Ezekiel Elliott Won't Wear His Old No. 21 Jersey in Second Cowboys Stint

Ezekiel Elliott Won’t Wear His Old No. 21 Jersey in Second Cowboys Stint

The Dallas Cowboys reunited with running back Ezekiel Elliott this offseason, bringing him back for a second stint with the organization after he spent one season with the New England Patriots in 2023.

There will be one key change for Elliott in his return to the Cowboys, however.

Rather than re-claim the No. 21 jersey he wore throughout his first seven seasons in the NFL, he plans to continue donning the No. 15 that he wore at Ohio State and last year with the Patriots. The No. 15 had been occupied by quarterback Trey Lance in '23, but he's agreed to shed the digits and wear No. 19 in '24, per a team announcement.

Elliott returned to Dallas on a one-year deal with a maximum value of $3 million. He joins a running backs room consisting of Royce Freeman, Rico Dowdle and Deuce Vaughn, and figures to compete for a healthy share of the workload.

The 28-year-old had a down year in '23 with the Patriots, registering career lows with 184 carries, 642 yards and three rushing touchdowns. Across 103 games with the Cowboys from 2016 to '22, Elliott had four seasons with over 1,000 rushing yards and scored a total of 80 touchdowns.

Chris Fowler Shared Wild Details of 115 Hours Recording Calls for ‘EA College Football 25’

Chris Fowler Shared Wild Details of 115 Hours Recording Calls for ‘EA College Football 25’

With the release date of EA Sports' College Football 25 video game inching closer, ESPN broadcaster Chris Fowler posted that he officially completed his announcing parts for the game.

Over the course of two years, Fowler recorded around 115 hours of audio, including about 700 college football stars' names. Unlike the previous edition of the game, which last came out in 2013, this edition will be able to include the players' names because of NIL rules.

Fowler explained just how detailed the analysis for the game will be as he listed numerous scenarios in which him and his broadcasting teammate Kirk Herbstreit recorded content for.

"It is an incredibly detailed process," Fowler said. "I couldn't be more impressed with everyone at EA. Total pros who care so much about the quality and sweat the details."

The game is expected to be released on July 19 after years of anticipation. A cover athlete is supposed to be announced some time in May.

Drew Lock Has ‘Good Shot’ to Start Over Daniel Jones, NFL Insider Says

Drew Lock Has ‘Good Shot’ to Start Over Daniel Jones, NFL Insider Says

The New York Giants opted not to select a quarterback in the 2024 NFL draft, leaving Daniel Jones, Drew Lock and Tommy DeVito as the trio of QBs on the current roster.

One NFL insider believes that a quarterback competition could be on the cards for the Giants, hinting that Daniel Jones's status as the starter may not be all that secure.

"I believe Drew Lock has a really good shot on winning that job," NFL Network's Daniel Jeremiah said, via Gregg Rosenthal. "They were comparing Daniel Jones and Drew Lock, emphasis on Drew Lock, to the QBs that were going to be there (at the No. 6 pick in the draft) and the line for them was Drake Maye."

Lock made the move to New York this offseason on a one-year, $5 million deal. In March, the 27-year-old told reporters that it had been "conveyed" to him by the team that Jones was going to be the Giants' starting quarterback.

That differs from what Seattle Seahawks GM John Schneider said when Lock signed with New York. At the time, Schneider said during a radio appearance that the Seahawks attempted to re-sign Lock, but he was lured to the Giants under the pretense that he could compete for the starting role.

Giants GM Joe Schoen said (via ESPN) that Jones, who signed a four-year, $160 million extension last March, would remain the team's starter in 2024. Jeremiah indicated Wednesday, however, that he believes Lock could make a push for the starting job.

After a strong campaign in '23, Jones featured in just six games last year before missing the rest of the season with a torn ACL. He struggled when healthy, throwing two touchdowns to six interceptions and coughing up four fumbles.

