Texans LT Laremy Tunsil vows to fix his penalty problem

Houston Texans left tackle Laremy Tunsil had 20 penalties in 2019, and seeks to correct the problem in Year 2 with the AFC South champions.

Laremy Tunsil made a big impact for the Houston Texans in 2019.

The former Miami Dolphins 2016 first-round pick earned his first career Pro Bowl, but the solution to the Texans’ left tackle problem also collected 17 accepted penalties, 14 of them false starts.

Tunsil knows the penalty issue is unacceptable and seeks to rectify the problem in his second season with the Texans.

“My main goal is to fix the penalties I had last year,” Tunsil said. “That was one of the main things I wanted to work on and work with [quarterback] Deshaun (Watson) this offseason.”

The Texans lost 90 yards due to Tunsil’s penalties alone. Houston finished with 892 penalty yards on offense, the 19th-most in the league. If Tunsil’s penalty yards were even cut in half, they would have gone ahead of the Baltimore Ravens for 22nd-most penalties last season.

“Moral of the story is just I want to improve,” said Tunsil. “I want to keep improving every year that I have. I’m going into my fifth year. I want it to be just one of the best seasons I ever had.

“Like, when I go into my sixth year, I want it to be one of the best seasons I’ve ever had. It’s just keep improving and keep doing things to help the team.”

The Texans are already getting one of the biggest boosts they have not seen since 2011 with the offensive line returning the same five starters. Tunsil is also benefiting from going to training camp with the Texans, even if it is an extended form that also functions as a mini-offseason with zero preseason games.

“You can already tell he’s a great player,” coach Bill O’Brien said. “He’s shown up every day, real technician, very athletic, very smart, works really well with [guard] Max Scharping on that left side.”

If Tunsil fixes his penalty problem, then the Texans will have a reliable side of their offensive line.

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What might Dolphins’ roster look like without major trades last fall?

What might Dolphins’ roster look like without major trades last fall?

The Miami Dolphins’ journey to the here and now has been quite the experience. Miami isn’t necessarily out of the woods yet, either. The team has added a good deal of talent across the roster over the course of the past season but all of those additions won’t mean much until the wins start to come. And while Miami has done well to build things back up, part of the rebuilding process was tearing things down, as well.

Even after the initial storm of roster departures in the spring of 2019, two big trades loom as monumental pieces of the Dolphins’ rebuilding effort that could have possibly changed where the Dolphins have ended up today. Those are, of course, the trades of OT Laremy Tunsil and DB Minkah Fitzpatrick. But now that we’re approximately one year removed from the fallout of both deals, we can turn our eyes back and begin to speculate what might have been different had those two players been kept? How different would the roster (and the salary cap) look?

For starters, Miami finished the 2019 season at 5-11. With Tunsil and a bought in Fitzpatrick, Miami adds probably their best player on either side of the football versus what the team actually had to work with. How do you measure that in wins and losses? It is hard to say. But we can, just for the sake of this exercise, assuming Miami wins more with two very good additions — one on each side of the ball. The low-hanging fruit is to say that Miami picks up wins in their two one-point losses last season — one to Washington and the other the the Jets in December. That would put the Dolphins at 7-9 on the season; an equal mark to where the team finished the year prior under Adam Gase.

And while a two win improvement sure sounds nice, let’s look at the fallout this would cause. Miami would hold only one first-round pick and two second-round picks in this past April’s NFL Draft, losing out on two first round picks and seeing their only other 1st-round pick tumble down the draft order — based on their adjusted strength of schedule after adjusting for wins over Washington and New York, Miami would have been slated to pick at No. 11 and the team’s first 2nd-round pick would have been scheduled at No. 48 instead of 39.

Let’s assume Miami still targets a quarterback — they’re not getting Tua Tagovailoa without trading up from 11 to get in front of the Chargers, who now pick at No. 5. So Miami is probably coming home with Jordan Love or Justin Herbert as their next franchise passer, instead and would be lucky to nail down Robert Hunt at the same pick in the 2nd-round. In reality, Miami’s offseason was such a big win because they got their quarterback of choice without giving up assets and were able to double down on cheap rookie talent at key spots early in the draft between Austin Jackson, Hunt, Noah Igbinoghene and Raekwon Davis.

