Houston Texans roster moves tracker: Making the cuts to 53

The Houston Texans have to trim down to 53 men on their active roster by 3:00 p.m. Central Time Sept. 5. Follow all of the updates here.

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The Houston Texans have to trim down to a 53-man roster by Sept. 5 at 3:00 p.m. Central Time, and they have already been busy. Follow along with all of the updates here.

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Aug. 31 — QB Alex McGough

Aug. 31 — DT Albert Huggins

Aug. 31 — LB Daren Bates

Sept. 5 — WR Tyler Simmons

Jags 53-man roster cuts tracker 2020: Live updates

Keep track of the Jags’ roster decisions up until the league’s mandated deadline.

The Jacksonville Jaguars’ staff will be utilizing the next 20 hours trimming their roster down to 53 players as the league’s final roster deadline of Sep. 5 (4:00 p.m. EST) is quickly approaching. After that, fans can begin focusing on the regular season as the Indianapolis Colts will be coming into town on Sept. 13.

The Jags made 11 moves Friday to trim their roster down and will be looking to pick up where they left off Saturday morning. Of course, all of the reported moves won’t officially be confirmed until the team names their 53-man roster, which we’ll be posting as soon as possible.

Here’s a running list of the players who’ve been cut by the team. As we inch closer to the deadline, be sure to refresh the page as we’ll be adding in more names as they come in.

>>>READ: Jags final 53-man roster projection<<<

Reported cuts

7:37 PM: The Athletic’s Greg Auman reports that the Jags have cut nine players, RB Nathan Cottrell, WR Marvelle Ross, TE Matthew Flanagan, OL Ryan Pope, OL Austin Pleasants, OL K.C. McDermott, OL Garrett McGhin, OL Blake Hance, LS Matthew Orzech.

With Orzech being cut, the Jags pretty much have confirmed that rookie long snapper Ross Matiscik will be their guy after going undrafted this year out of Baylor.

The Jags also place RB Ryquell Armstead on their Reserve/COVID list, per ESPN’s Field Yates.

11:12 AM: The Jags released DL Caraun Reid this morning, per Adam Schefter

Tracking Packers’ cuts down to initial 53-man roster

Tracking all the cuts as the Packers trim their roster from 80 players to 53 before Saturday’s deadline.

The Green Bay Packers must make 27 cuts – going from 80 players to an initial 53-man roster – before Saturday’s 3:00 p.m. CT deadline.

GM Brian Gutekunst and coach Matt LaFleur will have hard decisions to make, but it’s not all bad news: Practice squads have been increased from 10 players to 16 this year, so although the team will cut 27 players between now and Saturday, there’s a good chance the Packers will retain a big chunk of their current roster ahead of Week 1’s trip to Minnesota to play the Vikings.

Follow along below as we track all the cuts made by the Packers over the next day or so:

Cuts

Current roster

QB: Aaron Rodgers, Tim Boyle, Jordan Love
RB: Aaron Jones, Jamaal Williams, A.J. Dillon, Tyler Ervin, Dexter Williams, Damarea Crockett, Patrick Taylor
FB: John Lovett
WR: Davante Adams, Allen Lazard, Marquez Valdes-Scantling, Jake Kumerow, Equanimeous St. Brown, Darrius Shepherd, Malik Taylor, Reggie Begelton, Malik Turner
TE: Marcedes Lewis, Robert Tonyan, Jace Sternberger, Josiah Deguara, Evan Baylis
OT: David Bakhtiari, Rick Wagner, Billy Turner, Alex Light, Yosh Nijman, John Leglue, Cody Conway
IOL: Corey Linsley, Elgton Jenkins, Lane Taylor, Lucas Patrick, Jon Runyan, Jake Hanson, Simon Stepaniak, Zack Johnson
DL: Kenny Clark, Dean Lowry, Tyler Lancaster, Montravius Adams, Kingsley Keke, Treyvon Hester, Willington Previlion
OLB: Za’Darius Smith, Preston Smith, Rashan Gary, Tim Williams, Randy Ramsey, Jonathan Garvin, Tipa Galeai, Greg Roberts, Delontae Scott
ILB: Christian Kirksey, Oren Burks, Ty Summers, Kamal Martin, Curtis Bolton, Krys Barnes
CB: Jaire Alexander, Kevin King, Chandon Sullivan, Josh Jackson, Ka’dar Hollman, Stanford Samuels, Kabion Ento, Will Sunderland, Dashaun Amos
S: Adrian Amos, Darnell Savage, Raven Greene, Will Redmond, Vernon Scott, Henry Black
K: Mason Crosby
P: JK Scott
LS: Hunter Bradley

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2020 Cowboys Training Camp: The nuts, bolts, Plexiglas dividers, contact tracers of it all

The Cowboys have made sweeping changes to their daily procedures and their sprawling facilities in order to host training camp in 2020.