It's possible Jones will be on a short leash in '24, and Jeremiah suggested that Lock could outright usurp him for the role ahead of the season.

In Lock's lone season with the Seahawks, he appeared in four games, including two starts, and completed 63.2% of his passes for 543 yards and three touchdowns to three interceptions.

The One Transfer Manchester City Are Said to Regret Sanctioning

The One Transfer Manchester City Are Said to Regret Sanctioning

Manchester City overhauled its squad at the start of the 2023/24 Premier League season after a treble-winning campaign. Notable players like Riyad Mahrez and Aymeric Laporte went to the Saudi Pro League, while youngster Cole Palmer is the favorite for Young Player of the Year at Chelsea.

Though, it's another departure that has Manchester City regretting signing off on. According to Barcelona news outlet Mundo Deportivo, Man City manager Pep Guardiola misses and regrets selling midfielder Ilkay Gundogan.

The German midfielder was a stalwart for the club in his 188 appearances for the club. He notably scored the Premier League title winner for Man City in the 2021/22 season against Aston Villa completing a remarkable comeback.

Gundogan departed for Barcelona at the start of the season on a free transfer. Man City certainly haven't lacked midfield options bringing in Mateo Kovacic and Matheus Nunes from Chelsea and Wolverhampton Wanderers respectively, but it's understandable why Guardiola would miss Gundogan's intangibles. Gundogan, Kevin De Bruyne and Rodri as a midfield played a massive part in the treble last season.

Man City is currently a point off Arsenal in the Premier League title race with four matches remaining, but the club does have a game in hand over its North London competitor. If Manchester City wins its remaining games, it will win an unprecedented four league titles in a row. Yet another feather in the cap of what's been the most dominant run in the league's history.

There were questions entering and throughout the season whether Man City would come into the season with the same hunger. Man City has trailed both Arsenal and Liverpool at different points in the season, but if all goes according to plan those days in second and third place will be a formality. A double is also on the cards with an FA Cup final rematch set with rivals Manchester United. However, City failed to win the Carabao Cup and were knocked out of the Champions League in the quarter-finals by Real Madrid.

Fans won't be disappointed at all if the season ends with a league and cup double, but perhaps Guardiola wonders what could've been if Gundogan wasn't sanctioned to leave.

76ers-Knicks Game 6 Late Start Time Rightfully Has Fans Sounding Off

76ers-Knicks Game 6 Late Start Time Rightfully Has Fans Sounding Off

The Philadelphia 76ers and New York Knicks are currently locked in arguably the most entertaining first-round series of the 2024 NBA playoffs.

The Knicks hold a 3–2 series lead as the teams have traded incredible finishes. Game 6 will take place at 9 p.m. ET Thursday night in Philadelphia, and fans are not happy about that scheduling.

The Sixers-Knicks game will be the second part of an NBA playoff doubleheader starting at 6:30 p.m. ET. The Milwaukee Bucks and Indiana Pacers will open the night, with the battle in Philly closing things out. Having the the first round's marquee series start an elimination game at 9 p.m. on a Thursday night is a bold piece of NBA scheduling.

A series of tweets reacting to that decision follows.

It's easy to understand why East Coast fans are so upset. That's an incredibly late tip on a weeknight. So many fans who would usually watch will be in bed by the time it finishes. This is the kind of scheduling that made the Pac-12 irrelevant.

The Knicks won the first two games of the series, before the 76ers won Game 3 behind 50 points from Joel Embiid. Game 4 went to New York as Jalen Brunson dropped 47 points to lead the way. On Tuesday night, the Sixers took Game 5 in overtime when Tyrese Maxey took over and scored 46. It has been an action-packed affair and at 3–2, the serious could legitimately go either way. It would be nice if more people could watch it.

Orioles Broadcaster Jim Palmer Absolutely Torches Ump After Terrible Called Strike

Orioles Broadcaster Jim Palmer Absolutely Torches Ump After Terrible Called Strike

Three decades have passed since the end of Hall of Fame former Baltimore Orioles pitcher Jim Palmer's distinguished career.

