move that saves the team $5.1 million in cap space this coming season.

Rudolph was coming off a year where injuries let him play in just six games at Notre Dame in 2010, but the Vikings pulled the trigger on selecting him and boy did it ever pay off.

Rudolph would end up catching 453 passes as a Viking, going for 4488 yards and 48 touchdowns.

Related: Kyle Rudolph through the years (photos)

He was a key part of the Vikings team that reached the NFC Championship Game in January of 2018 and also pulled in a Pro Bowl MVP award along the way.

As great as his on-the-field accomplishments are, Rudolph has been significantly more impressive off it in the Minneapolis area with charity work that landed him a nomination for the NFL’s Walter Payton Man of the Year three different times.

All the best in whatever might be next for one of the best to do it at Notre Dame in recent years – both on the field and off.

Kyle Rudolph released by Vikings, could help solve 49ers TE depth problem

The San Francisco 49ers should kick tires on Kyle Rudolph after he was released by the Minnesota Vikings.

The Minnesota Vikings on Tuesday announced the release of Pro Bowl tight end Kyle Rudolph. While the 49ers won’t have a ton of money to play with in free agency, Rudolph is the type of player they could allocate some of their resources to.

San Francisco last offseason pursued free agent TE Austin Hooper before he signed what was then the most expensive tight end contract ever with the Cleveland Browns. If they’re still in the hunt for a pass-catching TE option to pair with George Kittle, Rudolph makes a lot of sense.

At 31-years old, Rudolph’s days as a primary weapon are likely behind him. However, until last year when he caught only one, he was still an efficient touchdown scorer. The five years prior to that he averaged six touchdown catchers per season.

The former second-round pick is still a weapon in the red zone who’s crafty enough to get open, and physical enough to beat defenders on contested throws. Being able to plug him in as a pass catcher would be a significant upgrade for San Francisco over the likes of Ross Dwelley and Charlie Woerner who’re both primarily blocking TEs.

San Francisco shouldn’t be willing to break the bank for Rudolph, and if a team offers him starter money, the 49ers will be out of the running. On the other hand, if his market comes in at something they can afford, the 49ers should absolutely be aiming to bring in the two-time Pro Bowler.