Had Miami kept Tunsil and Fitzpatrick, we’d be looking at clearly better options at left tackle and free safety but either a presumed downgrade at quarterback OR having to pay handsomely to pull the New York Giants out of pick No. 4 or the Detroit Lions out of pick No. 3 to land Tagovailoa (and no extra picks in 2021, either).

Oh, right — and the Dolphins would have presumably paid Laremy Tunsil a contract extension by now. The Texans ponied up for Tunsil and paid him a new contract that averages over $22M per season. Paying Tunsil versus what the team is paying Austin Jackson would leave Miami with somewhere around $5M in salary cap space versus the $24M the team currently holds — plus would push the Dolphins’ 2021 salary cap higher amid the prospect of a reduced 2021 salary cap amid the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. With roughly $19M less in carryover for 2021 and an additional $18-20M in commitments in 2021 for Tunsil versus Jackson, the Dolphins would absolutely feel the cap squeeze in 2021 versus having a projected $28-30M in cap space next year AFTER the cap reduction to $175M.

So, to sum it up, everything happens for a reason. For Miami, the prospect of trading Tunsil and Fitzpatrick last fall was a tough pill to swallow. But, given the shift in financials and draft assets that would have taken place had Miami kept both players, you could very easily argue that the Dolphins are in a much greater spot moving forward. Here is a summary of some of the outcomes:

TRADE TUNSIL & FITZPATRICK

  • Projected $30M in 2021 cap space
  • Landed QB Tua Tagovailoa, OT Austin Jackson, DB Noah Igbinoghene in the 1st-round of 2020 NFL Draft, plus OT Robert Hunt in the early 2nd-round

KEEP TUNSIL & FITZPATRICK, TRADE UP FOR TAGOVAILOA

  • Approximately -$6M in 2021 cap space (so you’ll need to cut players after the 2020 season to get under the cap)
  • Land QB Tua Tagovailoa in the 1st-round of the 2020 NFL Draft
  • Trade away pick used to draft OT Robert Hunt, own no additional 2020 or 2021 1st-round draft selections (Trading pick No. 11 to pick No. 3 or No. 4 will require 2020 2nd-round pick & Dolphins’ only 2021 1st-round pick)

KEEP TUNSIL & FITZPATRICK, NO TAGOVAILOA

  • Approximately -$6M in 2021 cap space (so you’ll need to cut players after the 2020 season to get under the cap)
  • Land QB Jordan Love or QB Justin Herbert in the 1st-round of the 2020 NFL Draft, plus OT Robert Hunt in the early 2nd-round

We’ll let you be the judge of which outcome you’d prefer.

Texans RT Tytus Howard watched more film to improve in pass protection

Houston Texans right tackle Tytus Howard says that he watched more film in an effort to improve his pass protection in the offseason.

Tytus Howard may not have finished his rookie season with an MCL injury that landed him on injured reserve on Nov. 30, 2019, but it was good enough to land him on the Pro Football Writers of America’s all-rookie team.

However, the former 2019 first-round pick from Alabama State doesn’t want to rest on his laurels. Howard seeks to take another step in his development in his pass protection to fulfill Bill O’Brien’s vision as being a bodyguard for quarterback Deshuan Watson.

“I know the offseason for me, because I wasn’t able to do as much because I was recovering from a knee injury,” Howard said. “So, I think with me, it was more film study and watching what did I do to get beat on the plays that I did get beat on and how can I improve that?”

Not only did Howard take a look at his film from his rookie year to see where he needed to improve, but he also watched tape of greats in the NFL to see how to improve.

“Looking at other guys who have been successful in the NFL before and watching how they go about pass blocking and what can I do to be on the same level as those guys,” said Howard. “Because I want to be one of the greats.”

One of the “greats” that Howard watched was teammate Laremy Tunsil, who earned his first career Pro Bowl last season in his initial season with the Texans.

Said Howard: “I watched the greats and I got one of the best on my team at left tackle, Laremy. So, I try to watch and see how patient he is, how he stays inside-out. [Offensive line] coach (Mike) Devlin always coaches me to stay inside-out and stuff like that. I think for me, that’s the biggest part of my game, being patient and staying inside-out and just playing a game that my coaches coach me to play.

I think that’s going to help me out in this Year Two and I’m looking forward to helping my offensive line.”

The Texans are returning the same five starters along the offensive line for the first time since 2011. If they can return a better version of the five starters, the Texans should contend for more than the AFC South.