However, antipathy toward shoddy umpiring never leaves former players. Palmer proved as such during the Orioles' 4-2 win over the New York Yankees on Tuesday night, which he called for Mid-Atlantic Sports Network.

After shortstop Gunnar Henderson was called out on strikes on a pitch outside the zone in the first inning, Palmer lit into umpire C.B. Bucknor.

"You kinda wonder how bad he's gonna be and he's shown us already in the first inning," Palmer said. "All you want is a guy that understands the strike zone."

According to Umpire Scorecards, Bucknor's 91.6% accuracy on pitches called is tied for the lowest in baseball this season among umpires who've worked at least five games.

"He shouldn't be umpiring and he is, and they know it," Palmer said. "He's been around a long time, it doesn't mean you—it's kinda like pitching. When I couldn't get people out, I became a broadcaster."

Bucknor, who's worked five postseasons and two All-Star Games, has been an MLB umpire since 1996.

Peacock Will Increase Subscription Prices Again Ahead of the Paris Olympics

Peacock Will Increase Subscription Prices Again Ahead of the Paris Olympics

Peacock is getting a price hike, as Comcast is going to increase the price of subscriptions for its streaming app by two dollars ahead of the Paris Olympics. It will mark the second time the streamer's cost will go up in a year. It will now cost $7.99 for the version with ads and $13.99 for the ad-free version.

Peacock originally launched in 2020 at just $4.99 per month, and it was $9.99 per month as recently as last spring. Not long after it was announced that the streamer would carry the first online exclusive NFL playoff game, they raised the prices to $5.99 and $11.99. People complained, but the experiment was deemed a success as 23 million people tuned in to watch.

Now they're doing the same thing ahead of the Olympics, which begin on July 26 and run through Aug. 11. The plan is to make every event available to stream live and on-demand and fans will have the ability to watch up to four events at once. NBC has the broadcast rights for the Olympics through 2032.

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Peacock is clearly using sports as the main selling point of their streaming service with NFL, Olympics and even WWE, but it's also their excuse to raise prices. How else do you expect them to pay for something like the Philadelphia Eagles' season-opener in Mexico or the Olympic broadcast rights which they currently have through 2032?

If you do end up subscribing to Peacock because of live sports make sure to get your money's worth by checking out shows like Poker Face, Mrs. Davis, Twisted Metal, Paul T. Goldman and The Traitors. Just don't tell anyone because they might raise the prices again.

Timberwolves' Lingering Decision on Chris Finch Should Take Nick Nurse Timeout Debacle Into Account

Timberwolves’ Lingering Decision on Chris Finch Should Take Nick Nurse Timeout Debacle Into Account

On Wednesday, Minnesota Timberwolves assistant coach Micah Nori told assembled media that head coach Chris Finch's knee surgery had gone well and the team is considering their options on where he'll be for Game 1 of their second-round playoff series against the Denver Nuggets. Finch suffered a torn patellar tendon in his right knee after a collision with point guard Mike Conley in the Wolves' series-clinching win over the Phoenix Suns on Monday.

Due to the surgery, Finch will need special accommodations to remain on the sideline. Per The Athletic's Jon Krawczynski, Minnesota is considering trying to fit Finch in near the bench by moving some chairs around. The franchise is also looking into having Finch watch from a suite and meet the team in the locker room for pregame, postgame, and halftime.

It's obviously terrible for Finch to suffer this injury and have to coach the Wolves' first deep playoff run in decades with a leg cast or brace or whatever the situation will be. But while the team is deciding where he'll be doing so, they have to keep in mind the Nick Nurse timeout debacle that lost the Philadelphia 76ers Game 2 of their first-round playoff series against the New York Knicks.

