4 NFL landing spots if the Saints trade Pro Bowl guard Larry Warford

The New Orleans Saints might be shopping Pro Bowl guard Larry Warford after the 2020 NFL Draft. Teams like the Ravens should be interested.

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Could the New Orleans Saints trade three-time Pro Bowl right guard Larry Warford? It’s certainly possible, especially after the Saints reinforced their interior line by picking Cesar Ruiz in the 2020 NFL Draft. The idea has been floated by both ESPN’s Bill Barnwell and The Athletic’s Sheil Kapadia, but which teams might be interested in Warford’s services? Here are a few suggestions.

Miami Dolphins

Credit: Steve Mitchell-USA TODAY Sports

Miami signed Ereck Flowers in free agency to start at left guard, prompting last year’s starter Michael Deiter to slide over to the right side. He’ll be competing with in-house options like Jesse Davis, Danny Isidora, and the Ragin’ Cajuns own Robert Hunt, but none of them have the proven track record Warford boasts.

The Dolphins also have a wealth of draft capital to offer, with multiple picks in the first and second rounds (via Houston Texans), as well as rounds six (from the Pittsburgh Steelers and Seattle Seahawks) and seven (after a trade with the Atlanta Falcons).

However, there isn’t exactly a hot trader’s market for guards right now. The Saints would probably hope to acquire one of the late-round selections rather than a more valuable pick early in next year’s draft.

ESPN’s Bill Barnwell suggests Larry Warford as Saints’ most-likely offseason cut

ESPN’s Bill Barnwell suggested that New Orleans Saints Pro Bowl guard Larry Warford could be cut or traded after the 2020 NFL Draft.

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What’s next for the New Orleans Saints, now that the big waves of free agency and the 2020 NFL Draft are behind them? The months between now and their late-July training camp look to be quiet, but the Saints could still shake things up with a few crafty roster moves.

One transaction we should prepare for might be the release or trade of veteran guard Larry Warford. ESPN’s Bill Barnwell singled Warford out in a survey of every NFL team’s most-likely cut candidates, writing:

The Saints keep flooding the interior of their offensive line with assets. Last year, they signed Nick Easton in free agency and then traded up to draft Erik McCoy, who excelled at center as a rookie. This offseason, they re-signed Andrus Peat to a five-year, $57.5 million deal and then used their first-round pick on center Cesar Ruiz, who will shift over to guard.

This raises questions about Warford’s future, given that the former Lions guard — who has started 44 regular-season games over the past three seasons in New Orleans — is owed $8.5 million in the final year of his deal.

It isn’t the first time Warford’s name has come up in these sort of conversations. The Athletic also put him out there as an option for the Saints to move during or after the 2020 draft, maybe recouping some picks in 2021 after their always-aggressive trade strategy in this year’s event. The Saints already used their third- and sixth-round picks in 2021, but they’re projected to earn each selection back as compensatory picks — unless the NFL doesn’t allow it.

However, we might not see any movement on Warford until the Saints meet for training camp. The team doesn’t really need any more salary cap space right now, even if they should consider starting on long-term deals with Alvin Kamara, Demario Davis, and a handful of other 2021 free agents.

There’s something to be said for making Ruiz and McCoy each earn their starting jobs this summer, and Warford’s presence would push them to compete even harder for a spot on the starting lineup. While the Saints plan to try out both Ruiz and McCoy at guard and center, there could be a scenario where Warford puts in the work during the offseason and ends up looking like the best option to start at right guard again in 2020. If that’s the case, the Saints would know they at least have a quality backup in either Ruiz or McCoy.

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Saints sign Jameis Winston to a 1-year contract

The New Orleans Saints signed ex-Tampa Bay Buccaneers quarterback Jameis Winston to a one-year free agent contract.

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The New Orleans Saints and free agent quarterback Jameis Winston agreed to terms on a one-year contract, the team announced Tuesday afternoon. Winston, the former first-overall draft pick by the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, is now the fourth passer in the Saints quarterbacks room along with Drew Brees, Taysom Hill, and seventh-round draft prospect Tommy Stevens.

It’ll be interesting to see what kind of salary Winston agreed to in light of what the Saints have paid their other backup quarterbacks. Hill’s new contract extension pays out $10.5 million annually, and Teddy Bridgewater earned just $7.25 million last season as the NFL’s highest-paid second-string passer.

We’ll get an idea of how this impacts the Saints salary cap situation once more details are reported. New Orleans often uses automatically-voided years in its free agent contracts to help maneuver around the salary cap, so it’s possible their deal with Winston might be more complex than it first appears.

