Deadline for tagged players passes by with no new deal for Yannick Ngakoue

As expected, the Jags weren’t impressed with offers enough to come off Yannick Ngakoue and now he’s locked into a one-year deal for 2020.

While there was interest in him, Wednesday’s deadline for franchised players to get a long-term deal passed without Yannick Ngakoue receiving a new deal. Now, regardless as to where he plays in 2020, it will only be on a one-year deal.

The Jacksonville Jaguars holding firm on not trading him didn’t exactly shock anyone as general manager Dave Caldwell said that he thought the young pass-rusher’s options were limited. Additionally, as we saw with Jalen Ramsey, the Jags appear fine with holding on to a disgruntled player until they get what they want.

The downside to the Jags not trading Ngakoue, or signing him to a long-term deal themselves, is that the offers won’t get any better past this point because teams essentially would be acquiring a one-year rental. That almost certainly means that Ngakoue will likely have to suit up with the Jags in 2020 (if he does at all) being that their demands were high before the deadline.

Though the coronavirus pandemic can push things back, the Jags are scheduled to begin training camp in just under two weeks on July 28. If Ngakoue attends and plays under the franchise tag he’ll earn just under $18 million guaranteed. That’s a figure that would be good for the highest cap hit on the team and it also would give him the fifth-highest average when it comes to defensive end salaries.

NFL extends tag deadline until after CBA vote, countdown begins

It appears the NFL now has a firm schedule for the beginning of the new league year, the ratification of the proposed new CBA and the all-important to the Dallas Cowboys law regarding the use of one or two restrictive tags available to use on …

It appears the NFL now has a firm schedule for the beginning of the new league year, the ratification of the proposed new CBA and the all-important to the Dallas Cowboys law regarding the use of one or two restrictive tags available to use on pending free agents.

On Tuesday morning, the NFL and NFLPA made a joint agreement to extend the franchise and transition tag deadlines once again. Already moved once, the sides are doing what they can to adjust to the ever-changing landscape surrounding the player’s vote on the new collective bargaining agreement.

On Monday, the NFLPA extended the voting window for the players, which has to have 50%-plus-1 approval to ratify the league’s proposal. That window for all votes to be tallied is now Saturday, March 14 at 11:59 p.m. ET.

As new understanding of the CBA’s finer points have been realized, several players have petitioned the NFLPA’s executive board to re-cast their votes, but those requests have been denied. The NFLPA is also going to be holding elections.

More to come.