Sidney Jones contract details with Bengals emerge

Another nice value for the Bengals in free agency.

When looking at the contract the Cincinnati Bengals gave tight end Irv Smith Jr., it was apparent the team got a great value deal with high upside and little risk.

Turns out it is the same story for cornerback Sidney Jones.

According to Aaron Wilson of KPRC 2 in Houston, Jones’ one-year deal is worth $1.08 million, which means the cap hit actually checks in at less than $1 million.

So for the Bengals, that’s two players at minimum salaries who could end up starting. Smith could be tight end No. 1 next season and Jones could easily start at corner across from Cam Taylor-Britt on the boundary if Chidobe Awuzie hasn’t completed his rehab.

Not bad value by any means for a Bengals team with needs to fill but a cap tightrope to navigate over the next few years.

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Best reactions after Bengals sign CB Sidney Jones in free agency

Some reactions after the Bengals made a move in free agency.

The Cincinnati Bengals finally took a shot at the cornerback position in free agency on Monday, adding Sidney Jones.

Most projections had the Bengals adding a Jones-type player if they didn’t re-sign Eli Apple once again and indeed, it’s a one-year deal for the veteran.

Given the projection and Apple’s polarizing reputation, reactions from the Bengals fanbase and beyond went a lot of different directions. Some love the move, while others still want to see Apple return, too — which is a complete possibility still.

Here’s a look at the instant reactions from around the NFL scene after the first report broke that the Bengals had a deal with Jones.

Instant analysis after Bengals sign free agent CB Sidney Jones

Some quick thoughts on the Bengals signing Sidney Jones in free agency.

As expected, the Cincinnati Bengals played the patient game in free agency at the cornerback position.

Monday, reports surfaced that the team agreed to terms on a one-year deal with Sidney Jones.

The short and sweet of it? The move has Eli Apple vibes as a short pact for a nice system fit in Lou Anarumo’s defense who can rotate in as a starter if necessary.

Jones, a second-round pick by Seattle in the 2017 draft, spent three seasons there, one with Jacksonville and then split time between Seattle and Las Vegas over the last two seasons.

Along the way, Jones has battled injury issues and simply fought up depth charts, going as far as needing to scrap off the practice squad in Jacksonville for playing time.

Still, while some of the numbers might not be great, Jones feels very similar to the Apple rehab project that started a few years ago. He’s a bigger corner who fits the scheme well, so there’s a chance he can have a similar impact.

Speaking of Apple, the move is a small one that doesn’t prevent bringing back free agents like Apple and Tre Flowers. The team has remained mum on what the rehab timetable looks like for No. 1 corner Chidobe Awuzie, so for now, second-round sophomore Cam Taylor-Britt is tops on the depth chart.

Same story for the draft outlook. Jones’ arrival doesn’t prevent anything on draft day, starting right in Round 1.

On paper, Jones is exactly what we and most others projected for the Bengals at cornerback on the market, outside of bringing back Apple and Flowers. No matter who they brought on, it was going to be a system fit on an affordable deal with the understanding that, depending on Awuzie’s health, the new arrival would be third at best on the depth chart.

The nice thing with Jones, though, is that immense upside that had him drafted early remains and Anarumo’s defense has a solid chance of helping him grasp toward that ceiling.

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Bengals sign free agent CB Sidney Jones

The Bengals just got active in free agency again.

The Cincinnati Bengals have finally found some cornerback help in free agency with former second-round pick Sidney Jones.

According to The Score’s Jordan Schultz, the Bengals have signed the 26-year-old defensive back to a one-year deal.

Jones was a second-rounder for Philadephia who spent three seasons with the Eagles before bouncing around with two teams and ultimately landing in Cincinnati.

The Bengals entered the offseason needing help at cornerback with both Tre Flowers and Eli Apple set to hit the open market and No. 1 corner Chidobe Awuzie still rehabbing an injury.

Adding Jones this late in the process helps the Bengals keep their draft options open and doesn’t rule out the return of Apple or Flowers, if not both.

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Week 18 snap counts: Raiders finish off season digging deep at cornerback depth chart

The Raiders were forced to dig deep into the cornerback depth chart to finish off the season

No position this season has seen more turnover than cornerback. The group on the field at the end of their season finale was completely unrecognizable to the one they had to start the season.

The starting trio to begin the season was Rock Ya-Sin, Nate Hobbs, and Anthony Averett.

Ya-Sin and Averett are both on injured reserve and Hobbs was lost before half time.

The trio on the field for the second half of the season finale was Amik Robertson, Sidney Jones, and Tyler Hall.