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Adding up the 2020 NFL Draft salaries and Georgia’s drafted players

A look at the NFL Draft salaries for the 2020 class, including Georgia football players.

The 2020 remote NFL Draft has now passed and it’s time for the accountants and lawyers to put ink to paper and collect some young men’s signatures.

Contracts worth nearly $1.5 billion will be signed by the 255 drafted players from 99 colleges during the next few months. The current salary structure, which was put in place during the NFL’s 2011 collective bargaining agreement, greatly curbed the contracts of first-round draft picks. The CBA increased the 2020 minimum base salaries for all players to $610,000, including undrafted free agents.

The signing bonus represents a significant amount of a rookie player’s total compensation. Players will almost certainly retain 100% of their signing bonuses even if the season is shortened because of coronavirus concerns. Only the base salaries would be impacted, based on the number of games canceled. Rookie deals are typically four-year contracts that include a fifth-year team option.

Following are the expected contracts for the Georgia players drafted this year. I’m sure each will be receiving calls and post cards from the UGA Alumni Office in the very near future.

Player Team Round Pick Contract Signing Bonus
OT Andrew Thomas Giants 1st 4th $32.3m $21.1m
OT Isaiah Wilson Titans 1st 29th $11.6m $6m
RB D’Andre Swift Lions 2nd 35th $8.5m $3.8m
OG Solomon Kindley Dolphins 4th 111th $3.4m $0.80m
QB Jake Fromm Bills 5th 167th $2.9m $0.30m
TE Charlie Woerner 49ers 6th 190th $2.8m $0.18m
LB Tae Crowder Giants 7th 255th $2.7m $0.08m

LSU dominated the 2020 ‘Alumni Endowment Award,’ much like it did the 2019 college football season. The Tigers tied a seven-round NFL draft record with 14 draft picks worth a cumulative $124 million. Following are the top 10 colleges by 2020 NFL Draft contract totals.

1. LSU 14 players $124,058,000
2. Alabama 9 players $110,947,000
3. Ohio State 10 players $108,938,000
4. Georgia 7 players $64,337,000
5. Clemson 7 players $57,198,000
6. Auburn 6 players $50,654,000
7. Florida 7 players $43,817,000
8. Michigan 10 players $41,073,000
9. TCU 5 players $39,083,000
10. Oklahoma 4 players $37,239,000

And paraphrasing the great Waylon Jennings, ‘Mammas, don’t let your babies grow up to be guards. Let’em be tackles and cornerbacks and such.’

For the 2020 draft, guards are the least valued players for all positions, with an average totaling $3.0 million. Besides quarterbacks, their tackle line mates are the most highly valued position, with an average contract worth $8.3 million, followed by cornerbacks, who NFL teams value at $6.8 million per contract in 2020. Following are 255 players drafted by position and contract total:

Offensive Position Number Drafted Contract Average
Quarterback 13 $10.3m
Tackle 18 $8.3m
Wide Receiver 37 $5.7m
Running Back 16 $4.9m
Center 8 $.5m
Tight End 12 $3.8m
Guard 21 $3.0m
Defensive Position Number Drafted Contract Average
Inside Linebacker 3 $7.2m
Cornerback 26 $6.8m
Defensive End 15 $6.0m
Defensive Tackle 21 $5.4m
Linebacker 23 $4.7m
Weakside Linebacker 13 $4.4m
Safety 23 $4.1m
Specialist Position Number Drafted Contract Average
Punter 2 $2.8m
Long Snapper 1 $2.8m
Place Kicker 1 $2.5m

The 2021 “Tank for Trevor Lawrence Sweepstakes” takes place in Cleveland. The 2022 NFL Draft will be in Las Vegas. In the interim there will be a whole lot of college football to enjoy.

Projecting a contract extension between Alvin Kamara and the Saints

The New Orleans Saints have difficult contract negotiations ahead with superstar running back Alvin Kamara, one of their best weapons.

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So, the New Orleans Saints might have missed their window of opportunity to re-sign Alvin Kamara on the most team-friendly deal possible. The Carolina Panthers scuttled that chance with a four-year, $64 million contract extension for Christian McCaffrey, heralding a new wave of running back contracts around the NFL — maybe.

McCaffrey’s new average salary of $16 million just beats the high-water mark established by Ezekiel Elliott, who the Dallas Cowboys inked to an unprecedented six-year, $90 million extension just before the 2019 season. But Elliott’s new deal didn’t exactly precipitate a rush of big-money contracts for running backs all over the league, either. Teams still tend to undervalue the position.

