Tyrell Williams contract with the Lions is less expensive than initially reported

A voidable year and lower base salary save the Lions some precious cap room

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The free agent contract Tyrell Williams signed with the Detroit Lions is much more palatable to both the salary cap and the Lions fan base than initially reported.

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Details of the deal are now public, and the fine print shows the Lions got a much more cap- and team-friendly deal than was originally thought. It’s a one-year deal but the team added a voidable second season to spread out the cap hit and bonus amortization. For 2021, Williams will earn a $2 million base salary which is fully guaranteed. There is also a $2 million signing bonus that gets split over the two seasons.

The total deal costs the Lions just $3 million against the cap in 2021. There are $2.2 million in additional incentives, but none of those apply to the cap this coming season. Earlier reports on the Williams contract included these incentives as guaranteed base salary, which proved to be erroneous. If Williams does attain the incentives–which are not clearly defined to the public yet–he will earn the maximum contract value of $6.2 million.

 

Lions officially sign free agent WR Tyrell Williams

Lions officially sign free agent WR Tyrell Williams

Tyrell Williams is now officially a member of the Detroit Lions. The free agent wide receiver has signed with the team, the Lions announced in a press release on Tuesday morning.

Reports of Williams’ signing with the Lions sprung up late last week, but the deal was not completed until Tuesday. It’s a one-year contract. The exact terms of the deal have yet to be released but it is expected that Williams will earn up to $6.2 million for the season. A further breakdown is expected soon.

Williams sits atop the team’s depth chart at wide receiver, at least temporarily. He missed the 2020 season with a shoulder injury after playing through a heel issue in 2019, his first season with the Raiders. Prior to his Las Vegas tenure, Williams played under new Lions offensive coordinator Anthony Lynn with the Chargers, where Lynn was the head coach.

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Tyrell Williams: What the Lions are getting in their new wide receiver

Williams has a definite role in Detroit

The Detroit Lions added wide receiver Tyrell Williams to bolster the anemic core at the position. Williams signed a one-year deal to join Detroit after being cut by the Las Vegas Raiders late last month.

What are the Lions getting in Williams?

Williams, 29, is an outside-the-numbers vertical threat as a receiver. At 6-4 and over 200 pounds, he’s a big target with good strength at the catch point. He proved that during his career with both the Chargers and Raiders.

His time with the Chargers makes him a very familiar face for new Lions offensive coordinator Anthony Lynn, who was the head coach during the 2017-2018 seasons while Williams was on the team.

Lynn used Williams’ impressive long speed quite well in the Chargers offense. As the No. 3 receiver, his routes were generally limited to deeper throws down the field. He caught 153 passes in three years (2016-2018) in that role with the Chargers with an average yards per reception over 16 yards.

This route tree (courtesy NFL Next Gen Stats) from 2017 is pretty indicative of Williams at his best usage in Los Angeles:

Consistency is definitely a calling card. Even after moving to the Raiders for the 2019 season in a completely different offensive scheme and with a different style of QB in Derek Carr, Williams produced at almost exactly the same level. The three-year production between 2017 and 2019 is freakishly consistent:

You might notice there is nothing on the line for 2020. Williams missed last season with a shoulder injury. He missed two games in 2019 with a heel issue that also limited his availability in other games in his first year with the Raiders. One of the reasons Las Vegas gave up on him was Williams’ lack of availability for his lofty price tag; the Raiders paid out a $44 million contract over four seasons after the 2018 season to lure him as a top target.

If Williams is healthy, he will get every opportunity to be the same guy in Detroit he was from 2017-2019, a 40-catch, 650-yard receiver and field-stretching threat on the outside. Given how the Lions need a No. 1, No. 2 and No. 3 wideout right now, Williams is a smart gamble as a known commodity for Lynn.

Lions sign WR Tyrell Williams to one-year deal

WR Tyrell Williams signs a one-year deal with the Detroit Lions.

The Lions have signed wide receiver Tyrell Williams to a one-year deal on Wednesday, according to ESPN’s Adam Schefter. The deal is worth up to $6.2 million.

After missing the 2020 season with the Raiders due to a shoulder injury, the 29-year-old was an expected cap casualty made by Las Vegas last week. Because Williams was already released, he was able to sign with the Lions prior to free agency opening in the NFL on March 17.