Much of what Finch does on gameday can be executed sitting down or completely immobile. Coaches love to pace up and down the sideline and get animated and what have you but in terms of communication they just have to shout really loud. Where they are when they do so doesn't matter as much, and there are a multitude of easy solutions for the Timberwolves to pursue to ensure Finch's inability to walk doesn't interfere with getting word to his players on what play to run.

Calling timeouts is where it gets tricky, especially in high-pressure situations. The Nurse scenario is an ideal example. After the Sixers lost Game 2 he loudly complained he didn't get a timeout from the referees as Tyrese Maxey lost the ball on an inbounds pass and allowed the Knicks to hit a game-winning three-pointer. Replay proved Nurse didn't call a timeout as much as he motioned for it but pulled back at the last second, and then tried to call one after the Sixers lost the ball. The particulars don't carry over to Minnesota's dilemma.

But the broad strokes do. If the Wolves decide to have Finch on the sideline and act as the head coach despite his injury. In that case he would either be unable to move or would have to wheel himself around with a scooter. Should Minnesota find itself in a situation where a timeout is desperately needed, Finch can't jump up and down to get a ref's attention or sprint onto the court to ensure it gets called. In a split-second heat of the moment situation it may even throw the officials off that Finch isn't standing and they have to look down.

There's no easy answer to this one. If Finch is going to stay near the bench for the games then maybe he can pitch having a designated timeout coach to the NBA whose sole duty is to notify officials when the team wants a timeout. But that's the only realistic solution to the problem and that extra second of required communication can be the difference between a win and a loss.

if Finch gets put up in the suite, it's all a moot point. From up there he won't really be acting as a head coach. He'll have plenty of input and all that but he won't be communicating with the referees or his team. It is, if anything, the easiest and therefore most likely path the Timberwolves will take. But that, of course, comes with its own downsides and robs Finch of the sideline experience for the first real postseason run of his career.

Minnesota is in a tough spot. But whatever route the team chooses to go, they shouldn't forget how slim the margin for error is in the NBA. Especially when it comes to officials and timeouts.

Fact or Fiction: Boosting the Zurich Classic, Predicting Rory McIlroy’s Career Wins

Fact or Fiction: Boosting the Zurich Classic, Predicting Rory McIlroy’s Career Wins

Welcome back to SI Golf’s Fact or Fiction, where we’d love to play some alternate shot with friends but hope they’d still be our friends afterward.

Once again, we’re here to debate a series of statements for writers and editors to declare as “Fact” or “Fiction” along with a brief explanation. Responses may also occasionally be “Neutral” since there's a lot of gray area in golf.

Do you agree or disagree? Let us know on the SI Golf X account.

In the wake of Rory McIlroy and Shane Lowry’s popular win at the Zurich Classic, the PGA Tour should get more serious about the event (and team golf) by making it a signature event, therefore luring more of the Tour’s top players.

Bob Harig: FACT. By making this a signature event, not only do you assure more of the top players competing, but you can limit the field. The idea of 80 teams starting and so many players involved really defeats the purpose. Lean into this event and make it bigger.

John Pluym: FACT. The PGA Tour needs more events like Zurich, but with the fields limited to the best players in the world. And if the Tour can mandate that the winners get up in front of a raucous crowd and sing, “Don’t Stop Believin,’” all the better. 

Shane Lowry hugs Rory McIlroy after winning the 2024 Zurich Classic.

The entire panel thinks the PGA Tour should lift the Zurich Classic, which enjoyed its greatest week as a team event when Rory McIlroy and Shane Lowry won.

Stephen Lew-USA TODAY Sports

Jeff Ritter: FACT. These signature events are supposed to be rotating a bit, are they not? Time for Zurich to get in the mix so we can see more Ryder Cup-caliber pairings. 

John Schwarb: FACT. The Zurich’s format is such a treat in the sea of sameness on the Tour schedule, yet its field hardly gets fans excited. Signature events are largely a function of sponsors and schedules, but no excuses—it’s time to get many more top players to New Orleans. 