There’s no questioning his importance to the team; Kamara is effectively the Saints’ number-one running back and its number-two wide receiver, having touched the ball nearly as often in 2019 alone (252 times, with 171 carries and 81 catches) as $100 million wide receiver Michael Thomas has done in his last two record-setting seasons combined (275 times, between a league-leading 125 receptions in 2018, 149 in 2019, and a single rushing attempt).

But Kamara’s workload diminishes quickly when compared to what McCaffrey, Elliott, and other big-name runners around the league have handled. McCaffrey saw a career-high 287 carries last season, plus 142 targets (catching 116 of them). Elliott has logged 300-plus rushing attempts in three of his first four seasons. Derrick Henry is the next in line to reset the market, though he’s playing on a $10.278 million franchise tag in 2020. Kamara is much more of a part-time player than those two.

Still, a rising tide raises all ships. Even if teams are slow to sign running backs to huge deals, they have done it. A lengthy holdout resulted in Le’Veon Bell’s $13.125 million per-year contract with the New York Jets. While he was traded to the Houston Texans after injuries limited his availability, David Johnson is going to earn $13 million in 2020.

If Melvin Gordon is willing to play for $8 million on a prove-it deal with the Denver Broncos (and if Kenyan Drake is worth slightly more than that on a transition tag), then Kamara’s asking-price has to start out at least a stone’s throw from that range.

The difficulty in guessing a ceiling comes from the Saints’ track record of low-balling pass-catchers. Thomas is the first skills-position talent the team has signed to a contract valued near the top of the market since Jimmy Graham, who was almost immediately traded away to get out of it. So Kamara’s upper limit of expectations should not be anywhere near the $16 million figure McCaffrey commands. Even the $13 million Bell and Johnson earned might be pushing it.

While Kamara will beat Austin Ekeler’s contract with the Los Angeles Chargers by a mile, it’s worth remembering its structure. Ekeler has climbed the Chargers depth chart to become their go-to passing down back, which is a great role to play in a passing-down league. His $24.5 million contract averages out to just $6.125 million over four years, a salary far beneath Kamara’s expectations. While their receiving stats are similar (Ekeler caught 92 of 108 targets last year, gaining 993 yards through the air), Kamara’s larger body of work and frequent trips to the Pro Bowl will build his case.

So here’s our suggestion, averaging the salaries of Elliott, Bell, and Johnson (on the upper end of the scale) against Gordon (on the lower side), using Ekeler’s guarantees as a loose guide.

A sensible deal for Kamara (from the Saints’ perspective) could look like a three-year, $37 million contract with $22.57 million in guarantees. That would pay out an average salary of $12.3 million per year (raising his 2020 pay from where it stands now, at just over $2 million) and guarantee the first two years of the contract. We’ll just assume that Saints salary cap guru Khai Hartley includes some automatically-voided years at the end of it to help with the accounting, his signature move. If Kamara can remain healthy and productive, he would be set up to test free agency in 2023 before his 28th birthday, still in his prime and able to cash in after new broadcasting contracts have raised the NFL salary cap.

If nothing else, making that sort of offer now would give the Saints an idea of Kamara’s headspace. If he dismisses it out of hand, expecting closer to what McCaffrey and Elliott are earning, they’ll know that he won’t fit their budget and can add “running back” to their list of roster needs before this year’s draft. But if Kamara mulls it over and is willing to talk shop, there’s a chance the Saints could reach a compromise that makes both parties happy — much like they did last season in new deals with Thomas, Wil Lutz, and Cameron Jordan.

That said: there’s risk in signing Kamara to a short-term deal rather than a long-running contract. It takes away the Saints’ ability to backload future years, making it more difficult to maneuver around the salary cap in the short-term. And that could be the difference between retaining someone like Ramczyk or Lattimore (whose fifth-year options keep them around through 2021).

But at the same time, making a long-term commitment to a player with an injury history at a position that sees such high rates of attrition doesn’t make a ton of sense. And that brings us back full-circle, asking the original question of just how highly running backs should be valued in today’s NFL.

It’s a tough situation to navigate. Based off their recent moves, we could see some movement between the Saints and Kamara in the weeks ahead. The longer the Saints wait, the higher the market value will rise as players like Henry and Drake sign their own contract extensions. If they wait too long, they might get priced out.

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ESPN reports Vonn Bell, Bengals agreed on $6 million per-year contract

The New Orleans Saints replaced Vonn Bell with Malcolm Jenkins. Bell agreed to a three-year, $18 million deal with the Cincinnati Bengals.