Williams joins the Lions and reunites with offensive coordinator Anthony Lynn, who was the head coach of the Las Angeles Chargers from 2017 until last season. Williams started his career with the Bolts as an undrafted rookie in 2015.

Williams, a 6-foot-4 target who ran a 4.42 40-yard dash time, signed a four-year deal, $44M deal with the Raiders in 2019. Cutting him saved Las Vegas approximately $11.5 million in cap space.

During his first season as a full-time starter in 2016, Williams had a 1,000-yard season (1,059) but has not reach that plateau since. In his lone year on the field with the Raiders, Williams had 42 catches for 651 yards and six touchdowns.

Williams enters a Lions roster that currently has numerous wide receivers who are pending free agents, including Kenny Golladay, Marvin Jones, Danny Amendola and Mohamed Sanu.

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Free-agent WR Tyrell Williams has traits that should intrigue Rams

Tyrell Williams could be a big-bodied downfield threat for the Rams at WR.

There was a clear lack of big plays from the Rams offense last season, with more than one area to blame. The play calling was conservative, the wide receivers weren’t threats to stretch the field and Jared Goff was reluctant to take shots deep when he did get time.

With Matthew Stafford coming aboard as the new quarterback in L.A., there should be a rise in downfield throws. If the Rams are looking for a deep threat at wide receiver, a good one just became available thanks to the Raiders’ roster trimming. On Wednesday, Las Vegas released Tyrell Williams just two years into a four-year deal.

Williams, 29, missed the 2020 season with a shoulder injury, landing him on IR in September. The Raiders got one good season out of him, though, when he caught 42 passes for 651 yards and six touchdowns, a healthy average of 15.5 yards per reception – the fourth straight year he’s averaged at least 15 yards per catch.

Williams isn’t necessarily a burner, but he did run a 4.42 before the 2015 draft. That’s even more impressive when you consider his size at 6-foot-4, 205 pounds. That’s a combination of size and speed that the Rams don’t currently have, which makes him a great target as a free agent.

He’s a legitimate deep threat who can force secondaries to respect downfield throws, as we saw both in 2019 and previously with the Chargers. Here’s an example of Williams winning a one-on-one route to the post for a big gain with an over-the-shoulder grab.

With the length that he has, he can win contested-catch situations – another area of weakness for the Rams’ receivers. As a member of the Chargers, Williams somehow pulled down this deep throw from Philip Rivers for a touchdown.

It wasn’t quite the Kyler Murray-to-DeAndre Hopkins Hail Mary, but it was quite the impressive grab in traffic.

He showed off that physicality on this catch two seasons ago, too. On this catch over the middle, Williams breaks a tackle and turns what should’ve been a 10-yard gain into a 41-yard touchdown.

The Rams’ receivers are really good after the catch, too, but they don’t play with the strength or physicality that Williams does – mostly because they’re not 6-foot-4 like he is.

Williams would be a perfect WR3 in Los Angeles, splitting time with Van Jefferson behind Robert Woods and Cooper Kupp. And because he was released, not only can he be signed at any time, but he also won’t factor into the compensatory pick formula.

For the right price, he’s absolutely someone the Rams should look at once they get their financial situation in order. Stafford loves receivers who can win contested catches downfield (see: Calvin Johnson, Kenny Golladay, Marvin Jones) and Williams is a player who can do that.

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Absent last year’s distractions, Raiders WR Tyrell Williams ready to create an identity with rookie class

Tyrell Williams is entering his second year on the Raiders, and he foresees a more focused WR room without 2019’s distractions.

Though last year was Tyrell Williams’ first as a Raiders wide receiver, he feels 2020 will be a fresh start, and not simply because the franchise has moved to Las Vegas.

Williams has his own reasons to believe so. First of all, the Raiders are set to welcome a bevy of wideouts, including their No. 1 draft pick, Henry Ruggs III, and third-round selection, Bryan Edwards.

The Raiders also acquired free agent WR Nelson Agholor and drafted “Joker” Lynn Bowden Jr., one spot ahead of Edwards.

Another reason is an absence of distractions at the position, which the team had an excess of in 2019 with the shenanigans of former NFL wide receiver Antonio Brown. Williams told The Athletic’s Vic Tafur about his optimism after Tafur asked about new blood in the receiving corps.