Training camp will look very unusual for the 2020 Dallas Cowboys. From the Plexiglas dividers in the palatial locker room to the tarped-off seats in the team’s temporary meeting hall, from the mandatory monitoring checkpoints to the ultraviolet lightboxes for sanitizing phones and jewelry, right down to the proximity trackers the players will be wearing on their wrists.

All of those very out-in-the-open COVID-era add-ons will make for a surreal camp unlike any other. But there will be plenty of other behind-the-scenes changes, too, all implemented in hopes that the upcoming season can be salvaged amidst a global pandemic that has claimed 160,000 lives in the United States alone. Training camp will go on, but it sure won’t be business as usual.

Perhaps the most noticeable difference on Day One of Cowboys camp, though, will be the mercury. It’s not the heat, the old saying goes, it’s the humidity. For Friday, the first scheduled day in shells, Cowboys players and coaches will get a Texas-sized helping of both.

Temperatures are forecast to hit 101 degrees in north Texas on Friday, but it will feel like 106. By way of comparison, it will max out at a lovely 83 in Oxnard, California, where the Cowboys typically set up shop in August.

For his first camp as Cowboys coach, Mike McCarthy plans to subject players to the elements as much possible, using the natural-grass practice field at The Star in Frisco.

“My personal goal is to be on the grass,” he said during last week’s conference call with reporters. “That’s just personal preference.”

That preference is understandable, given McCarthy’s camp history. The grass at St. Norbert College, site of McCarthy’s 13 training camps as coach of the Packers, will be chilling (relatively) in 81-degree temps in Wisconsin on Friday.

“But really, the weather and those types of things will factor into it,” McCarthy continued. “We’re prepared to go outside every morning. That’s the plan. But I’m sure there will be days or a day or two that we may come inside the Ford Center. It’s very beneficial to have that flexibility, but my goal is to be on the grass as much as we can to start camp.”

Besides, McCarthy didn’t add, the Ford Center is being repurposed as the team’s meeting room.

The 12,000-seat indoor stadium and practice field is holding considerably fewer occupants after its recent alterations. Seats- and even entire rows- have been blocked off to keep players safely spread out during coaches’ presentations and sit-down sessions. The gorgeous movie theater normally used for such meetings simply doesn’t allow for social distancing.

For smaller breakout groups, the team can split and scatter.

“When the team breaks into units,” writes The Dallas Morning News‘s David Moore, “the defense goes to the northwest concourse to meet, and the offense takes the southwest corner near Tostitos Plaza.”

Meeting areas in stairwells and hallways. A thinned-out weight room. Reduced seating in the dining hall. Many areas of The Star have had to undergo a COVID-era redecorating. It’s awfully nice to have a 91-acre campus to work with.

The sprawling size of the team’s headquarters actually gives Dallas multiple options on how to reconfigure things, a luxury that few other organizations have. Take, for example, the clear Plexiglas dividers between the lockers.

“The Cowboys have more locker room space than most clubs,” Moore points out. “The main locker room houses 78 players. There’s a back room, normally reserved for rookies in camp, that has an additional 27 lockers. There are another two rooms with a total of 100 lockers at the adjacent Ford Center for high school football. There are at least two other auxiliary rooms that can be used for additional lockers or to store and sanitize equipment between practices.”

According to Moore, “the team could have set aside two empty lockers between every occupied space and made it work.”

Locker partitions means the chess board Amari Cooper leaves up for his matches with Chidobe Awuzie will stay put away for this season. In fact, should any two players get too close to one another, their contact trackers will issue a warning.

“A flashing red light comes on if you get too close,” rookie center Tyler Biadasz said.

The Kinexon trackers, picked up by the players each morning to be worn either on the wrist or attached to a belt loop, monitor players’ movements as they move throughout the facility. They’re set to go off if two of them are within six feet for more than a few seconds. The devices are left at The Star overnight, to be charged and sanitized in preparation for the next day.