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New Orleans Saint safety Vonn Bell agreed to a free agent contract with the Cincinnati Bengals in a situation that feels uncomfortably similar to last offseason’s loss of Mark Ingram. Both players were offered contracts by the Saints, but the team was forced to move on to other options owing to the rapidly-changing nature of the market. For Ingram, that meant landing with the Baltimore Ravens after Latavius Murray took his roster spot. And for Bell, it also means leaving for the AFC North after the Saints signed Malcolm Jenkins instead.

What stings for Bell, though, may be his contract details. Per ESPN, Bell agreed to a three-year, $18 million contract with the Bengals, which clocks in below the roughly $7.5 million per-year offer the Saints put on the table. It’s disappointing to see an up-and-comer like Bell leave New Orleans, especially for less money than the Saints reportedly offered him.

Maybe Bell overplayed his hand, or anticipated a more actively-interested free agent market. Maybe he got bad advice. Whatever the case, he’s now returning to Ohio after coming into his own in the NFL, playing football again not too far away from Ohio State, where he starred in college. It’s great that he got his money and will have the opportunity to play next to an accomplished free safety (the Bengals’ Jessie Bates is one of the better players at his position), but you have to wonder whether this was unnecessary had he accepted the offer the Saints made him.

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Updated reports say Janoris Jenkins signed two-year extension with Saints

Initial reports claimed Janoris Jenkins renegotiated a contract including voided years, but he will play for the Saints on a long-term deal.

A downside to the NFL’s new work-from-home practices in reaction to the coronavirus pandemic might be that information travels a little slower than it used to. With so many important figures working remotely — including general managers and head coaches, team contract negotiators, agents representing players, and the players themselves — it takes a bit longer for news to travel through the grape vine. There’s simply fewer eyes in the room to leak the details on which offers were on the table.

That’s the case for the New Orleans Saints and cornerback Janoris Jenkins, who NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport reported agreed to a two-year contract extension paying out $16.75 million in new money; combined with his current deal, that looks like a three-year $27 million agreement with $10.2 million in guarantees.

It’s also a big shift from the previously-reported news that Jenkins and the Saints did not reach an agreement on a long-term deal, instead settling on a restructure that created short-term salary cap space while allowing Jenkins to test free agency in 2021. We know now that’s not the case, and Jenkins will play for the Saints after next year.

So how does this new deal impact the Saints salary cap situation? Nick Underhill of NewOrleans.Football reported Jenkins will count for the following salary cap hits:

  • 2020: $5.05 million
  • 2021: $14.2 million
  • 2022: $8.75 million

However, these essentially work out like team options in the next few years, because the Saints can cut Jenkins with little financial penalty should he not play up to expectations (or fall off a cliff, talent-wise; he’ll be 34 in 2022, an age few corners perform well at). Per Over The Cap, the Saints can save $8.2 million in 2021 and $5.75 million in 2022 by releasing Jenkins, should they choose to do so.

So all in all, this is a much better deal for the Saints than what was initially reported. They’ve saved salary cap space this year and will get a return on their investment by having someone on their payroll actually play for them. For Jenkins, he gets some stability (and an instant $9 million payout) and the opportunity to stick with a team he obviously enjoyed playing for last season.

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Details on Eli Apple’s Raiders contract, Saints comp pick implications

The Las Vegas Raiders inked New Orleans Saints free agent Eli Apple to a one-year prove-it contract, giving the Giants ex-pat another chance

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The New Orleans Saints lost starting cornerback Eli Apple to the Las Vegas Raiders, who signed the free agent to a one-year, $6 million contract. Per NFL Network’s Mike Garafolo, that $6 million is fully guaranteed with a further $500,000 available in incentives.

This is essentially a prove-it contract for Apple, who played at a decent level for the Saints for much of the 2019 season. But when injuries and suspensions struck the secondary — taking number-one cornerback Marshon Lattimore and nickel corner P.J. Williams off of the field — Apple folded under the added responsibilities and was fouled six times in three games, including three penalties for defensive pass interference on Thanksgiving against the Atlanta Falcons.

A late-season ankle injury and the pickup of Janoris Jenkins off the waiver wire pushed Apple further down the depth chart, and now off the Saints roster. It’s hardly the result the team imagined when they swapped a 2019 fourth-round pick and a seventh rounder in 2020 to acquire him from the New York Giants, who drafted him tenth overall out of Ohio State back in 2016. So how does his loss impact the compensatory draft pick formula?

Those selections are awarded based off of whether a team signs fewer unrestricted free agents than it loses, so Apple’s $6 million salary being valued as a sixth-round pick in 2021 cancels out the addition of Emmanuel Sanders at $8 million per year. The Saints have also lost quarterback Teddy Bridgewater (at $21 million per year, qualifying for a third-round pick) and linebacker A.J. Klein ($6 million per year, sixth rounder).