Speaking of McIlroy, the Zurich was his 25th PGA Tour win, moving him into a tie for 23rd all time. To get to 15th requires 31 wins (tying Jimmy Demaret), and at 34 years old that’s as far as the Ulsterman will get.

Bob Harig: FICTION. Assuming good health, Rory should have 10 good years left. He’ll need some good fortune but even one win a year gets him to 35 victories. Rory is due for a couple of multiple-victory seasons. Getting to 40, while a stretch, is not out of the question..

John Pluym: FICTION. McIlroy will need a lot of good fortune to get to 31 wins, especially with Scottie Scheffler winning week to week or every other week (can he keep it up?). There are so many incredible players out there. But with 10-plus years left in his career, McIlroy should land somewhere between 30 to 35 wins.

Jeff Ritter: FICTION. So many variables with this kind of prediction, but assuming good health and continued drive, McIlroy should play well into his 40s. I’d guess he lands somewhere between Demaret’s 31 and Tom Watson’s 39.  

John Schwarb: FACT. The tendency with these questions is to overestimate right after a win, but his iron game and putting aren’t among the Tour’s best every week and he mostly plays elite events where he has to beat the best. He can absolutely grab six more wins in what will be a long career but I’m not willing to go overboard.

LIV Golf’s Adelaide event was a smash for the second consecutive year. Half of LIV Golf’s regular-season events are in North America but the Saudi-backed circuit needs to play the majority of its schedule overseas to better connect with nations starved for pro golf.

Bob Harig: FICTION. LIV Golf should definitely consider adding a second Australian event in a different state. It should go to South Africa, Spain, the U.K., South America, Japan or South Korea. But establishing a presence in the U.S. is imperative. It’s where most of the corporate support resides, and where the TV rights deals can potentially be the greatest. It’s a tough road without America.

John Pluym: FACT. LIV Golf Adelaide saw the biggest crowds of the dozen LIV events played over two seasons, so why not go there more often along with the PGA Tour and DP World Tour? It’s no different than the NFL playing more and more games overseas. Do it!

Cameron Smith plays a shot at the 2024 LIV Golf Adelaide event.

Cameron Smith played in front of huge crowds in his native Australia.

Courtesy LIV Golf

Jeff Ritter: FICTION. LIV is getting some traction overseas, but to become a bigger player in pro golf it needs to connect here in the U.S. I assume that’ll happen through the negotiated partnership that’s been in the works for nearly a year, but …

John Schwarb: FACT. A second Australian event seems like a no-brainer, and Asia is likely underserved with just two events on the LIV schedule. The league could also create wild-card spots for local players, boosting interest. If a LIV–PGA Tour merger of sorts remains far away, then LIV should stop trying to compete as hard for U.S. eyeballs and go where the Tour can’t. Or won’t.  

A Golf Digest story about NBC Sports said the network is still unsure who will be in the lead analyst’s chair in the U.S. Open, which is less than two months away. The chaos shows NBC should never have let Paul Azinger go. 

Bob Harig: FACT. I’m partial to Azinger. I don’t necessarily have a problem with rotating analysts, but we’d never know about it if Azinger were retained. And the way that went down sure seems curious. Having already dispensed with Roger Maltbie and Gary Koch, moving on from another comfortable voice seems too much..

John Pluym: FICTION. I don’t care who sits in the chair as long as they’re interesting. Who do golf fans want analyzing the action? Who do the players want? Let’s stir the pot instead of always trying to make things comfortable. Let’s also get the players mic’d up at events. In fact, that would be more interesting than who’s sitting in the lead analyst’s chair.  

Jeff Ritter: FICTION. I like Azinger, but rotating the chair has added some juice to the broadcasts so far this year. Also: do we need a “lead analyst” at the USO, or could NBC continue some sort of hybrid-rotation that week? I’m open to seeing what they come up with. 

John Schwarb: NEUTRAL. I was receptive to NBC’s plan to rotate the chair early in the year but no one has stuck yet and it’s fair to ask if these were actual tryouts or just a cheap way to run a booth. The U.S. Open deserves an analyst with gravitas and right now I feel like I’ll wish Azinger was there. But NBC still has time to get this right. 