In fact, many of the efforts meant to maximize players’ safety happen away from the team’s view. Two different vendors do a daily deep clean of the building. The entire HVAC system has been outfitted with air purification and ionization filters. Special washing machines even treat the laundry generated by the team- 700 pounds per day- so that the jerseys and towels themselves continuously kill germs and prevent their own re-contamination.

Players, coaches, and staff have their own high-tech routine each day. To gain access to the facility, every individual must go through a touchless scanner. Facial recognition programs not only verify the person’s identity, but also take their temperature.

And the actual COVID testing is a completely separate process. Thermal scans. Nasal swabs. A litany of screening questions to be answered. Want the antibody test? There’s a blood draw required for that.

But there’s only so much the next-gen precautions and extra protocols can do. It’s still football, a sport that requires a lot of close-up physical contact of large groups. And not every safety measure available is being adopted quite so readily.

At least one equipment manufacturer is testing a shield that would be worn inside the facemask, meant to block respiratory droplets expelled into the air. It has not met with wide acceptance; Cowboys linebacker Leighton Vander Esch is one of the skeptics.

“I need to breathe when I’m playing,” Vander Esch said, per Calvin Watkins of The Dallas Morning News. “And it’s one thing to have an eye shield on, but to have that other part on your helmet, some guys can wear it … but I’m probably not going to do it. We’re sweating, we’re hitting, and doing all that. I don’t think we’re going to get around it just by wearing a little shield on our chin.”

For now, Vander Esch and the rest of his teammates are already jumping through a considerable number of new hoops just to get ready to play football in 2020.

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Gators News: August 6, 2020

It is Thursday folks, which means we are getting closer to another weekend while we burn away the days until college football returns. 

It is Thursday folks, which means we are getting closer to another weekend while we burn away the days until college football returns.

After the Big Ten announced its 10-game intraconference schedule yesterday, the Atlantic Coast Conference followed suit today by announcing its 11-game intraconference-plus-one schedule for all 15 members, which now includes Notre Dame.

We can expect the SEC to release its schedule anytime now. In the meantime, you can track the schools and their positive tests using this article.  Also, be sure to check out our new feature here at Gators Wire and around the Wires network of sites:

Florida Gators Football: COVID-19 Status Tracker

Around the Swamp

It’s great to be a Florida Gator!

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Saints roster cuts tracker, instant analysis ahead of training camp deadline

The New Orleans Saints began cutting their 90-man roster down to just 80 players, per NFL rules due to the COVID-19 coronavirus pandemic.

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The New Orleans Saints began releasing players from their 90-man roster ahead of the NFL’s new Aug. 16 deadline to trim depth charts down to just 80 players, starting about an hour after our updated list of Saints players by jersey number went live (of course).

Teams will be allowed to hold small-group practice sessions without pads for the first few weeks of training camp, though work is largely limited to strength and conditioning drills due to the NFL’s rules and protocols during the COVID-19 coronavirus pandemic. That gives them an opportunity to try out some things with newcomers, but not much.

So far, the released players are a mix of veterans who already have some game film to refer to and rookies who didn’t have much of a chance of making the team. Check back often for updates as the Saints continue to winnow down their roster:

  • WR Krishawn Hogan, via Amie Just of The Times-Picayune | New Orleans Advocate. Hogan logged 83 snaps in eight games with the Saints last year after starting out on the practice squad, doing most of his work as a blocker. He caught his lone target to gain four yards before ending the season on injured reserve. He’s more of a known quantity than many of the receivers on the roster, so this could be a way for the Saints to give others a shot in practice.
  • CB Deatrick Nichols, via Nick Underhill of NewOrleans.Football. Nichols signed with the Saints after the XFL dissolved earlier this year; he led the upstart professional football league with three interceptions as a member of the Houston Roughnecks, and seemed ready to compete for a roster spot as a contributor on special teams and in slot coverage. The Saints may feel his XFL game tape is enough to help them decide whether to bring him back later this year.
  • FB Ricky Ortizvia Nick Underhill of NewOrleans.Football. Ortiz was a late addition to the Saints practice squad in 2019, suiting up for the regular season finale and their playoffs loss to the Minnesota Vikings. He ultimately played just 20 snaps on offense between those two appearances, catching one pass to gain eight yards. His release is a clear sign that veteran fullback Michael Burton won’t be challenged to start for the Saints.
  • DL Gus Cumberlander, via Nick Underhill of NewOrleans.Football. The big undrafted rookie out of Oregon fits the same height-weight profile as free agent pickup Margus Hunt, making him somewhat redundant with a cuts deadline on the horizon. A long shot to catch on with the Saints, Cumberlander should get an opportunity with another team as players around the league continue to opt out of the 2020 season.