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RB David Johnson is excited to play behind ‘dominant’ Texans offensive line

New running back David Johnson says he is excited to play behind the “dominant” Houston Texans offensive line.

There are various aspects of the Houston Texans that excite running back David Johnson.

The AFC South club presents an opportunity for the former 2016 All-Pro to reclaim his former glory, revitalize his career, play with a Pro Bowl quarterback, and not have to be the focal point of the offense.

However, the most exciting aspect of the Texans exists in the five offensive linemen in front of Johnson.

“This is the thing I am probably most excited about is how good and dominant our offensive line looks,” Johnson told reporters on Thursday. “How strong they look and just from watching film from last year of each player, it’s going to be very fun to say the least.”

For the first time since 2011, the Texans are returning the same five offensive linemen as starters. Former 2014 San Francisco 49ers second-round running back Carlos Hyde revitalized his career behind the Texans’ line, collecting his first 1,000-yard rushing season of his career.

Who knows what a former All-Pro could do behind LT Laremy Tunsil, LG Max Scharping, C Nick Martin, RG Zach Fulton, and RT Tytus Howard?

“I think it’s going to help out the offense, those five guys up there,” Johnson explained. “Their level of professionalism and how smart they are, first and foremost, is that. L.T., Max, and those guys, Nick, they’re going to be very good for us.”

Johnson looks forward to the offensive line, not only protecting quarterback Deshaun Watson, but also, “get the holes open for me.”

“I can’t wait for the season to start,” Johnson said.

The seasons starts Sept. 10 against the Kansas City Chiefs at Arrowhead Stadium in a rematch of the AFC divisional playoffs. Though the Texans were able to put 31 points on the eventual Super Bowl LIV champions, they gave up 51 points. Although a better defense is the obvious upgrade, perhaps with a more effective ball-control run game led by a dominant offensive line, the Texans can start the season 1-0.

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Texans LT Laremy Tunsil claims No. 66 on NFL Network’s Top 100 Players list

Houston Texans left tackle Laremy Tunsil landed at No. 66 on the NFL Network’s Top 100 Players list.

Houston Texans left tackle Laremy Tunsil landed on the NFL Network’s Top 100 Players list Monday night.

The first-time Pro Bowler claimed his first ever appearance on the list as he ranked No. 66 overall.

Tunsil’s inclusion is a part of a 2020 offseason that has been nothing but wins for the former Miami Dolphins 2016 first-round pick. ESPN polled anonymous coaches, scouts, players, and front office personnel for a series of position breakdowns, and Tunsil was voted the second-best offensive tackle in pro football. Only the Dallas Cowboys’ Tyron Smith was better.

The former Ole Miss product signed a three-year contract extension worth $22 million in April. The Texans gave up two first-round picks and a second-rounder for Tunsil’s services, but he has proven to be the missing piece Houston needed to retool and fortify their offensive line.

“The main thing with me last year was the playbook,’ Tunsil told reporters on April 27. “I came at a late time, only had a couple of days to prepare for the game. But just to have that whole season, then this offseason under my belt, I think it’s going to help me with this playbook and my relationship with the players, and us being on the same page. I think that’s going to help a lot.”

With the rest of the NFL now on notice the Texans have a talented blindside protector, defensive coordinator will need to get more creative in finding ways to harass Deshaun Watson.

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Taylor Decker: Projecting what the Lions left tackle’s next contract will cost

Decker is going to get paid this coming offseason, if not sooner

Taylor Decker is entering the final season of his rookie contract, and the Lions starting left tackle is due for a handsome reward. The Lions have a chance to reach an extension this offseason before the price tag goes up, if they so choose. Or they could play it out, possibly use a franchise tag to keep him or let Decker hit free agency and create a huge hole on Matthew Stafford’s blindside.

What kind of money is Decker looking at in his next deal, be it in Detroit or elsewhere?

The Lions might have unwittingly set the market value higher for their left tackle by paying what they did to lure right tackle Halapoulivaati Vaitai as a free agent this offseason. Detroit inked Vaitai, a career backup (although an oft-used one) in Philadelphia, to a 5-year, $45 million deal that could bump to $50 million. A full $20 million is guaranteed at signing.

Vaitai’s deal raised the floor considerably for tackles. While Decker was primed to earn significantly more regardless of this contract, what Vaitai got solidified Decker’s leverage and value, be it in Detroit or on the open market.