What to Expect from Bears QB Caleb Williams in Year 1

What to Expect from Bears QB Caleb Williams in Year 1

The 2024 NFL draft is done, and it’s time to dive in and answer a few questions about it …

From David Kromelow (@dkrom59): What are realistic expectations for Caleb Williams (individually speaking) and the Bears in general this season? And do you anticipate Bo Nix starting over or under 10 games for the Broncos this year?

 

Alright, Davis, so on the first question, I’d say 3,700 yards, 20 touchdowns and 10 interceptions would be a reasonable stat line for Williams in Year 1. I do think the team has a chance to be good and, just as important, positioned to help fuel the quarterback’s development.

With a deep crew of backs (D’Andre Swift, Roschon Johnson, Khalil Herbert) and a rugged offensive line, the Chicago Bears should have the ability to keep Williams out of the long-yardage situations that kill young quarterbacks. And with a fast-improving team, and a defense coming around at the end of last year, he shouldn’t be playing from behind quite as much as quarterbacks drafted that high usually do. Having Keenan Allen, DJ Moore and Rome Odunze won’t hurt, either.

So, yeah, I think that team can win nine or 10 games just with solid play from Williams.

As for Nix, I do think Sean Payton’s going to get him out there. One thing I know Payton loved about Nix was his experience. Between Auburn and Oregon, Nix started an NCAA record 61 games. Generally, quarterbacks who played a lot in college (see: Purdy, Brock) translate faster to the NFL. Which should make it a little easier on Payton to play Nix, and get him NFL game reps now rather than later.

Buffalo Bill receiver Keon Coleman

The Bills drafted Coleman in the second round after trading back with the Chiefs.

Bob Donnan-USA TODAY Sports

From d_iggs17 (@d_iggs17): Was Keon Coleman the Bills’ guy all along or did they have another receiver in mind?

Diggs, let’s look at this logically. The Buffalo Bills did the trade with the rival Kansas City Chiefs, moving down from 28 to 32, knowing what the rest of the NFL did last week—that Texas burner Xavier Worthy was a great fit for Kansas City. So if the Bills loved Worthy, they wouldn't have done that. With full acknowledgement that the San Francisco 49ers are really good, and often outside the box on receiver assessments, it’s fair to say few teams had Florida’s Ricky Pearsall going 31st. And they dealt with ex-Bills exec Dan Morgan in trading down from 32 to 33.

Put the pieces together, and it’s easy to think that the Bills had an inkling that Worthy and South Carolina’s Xavier Legette were going in the spots they traded out of, and were surprised to see Pearsall go where he did. And maybe they moved out of 28 when the hope that LSU’s Brian Thomas Jr. would slip to them died.

So let’s say, in a great receiver year, they had Coleman as their fifth guy, behind Thomas, his LSU teammate Malik Nabers, Ohio State’s Marvin Harrison Jr. and Washington’s Rome Odunze. I’d say to get that guy—some scouts assessed him as a prospect in the Harrison–Nabers–Odunze class in the fall—in the second round is pretty good value, especially when it resulted in improving three later picks in pick swaps as part of trades.

 

From Chandler (@_chandler_____): What do the Chiefs do with their excess cap space?

 

Chandler, their cap space is a moving target because of the restructures of Patrick Mahomes’s contract. They pushed more than $21 million into the future, and that eventually has to be accounted for.

To simplify it, let’s say you have $200 to spend on your team today, and $220 to spend on it tomorrow. So on one player, you push $20 off to tomorrow. Now, on paper, it may look great that you have that extra $20 today. But you’ll still have to account for it tomorrow. So if you have the choice, with your team built, to take $20 off the top today to add to what you can spend tomorrow, would you do it? You probably would.