It’s unclear whether safety Malcolm Jenkins will factor in, but if he did his $8 million salary would wipe out the sixth-round selection garnered by losing Klein. Because Jenkins had his 2020 contract option declined by the Philadelphia Eagles, he should count against the Saints; if he had been cut instead, he would not factor into the equation. Changes in the new collective bargaining agreement make this a little more confusing than it’s been in the past.

The Saints also signed fullback Michael Burton, an unrestricted free agent, but his near-minimum salary will not count against the Saints’ other losses. For now, we’re conservatively predicting that the Saints will be awarded a third-round pick in 2021 for Bridgewater, while sixth-round selections for Klein and Apple will be wiped out by the signings of Sanders and Jenkins. Keep an eye out for Vonn Bell’s landing spot, which should also qualify for a compensatory pick in next year’s draft.

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Saints pick up fifth-year options on Marshon Lattimore and Ryan Ramczyk

The New Orleans Saints exercised fifth-year options for Marshon Lattimore and Ryan Ramczyk, keeping them both around for the 2021 season.

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The first members of the 2017 NFL Draft class have had their fifth-year options picked up for the 2021 season, and they both play for the New Orleans Saints. ESPN’s Field Yates reported Thursday that the Saints exercised the options for both cornerback Marshon Lattimore and right tackle Ryan Ramczyk, keeping them both under team contract control for the next two years and, crucially, buying more time to hammer out long-term contract extensions for both of them.

Lattimore and Ramczyk being the first members of their draft class to have their options activated speaks to how highly-regarded they both are in New Orleans. We estimated earlier this offseason how much these options will be worth in 2021, but those figures will heighten between now and then as new contracts are paid out around the league.

Lattimore, the 11th overall pick out of Ohio State back in 2017, has been voted into two Pro Bowl appearances in his first three years. He was also selected as the NFL Defensive Rookie of the Year. Ramczyk, the 32nd overall pick from Wisconsin that year, has strangely been snubbed for each Pro Bowl since while earning recognition on the All-Pro list in both 2018 (on the second team) and 2019 (on the first team).

For a quick refresher: because neither Lattimore nor Ramczyk were picked within the first ten selections, their fifth-year option values will be determined by the average of the highest-paid players at their positions (specifically, the 3rd- to 25th-highest annual salaries). For now, that puts them in the ballpark of $11.6 million for Lattimore and $12.8 million for Ramczyk.

And, just to remind everyone: the Saints picking up these fifth-year options does nothing to affect either player’s 2020 salary cap hits. These were expected moves that should do a lot to keep the Saints competitive in the future.

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Report: Vonn Bell turned down significant offer before Saints signed Malcolm Jenkins

The New Orleans Saints made a big contract offer to free agent Vonn Bell, who declined. That prompted the signing of Malcolm Jenkins.

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The New Orleans Saints signed Philadelphia Eagles free agent Malcolm Jenkins to a four-year, $32 million contract this week, but some Saints fans were left wondering, “Why?”

Jenkins was one of the top safeties available, but he’ll be replacing Vonn Bell, an up-and-comer who grew in popularity as the 2019 season ran on. Bell ended the year with the NFL’s most fumble recoveries, and his first career interception. More than one fan has asked why the money given to Jenkins couldn’t have been spent on Bell.

According to NewOrleans.Football’s Nick Underhill, Bell didn’t want it. Underhill reports that the Saints made Bell a comparable offer, “around the neighborhood of $7.5 million per season,” but the 25-year-old safety turned it down, thinking he could find a bigger payday in free agency.

Whether he’ll actually land that sort of deal is to be determined, but there aren’t many safeties like Bell who command double-digit salaries. Only the versatile free safeties who can make plays in coverage and defend from multiple alignments earn that — the hard-nosed safeties who make a living in the tackle box and at the line of scrimmage, like Bell, rarely draw more than $8 million annually.

But Bell won’t lack for suitors. Teams like the Cincinnati Bengals make sense as they look to load up on playmakers ahead of next month’s NFL draft, with potential face of the franchise-worthy quarterbacks like LSU’s Joe Burrow will be available. It’s also worth noting that the Carolina Panthers were reportedly in on Bell’s sweepstakes, and they recently released veteran safety Eric Reid, possibly making room for someone like Bell.

There’s still plenty of cash to be spent in free agency, and as one of the best safeties still available, Bell figures to get the contract he’s wanting.

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