Another 2020 free agent tackle, this one more of Decker’s caliber of player, that helps set the value is Jack Conklin. The Browns signed the former Titan right tackle to a 3-year, $42 million contract with $30 million guaranteed at signing.

The $14 million per year is a good bargaining point. Decker and Conklin have largely parallel career arcs, starting out very well as rookie first-round picks in 2016, fading back to average for a couple of years before rebounding with a solid 2019. Both are slightly above-average starters for their positions with a high overall floor but also enough issues that they’re unlikely to ever get much higher than that current status.

Then again, left tackles do earn significantly more. Donovan Smith of the Buccaneers inked a 3-year, $41.25 million deal in 2019. He’s not even close to as good as Decker; per Pro Football Focus, Smith has allowed 10 more sacks, 49 more QB pressures and committed 18 more penalties over the last four seasons than Decker.

Houston’s Laremy Tunsil, another 2016 first-rounder, signed for $66 million over three years just before April’s draft. A full $40 million of that money is guaranteed. Tunsil’s PFF numbers are close to Decker’s, allowing fewer sacks and pressures but committing far more penalties and earning consistently lower run-blocking marks.

Expect Decker’s next contract to come in between what Conklin and Smith got and what Tunsil earned in his extension with the Texans. A 3-year deal for $50 million, with $35 million guaranteed, is the right range for a deal for both sides. Decker could take a longer deal with a lower percentage of his salary guaranteed, too.

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Jamal Adams just the 8th player traded for 2 first-round picks since 2000

Former Jets safety Jamal Adams became only the eighth player to be swapped for two first-round picks on Saturday.

Jamal Adams joined an exclusive group when the Jets dealt him to the Seahawks on Saturday.

New York received two first-round picks in exchange for Adams, making him only the eighth player since 2000 to be flipped for two first-round selections. Among those eight players are Pro Bowlers, All-Pros and a former NFL Defensive Player of the Year.

With Adams taking his talents from the Big Apple to Seattle, here is a look at the other players who have been swapped for two first-round picks in the last 20 years.

Joey Galloway

Photo by Matt Rourke/Getty Images

The Seahawks have become known for trading their first-round picks in exchange for veteran talent in recent years. At the beginning of the century, though, they were on the receiving end of a large haul for the services of wide receiver Joey Galloway.

Galloway starred for the Seahawks for the first three years of his NFL career but eventually became disgruntled with his contract. A contract dispute and holdout that lasted 101 days ensued and cost Galloway half of the 1999 season. That was the final straw for Seattle, as it sent him to the Cowboys in exchange for first-round picks in the 2000 and 2001 NFL drafts.

Dallas gave Galloway a contract that made him the second-highest paid receiver in the league upon his arrival, but he never quite lived up to the deal. The Seahawks, meanwhile, used one of the two first-round picks the Cowboys gave them on Shaun Alexander, who went on to become a three-time Pro Bowler and MVP in 2005.

Seahawks’ deal for Jamal Adams further proves the NFL’s win-now mentality

Jamal Adams, Khalil Mack. Jalen Ramsey. Laremy Tunsil. More than ever, teams are willing to give up major draft value for superstars.

It used to be that NFL teams were measured by their ability to build their teams in the draft, with the occasional shot in free agency to round things out. But as the salary cap has ballooned in recent years, teams are taking a different tack to talent acquisition. More than ever, it seems to be perfectly fine to drain your draft picks over a series of years if the player you want is on the block.

The Seahawks were the most recent team to take advantage of this new mentality on Saturday with a trade for Jets safety Jamal Adams that will, among other things, deprive Seattle of first-round picks in both 2021 and 2022. You could argue that given Seattle’s ugly hit rate with first-round picks over the last decade, they’re better suited to offload those first-round selections as they also did in previous years for receiver Percy Harvin and tight end Jimmy Graham.

Not that the Harvin or Graham moves worked out as well as the Seahawks would have liked, but the Adams trade gives head coach Pete Carroll the two-safety defense he needs to succeed at the highest level, and that’s a defense Seattle hasn’t had since the heyday of the Legion of Boom, when Earl Thomas and Kam Chancellor patrolled the deep third. Last October, the Seahawks absolutely fleeced the Lions in a trade for safety Quandre Diggs. All Seattle had to give up was a fifth-round pick, and it could be argued that Diggs saved Seattle’s season. Before Diggs showed up, the Seahawks were dysfunctional at safety as they had never been in the Carroll era, and that could not stand.