“I’m excited, man. Adding speed and athleticism and that is going to push the guys we have coming back, it’s going to push us all. You add two draft picks, shoot, the other guys are going to think that their spots are being taken. And not only will it bring up so much competition, but it’s going to help us have an identity.

Last year, we obviously had so much distraction that we never got to have an identity as a receiver room. But this year, we’re going to be able to dial in and make it known who we want to be as a group.”

The influx of talent and the absence of distraction at WR is a major reason to be excited about the Raiders’ chances in 2020. After Brown’s explosive exit just before the 2019 campaign, the group was a mere fraction of what coach Jon Gruden had in mind.

There were injuries as well, with Williams suffering from plantar fasciitis in both feet for most of the season and WR Hunter Renfrow suffering a rib injury against the Jets. Still, quarterback Derek Carr and the offense churned out yardage at a high rate, finishing No. 9 in the NFL in passing yards.

To paint a picture, Williams and Renfrow were the only wide receivers with more than 40 receptions, with tight end Darren Waller pacing the club with 90 grabs. Carr is about to have plenty more options in Las Vegas.

Ruggs has speed to burn. Edwards is the big-body, goal-line-ready wide receiver Carr has been missing, perhaps since Andre Holmes left the club. Agholor is a former first-round pick with solid NFL production, and Bowden is poised to loosen the defense from any angle.

And they’ll all be in the WR room learning how to attack the defense as a unit, without the petty distractions Brown provided a year ago. There’s such a thing as addition by subtraction. The Raiders not only did that, but they also added an array of impressive talent. It appears Williams can’t wait to get started.

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Raiders WR Tyrell Williams pens powerful story of racism he faced growing up

Raiders WR Tyrell Williams pens powerful story of racism he faced growing up

What a time. With Black Lives Matter marches happening across the country following the death of George Floyd’s murder by Minneapolis police, NFL players are speaking out about their experiences with racism and demanding change.

Raiders wide receiver Tyrell Williams took the time to write tell his story in an Instagram post. And it’s worth your time.

My Mom is white my Dad is black. I grew up in Turner, Oregon which is 95% white. Early in school I remember learning about slavery and civil rights and kids making jokes and saying crazy stuff about me. The school’s solution was to have my dad come and take me on a walk. In middle school I was told I shouldn’t be alive because my parents should have never been together. In middle school kids were either so excited to read the books on civil rights and segregation because they got to say the N word, or they were turning and staring at me when it was my turn to read.

In high school I remember being called the N word during multiple football games. Never basketball or track because you’d be able see and hear who said it. In high school I remember white kids telling me I’m not “actually” black anytime black cultural topics are brought up.
For me, I felt racism weekly. Walking out of high-school one day to see KKK flyers on all the windshields of the cars.
These were just a few of the thousands of incidents of racism early in my life that stuck out. I had an identity crisis growing up not knowing with who or how to fit in. Fortunately I also had great friends who would stick up and stand for the cause.
I want to and am going to be an outlet for these kids going thru what I went thru. Im going to have a louder voice in bringing light to the hate.
I love my mixed family and friends. I’m thankful for my friends and family who have had the black community’s back, and my friends who had my back growing up and still do today.
My Dads life matters
My Brothers life matters
My Sisters life matters
My Niece and Nephew life matters
My Cousins and Aunties life matters
My Granny and Papas life matters
Proverb 6:16-19

In case you’re wondering, Proverbs 6:16-19 reads thusly:

There are six things the Lord hates, seven that are detestable to him: haughty eyes, a lying tongue, hands that shed innocent blood, a heart that devises wicked schemes, feet that are quick to rush into evil, a false witness who pours out lies and a person who stirs up conflict in the community.

What Williams said hits close to home for me personally. Literally. I was born just an hour north of Turner Oregon in Portland and spent my childhood in the rural parts of Oregon much like Turner. Subtle and unknowing racism is rampant there. What Williams illustrates here is not just believable, but the kind of thing I’ve personally witnessed. And yes, the KKK has a rather shockingly large presence in rural parts of Oregon.

I’m sorry you went through this, Tyrell. I can’t imagine going through that and respect greatly your ability to rise above it.

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Several Raiders players have guarantees that kicked in today

Several Raiders players have guarantees that kicked in today

It’s fairly standard for contracts to have language written into them that guarantees all or part of their salary the following season three days after the previous season is done. The Super Bowl was Sunday, which means the Raiders had to make a decision by today to either let those guarantees kick in or cut bait.