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2020 Lions UDFA tracker

Tracking all the reported and rumored 2020 undrafted free agents that have agreed to join the Detroit Lions.

The 2020 NFL Draft is over and the Detroit Lions have added nine new players to their roster, bringing the total to 87 players. That leaves only three open spots for undrafted free agents (UDFA) unless the team is willing to cut players currently under contract.

This page will track all the reported 2020 undrafted free agents and potential tryouts that have agreed to join the Lions.

Note: we are already over three reported players so further clarification on their contract (UDFA offer or tryout) or moves are expected to be coming in the near future.

Hunter Bryant, TE, Washington

Arryn Siposs, Punter, Auburn

Jalen Elliot, safety, Notre Dame

Luke Sellers, Fullback, South Dakota State

Steven Wirtel, Long snapper, Iowa State

Jeremiah Dinson, DB, Auburn

Bobby Price, FS, Norfolk State

Texans’ 2020 undrafted free agent tracker

The Houston Texans can still add to their 90-man roster with quality signings of priority free agents. Follow along with the tracker.

The Houston Texans can still add to their 90-man roster with quality signings of priority free agents. Follow along with the tracker below:

Signed

TCU guard Cordel Iwuagwu

Notre Dame linebacker Jamir Jones

James Madison tight end James Stapleton

West Georgia defensive tackle Auzoyah Alufohai

Ole Miss running back Scott Phillips

2020 Redskins undrafted free agents tracker: all reports of post-draft signings

The Redskins have completed their draft, but that doesn’t mean they are finished adding players to their roster.

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While the bigger names came off the board during the 2020 NFL Draft, don’t be surprised if the Washington Redskins take some chances on lesser-known guys who didn’t get drafted over the weekend. While many of the NFL’s best players come from the draft, a handful of difference-makers have been found still waiting in the past, waiting to sign with whoever will take them. For instance, the Redskins signed Steven Sims Jr. after the draft in 2019, and he now stands as one of their best receivers.

So who have the Redskins added as UDFAs? Follow along as we track the most up-to-date additions below:

Undrafted Free Agent Signings:

TE Thaddeus Moss — LSU

QB Steven Montez — Colorado

WR Isaiah Wright — Temple

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Tracking every Saints undrafted free agent report, with instant analysis

The New Orleans Saints moved quickly to add undrafted free agents following the 2020 NFL Draft, plugging roster holes and getting better.

Our tracker for the newest crop of New Orleans Saints undrafted free agents is live. Reports will be flying fast and furious now that the 2020 NFL Draft is in rearview, so keep in mind that these are all preliminary deals and nothing is official until the team says so.

With that said: here’s the list of college free agents who have earned a shot with the Saints during training camp later this summer.

  • WR Marquez Callaway, Tennessee. Callaway has a ways to go as a receiver, having caught just 92 passes in 42 games, but his abilities on punt returns should help his odds. He averaged 13.6 yards per return and scored three touchdowns for the Vols. Per Adam Caplan of Sirius XM NFL Radio.
  • OL Calvin Throckmorton, Oregon. Throckmorton might project best to a backup role at guard and center due to strength and length issues, but he’s started 45 games at tackle (40 of them on the right side). Per Katherine Terrell of The Athletic. Nick Underhill of NewOrleans.Football reported that Throckmorton will receive a fully-guaranteed base salary of $110,000 and a $12,500 signing bonus.
  • OL Jordan Steckler, Northern Illinois. Steckler has played games at both tackle and guard, and offers nice depth for training camp. Per his agent Brett Tessler of Tessler Sports.
  • DT Malcolm Roach, Texas. Roach needs to be coached up quite a bit, but his natural athleticism is nice — not many athletes can measure in at 6-foot-2, 297 pounds and then time the 40 yard dash in 4.84 seconds. Per NFL Network’s Tom Pelissero.
  • OT Darrin Paulo, Utah. Paulo is a huge prospect at 6-foot-5 with 34 7/8-inch arms, and quick feet for a bigger blocker. But the downside to that height is a struggle to get low, and he needs work. Per the Utah football program’s Twitter account.
  • RB Tony Jones Jr., Notre Dame. Jones didn’t start until 2019, but he averaged more than 6 yards per rushing attempt on 144 carries and caught 27 passes last season. Per Sports Illustrated’s Bryan Driskell.

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