Teams have made these blockbuster trades for different reasons. Around the same time Seattle worked that Diggs trade, the Rams gave up their first-round picks in 2020 and 2021 for Jaguars cornerback Jalen Ramsey. The similarities between the Ramsey and Adams deals are striking: Both players were unhappy with their teams at the time, both players were traded to teams that believed they were a couple steps away from the Super Bowl (or in the Rams’ case, a return to the Super Bowl), and both players were traded without the assurance that a long-term contract would extend their stays.

Ramsey will make $13,703,000 in 2020 in the fifth-year option of his rookie deal, and beyond that, there’s no guarantee that he’ll be a part of the team. The Rams can come to terms with him, they can slap the franchise tag on him, or they can let him go, but they made that trade understanding that Ramsey was going to cost someone a lot of money down the road. With the NFL and the NFLPA agreeing to kick any loss of revenue in the 2020 season down multiple future seasons from a salary cap perspective, this could result in a serious pinch for Sean McVay’s team.

Similarly, the Seahawks have Adams through the 2021 season due to the fifth-year option the Jets exercised. Beyond that, and given Adams’ preference to be paid as one would expect from one of the NFL’s top defensive players, it’s clear that these deals are more about the here and now, and teams will address the ramifications later.

Or not. Meanwhile, Carroll is a happy guy on July 25, 2020, and he should be.

Adams and Ramsey are but two members of the recent “Two First-Rounders” club, and the fact that four players have made that group over the last three years does establish a new trend. From 1986 through 2009, per ESPN’s Kevin Seifert, eight players were traded for first-round picks. Now, it’s the thing all these crazy kids are doing.

Last August, the Texans traded two first-round picks, plus a second-round pick, to the Dolphins for left tackle Laremy Tunsil and Kenny Stills. Tunsil was the major part of the equation, and this trade was one of several that people have roasted Texans head coach and de facto general manager Bill O’Brien for making. O’Brien may have a skewed concept of player value overall, but Tunsil did do a lot to improve Houston’s blindside blocking. Tunsil was due to be a free agent following the 2020 season, but after giving up so much for him in the first place, the Texans doubled down in the second place with a three-year, $66 million extension with $40 million fully guaranteed that made Tunsil the league’s highest-paid tackle on a per-year basis. Your smarter people around the league would say that O’Brien had no choice but to give Tunsil whatever he wanted.

Sure, but when you want to win now, you take the risks in the moment and assess the damage later. When the Bears traded their 2019 and 2020 first-round picks to the Raiders for edge-rusher Khalil Mack in 2018, they also started work on a six-year, $141 million contract extension with $90 million in total guarantees over the life of the deal. This made Mack the NFL’s highest paid player at his position, an honor he holds to this day.

The return on investment on these types of deals are obviously iffy. Mack retained his status as one of the NFL’s best quarterback disruptors in 2018, but injuries limited his effectiveness in 2019. Ramsey allowed a 70% catch rate for the Rams over nine games, allowing 28 catches on 40 targets for 336 yards, no touchdowns, one interception, and an opposing quarterback rating of 85.0. Both the Rams and Bears were beset by regression and quarterback issues in the 2019 season, and neither team made the playoffs after they each did the year before. The Texans made the playoffs with Tunsil, who was one of the league’s best pass-blockers and made his first Pro Bowl, and things looked good for them before they blew a 24-0 lead to the eventual Super Bowl champion Chiefs in the divisional round.

So, if we’ve learned anything from the Mack and Tunsil deals that we can spin forward to Adams’ situation in Seattle (and Ramsey’s situation in Los Angeles with even more urgency), it’s that Carroll and Seahawks general manager John Schneider had better be ready to write a major series of checks to their new acquisition. Because if you go all-in to win now, and it doesn’t work out, the worst possible thing you can do is to fail to wrap up that player for the long term.

That’s the price of doing business in today’s NFL. The paradigm shift from patience to impulse buying has never been more evident.

Seahawks’ deal for Jamal Adams further proves the NFL’s win-now mentality

Jamal Adams, Khalil Mack. Jalen Ramsey. Laremy Tunsil. More than ever, teams are willing to give up major draft value for superstars.