So that’s my convoluted way of saying the Chiefs probably take the money and roll it over. One thing that’s interesting, too, is that with Travis Kelce’s new deal—which essentially added $4 million this year, guaranteed his money, and added an early vesting date for next year’s guarantees—there are no void years. I’d look for the Chiefs to do more deals that way, to make it so Mahomes’s deal is the only one pushing money forward, which will allow them to build in a more sustainable way.

 

New Orleans Saints quarterback Spencer Rattler

Most NFL scouts had Rattler projected as a fourth-round pick.

Ken Ruinard-USA TODAY Sports

From Tyler (@BigTyTheMemeGuy): How big of a shot does Spencer Rattler have at becoming the Saints’ starting QB after Derek Carr?

 

Tyler, I’m just going to use the space you gave me to say something else on Rattler here: The only reason anything involving Rattler (like my buddy Ian Rapoport’s Netflix note during the final day of the draft) is a big deal is because three springs ago people were projecting him to be something he wasn’t.

In the Netflix documentary, “QB1: Beyond the Lights,” Rattler was a senior at Pinnacle High School, and the conversations showed him criticizing his teammates, which did not make him look great and impacted his draft stock.

You know all those way-too-early mock drafts? Absent an obvious top-end prospect coming into the 2022 class, a lot of folks projected Rattler, then Oklahoma’s starter, to go in the top five. Some had him first, based largely on Rattler’s recruiting ranking, some promise after his first year with the Sooners, and Lincoln Riley’s previous three starters at OU all going in the top 50 picks, with Baker Mayfield and Kyler Murray drafted first in consecutive drafts.

So what Rapoport reported during the draft had followed Rattler through his benching for Caleb Williams at OU and over to South Carolina, where he played in 2022 and ’23.

The truth is most NFL people would have told you before the draft he was going in the fourth round or so, and he went a round later. He also was picked 23 slots behind where the Saints took Jake Haener last year. So to answer your question, it’s not likely he’ll replace Carr.

 

New York Giants quarterback Drew Lock

It's not likely that Lock beats out Jones for the starting job with the Giants.

Darren Yamashita-USA TODAY Sports

From Bobby Spence (@postcrabcore): Drew Lock competing for QB1?

 

Bobby, if you mean getting first-team reps with Daniel Jones in New York Giants training camp, then I think the answer is no. But the Seahawks really liked the progress they saw from Lock over the two years he spent there, enough to where maybe you could close your eyes and envision his story playing out like the guy that beat him out, Geno Smith, in Seattle.

And because Jones is coming off an ACL tear, and won’t be back on the practice field, there’s an opening here. While you can only show so much in the spring, the fact that the New York Giants didn’t draft a quarterback will afford Lock starter reps through all the noncontact practices in May and June. If he makes an impression, and Jones stumbles in training camp, could things turn at some point in August?

I wouldn’t bet on that happening, but I wouldn’t rule it out.

 

San Francisco 49ers receiver Deebo Samuel

Samuel could be the odd man out in San Francisco.

Mark J. Rebilas-USA TODAY Sports

From Joe Douglas SZN (@F---AdamGase): Do you think Deebo or Aiyuk gets traded? If yes, which teams could be in play?

 

Joe, a couple of months ago, I thought Brandon Aiyuk could be the odd man out in the San Francisco 49ers’ bottleneck of big contracts. My logic matched the logic the 49ers used in dealing All-Pro DeForest Buckner four years ago—when they chose a guy who had massive value to other teams, and played a position where the team had a surplus of talent.

I’ve now changed my thinking. If there’s a guy that could get moved, it’s probably Deebo Samuel, with San Francisco looking to get an extension for Aiyuk done, the team’s best pure receiver. Samuel, a great player, may be seen as more of a luxury to have at this point, especially with another do-everything type in Christian McCaffrey (who may look for a pay bump of his own this summer).

Samuel’s also under contract, and has a lot of mileage on his legs, which is the reality of playing him the way the 49ers do, as a receiver and as a running back.