In particular, there were four players on whom the Raiders had a decision to make. Center Rodney Hudson ($12.65M in 2020 and $3.5M in 2021), WR Tyrell Williams ($11M), G Richie Incognito ($5M), and QB Derek Carr ($2.9M), according to OverTheCap.com. 

Hudson was a no-brainer, they just gave Richie Incognito a 2-year extension, and Derek Carr’s guarantee was just a small fraction of his $18.9 million base salary, raising his dead money on release or trade from $5 million to $7.9 million. So, those all figured to happen and did.

Tyrell Williams was the only one who was somewhat in question. The $11 million guarantee is his entire salary, so if the team decided to move on, they could do so free and clear. For Williams, no news is good news.

He was signed last offseason and the team said several times that when they initially courted him it was as a number one receiver. That changed when they were able to trade for Antonio Brown. And then with Brown’s epic meltdown and subsequent release, Williams was back to being the number one receiver. Though his play didn’t bear this out.

Williams was bogged down by a plantar fascia injury much of the season and didn’t offer Derek Carr and the Raiders the threat they needed in a number one receiver.

His $11 million price tag is fairly high, but it’s still 19th in the league at his position.

The 6-4, 205-pounder is an X-receiver type. A long strider who should be able to win 50/50 jump balls. He flashed that at times in the season. His return still leaves the team in need of speed as Mike Mayock pointed out in a recent interview during the Senior Bowl.

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Report: Robby Anderson doesn’t plan on giving Jets hometown discount

Not willing to give a hometown discount, Robby Anderson is looking to cash-in as he becomes a free agent for the first time in his career.

With the Jets season coming to a close, the team has a decision to make about impending free agent wide receiver Robby Anderson.

Anderson has a big opportunity to cash-in as the fourth-year receiver out of Temple will hit free agency for the first time in his career. Since Anderson and the Jets failed to come to terms on a contract extension prior to the beginning of the regular season, his price tag has gone up and he will likely command around upwards of $12 million on the open market.

At 26 years old and entering the prime of his career, Anderson is in a position to earn the biggest contract of his NFL career. With this in mind, a hometown discount for the Jets during bidding for his mind doesn’t seem to be in the cards.

“You got to talk to my agent,” Anderson told Manish Mehta of the New York Daily News following the Jets 13-6 win over Buffalo. “I don’t think that makes sense.”

After a slow start to the season, Anderson had a second-half surge that could earn him a nice payday. He finished the season with 52 receptions for 779 yards and five touchdowns.

“I would say that I played the cards that I was dealt and made the most out of what I could,” Anderson said of his 2019 season.

Anderson will be seeking a contract similar to what receivers Tyrell Williams, Sterling Shepard and Tyler Boyd have signed recently. He is going to command a competitive market in free agency given his ability to take the top off the defense and game-breaking speed. Also working in Anderson’s favor is his underneath route-running skills, which developed nicely as 2019 progressed.

The Jets would be wise to get Anderson signed to a long-term deal before the legal-tampering period begins. Just don’t expect him to take a cheaper deal with the team that took a shot on him as an undrafted free agent.

Winners and Losers for Raiders in Week 15 versus Jaguars

Raiders wire takes a look at the Winners and Losers from the terrible loss to the Jacksonville Jaguars in the last game in Oakland.

Well, that was an awful way to close the coliseum. The Oakland Raiders didn’t show up in the second half allowing the Jacksonville Jaguars to come back from a 13 point halftime deficit to win the game 20-16. This is the Raiders’ fourth loss in a row after a surprising 6-4 start but now has come back to life.

The Raiders offense came out hot with their usual first drive score, but after that was nothing but field goals even when they moved the football. They were completely shut down in the second half with all four possessions leading to no points and kept the Jaguars in the football game. The Raiders are starting to match their point differential to equal out how bad they are.

The defense put up the best performance they could holding the Jaguars to 4.9 yards per play. However, the defense is not good enough to hold any offense under 20 points and allowed three second-half drives that were either field goals or touchdowns. Even with decent individual performances for the defense, the secondary is too beat up to hang with any football team.

Who were the winners and losers for Week 15? Not many winners with this terrible loss closing the Oakland Coliseum.

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