It used to be that NFL teams were measured by their ability to build their teams in the draft, with the occasional shot in free agency to round things out. But as the salary cap has ballooned in recent years, teams are taking a different tack to talent acquisition. More than ever, it seems to be perfectly fine to drain your draft picks over a series of years if the player you want is on the block.

The Seahawks were the most recent team to take advantage of this new mentality on Saturday with a trade for Jets safety Jamal Adams that will, among other things, deprive Seattle of first-round picks in both 2021 and 2022. You could argue that given Seattle’s ugly hit rate with first-round picks over the last decade, they’re better suited to offload those first-round selections as they also did in previous years for receiver Percy Harvin and tight end Jimmy Graham.

Not that the Harvin or Graham moves worked out as well as the Seahawks would have liked, but the Adams trade gives head coach Pete Carroll the two-safety defense he needs to succeed at the highest level, and that’s a defense Seattle hasn’t had since the heyday of the Legion of Boom, when Earl Thomas and Kam Chancellor patrolled the deep third. Last October, the Seahawks absolutely fleeced the Lions in a trade for safety Quandre Diggs. All Seattle had to give up was a fifth-round pick, and it could be argued that Diggs saved Seattle’s season. Before Diggs showed up, the Seahawks were dysfunctional at safety as they had never been in the Carroll era, and that could not stand.

Teams have made these blockbuster trades for different reasons. Around the same time Seattle worked that Diggs trade, the Rams gave up their first-round picks in 2020 and 2021 for Jaguars cornerback Jalen Ramsey. The similarities between the Ramsey and Adams deals are striking: Both players were unhappy with their teams at the time, both players were traded to teams that believed they were a couple steps away from the Super Bowl (or in the Rams’ case, a return to the Super Bowl), and both players were traded without the assurance that a long-term contract would extend their stays.

Ramsey will make $13,703,000 in 2020 in the fifth-year option of his rookie deal, and beyond that, there’s no guarantee that he’ll be a part of the team. The Rams can come to terms with him, they can slap the franchise tag on him, or they can let him go, but they made that trade understanding that Ramsey was going to cost someone a lot of money down the road. With the NFL and the NFLPA agreeing to kick any loss of revenue in the 2020 season down multiple future seasons from a salary cap perspective, this could result in a serious pinch for Sean McVay’s team.

Similarly, the Seahawks have Adams through the 2021 season due to the fifth-year option the Jets exercised. Beyond that, and given Adams’ preference to be paid as one would expect from one of the NFL’s top defensive players, it’s clear that these deals are more about the here and now, and teams will address the ramifications later.

Or not. Meanwhile, Carroll is a happy guy on July 25, 2020, and he should be.

Adams and Ramsey are but two members of the recent “Two First-Rounders” club. Last August, the Texans traded two first-round picks, plus a second-round pick, to the Dolphins for left tackle Laremy Tunsil and Kenny Stills. Tunsil was the major part of the equation, and this trade was one of several that people have roasted Texans head coach and de facto general manager Bill O’Brien for making. O’Brien may have a skewed concept of player value overall, but Tunsil did do a lot to improve Houston’s blindside blocking. Tunsil was due to be a free agent following the 2020 season, but after giving up so much for him in the first place, the Texans doubled down in the second place with a three-year, $66 million extension with $40 million fully guaranteed that made Tunsil the league’s highest-paid tackle on a per-year basis. Your smarter people around the league would say that O’Brien had no choice but to give Tunsil whatever he wanted.

Sure, but when you want to win now, you take the risks in the moment and assess the damage later. When the Bears traded their 2019 and 2020 first-round picks to the Raiders for edge-rusher Khalil Mack in 2018, they also started work on a six-year, $141 million contract extension with $90 million in total guarantees over the life of the deal. This made Mack the NFL’s highest paid player at his position, an honor he holds to this day.

The return on investment on these types of deals are obviously iffy. Mack retained his status as one of the NFL’s best quarterback disruptors in 2019, but injuries limited his effectiveness in 2019. Ramsey allowed a 70% catch rate for the Rams over nine games, allowing 28 catches on 40 targets for 336 yards, no touchdowns, one interception, and an opposing quarterback rating of 85.0. Both the Rams and Bears were beset by regression and quarterback issues in the 2019 season, and neither team made the playoffs after they each did the year before. The Texans made the playoffs with Tunsil, who was one of the league’s best pass-blockers and made his first Pro Bowl, and things looked good for them before they blew a 24-0 lead to the eventual Super Bowl champion Chiefs in the divisional round.