How much of a change is that from how the season began at the position? Robertson played all of 13 snaps in the season opener while midway through this season, Jones and Hall weren’t even on the team.

Robertson in particular played every snap for the Raiders. Just the third time in his three-year career he’s done that.

Offense Spec Tms
Player Pos Num Pct Num Pct
Dylan Parham G 70 100% 3 13%
Kolton Miller T 70 100% 3 13%
Jermaine Eluemunor G 70 100% 3 13%
Jarrett Stidham QB 70 100% 0 0%
Alex Bars G 70 100% 0 0%
Andre James C 70 100% 0 0%
Mack Hollins WR 66 94% 5 22%
Davante Adams WR 63 90% 0 0%
Josh Jacobs RB 50 71% 0 0%
Darren Waller TE 47 67% 0 0%
Hunter Renfrow WR 40 57% 4 17%
Foster Moreau TE 28 40% 10 43%
Jakob Johnson FB 19 27% 8 35%
Ameer Abdullah RB 18 26% 14 61%
Keelan Cole WR 10 14% 0 0%
Thayer Munford T 7 10% 3 13%
Zamir White RB 2 3% 0 0%
Defense Spec Tms
Player Pos Num Pct Num Pct
Maxx Crosby DE 59 100% 6 26%
Duron Harmon SS 59 100% 5 22%
Amik Robertson CB 59 100% 0 0%
Trevon Moehrig FS 59 100% 0 0%
Clelin Ferrell DE 58 98% 6 26%
Luke Masterson LB 56 95% 9 39%
Bilal Nichols DT 46 78% 6 26%
Roderic Teamer SS 39 66% 13 57%
Jerry Tillery DT 34 58% 5 22%
Andrew Billings DT 32 54% 0 0%
Nate Hobbs CB 30 51% 2 9%
Sidney Jones CB 29 49% 0 0%
Tyler Hall CB 28 47% 0 0%
Isaiah Pola-Mao FS 18 31% 15 65%
Kyle Peko DT 13 22% 8 35%
Neil Farrell DT 13 22% 0 0%
Harvey Langi LB 12 20% 1 4%
Malcolm Koonce DE 5 8% 17 74%
Matthias Farley FS 1 2% 20 87%
Special Teams Spec Tms
Player Pos Num Pct Num Pct
Curtis Bolton LB 0 0% 19 83%
Brandon Bolden RB 0 0% 15 65%
Jesper Horsted TE 0 0% 14 61%
Austin Calitro LB 0 0% 12 52%
Daniel Carlson K 0 0% 7 30%
Trent Sieg LS 0 0% 5 22%
AJ Cole III P 0 0% 5 22%
Sam Webb CB 0 0% 4 17%
Jackson Barton T 0 0% 3 13%
Hroniss Grasu C 0 0% 3 13

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Seahawks Week 12 Inactives: These 5 players out vs. Raiders

Here are the inactives lists for both teams for today’s matchup:

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The Seattle Seahawks are back in action following their week off after a trip to Munich, Germany. They are home against their former AFC West rival, the Las Vegas Raiders. Seattle will look to earn their much-needed seventh win on the year to keep pace with the San Francisco 49ers for the division lead.

Here are the inactives lists for both teams for today’s matchup:

Seattle Inactives:

Penny Hart – WR

Artie Burns – CB

Teez Tabor – S

Jake Curhan – G

Myles Adams – DT

Vegas Inactives:

Sidney Jones IV – CB

Brittain Brown – RB

Jackson Barton – T

Jacob Hollister – TE

Neil Farrell Jr. – DT

Matthew Butler – DT

Kendal Vickers – DT

Be sure to follow Seahawks Wire on Twitter for live updates during the game, and check in for highlights/analysis afterwards.

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Raiders place LB Divine Deablo on injured reserve, sign veteran CB Sidney Jones

Divine Deablo heads to IR as Raiders sign former 2nd round CB Sidney Jones

As reported Sunday night, the Raiders have signed veteran Sidney Jones. A former round two pick out of Washington in 2017 by the Philadelphia Eagles, Jones has played six seasons in the NFL, appearing in 50 games with 25 starts.

Jones appeared in 16 games last season with 11 starts for the Seattle Seahawks, but was cut after three games this season with no starts.

The 6-0, 181-pounder has four career interceptions along with 29 pass breakups. His best overall numbers came last season with the Seahawks.

The 26-year-old cornerback joins the Raiders due to a roster spot opened up by second-year linebacker Divine Deablo heading to injured reserve.