As for fits for Samuel, I think you’d look at some of the usual suspects in that coaching tree. San Francisco won’t trade him to the Los Angeles Rams, and I can’t imagine they’d send him to the Green Bay Packers, either. The Atlanta Falcons, with OC Zac Robinson, might make some sense. The New York Jets could, too, as a piece for the receiver group, and for some depth behind Breece Hall at tailback. And a reunion with Mike McDaniel and the Miami Dolphins could be fun.

Speaking of that …

Miami Dolphins running back Jaylen Wright

The Dolphins added more speed to their offense with Wright, a fourth-round pick.

Matt Stone/Louisville Courier Journal /

From Tua Messivailoa (@TuasRevenge): Are the Miami Dolphins assembling the fastest team of all time?

 

Tua, yes, they appear to be doing just that. And I’m assuming you’re referencing fourth-round pick Jaylen Wright, a tailback out of Tennessee who averaged 7.4 yards per carry over three years in Knoxville, then blazed a 4.38 in the 40-yard dash at the combine.

The disconnect, of course, is that he only averaged 11 carries per game, and the home-run hitter element he brought to the Tennessee backfield was mixed with inconsistency as an inside runner and as a receiver. Last year’s rookie dynamo in Miami, De’Von Achane, by comparison, and who’s more than 20 pounds lighter, averaged nearly 20 carries per game in his final season at Texas A&M.

So it’ll be interesting seeing how McDaniel and the coaches add Wright to the mix with a huddle that’s already stocked with legitimate speed in Achane, Tyreek Hill and Jaylen Waddle. My guess would be McDaniel will find a way to get some big plays from him, and make an already headache-inducing offense even more of a nightmare for defenses.

Georgia pass rusher Mykel Williams

Williams could be a top pass-rushing prospect in the 2025 NFL draft.

Saul Young/News Sentinel / USA TODAY

From Glen Phelps (@PhelpsGlen62041): Very preliminary, but what appear to be the strengths of the 2025 draft?

 

Glen, just scanning some lists, but it sure looks like there are a lot of high-end pass-rushing prospects in the group—Georgia’s Mykel Williams, LSU’s Harold Perkins, Ohio State’s J.T. Tuimoloau along with transfers such as Texas A&M’s Nic Scourton and Ole Miss’ Princely Umanmielen. So it sure looks like there’s a good group that could be part of the early draft conversation.

The other thing I see is another good year at offensive tackle with LSU’s Will Campbell and Texas’ Kelvin Banks Jr. in that mix.

 

From Strickly Speakin’ (@SpiderStrick): Do you foresee any more tweaking to the Commanders’ front office now that we’ve reached the time of year those things tend to happen?

 

Probably not a lot, Speakin’. Just looking at the landscape, the decision to retain Martin Mayhew was a big one for GM Adam Peters, given Mayhew’s experience in two different places as a GM, and the experience the two had together in San Francisco (and the fact that he was willing to take a step back from the GM role and stay in Washington says a lot about Mahew). Also, Peters already brought Lance Newmark over from Detroit to be his assistant GM.

So I think anything that happens on the scouting side would qualify as tweaking. What’s more likely is the Commanders adding to the staff for analytics chief Eugene Shen.

 

From Don Ridenour & CEO of Klutch Sports Rich Paul (@DonRidenour): Besides Marvin Harrison Jr, what team got the best value for a player from Ohio State?

 

Houston Texans tight end Cade Stover

Stover was a reliable target for C.J. Stroud in 2022.

Kirby Lee-USA TODAY Sports

With a nod to Tommy “Two Hands” Eichenberg going to the Las Vegas Raiders, give me Cade Stover to the Houston Texans. The third-rounder is still just learning to be a tight end, and was a reliable target for C.J. Stroud in 2022. He’s tough as nails, a bull in the open field, and reliable.

I’d bet on him developing, and becoming a more polished route runner, working with a really good offensive staff and his old quarterback.