So, if we’ve learned anything from the Mack and Tunsil deals that we can spin forward to Adams’ situation in Seattle (and Ramsey’s situation in Los Angeles with even more urgency), it’s that Carroll and Seahawks general manager John Schneider had better be ready to write a major series of checks to their new acquisition. Because if you go all-in to win now, and it doesn’t work out, the worst possible thing you can do is to fail to wrap up that player for the long term.

That’s the price of doing business in today’s NFL. The paradigm shift from patience to impulse buying has never been more evident.

The NFL’s 11 best offensive tackles

You need to protect the quarterback in today’s NFL, and if you’re going to be a great tackle start there. Here are the est in the game.

A few years ago, long before a career change that brought me to this moment, I was doing what probably everyone reading this piece was doing: Watching the NFL Draft. It was the 2013 NFL Draft to be exact, and the Miami Dolphins had just made their first-round selection: Dion Jordan, a pass rusher out of the University of Oregon.

It was a bit of a shocking move, in that Jordan was considered a first-round prospect but maybe not someone worthy of a Top Five selection. He also tore his labrum that February and would be sidelined for three to four months as he recovered from the surgery to repair the injury.

When the pick was made Mike Mayock, covering the draft for the NFL Network, said something that has stuck with me since. He talked about how the Jordan pick was more evidence that the most important spot on a football field is the seven yards behind the center. I’m paraphrasing now, but he said that teams need guys who can “throw from that spot, protect that spot, and attack that spot.”

When you are going to pay the guy throwing from that spot somewhere in the vicinity of $500 million dollars, the guys protecting that spot better be darn good at what they do.

Here are some of the best the league has to offer at protecting the spot from the tackle position.

More Top 11 lists: Slot defenders | Outside cornerbacks | Safeties | Linebackers | Edge defenders | Interior defensive linemen 

Honorable Mentions

(Geoff Burke-USA TODAY Sports)

Two names are going to be glaringly absent from this list, so we need to address them right out of the gate. First up is Trent Williams, who found a new home this offseason with the San Francisco 49ers. Williams is usually a lock for lists like this, but as he missed all of 2019, he failed to meet the snap threshold for this piece. Then there is Jason Peters, another mainstay at the offensive tackle position. Part of the criteria for these lists is a bit of forward-thinking, and since Peters is actually kicking inside to guard this year for the Philadelphia Eagles, it is hard to consider him a tackle for this exercise.

Other names that just missed out include Bryan Bulaga, who is sliding into a tackle spot for the Los Angeles Chargers this season, and Jake Matthews, who continues a long lineage of NFL success. Then there is Trent Brown, a massive human who locked down Tom Brady’s blindside two seasons ago, and now handles the right tackle spot for the Las Vegas Raiders. A few more years of success from Brown probably slides him onto future such lists. Finally Braden Smith is worthy of consideration after just two years in the league, and perhaps he’ll crack the Top 11 in next year’s edition.

Best Tackle Pair

(Brett Davis-USA TODAY Sports)

As we will discuss in a few minutes, you need bookends at the tackle position in today’s NFL. Gone are the days when the best pass rusher was going to be attacking your left tackle on down after down. Now defenses are attacking from every possible angle, and some of the best pass rushers in the game (such as Von Miller and Khalil Mack) are working against your right tackle in large part. So the teams that have a pair of bookend tackles are in good shape.

Those teams include the Baltimore Ravens, who get to roll out Ronnie Stanley and Orlando Brown Jr. on Sundays. Then there are the Dallas Cowboys, and we will see both La’el Collins and Tyron Smith on this list. Indianapolis has a solid pair as well, with Anthony Castonzo and the previously-mentioned Braden Smith. Some good pairs were broken up this offseason, such as Bavid Bakhtiari and Bryan Bulaga, as well as Taylor Lewan and Jack Conklin. Lane Johnson and Jason Peters are still teammates, but no longer the pair of bookends they once were.

That brings us to the top duo, the combination of Ryan Ramczyk and Terron Armstead in New Orleans. Both players make this list and they are both elite talents at the position. Sean Payton and company have assembled a talented offensive line group and these bookend tackles are a huge part.

Now, the Top 11.