Deablo is the team’s leading tackler. He injured his forearm on the second play of Sunday’s game against the Jaguars and was carted off the field. He will miss at least four games.

Blake Martinez played nearly the entire game for the Raiders in place of Deablo alongside Denzel Perryman.

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Sidney Jones is perfect waiver wire target for Bengals

The Bengals could help fix CB with a critical waiver wire claim.

The Cincinnati Bengals need help at cornerback.

The waiver wire might provide said help.

Seems simple enough, right? The Bengals oddly decided to sit still at Tuesday’s trade deadline. It was odd not in that the team usually makes use of such things, but odd in that the team is in the Super Bowl window and just lost No. 1 corner Chidobe Awuzie for the season.

But the waiver wire might be there to bail the team out, anyway.

The Seahawks waived Sidney Jones after failing to trade him before the deadline, meaning he’s subject to waivers. He’s still just 26 years old, a former second-round pick and on a cheap half-season contract.

While Jones did fall out of favor a bit with the Seahawks, it could always be a case of a new environment helping unlock some of the big upside. And frankly, the Bengals need bodies with experience at boundary corner besides Eli Apple, because the rookie tandem of Cam Taylor-Britt and Dax Hill struggled in a big way on Monday night.

Funnily enough, Jones was the biggest name that came to mind when suggesting trade candidates after Awuzie’s injury. Now he’s available, provided half the teams in front of the Bengals in waiver priority (it goes by reverse league standings) don’t put in a claim on him first.

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Seahawks waive veteran cornerback Sidney Jones

The Seattle Seahawks ultimately had to waive veteran cornerback Sidney Jones after being unable to trade him by Tuesday’s deadline.

The Seattle Seahawks executed a couple of roster moves on Tuesday, including the waiver of veteran cornerback, Sidney Jones.

Per NFL.com’s Ian Rapoport, Seattle had attempted to trade Jones before the deadline but ultimately was forced to cut him.

Jones was originally selected by the Eagles in the second round of the 2017 NFL draft out of the University of Washington and spent three years in Philadelphia. He was picked up by the Jaguars ahead of the 2020 season and was then dealt to the Seahawks via a trade in 2021.

With the emergence of Tariq Wollen and Mike Jackson at the starting corner spots, and Tre Brown’s return to practice, Jones’ services were no longer needed.

Even though Jones is a vested veteran, he must clear waivers since he was cut following the trade deadline.

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6 trade targets for the Saints ahead of the NFL deadline

6 trade targets for the Saints ahead of the NFL deadline: A single move won’t right the ship, but it might plug a hole and help keep them afloat

We’re in a tight spot. A 2-5 start to the season is hardly what the New Orleans Saints anticipated, and now the NFL trade deadline is fast approaching. They’ve got decisions to make ahead of that Nov. 2 cutoff date, and they could end up cutting a deal with another team. We’ve seen the Saints make trades at the deadline before, acquiring players like linebacker Kwon Alexander (in 2020) and cornerback Eli Apple (in 2018) while moving others such as Adrian Peterson (in 2017), having made a run at wide receiver Emmanuel Sanders (at the 2019 deadline, later signing him as a free agent in 2020). 

The point is the Saints were always active at the trade deadline under Sean Payton. Will that be the case with Dennis Allen calling the shots? Personally, I don’t think the Saints should be making many moves right now. Certainly not in the name of sending out future draft picks after they already depleted their resources. They aren’t one or two players away from fixing their biggest problems and kicking off a win streak. But if the right opportunity is there to improve the team at a reasonable expense, go for it.

If you’re curious, here are the draft picks available to New Orleans:

  • 2023: Rounds 2, 3, 4, 5, 5 (via Philadelphia Eagles), 7
  • 2024: Rounds 1, 3, 4, 5, 6, 6 (via Philadelphia Eagles)
  • 2025: Rounds 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6

The Houston Texans own New Orleans’ 2023 sixth round pick (for cornerback Bradley Roby) and their 2024 seventh rounder (for running back Mark Ingram II), while the Eagles control the Saints’ 2023 first round choice and 2024 second rounder (after their 2022 trade to get an extra first-round pick), with Philly also getting a 2025 fifth rounder (as part of the C.J. Gardner-Johnson trade). There’s some moving parts involved, but the Saints do have enough draft capital to make another move or two (and enough salary cap space, too). Again, it isn’t what I would do, but the Saints can take action at the trade deadline if they’re determined enough.

It just won’t be a big move. Remember, the goal isn’t to fully right the ship with one bold move. You just want to plug holes where you can and stop the leaking. With that in mind, here are six players the Saints should call about: