News Commanders Team Notes

Washington Commanders Free Agency Rumors and News Tracker

NFC Wild Card Playoffs: Washington Commanders v Tampa Bay Buccaneers

Photo by Perry Knotts/Getty Images

Free agency continues!

The NFL’s legal tampering period started on Monday at 12pm; free agency officially started yesterday at 4pm. The Washington Commanders have been active, and also lost a few players to other teams. They finaled trades for WR Deebo Samuel and LT Laremy Tunsil and signed five free agents from other teams. Eight players have been re-signed, and RB Chris Rodriguez Jr 's ERFA tender was extended. Six of Washington's free agents have signed with other teams.

Who should GM Adam Peters be looking at today?

Free Agents Signed


Jets DT Javon Kinlaw - 3-year, $45 million

Saints S Will Harris - 2-year, $8million($10m max)

Falcons DT Eddie Goldman - 1-year deal,

Patriots CB Jonathan Jones - 1-year deal, $5.5m ($6.5m max)

Patriots DL Deatrich Wise - 1-year deal, up to $5m

Trades


San Francisco 49ers WR Deebo Samuel

Houston Texans LT Laremy Tunsil

Cuts


DT Jonathan Allen - Signed 3-year, $60 million deal with Vikings

Washington’s Unrestricted Free Agents (UFA)


QB Jeff Driskel

WR Olamide Zaccheaus

WR Noah Brown

WR Jamison Crowder

WR K.J. Osborn

OL Trent Scott

OL Michael Deiter

DE Clelin Ferrell

DL Jalyn Holmes

OLB Dante Fowler Jr.

DT Sheldon Day

CB Noah Igbinoghene

CB Michael Davis

LB Nick Bellore

K Austin Seibert

Washington’s Exclusive Rights Free Agents (ERFA)


RB Chris Rodriguez - Tender extended

Washington Free Agents re-signed


K Zane Gonzalez - 1-year, $1.17 million deal

LB Bobby Wagner - 1-year, $9 million deal

TE Zach Ertz - 1-year $6.25 million deal

TE John Bates - 3-year deal

P Tress Way - 1-year deal

RB Jeremy McNichols - 1-year deal

QB Marcus Mariota - re-signed: 1-year, $8 million

Washington practice squad players re-signed


Kevon Seymour - 1 year deal

Washington Free Agents signed by another team


OT Cornelius Lucas - 2-year, up to $10 million with the Browns

WR Dyami Brown - 1-year, $10 million with the Jaguars

S Jeremy Chinn - 2-year, $16 million deal with the Raiders

S Darrick Forrest - 1-year deal with the Bills

LB Mykal Walker - 2-year deal with the Cardinals

CB Benjamin St-Juste - 1-year deal with the Chargers

Washington Free Agency News & Rumors

Pass-rush help for Philadelphia: Eagles reached agreement today on a one-year deal with former Chiefs free-agent LB Joshua Uche, who now will try to help replace Josh Sweat and Brandon Graham. Deal negotiated by Drew Rosenhaus and Kyle Lincoln. pic.twitter.com/wKGH2MHJGw

— Adam Schefter (@AdamSchefter) March 13, 2025

Teams are willing to pay Trey Hendrickson the contract that he desires but have found Cincinnati’s current asking price to be “ridiculous,” as one GM told me.

The Bengals can adjust as the offseason progresses, but right now, teams aren’t willing to meet their terms. pic.twitter.com/xzaIllagVz

— Dianna Russini (@DMRussini) March 13, 2025

Source: The #Jets are re-signing LB Jamin Davis to a 1-year deal.

The former #Commanders’ first-round pick has 8 career sacks and finished last season with the Jets. Now, he gets to work under Aaron Glenn. pic.twitter.com/t8RiTdfIN9

— Jordan Schultz (@Schultz_Report) March 13, 2025

One more: Commanders are signing DL Deatrich Wise to a 1-year contract, per source.

The second long-time Patriot signed today. Wise, 31, has 34 career sacks.

— Ben Standig (@BenStandig) March 13, 2025

Kevon Seymour back with the Commanders on a one -year deal. Corner also provides special teams help.

— John Keim (@john_keim) March 12, 2025

Congrats @BenStJuste agreeing to a 1 year deal with the @chargers

— Mike McCartney (@MikeMcCartney7) March 12, 2025

Source: The #Cardinals are signing former #Commanders LB Mykal Walker.

He has 241 career tackles, 4 INTs and 7 TFLs. pic.twitter.com/g2hTjgUUvK

— Jordan Schultz (@Schultz_Report) March 12, 2025

Washington will sign DT Eddie Goldman to a one-year deal, as @JFowlerESPN reported. At 6-foot-4, 320 pounds Goldman provides size inside. Played for Atlanta last year; was a 2nd-round pick by Chicago in 2015.

— John Keim (@john_keim) March 12, 2025
The Commanders are re-signing QB Marcus Mariota to a one-year deal, per source. Up to $8 million, per source.

— Ben Standig (@BenStandig) March 12, 2025
Thank you God all glory to
You, dear Lord. Let get to it! https://t.co/qSR35Ro2sP

— Darrick Forrest Jr. (@_Dfoe5) March 12, 2025
Veteran RB Jeremy McNichols is re-signing with the #Commanders on a one-year deal, per source. pic.twitter.com/0eXU5V2EEF

— Tom Pelissero (@TomPelissero) March 11, 2025
Did everybody know Laremy Tunsil was available

"They talked to some teams that were in the tackle market..

Several teams had the chance to get Laremy Tunsil and they decided not to" ~ @RapSheet #PMSLive https://t.co/e38NpO8Nlf pic.twitter.com/ukDgdlLTjJ

— Pat McAfee (@PatMcAfeeShow) March 11, 2025


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Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/2025/3/13...ommanders-free-agency-rumors-and-news-tracker
 
Washington Commanders Free Agency: Bears edge rusher Jacob Martin agrees to 1-year deal worth up to $3m

Seattle Seahawks v Chicago Bears

Photo by Cooper Neill/Getty Images

More pass rush help

With Dante Fowler still an unsigned free agent, Washington is looking elsewhere to find situational pass rushers. 29-year-old Jacob Martin was a 6th round draft pick of the Seahawks in 2018, but he didn’t last there.

He spent 3 seasons with the Texans from 2019-21, but Washington will be his 6th team in the four years since.

Playing the final 11 games of the ‘24 season with the Bears, the 6’2” 242 pound Martin, playing 32% of the available snaps, was credited with 6 QB hits and 3 sacks in 222 snaps. He also plays special teams (206 snaps in 11 games).


Washington signed edge rusher Jacob Martin to a one-year deal, source confirms. Martin spent last season with Chicago. @AdamSchefter reported it was a deal worth up to $3 million. Martin is joining his eighth organization; he had 3 sacks last season.

— John Keim (@john_keim) March 14, 2025

Washington signed DE Jacob Martin. He ranked 66th out of 132 edge rushers on PFF. Another solid pickup pic.twitter.com/N3jhuvBZb9

— obvlon (@obvlon) March 14, 2025
Def InterceptionsFumblesTackles
SeasonAgeTeamLgPosGGSIntYdsIntTDLngPDFFFmbFRYdsFRTDSkCombSoloAstTFLQBHitsSftyAVAwards
201823SEANFLDE16000000201003.010822802
201924HOUNFLDE14000000101003.511653701
202025HOUNFLDE14100001101003.0201373302
202126HOUNFLLDE171400003200004.02311125616
2022272TMNFLDE13000000100002.514772501
202227NYJNFLDE8000000100001.58350401
202227DENNFLDE5000000000001.06422100
202328INDNFLDE17000000000002.07521301
202429CHINFLDL11000001000003.015963601
7 Yrs10215000057030021.010059411938114
17 Game Avg17200001100003.5171073602
HOU (3 Yrs)4515000044020010.5543024111619
IND (1 Yr)17000000000002.07521301
SEA (1 Yr)16000000201003.010822802
CHI (1 Yr)11000001000003.015963601
NYJ (1 Yr)8000000100001.58350401
DEN (1 Yr)5000000000001.06422100

Defense & Fumbles Table
Provided by Pro-Football-Reference.com: View Original Table
Generated 3/14/2025.

Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/2025/3/13...cob-martin-agrees-to-1-yr-deal-worth-up-to-3m
 
Could the Commanders be Targeting Kyle Kennard in the Draft?

NCAA Football: Louisiana State at South Carolina

Scott Kinser-Imagn Images

Hogs Haven takes a look at 2025 NFL Draft prospects that could contribute to the Commanders

Kyle Kennard, DE
School:
South Carolina | Conference: SEC
College Experience: Senior | Age: 23
Height / Weight: 6’4” / 254 lbs
Projected Draft Status: 2nd-4th Round

Player Comparison: Felix Anudike-Uzomah

College Statistics

TacklesDef InterceptionsFumbles
SeasonTeamConfClassPosGSoloAstCombTFLSkIntYdsAvgIntTDPDFRYdsFRTDFFAwards
2020Georgia TechACCFRDL6821032.500000000
2021Georgia TechACCFRDL125101542.000000000
2022Georgia TechACCSODL1219173652.000000000
2023*Georgia TechACCJRDL12322254116.011212.0002002
2024*South CarolinaSECSRDL12208281611.500012003 Nagurski,AA
Career5484591433924.011212.0014005
Georgia Tech (4 Yrs)4264511152312.511212.0002002
South Carolina (1 Yr)12208281611.500012003

Defense & Fumbles Table
Provided by CFB at Sports Reference: View Original Table
Generated 3/10/2025.

Player Overview


A three-star recruit out of Atlanta, Kyle Kennard chose to stay close to home and attend Georgia Tech rather than play at Iowa State, Arizona State, Tennessee, and others. At the end of his freshman year, Kennard became a starter and generated most of his production in the final games of the season. Kennard remained in a reserve role the following season, only starting two games. With increased time as a starter in his junior year, Kennard’s production also increased.

As a senior in his final year at Georgia Tech, Kennard led the team in tackles for a loss and sacks. This caught the eye of South Carolina and they made it a priority to get him in the transfer portal. Once in Columbia, Kennard got to work. On a defensive line full of very talented players, Kennard was the most productive Gamecock. He was the SEC Defensive Player of the Year, a First-Team All-American, and the Bronko Nagurski Trophy winner - the best defensive player in college football.

Strengths

  • Good size with excellent length
  • Gets upfield quickly with long strides
  • Displays strong hands to stun blockers
  • Uses ghost move, rip moves, and chops to beat blockers outside
  • Long legs make inside counters effective

Weaknesses

  • If initial rush fails, can stay attached to blockers
  • Hip tightness can make turning the corner difficult
  • Needs more strength to not be pushed off rush path
  • Needs to diversify rushes; can rely too much on ghost move
  • Can hesitate to act as he diagnoses play

Let’s See His Work


Kyle Kennard is a prototype standup edge rusher with the potential to be a star edge defender.

Kennard posted 10 sacks and 39 pressures in 2024. He’s capable of making splash plays to impact the game, but has to become a more consistent pass rusher and run defender.

Day 2 pick. pic.twitter.com/zWUGRekMKf

— NFL Draft Files (@NFL_DF) February 7, 2025

The Washington Commanders had a formal meeting with the following player at the NFL Combine:

Kyle Kennard, DE/Edge, South Carolina

According to several sources.

— Ken Johannesen (@BurgundyBurner) March 4, 2025

Kyle Kennard is a DE prospect in the 2025 draft class. He scored an unofficial 8.28 #RAS out of a possible 10.00. This ranked 314 out of 1820 DE from 1987 to 2025.

Splits projected, explosion and agilities pending pro day.https://t.co/77bT78L2ap pic.twitter.com/e1LzLvBwUN

— Kent Lee Platte (@MathBomb) February 28, 2025

How He Fits on the Commanders


Free agency has kicked off and the Commanders appear comfortable letting Dante Fowler, Jr. and Clelin Ferrell walk. Deatrich Wise, Jr. was signed in free agency, but the team is likely to look to the draft to find defensive ends to go with him, Dorance Armstrong, and Javontae Jean-Baptiste.

After a productive final season for the Gamecocks, Kyle Kennard could be a good rotational player for the Commanders to begin his career. He should be able to get to QBs using his length, initial quickness, and pass rush moves The strength and better pass rush plans will come with time. Those are the only things that will prevent him from being a starter right away. Even if he does not improve in these areas, he should be able to provide rotational depth at the position in a role similar to Dante Fowler, Jr.’s last season.

Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/2025/3/14...rs-be-targeting-kyle-kennard-in-the-nfl-draft
 
Frankie Luvu and Bobby Wagner: The Department of Defense

Screenshot_2025_03_14_172531.5.png


DoD!

NEW SHIRT ALERT!


Luvu/Wagner DoD | BreakingT

Frankie Luvu and Bobby Wagner were signed this offseason to remake the Washington Commanders linebackers group. Our friends at BreakingT have a new shirt for the pair. Luvu was the young stud and Wagner was the future Hall of Fame veteran. Both brought experience and leadership to a group that later released former 1st round LB Jamin Davis.

Luvu and Wagner have been a great pairing, and have helped reshape the Commanders defense. They have 10 sacks over the first 13 games, with 8 of them coming from Luvu. Bobby Wagner already has 104 tackles, and that’s his 13th-straight season with 100+. That ties him with Ray Lewis, and moves him behind another LB who should be in the Hall of Fame, London Fletcher. Wagner only signed a 1-year deal. Will he extend his career in Washington?(Editor’s note: Yes he will!)


Luvu/Wagner DoD t-shirt | BreakingT

♂️ https://t.co/ES3q7UOBJ6

— Frankie Luvu (@frankluvu7) December 5, 2024

Commanders LBs Bobby Wagner and Frankie Luvu have a formed an incredible connection this season...

They sat down this week before their matchup with the Bears to chat. pic.twitter.com/1345hXLUf8

— NFL on CBS (@NFLonCBS) October 27, 2024

BreakingT Washington DC Collection

Bobby Wagner reached out to all-time great LB London Fletcher back in 2019.

Now, Wagner is chasing Fletcher in 100+ tackle seasons. (h/t @NickiJhabvala) pic.twitter.com/Puqf8UdwAU

— NFL (@NFL) December 3, 2024

Bobby Wagner joined London Fletcher today as the only other player to record 100+ tackles in at least 13 straight seasons in NFL history.

Wagner after the game: “[Fletcher] is more than deserving of being in the Hall of Fame. People should recognize his greatness.” pic.twitter.com/gS2mQz7FGr

— Ethan Cadeaux (@Ethan_Cadeaux) December 1, 2024
"Simply the best"#WPMOYChallenge @Bwagz pic.twitter.com/EFVOn7wEJk

— Washington Commanders (@Commanders) December 5, 2024

Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/2024/12/5/24313943/frankie-luvu-and-bobby-wagner-the-department-of-defense
 
Washington Commanders Free Agency: DE Clelin Ferrell re-signed to 1-year deal

Washington Commanders v Dallas Cowboys

Photo by Cooper Neill/Getty Images

Rotational DE returns

There have been multiple reports that 27-year-old DE Clelin Ferrell will be returning to the Commanders on a 1-year contract. The value of the deal has not yet been disclosed, but Ferrell signed with the Commanders last year on a one-year deal worth $3.75m.

Critiques of Ferrell’s play in 2024 were mixed, but he has a reputation as more of a run-stopper than a pass-rusher.

Ferrell was originally drafted 4th overall in the 2019 draft by the Raiders. His career never really lived up to his draft pedigree, and at the end of his rookie contract, Ferrell signed with the 49ers in 2023 on a 1-yr, $2.5m contract. When GM Adam Peters came to Washington from San Francisco, he signed Ferrell to help with the ‘recalibration’ of the Commanders.

Now, Ferrell gets another opportunity to work with defensive coordinator Joe Whitt and head coach Dan Quinn to improve the Commanders defense in an effort to build the team into perennial playoff contenders.


The #Commanders are bringing back veteran DL Clelin Ferrell, source said, as the former first-rounder returns after 10 starts and 3.5 sacks with 26 tackles. pic.twitter.com/d9yumLl7uZ

— Ian Rapoport (@RapSheet) March 15, 2025

Washington has re-signed DE Clelin Ferrell to a one-year deal per source. Ferrell provides another end who can help against the run. The Commanders have loaded up on run-stopping depth along the front.

— John Keim (@john_keim) March 15, 2025
Def InterceptionsFumblesTackles
SeasonAgeTeamLgPosGGSIntYdsIntTDLngPDFFFmbFRYdsFRTDSkCombSoloAstTFLQBHitsSftyAVAwards
201922OAKNFLLDE151500005001004.53824148806
202023LVRNFLLDE111100003200002.02718931004
202124LVRNFLDE16000001000001.514861601
202225LVRNFLDE16400002000002.0268183802
202326SFONFLDL171700001101003.528151361308
202427WASNFLDE141000000100003.52611154904
6 Yrs89570000124020017.015984752554025
17 Game Avg171100002100003.230161451005
OAK (4 Yrs)58300000112010010.010558471532013
SFO (1 Yr)171700001101003.528151361308
WAS (1 Yr)141000000100003.52611154904

Defense & Fumbles Table
Provided by Pro-Football-Reference.com: View Original Table
Generated 3/15/2025.

Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/2025/3/15...cy-de-clelin-ferrell-re-signed-to-1-year-deal
 
The Laremy Tunsil trade is now official!

temp_laremy_tunsil_2.5.jpg


Officially official

The Commanders have officially announced the trade for Laremy Tunsil.


Trade details pic.twitter.com/293U1R927g

— Washington Commanders (@Commanders) March 15, 2025

Staying in 7️⃣8️⃣@KingTunsil78 | #RaiseHail pic.twitter.com/nhDJWK4Yrg

— Washington Commanders (@Commanders) March 15, 2025

LT at LT@KingTunsil78 | #RaiseHail pic.twitter.com/ymneEZn8IX

— Washington Commanders (@Commanders) March 15, 2025

ORIGINAL STORY​


The Washington Commanders have been active in free agency and the trade market after their unexpected 12-5 season. They made it to the NFC Championship game in their first season under new GM Adam Peters, and they’re looking to capitalize on QB Jayden Daniels rookie contract. Adam Schefter has reported that Washington is trading for Houston Texans LT Laremy Tunsil.

The trade details:

Houston gets:

2026 2nd rounder

2026 fourth rounder

2025 third rounder

2025 seventh rounder

Washington gets:

2025 fourth rounder

T Laremy Tunsil

Def InterceptionsFumblesTackles
SeasonAgeTeamLgPosGGSIntYdsIntTDLngPDFFFmbFRYdsFRTDSkCombSoloAstTFLQBHitsSftyAVAwards
201622MIANFLLG141400000000000.000006
201723MIANFLLT151500000000000.000006
201824MIANFLLT151500000000000.00000006
2019 25HOUNFLLT141400000000000.000000010PB
2020 26HOUNFLLT141400000000000.000000010PB
202127HOUNFLLT5500000000000.00000002
2022 28HOUNFLLT171700000001-200.01010008PB
2023 29HOUNFLT141400000000000.00000009PB
2024 30HOUNFLT171700000000000.00000009PB
9 Yrs12512500000001-200.010100066
17 Game Avg171700000000000.000009
HOU (6 Yrs)818100000001-200.010100048
MIA (3 Yrs)444400000000000.000000018

Defense & Fumbles Table
Provided by Pro-Football-Reference.com: View Original Table
Generated 3/10/2025.

Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/2025/3/15/24386697/the-laremy-tunsil-trade-is-now-official
 
Daily Slop - 16 Mar 25 - The Eagles are loaded with picks in the ‘25 & ‘26 drafts

Philadelphia Eagles Super Bowl Championship Parade

Photo by Mitchell Leff/Getty Images

A collection of articles, podcasts & tweets from around the web to keep you in touch with the Commanders

Commanders links

Articles​

ESPN

Commanders 2025 free agency tracker: Offseason moves, signings

Noah Brown, WR​


Brown is returning to the team on a one-year deal.

What it means: Brown provides quality depth and a potential starter for the Commanders. He did a nice job for them after joining the team as a waiver claim the week before the season opener. In 11 games, he caught 35 passes with one touchdown. He was on pace to set a career-best in catches (he ended up eight shy) before injuring his kidney. He has good size at 6-foot-2 and 225 pounds — something Washington needed — and plays physical. He’s a good third option along with Terry McLaurin and Deebo Samuel.

What’s the risk: None. The deal is only worth up to $4.5 million. Despite his production Brown again finished on injured reserve and has missed a combined 13 games the past two seasons. The Commanders could add another young outside receiver as insurance. But as long as Brown stays healthy he should deliver for them again.

Sheldon Day, DT​


Day returns to Washington on a one-year deal.

What it means: Depth. Day was part of Washington’s defensive line rotation last season as a fourth tackle. He finished with a career-high 24 tackles and 12 solo tackles. Washington also has added defensive tackle Goldman — who is at least 30 pounds heavier so would play a different role. The Commanders starters are expected to be Daron Payne and Newton. They also signed Kinlaw, who can play inside but might also play some outside. At 6-foot-1, Day is a little shorter than most inside but can use his quickness to help against the run.

What’s the risk: None. He’s not expensive, nor is he guaranteed a roster spot. Day has played with five other franchises, so he is used to earning a spot, and this summer will be no different.


Sports Illustrated

New Commanders CB discusses franchise turnaround and QB Jayden Daniels


Jonathan Jones is coming from a winning organization with a top quarterback, and believes the Washington Commanders can be one as well.

For a player on the Patriots’ roster it was probably not even a thought that he’d ever play here, something new Washington cornerback Jonathan Jones admitted in his introductory press conference with the local media.

“I’ll be honest with you, I didn’t think that would even be a part of the plan. Just seeing the turmoil that was going on here and just everything that this organization had to deal with,” Jones shared. “Just seeing how quickly it turned around, I think was one of the biggest surprises to me of just how quickly they were able to get in good people, good staff...everyone here from the scouts, everyone had to play a part in turning this place around and they’ve done a good job of it.”

Now that the turnaround is in progress, Super Bowl winners are more likely to want to play for the Commanders. A big part of that, of course, is quarterback Jayden Daniels. Despite being a defensive player, Jones knows how important it is to have that guy on the other side of the roster, something he learned as teammates with Tom Brady during his final years with the Patriots.

“It brings a lot of confidence. It brings a confidence to a team, to a defense. Your goals kind of shift,” Jones said. “Sometimes on defense, you’ll feel like you’re trying to win the game (and) that it has to be on you, and you’ll shift to a point to-there are certain teams around this league-we were that in New England for a while, Kansas City, whereas the defense, your job is like, let me just get the ball back to our offense, to the quarterback, and then if they have the ball on the last drive, we know we’ll win that game. And so it gives a lot of confidence to a defense when you have a player like that.”


Commanders.com

Commanders acquire T Laremy Tunsil


From 2019-2024, Tunsil played for the Houston Texans where he started in 81 games and earned Pro Bowl honors in each season. In 2024, Tunsil registered an 89.1 pass block grade from PFF among all offensive tackles. He also had a pass block win rate of 93 percent on 411 total snaps, tied for the seventh best among all offensive tackles, per ESPN analytics.

Since 2022, Tunsil has earned a 91.7 pass blocking grade (second among all offensive tackles) and allowed a presser rate of 3.1 percent, the third best among all offensive tackles.


Podcasts & videos

NFL Network’s Rhett Lewis on Washington’s Acquisitions, Trades & 2025 Draft | Get Loud | Commanders​


NFC East links

Bleeding Green Nation

Eagles projected to have max number of compensatory picks in the 2026 NFL Draft


Howie Roseman and his staff are going to have SO much draft capital the next couple years.

With the news that the Eagles have also lost Mekhi Becton in free agency, they are now projected to have maxed out their compensatory picks potential in the 2026 NFL Draft. The max limit is four in any one draft, and with Becton signing with the Chargers on a two-year, $20 million deal, they’ve added their last one.

In addition to their four future comp picks, they also have an extra pick thanks to the Jets trading for Haason Reddick — a move that didn’t work out that well for New York, but the Eagles at least got something out of the deal.

Here’s a current look at the Eagles’ 2026 NFL Draft picks:

  • Round 1
  • Round 2
  • Round 3
  • Round 3 (from Jets — Haason Reddick trade)
  • Round 3 (projected comp pick — Milton Williams)
  • Round 4
  • Round 4 (projected comp pick — Josh Sweat)
  • Round 5
  • Round 5 (from Texans — C.J. Gardner-Johnson trade)
  • Round 5 (projected comp pick — Mekhi Becton)
  • Round 6 (projected comp pick — Isaiah Rodgers
  • Round 7

The exact 2025 NFL Draft order was finalized earlier this week. The Eagles currently have eight picks there.


Big Blue View

It’s time for the Giants to sign Russell Wilson and be done with the Aaron Rodgers nonsense


It’s time for GM Joe Schoen and head coach Brian Daboll to be realistic.

Matthew Stafford was never coming to the Giants. In their desperation to find a big-name quarterback who could help them keep their jobs, Schoen and Daboll allowed the Giants to be used by Stafford in an effort to get the deal Stafford ultimately wanted — and got — from the Los Angeles Rams.

Now, the Giants are waiting ... and waiting ... and waiting some for the attention-loving Rodgers to make a decision.

Why would Rodgers choose the Giants, 3-14 last year and 9-25 the last two seasons, anyway?

The most recent reporting from The Athletic is that Rodgers wants the Minnesota Vikings — if they want him.

Wilson is not, and never has been, quite the player that Rodgers is still capable of being. He is still far superior to anyone the Giants had at quarterback last season. He seems to want the New York/New Jersey market.

Wilson is said to be “ready to sign,” but how long will he be willing to play second fiddle while the Giants and Steelers wait on Rodgers?

Wilson gives the Giants what they need — better quarterback play that they have had the past couple of years and someone who seems willing/able to help mentor a young quarterback for the future.


NFL league links

Articles​

NFL.com

Falcons keep Kirk Cousins on roster through Saturday, allow 2026 $10 million bonus to become guaranteed


Atlanta kept the quarterback on its roster through Saturday at 4 p.m. ET, meaning his $10 million roster bonus for the 2026 season has become fully guaranteed, NFL Network Insider Tom Pelissero reported.

The deadline to avoid that amount being locked in for Cousins in the future could have potentially led the Falcons, who are going forward with Michael Penix Jr. as QB1, to release the veteran.

But Atlanta’s messaging has remained clear throughout the offseason; the latest decision is firmly in line with the team’s approach. Plus, the guarantee is still subject to offset language and could transfer partially or fully to another team rostering Cousins in 2026, per Pelissero.

Depending on how the QB carousel continues, another team might come calling and present enough value for the Falcons to move on — regardless of the additional $10 million newly added to the gobs of money Atlanta paid for Cousins in the first place.

Should a quarterback-needy club strike out on remaining veteran signal-callers like Aaron Rodgers or Russell Wilson, or fail to land a prospect it believes in during April’s draft, the options at QB drastically narrow moving forward.

An injury in training camp could also press someone to attempt a trade for Cousins.


The Athletic (paywall)​

The Aaron Rodgers waiting game: Two QBs, three teams wait on Kevin O’Connell and Vikings’ call


Three days after becoming a free agent, Aaron Rodgers remains a quarterback without a team. As the four-time MVP ponders his next move, one thing has become clear: The person who currently holds the biggest sway over his playing future is Minnesota Vikings coach Kevin O’Connell.

After conversations with more than a dozen league sources, this is where Rodgers, the Vikings and two other teams courting the 41-year-old quarterback — the New York Giants and Pittsburgh Steelers — stand.

Rodgers is hoping to sign with the Vikings, who went 14-3 in 2024 before suffering a first-round playoff defeat to the Los Angeles Rams. Meanwhile, the Vikings have been strongly weighing the possibility of pursuing Rodgers as a replacement for 2024 starter Sam Darnold, who signed a three-year, $100 million free-agent deal Wednesday with the Seattle Seahawks.

Rodgers, in the wake of his release by the New York Jets, is seeking an annual salary in the same general range as Darnold’s — though that’s not expected to be a major stumbling block. O’Connell, the reigning NFL coach of the year, must decide whether he’s committed to bringing in the future first-ballot Hall of Famer, while considering the effect such a move could have on the growth of second-year quarterback J.J. McCarthy, the 10th pick in the 2024 draft. To be sure, pursuing Rodgers would be an organizational decision, but O’Connell is the person with the most on the line, and it will only happen if he’s comfortable with the scenario.

Rodgers has been targeted by the Steelers and Giants but has essentially put both teams on hold while he waits for clarity regarding the Vikings’ situation. If Minnesota ceases to be an option, it’s also possible that Rodgers will turn down both the Steelers (a 2024 playoff team) and Giants and instead opt for retirement.

The bottom line: There are a lot of people waiting on Rodgers’ decision. And Rodgers, at least for now, is waiting on O’Connell.


All aTwitter


Signed, sealed, delivered ✔️ pic.twitter.com/8zVYEmEUsk

— Washington Commanders (@Commanders) March 15, 2025

Trade details pic.twitter.com/293U1R927g

— Washington Commanders (@Commanders) March 15, 2025

A new face in Washington pic.twitter.com/Ts3j0ls0AH

— Washington Commanders (@Commanders) March 15, 2025

pic.twitter.com/FjxT1lzcN4

— Laremy Tunsil (@KingTunsil78) March 13, 2025

The #Commanders are bringing back veteran DL Clelin Ferrell, source said, as the former first-rounder returns after 10 starts and 3.5 sacks with 26 tackles. pic.twitter.com/d9yumLl7uZ

— Ian Rapoport (@RapSheet) March 15, 2025

Commanders are signing DE Clelin Ferrell, via @DMRussini.

26; entering 6th season.
4th overall pick in 2019.
4 years LVR, last year in SF
Started 17 games in 2023.
3.5 sax last year, 13.5 in 5 yrs.
PFF: Bad run grade (47.4) last year. pic.twitter.com/eSCSrRbquV

— Grant Paulsen (@granthpaulsen) March 12, 2024


Jonathan jones gonna go crazy in joe whitts defense #RaiseHail pic.twitter.com/IizYykqdBh

— PAIN (@Xommanders) March 16, 2025

#Commanders WR Deebo Samuel putting in some boxing work this offseason

(via:@MateoBoxr / @boxrgym on IG) pic.twitter.com/dtixw6Bral

— brandon (@JayDanielsMVP) March 15, 2025

Commanders D-Line so far:

DE - Dorance Armstrong, Deatrich Wise, Clelin Ferrell, Javontae Jean-Baptiste, Jacob Martin, Viliami Fehoko Jr., Andre Jones Jr.

DT - Daron Payne, Johnny Newton, Javon Kinlaw, Eddie Goldman, Sheldon Day, Norell Pollard#RaiseHail

— KB (@KBDCSports) March 16, 2025


Titans Release Veteran CB Chidobe Awuzie https://t.co/rr1eq5nubY

— NFLTradeRumors.co (@nfltrade_rumors) March 15, 2025

Former Washington WR Adam Humphries has retired #RaiseHail

— Commanders27 (@Commanders27) March 16, 2025

Kirk Cousins has now guaranteed himself $331.6M earned on the field across 14 NFL seasons.

Tom Brady earned $332M in 23 seasons.

— Spotrac (@spotrac) March 15, 2025

Per me and @RapSheet, the #Vikings are sending a 2026 6th-round pick to San Francisco and the team will swap picks 160 and 187 this year. https://t.co/OJkx204HN4

— Tom Pelissero (@TomPelissero) March 16, 2025

Parris Campbell has agreed to a one-year #Cowboys deal:https://t.co/WsMsJk6nam

— Pro Football Rumors (@pfrumors) March 16, 2025


Teams with a franchise quarterback: pic.twitter.com/5reP0lP2fp

— Dov Kleiman (@NFL_DovKleiman) March 15, 2025

Total NFL player suspensions since 2020:

Which team surprises you the most?

(h/t Ig/pickinem) pic.twitter.com/438BH9k63w

— Dov Kleiman (@NFL_DovKleiman) March 16, 2025

There are a lot of unanswered questions here, but FOR THE MOMENT Over the Cap has Washington on the board for one comp pick in the 2026 draft.

This is FAR from final.

The team could lose this pick or gain more depending on many factors.#RaiseHail pic.twitter.com/uYxkQI8659

— Bill-in-Bangkok (@billhorgan2005) March 15, 2025

Alex Ovechkin, goal No. 887. Beautiful redirect.

Eight away from passing Wayne Gretzky pic.twitter.com/uPmCBWQUgc

— Ethan Cadeaux (@Ethan_Cadeaux) March 15, 2025

Mike Francesa yelled at his staff for a few minutes last night, not realizing he was live. pic.twitter.com/FVSSch13pt

— Funhouse (@BackAftaThis) March 15, 2025

Insane: Football being played in the 1940s pic.twitter.com/XPJ5s7Esmf

— Dov Kleiman (@NFL_DovKleiman) March 15, 2025


Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/2025/3/16...les-are-loaded-with-picks-in-the-25-26-drafts
 
Washington Commanders Free Agency: DL Jalyn Holmes re-signed on 1-year deal

NFC Divisional Playoffs: Washington Commanders v Detroit Lions

Photo by Brooke Sutton/Getty Images

Jalyn's back

Free agency has slowed down and we're entering the next phase as teams continue to tweak their rosters before next months draft. Teams have re-signed most of the players they planned to bring back, and are looking for role players and camp bodies with potential.

Defensive lineman Jalyn Holmes was a late addition to the Commanders roster last season, signing with them on October 16th, two days after getting released by the New York Jets. He played in 11 regular season games, and all three playoff games. He got his only start of the season against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in the wild card round of the playoffs. Holmes hadsacks, 14 combined tackles and 5 tackles for loss with Washington and another three tackles during the playoffs.


The Commanders are re-signing DL Jalyn Holmes to a one-year contract, according to Holmes' agent.

Thought Holmes provided good work at end and tackle. More depth regardless. https://t.co/af1DmrAG2l

— Ben Standig (@BenStandig) March 17, 2025
Def InterceptionsFumblesTackles
SeasonAgeTeamLgPosGGSIntYdsIntTDLngPDFFFmbFRYdsFRTDSkCombSoloAstTFLQBHitsSftyAVAwards
201822MINNFLDE5000000000001.03301101
201923MINNFLDE6000000000000.04221000
202024MINNFLLDE14900002000000.03616202404
202125NORNFLDE8100001000000.014772001
202226CHINFLDE1000000000000.03120000
202327NYJNFLDL5000000000001.05321100
2024282TMNFLDL16000000000002.0181176301
202428NYJNFLDL5000000000000.04131100
202428WASNFLDT11000000000002.0141045201
7 Yrs551000003000004.083434013907
17 Game Avg17300001000001.22613124302
MIN (3 Yrs)25900002000001.04321224505
NYJ (2 Yrs)10000000000001.09452200
WAS (1 Yr)11000000000002.0141045201
NOR (1 Yr)8100001000000.014772001
CHI (1 Yr)1000000000000.03120000

Defense & Fumbles Table
Provided by Pro-Football-Reference.com: View Original Table
Generated 3/17/2025.

Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/2025/3/16...ency-dl-jalyn-holmes-re-signed-on-1-year-deal
 
Daily Slop - 17 Mar 25 - Mark Bullock breaks down film of DE Deatrich Wise

New England Patriots v Arizona Cardinals

Photo by Mike Christy/Getty Images

A collection of articles, podcasts & tweets from around the web to keep you in touch with the Commanders

Commanders links

Articles​

Bullock’s Film Room (subscription)​

What DE Deatrich Wise brings to the Washington Commanders


Wise follows the pattern of free agents the Commanders have brought in under Adam Peters and Dan Quinn. He’s an experienced veteran, having played eight seasons in the NFL and has been part of winning teams, having spent all eight seasons in New England, where he won two Super Bowls with the Patriots. Wise isn’t a top tier free agent acquisition, but he could play a part in the defensive line rotation. So what does Wise bring to the Commanders? Let’s take a closer look.

The first thing that stands out about Wise is his size. Wise is listed at 6-foot-5, 280 pounds. That’s quite heavy for a typical edge defender. I think a lot of people saw that size and thought he was a player signed to reinforce the run defense, which the Commanders struggled with last season. But watching Wise, that’s not really his game. He was more of a pass rush specialist in New England, typically playing in obvious passing situations.

Wise isn’t a prolific sack artist by any means. He averages 4.25 sacks per season over his career, but that isn’t drastically different from Dante Fowler when he signed in Washington last year. At that point, Fowler averaged 5.6 sacks per season over his career. Fowler had a breakout year last season for Washington and has now re-signed with the Cowboys, so the Commanders will be hoping that they can replicate the success they had with Fowler again this year with Wise.

On the field, Wise is quite different in play style compared to Fowler. Wise doesn’t have the same burst and get off that Fowler had. Instead, he wins with his length and hand fighting techniques. He has nearly 36-inch arms, which is far longer than most NFL tackles. In fact, of the tackles currently scheduled to start this season, only one right tackle and four left tackles can match or better his arm length. I don’t think Wise uses his length enough from what I’ve seen of him, but when he does it can be a real handful.

Here we can see Wise working against 49ers left tackle Trent Williams, one of the best and most athletic left tackles in the entire NFL. Wise starts with quite a tight alignment, so works wide off the snap. He then reaches out with his inside hand and lands it on Trent Williams’ chest. You can see the issue this causes for Williams. As Wise locks out his elbow to ensure his arm is at full extension, Williams struggles to reach him. He can’t get his hands on Wise’s chest and can only just reach his shoulder. Wise uses that leverage to drive Williams back and try to turn the corner, but Williams does just enough to hold him off and allow the quarterback to scramble away from him.

I’d expect the Commanders coaches to try and get Wise to use that length a little more frequently because it’s such a huge advantage for him. I suspect they will enable him to work inside and rush against interior lineman too, which is something he didn’t do that often in New England despite his extra size. His length will stand out even more on the inside, so look out for that this season.


NFL.com

NFL free agency: Nine eye-catching roster developments from wild week

Commanders again look to win offseason​


At this time last year, the Washington Commanders had just hired new head coach Dan Quinn and were in the midst of a spending spree that made them one of the free agency winners in 2024. Soon after, Washington struck gold in the draft with quarterback Jayden Daniels, who would go on to lead the team to the NFC Championship Game in Year 1, running away with Offensive Rookie of the Year honors in the process.

Nowadays, general manager Adam Peters and Quinn are understandably in win-now mode, putting them in the conversation to win the offseason for a second straight year, despite having less money to spend this time around. Washington began by bolstering an offense that ranked seventh in yards and fifth in scoring last season, trading for Laremy Tunsil (acquired from the Texans) and Deebo Samuel (49ers). Tunsil is one of the best left tackles in the NFL, having recorded the highest Pro Football Focus pass-blocking grade (92.0) among tackles since 2018 (min. 2,500 pass block snaps). Samuel is a do-it-all playmaker who can elevate Kliff Kingsbury’s offense. Washington also gave veteran defensive tackle Javon Kinlaw a lucrative deal after releasing longtime staple Jonathan Allen (now in Minnesota).

In addition to those splashy moves, the Commanders have smartly re-signed pieces on both sides of the ball. The offense returns backup QB Marcus Mariota, RB Jeremy McNichols and tight ends John Bates and Zach Ertz, the latter of whom finished second on the team in targets (91), catches (66), receiving yards (654) and receiving TDs (seven) last season. Pro Bowl linebacker Bobby Wagner is back for Quinn’s defense. In addition, the re-signings of kicker Zane Gonzalez and punter Tress Way were crucial under-the-radar moves.


ESPN

Commanders 2025 free agency tracker: Offseason moves, signings

Tress Way, P​


Way is returning to the Commanders on a one-year deal.

What it means: Washington won’t have to worry about this position for at least another year. Way has solidified the position since joining the organization in 2014. Way averaged 46.9 yards per punt last season, which is also his career average. He punted only 50 times — and went two games in a row without one. That marked the second fewest in his career; his low is 49 set in 2016 when they played 16 games.

What’s the risk: None. Way turns 35 next month so it’s uncertain how long he’ll want to continue playing. But there’s no need to find a successor now. He’s still a very good punter.

Marcus Mariota, QB​


Mariota is returning to the Commanders on a one-year deal.

What it means: Daniels gets back a valuable mentor. It also means Mariota could not find another place where he could compete for the starting job. That was his stated desire. But, short of that, a return was at or near the top of his list. Mariota was terrific in two games replacing an injured Daniels. In wins over Carolina and Dallas — which covered five quarters — Mariota was a combined 33-for-41 for 366 yards and four touchdowns and scored another one rushing.

What’s the risk: None. Mariota proved his worth on and off the field. He liked Kliff Kingsbury’s offense and handled the role of mentoring Daniels quite well. It helps how much Daniels likes learning from veterans, but they meshed well. Breaking up that group would have been the risk. It’s a good quarterback room.


Commanders Wire

Commanders bring back key defensive line reserve for 2025


One night after re-signing defensive end Clelin Ferrell, the Commanders are bringing back defensive lineman Jalyn Homes on a one-year deal.

The Commanders initially signed the 29-year-old Holmes on October 16, and he became a part of their defensive line rotation for the remainder of the season, including in the playoffs. In 11 games for Washington, Holmes recorded 14 tackles, including five for loss, and two sacks. Before his time with the Commanders, Holmes appeared in five games for the New York Jets.

The 6-foot-5, 283-pound Holmes entered the NFL as a fourth-round pick of the Minnesota Vikings in the 2018 NFL draft. After three seasons with Minnesota, Holmes spent time with the New Orleans Saints, New York Giants, and the Chicago Bears, in addition to the Jets and Commanders. The 2015 season will be Holmes’s eighth NFL season.

Holmes excelled in a reserve role for Washington, appearing in 23% of the Commanders’ defensive snaps. The Norfolk, Virginia, native offers versatility, playing inside or on the edge.


Sports Illustrated

Commanders fans excited for new safety, and he’s appreciating the love


Will Harris agreed to sign with the team, a fact he enjoyed being part of, and shared with media in his introductory press conference last week.

“I know that when the news first broke, man, I know that my phone is still buzzing with Commanders fans,” Harris shared. “The last 48 hours, there has been so much love, and I haven’t seen anything like it. I haven’t felt anything like it, right? So man, this fan base is amazing, and I can’t wait to give ‘em everything I got. I can’t wait. ...One thing about really good fan bases, is that we work together. We work together a lot. It’s us, and we need them. We definitely need them, especially on those third downs, you know what I mean? So we’re going to make sure they’re going to bring the noise and we’re going to make sure we get off the field. I’m super excited about it.”



Hogs Haven

Breakout Candidates for the Commanders in 2025


Dominique Hampton may be a bit of a tweener who doesn’t fit the typical mold of a linebacker being a former safety yet his versatility could serve as an advantage in 2025. Hampton is on course to be a potential starter in 2025 meaning that the 2024 5th rounder has likely earned the trust of the coaching staff. He dealt with injuries throughout the season and only made one appearance making him off most people’s radars. Hampton, however, with an increased role could excell as a coverage linebacker especially considering that Washington has set up a system for him to succeed. Washington has improved their run defense significantly this offseason and this coupled with the fact Hampton already is a good scheme fit could help Hampton breakout in 2025.


Podcasts & videos


On video talking about the Commanders edge rush quest. What would you give up for Trey Hendrickson? Rather draft one? More. ⁦@ESPNRichmondhttps://t.co/PuFt7jZQTr

— John Keim (@john_keim) March 17, 2025


Episode 1,029 - Analysis of latest in Commanders free agency. Clelin Ferrell stays, Dante Fowler goes & more.

Guest: @TheHowardGutman on the Josh Harris group. Great insight on the culture change, RFK bill, Harris sticking w/ the name "Commanders" & more.https://t.co/iJbpFXWE1F

— Al Galdi (@AlGaldi) March 17, 2025

NFC East links

Blogging the Boys

Cowboys free agency: 5 targets who would be a ‘splash’ signing that are still available


1. Asante Samuel Jr (Cornerback): Samuel is causing quite the stir at the moment as a number of teams seem to be in the squabble for his skills.

His ability to play both man and zone coverage would provide flexibility to the defensive scheme making him very intriguing.

Samuel Jr. has nine interceptions and 30 pass breakups in his career, but he is coming off a season where he only played in four games. It turns out this was due to an ongoing shoulder issue that he’s had to deal with since birth. That puts a question mark around his status, and given the fact the Los Angeles Chargers’ coaches kept him on the sideline for the season adds further apprehension. Samuel Jr. will be looking for a contract that projects to being in the region of a three-year deal that’s approximately $36 million.

The question on this move is whether the price tag is worth of the risk. This one would come down to the medical situation and the risk management associated with Samuel. But he would fill a huge void in the secondary that currently remains a massive weakness on this defense.

5. Azeez Ojulari (Edge): Ojulari blew up the combine back in the day and was a big name coming out the 2021 draft class. Since joining the New York Giants he has amassed 22 sacks over four seasons, including six in 2024. His ability to pressure quarterbacks is outstanding and at only 24 years old, he still has plenty of football in him.

Unfortunately, throughout his tenure with the Giants, Ojulari has faced multiple injuries that limited his availability. In 2022, he was placed on injured reserve due to a calf injury. Similarly, in 2023, he was again placed on injured reserve which forced the Giants to find other players to hold his position.


NFL league links

Articles​

NFL.com

Five perfect free agent marriages

Jonathan Allen - DE · Age: 30 - Minnesota Vikings​


CONTRACT: Three years, $51 million, with a max value of $60 million.

Vikings defensive coordinator Brian Flores has terrorized opponents with a smoke-and-mirrors scheme that befuddles quarterbacks and blockers with relentless pressure. Though the mad scientist has successfully harassed foes without an established interior pass rusher to this point, the addition of Allen gives the Vikings a destructive force at the point of attack with superb run-stopping skills and a pass-rushing presence. The two-time Pro Bowler, who missed nine regular-season games last season due to a pectoral injury but returned for the team’s playoff run, has generated 42 sacks over eight seasons with Washington. With veterans Jonathan Greenard and Andrew Van Ginkel commanding attention on the outside, the ninth-year pro should see his sack production spike in Minneapolis.

Commanders Wire

Commanders quarterback earned an unusual bonus for one play in 2024


Driskel did appear in one game in 2024, in Week 2 against the New York Giants. He played one snap when doctors checked out Daniels, but did not record a statistic. Driskel came in, handed the ball off, departed, and was never seen on the field again last season.

The NFL announced 2024 performance bonuses recently, and only one Commander was on the list: Driskel.

Per Ben Baby of ESPN, Driskel earned $981.12 for that one play, for which he didn’t record a statistic.

Driskel entered the league as a sixth-round pick in 2016. The Commanders were his eighth NFL team. Driskel is currently an unrestricted free agent and unlikely to return to Washington. Daniels started every game last season, and Mariota came in for him twice due to injuries, but he played exceptionally well. Mariota recently re-signed for 2025. The Commanders will likely carry only two quarterbacks on the 53-man roster next season. If they carry a third, Sam Hartman would have the best chance at making the roster, and Washington could likely retain him via the practice squad.


All aTwitter


Commanders bringing back Jalyn Holmes, per his agent.

More depth and versatility on the DL. https://t.co/PaFMk6EjYP

— Sam Fortier (@Sam4TR) March 17, 2025


Passion & intensity pic.twitter.com/zy7AUxexzu

— Washington Commanders (@Commanders) March 16, 2025

Rick Pitino's answer as to why his teams improve soon after he takes over unintentionally explains the Commanders with Peters and Quinn. pic.twitter.com/cLIoGkaMfP

— Ben Standig (@BenStandig) March 16, 2025


32 draftable grades on this years RB class. Group is loaded with depth. There were 30 RBs drafted in 2017. Could see more this year. A few of my favorites outside of Round 2:

• DJ Giddens – Kansas St
• Devin Neal – Kansas
• LeQuint Allen – Syracuse
• Brashard Smith – SMU

— Jordan Reid (@Jordan_Reid) March 16, 2025



THE #BENGALS WILL BE SPENDING 44% OF THEIR SALARY CAP ON JUST 3 OFFENSIVE PLAYERS

Joe Burrow: $55M AAV
Ja’Marr Chase: $40.25M AAV
Tee Higgins: $28.75M AAV

125 MILLION DOLLARS PER YEAR ON THE THREE.

$125M is 44.77% of the 2025 salary cap: $279.2M.

THIS IS UNHEARD OF. pic.twitter.com/z8I4Uz6C7W

— MLFootball (@_MLFootball) March 17, 2025

Ja’Marr Chase topped Justin Jefferson

“If I want to beat Justin Jefferson, I’m going to beat the sh*t out of Justin. Not by a penny, brother.”

Chase kept his word, getting over $5M more than Justin. https://t.co/g9s9jjljfT pic.twitter.com/jvTfca98au

— Dov Kleiman (@NFL_DovKleiman) March 17, 2025

Meanwhile, to compare with one (not so) random team, the Broncos are below $20M APY among Bo Nix, Courtland Sutton, and Marvin Mims.https://t.co/CIcdk6Sazh

— Nick Korte (@nickkorte) March 17, 2025

Sources: Cincinnati is working to retain Trey Hendrickson and discussions are ongoing between the two sides.

The Bengals are attempting to do what many in the league thought difficult and keep — and pay — all three of their stars. pic.twitter.com/3fQjvqjwZg

— Dianna Russini (@DMRussini) March 17, 2025

players averaging over $28.5M on roster:

3 - CIN*

2 - DET, PHI, MIA, CLE, SF, DAL, KC

1 - BUF, PIT, NO, GB, BAL, JAX, MIN, ARI, ATL, LAC, SEA, LAR, TB, LV

0 - CAR, CHI, DEN, HOU, IND, NE, NYG, NYJ, TEN, WAS

*Joe Burrow, Ja'Marr Chase, Tee Higgins after each WR signed new…

— Warren Sharp (@SharpFootball) March 17, 2025


Philly has lost a lot of defensive pieces this free agency… @NFLonPrime #RaiseHail pic.twitter.com/uuLtGkN8if

— SleeperCommanders (@SleeperWSH) March 16, 2025


posting a photo from last season every day until OTAs pic.twitter.com/sodVXTu6ZY

— Washington Commanders (@Commanders) March 16, 2025

VCU IS NCAA TOURNAMENT BOUND

The Rams are headed back to the dance after winning the A-10 Championship #MarchMadness pic.twitter.com/qHKDwaxEiV

— NCAA March Madness (@MarchMadnessMBB) March 16, 2025

THE BRACKET #MarchMadness pic.twitter.com/fo6lA8hJ7g

— NCAA March Madness (@MarchMadnessMBB) March 16, 2025


Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/2025/3/17...-bullock-breaks-down-film-of-de-deatrich-wise
 
Laremy Tunsil Presser: Jayden Daniels is a baller and he’s going to make my job hella easy.

Screenshot_2025_03_17_143221.0.png


Washington’s new left tackle introduces himself to the local media and fans

A hot topic of conversation all offseason had been what Adam Peters would do to enhance the Washington Commanders offensive line ahead of the 2025 season. A week ago, we all learned the answer when the NFL world was stunned by the announcement of a trade between the Commanders and Texans that would bring one of the best left tackles in the NFL, Laremy Tunsil, to Washington for a handful of picks. The trade was made official on Saturday, and the Commanders new LT spoke to the media today.

Tunsil talked about the trade from the Texans to the Commanders, and how it was different from when Miami moved him. It was business for Houston as they wanted to get younger, and they’ve made a lot of changes this offseason. Tunsil will move from blocking for C.J. Stroud to blocking for Jayden Daniels, and he’s ready for his new QB to make his “job hella easy”.

Tunsil was asked about his contract after the trade, and if he’s pushing for a new deal with his new team. He has two years left on his current deal, but he passed on the question and said Adam Peters and the front office know where he stands on that. Tunsil is due $21.35 million over each of his remaining years, but doesn’t have any guaranteed money for his final year.

Laremy Tunsil is entering his 10th NFL season, and he said the best is yet to come. The sky’s the limit with this team as long as Jayden Daniels is under center. Tunsil talked about eliminating the 19 penalties he had last year, and improving in every aspect of his game. He’s also working on being a mentor to young players which will help second-year offensive tackle Brandon Coleman who will be switching positions after the Tunsil trade.


LT at LT@KingTunsil78 | #RaiseHail pic.twitter.com/ymneEZn8IX

— Washington Commanders (@Commanders) March 15, 2025
LIVE: T Laremy Tunsil speaks to the media https://t.co/IWopzjlh3r

— Washington Commanders (@Commanders) March 17, 2025

Nothing personal, just business:

Tunsil added: "I honestly think it was a business move to play the young guys. ... I don't think it was anything personal. I don't think it was [based] off play last year."https://t.co/ZV5Bv7kABZ

— Nicki Jhabvala (@NickiJhabvala) March 17, 2025
Tunsil said he's learned to not take anything personal with being traded, as he's been through the situation twice now. Appreciates the Texans organization and them giving him a call to notify him of their decision

— Zach Selby (@ZachSelbyWC) March 17, 2025
Laremy Tunsil said he understands the business of football and doesn't take the trade as anything personal from the Texans end. Said he appreciated Houston giving him a heads up about the trade, something that wasn't afforded him when traded from Miami

— Ben Standig (@BenStandig) March 17, 2025

Huge impact:

New Commanders LT Laremy Tunsil:

“I think I can make a huge impact quickly. They traded for me for that reason.” pic.twitter.com/9g7f7Dt45M

— Sam Fortier (@Sam4TR) March 17, 2025
Laremy Tunsil addressing the media. Thinks he can make a "huge impact." "Pass protector, a damn good run blocker." Also mentioned he can be a mentor to younger players

— Zach Selby (@ZachSelbyWC) March 17, 2025

Jayden Daniels:


#Commanders LT Laremy Tunsil on playing with his new QB Jayden Daniels:

“I damn sure can’t wait to block for Jayden Daniels.” pic.twitter.com/JTlQzuG5ip

— brandon (@JayDanielsMVP) March 17, 2025
Tunsil said he "damn sure can't wait" to block for Jayden Daniels. "He's a baller."

— Zach Selby (@ZachSelbyWC) March 17, 2025
Laremy Tunsil on Jayden Daniels: "He's a baller and he's going to make my job hella easy."

— Nicki Jhabvala (@NickiJhabvala) March 17, 2025
Word Tunsil used to describe Jayden Daniels: "Athletic. Composed."

— Zach Selby (@ZachSelbyWC) March 17, 2025

Contract negotiations:

Laremy Tunsil when asked if about his remaining 2 years and if he's looking for more: "[Adam Peters] and the front office know where I stand on that."

— Nicki Jhabvala (@NickiJhabvala) March 17, 2025

Energy in the building:

Laremy Tunsil on his first view of the Commanders' "culture" from his visit over the weekend: "The energy in that building is off the charts, really. Everybody is happy, everybody is energetic, everybody is looking to win."

— Nicki Jhabvala (@NickiJhabvala) March 17, 2025

Penalties last year:


#Commanders LT Laremy Tunsil on his penalties last year:

“Those 19 penalties I had last season was unacceptable. That’s something I want to address for sure, getting that number down or even having none…” pic.twitter.com/Fdpi1z3cwX

— brandon (@JayDanielsMVP) March 17, 2025
Tunsil said the 19 penalties he had last season were "unacceptable" and wants to work on getting that number down next season

— Zach Selby (@ZachSelbyWC) March 17, 2025

Sky’s the limit:

Tunsil: The sky's the limit for this team

— Zach Selby (@ZachSelbyWC) March 17, 2025

Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/2025/3/17...aller-and-hes-going-to-make-my-job-hella-easy
 
Daily Slop - 18 Mar 25 - Spotlight interview with new Commanders CB Jonathan Jones

NFL: Indianapolis Colts at New England Patriots

Eric Canha-Imagn Images

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Five things to know about LT Laremy Tunsil


The trade made waves in the NFL.

The move between the Commanders and Texans was an unexpected one, as reports of the trade began emerging on social media not long after the legal tampering period opened on March 10. The Commanders, who advanced to the NFC Championship last year, made an aggressive move to acquire one of the best offensive tackles in the sport and shore up a serious position of need; so, naturally, the move made waves around the NFL.

“Tunsil is a dog, bro,” said Las Vegas Raiders defensive end Maxx Crosby. “That’s the one that really stuck out to me amidst all the craziness. That one, definitely for sure.”

Dallas Cowboys edge rusher Micah Parsons had a more simplistic, yet no less effective, way of expressing his feelings about the trade.

“Wtf,” he posted on X.

Meanwhile, reporters generally praised the move by Washington to acquire Tunsil. Sporting News’ Vinnie Iyer gave the Commanders an “A,” saying “the veteran tackle immediately becomes a key leader of the line with plenty of high-level play left in him ahead of turning 31 in August.” The Athletic gave the Commanders an “A-” for elevating their personnel at offensive tackle.

Although it might have cost Washington valuable draft capital, the belief is that the player is worth the cost and raises the offense’s ceiling.


Tunsil said the energy in the building at Washington is "off the charts" and he's glad to be part of it

— Zach Selby (@ZachSelbyWC) March 17, 2025

Washington Post (paywall)​

Laremy Tunsil ‘damn sure can’t wait to block’ for Jayden Daniels


This time, Tunsil is joining a team that finished 12-5, with a rookie of the year quarterback in Jayden Daniels and a widely respected coach in Dan Quinn. For perhaps the first time in decades, Washington is a coveted landing spot — for free agents, draftees and trade acquisitions, including Tunsil.

“Just watching this team on film last year, a tremendous team, top to bottom — special teams, defense, offense,” Tunsil said. “I think [General Manager Adam Peters and Quinn] put a great team together and just added a few more pieces, added myself. It’s only going to make it better.”

Tunsil’s potential to revamp Washington’s offensive line and transform the offense can’t be overstated. The Commanders’ line has undergone multiple iterations in recent years, but it hadn’t received significant investment before last year, when Washington gave guard Sam Cosmi a four-year, $74 million extension.

But everything changed last year thanks to the play of Daniels. Washington made it clear late last season, when it traded for cornerback Marshon Lattimore, that its front office was out to win now, maximizing the few years left on Daniels’s rookie contract.

“In my opinion, they traded for me for that reason, just to make a huge impact on the team,” Tunsil said. “I’m down to do whatever they want me to do, especially at Year 10. If they need me to play quarterback and back up Jayden Daniels, then I can do that — running back, whatever.”

Tunsil said he “damn sure can’t wait to block for” Daniels, calling him “a baller” just from watching him on TV and game film.

“It seems like he’s a better dude, too, just hearing from a lot of people just around the locker room and his teammates at LSU. I know a couple of guys,” Tunsil said. “… So I can’t wait. He’ll make my job hella easy.”


The Athletic (paywall)​

Commanders proving they won’t get complacent coming off surprising season


“For the guys that are coming back, I think the messaging is very simple,” Ertz said on a video call with local reporters. “We can’t say we’re 12-5 and be complacent in how we approach the process. We have to get better as a football team.”

That’s how general manager Adam Peters and coach Dan Quinn entered the transactional part of the offseason. Washington acquired wide receiver Deebo Samuel and left tackle Laremy Tunsil in a pair of splashy trades that cost four draft picks, including a 2025 third- and 2026 second-rounder. Combined with last season’s trade deadline acquisition of cornerback Marshon Lattimore, the team that sincerely believes in building through the draft lost six selections from its war chest.

This divergent path from last year’s slower and self-described recalibration approach has led to “all in for the Super Bowl” talk, or at least the idea of Washington being extra aggressive after a surprising season.

Risk-reward debates followed, including the thought of pushing in more chips by trading for Bengals defensive end Trey Hendrickson. Cincinnati’s trade demands — a first-round pick at minimum — and potentially a lack of interest in moving the 2024 sacks leader in search of a new contract are the hold-ups in any deal, league sources tell The Athletic. The sources said Washington has explored a Hendrickson trade, but the level of interest following the move for Tunsil is unclear.

The fork-in-the-road scenario for Washington’s consideration added a twist. The rare two-year window with a star quarterback playing on a far cheaper rookie contract before becoming extension-eligible creates an aggressive roster-building opportunity.

“Draft picks are fun … but oftentimes they do take a few years to develop,” said the 34-year-old Ertz following the Samuel and Tunsil deals. “For a guy that wants to win now, just like everyone else in this building, sometimes (trades) are a little bit of a shortcut to get a proven commodity. There is no guessing or projection in that regard.”


Commanders.com

Mock Draft Monday | CBS Sports’ Garrett Podell gives Commanders athletic pass-rusher


The opinions expressed in this article do not reflect those of the team.

This week, we’re looking at a recent mock draft from CBS Sports’ Garrett Podell, who provided Washington with a talented, athletic edge rusher.

Donovan Ezeiruaku, EDGE, Boston College​


The Washington Commanders entered their second offseason with general manager Adam Peters at the helm with several holes to fill, and one of the biggest was at edge rusher.

The need to find a player who can consistently disrupt quarterbacks increased since free agency began on March 12. Dante Fowler Jr., who led the team in sacks last year, is headed back to the Dallas Cowboys on a one-year deal. The team has focused on adding depth pieces and players with upside like Javon Kinlaw, but most of the top options have signed elsewhere. Though there are solid players still available, the Commanders appear to be lacking a true game-changer at the position.

However, the Commanders can still turn to the draft, and this year’s class is considered to be heavy on pass-rushing talent. Even at 29th overall — currently the team’s first of five picks — the expectations are for there to be impactful players, and Podell has given Washington one of this year’s best in Boston College’s Donovan Ezeiruaku.

“He’s quick off the snap, using bend and agility to win at the top of the rush or make stops in the backfield,” **wrote NFL.com’s Lance Zierlein.** “His hands exploit small advantages to turn them into big ones and he has a variety of ways to challenge protection, though he’s still learning to craft his plans.”

The Commanders could use a player who knows how to step up against the run and pass on their roster in 2025. They were fine in sack production last year with 43 in 2024 — in fairness, that’s tied for the most they’ve recorded in a season since 2020 — but there were moments when it was clear they still needed more from their defensive ends. The defense’s performance against the run was troublesome all season, although it was most glaring when the Philadelphia Eagles rushed for 229 yards in the NFC Championship.

And Ezeiruaku would not provide a complete solution to Washington’s defensive issues. He likes to cut under offensive tackles, which can result in him losing contain and providing an escape route for quarterbacks. Although he’s found ways around his size, it’s clear that it does hinder him at times in the run game.

The good news is that Ezeiruaku doesn’t have to carry the burden of being Washington’s only solution on the edge, especially as a rookie. The staff has shown a knack for finding what players do well and putting them in the best scenario to succeed. For Ezeiruaku, that’s beating players around the edge and getting quarterbacks on the ground.

“Ezeiruaku’s play demeanor, skill and athletic talent are the underpinnings of a productive starter with three-down value,” Zierlein wrote.


Commanders Wire

Are the Commanders bringing back too many of their own players?


“Is Will Harris an upgrade over Jeremy Chinn? Jeremy Chinn was pretty good as the season went along...Jeremy Chinn’s contract was more noteworthy than Will Harris. It suggests the marketplace wanted Jeremy Chinn more than it wanted Will Harris. So it is hard to say on paper that this (signing) has been an improvement.”

How about Johnny Newton? Yes, he got off to a rough start, requiring surgery on both feet in the offseason. So he could come back better prepared for his second season. However, the team encouraged Jonathan Allen to look elsewhere. Does anyone know that Javon Kinlaw will be better than Allen? Or will Newton be better than Allen?

Standig concluded, by way of an analogy, “It feels like they are bringing the band back together, and the band was off key for a good chunk of their performances last year. It is confusing, and I kind of get the guys they brought back. By the way, the defensive line has 11 guys that could make the team, but is it good enough to improve?”


Podcasts & videos

2x Super Bowl Champion Jonathan Jones is still “HUNGRY to WIN” | Next Man Up | NFL Free Agency​



Super-sized episode with @davidaldridgedc.

What aggressive moves for Tunsil, Deebo say about internal approach. The Trey Hendrickson potential. Latest moves on the line. "Mock Draft Monday" post-FA. DA on the late John Feinstein.https://t.co/FfEzwYim3x

— Ben Standig (@BenStandig) March 17, 2025

Nicki Jhabvala on the Tunsil Trade and Other Moves | John Keim Report​


NFC East links

Bleeding Green Nation

Lane Johnson, Eagles agree to contract extension through 2027


Here are some details on the new deal, via NFL insider Adam Schefter:

Johnson has reworked his contract to add $8 million dollars over the next two years, and an additional $30 million in guarantees, per his agent Ken Sarnoff from 1 of 1 Agency. The soon-to-be 35-year-old Johnson now will earn $48 million over the next two years, including $40 million guaranteed. [...] In the end, Eagles All-Pro RT Lane Johnson added one year at $25 million to his deal and he now is under contract through the 2027 season.

Eagles sign former Giants second-round pick


Intriguing pass rusher addition!

The Philadelphia Eagles are signing free agent edge rusher Azeez Ojulari to a one-year, $4 million contract, according to a report from NFL insider Jeremy Fowler.

The New York Giants reportedly tried to retain their second-round pick (No. 50 overall) from the 2021 NFL Draft. But Fowler notes that the Eagles “heavily recruited” Ojulari, who played college football at Georgia (ever hear of that school?).

Ojulari was one of the more intriguing free agent options remaining on the open market. It’s a bit surprising he didn’t generate a higher price tag since:

  • He’s only 24 years old (turns 25 on June 16)
  • He’s produced 22 sacks, 37 QB hits, and 21 TFLs in 46 career games played (30 starts)
  • He plays a premium position

It is worth noting that injury issues have caused Ojulari to miss 22 games over the past three years. He hasn’t been available for an entire season since his rookie campaign in 2021.


Big Blue View

New York Giants free agency: QB Jameis Winston to meet with the Giants


The Giants’ QB search continues

The Giants, like every other team still in the market for a quarterback, are in a holding pattern while the Minnesota Vikings decide whether or not to court Aaron Rodgers, and Rodgers weighs his various options.

Russell Wilson is likely the next-best option for the Giants, though they have competition from the Pittsburgh Steelers in that regard.

Winston is significantly younger than either Wilson or Rodgers, just turning 31 in January of this year. He’s a volatile passer who’s disregard for risk for a potential reward, but his arm strength and mobility could mesh with a more aggressive version of the Giants’ offense. He’s also said that he has “a ton of respect for coach Brian Daboll, the things he does offensively.”

Winston has also said that he would “absolutely” sign with the Giants and that he believes that the Giants’ young roster is ready to win now. We’ll see if he gets the chance to back up his beliefs.


NFL league links

Articles​

The Athletic (paywall)​

Is Kyle McCord an NFL Draft sleeper? QB guru Jordan Palmer thinks so — and he can prove it


“Playing quarterback is different,” Palmer says. “Golfers swing when they’re ready. When I tell you a pitcher throws 94, you wouldn’t ask me, ‘From how far away?’

“Everything quarterbacks do is a reaction. And you do not need to be the most dynamic athlete in the world to create time and space, to make plays.”

He believes coaches and organizations are inching closer to seeing things a bit different when it comes to player evaluation, especially at quarterback.

He also believes the game is still at least a decade behind where it should be, although he’s convinced it won’t take another decade to make up that ground.

“Ten years ago, if I would’ve said, ‘That receiver over there runs 22,’ you’d have said, ‘Twenty-two what?’ Now, they’re talking about how a kid runs 22 miles per hour before they talk about his 40 time,” Palmer says. “I believe, within the next few years, you’re going to (be able to) point to that quarterback, and I’ll ask you, ‘How good is he?’ And you’ll say, ‘He’s a 760.’ And I’ll be like, ‘Wow, he can spin it.’ Or, ‘That guy has small hands, but he’s a 770′ — and I don’t care that he has small hands, because he can spin it.’

“We’re replacing the nomenclature over time.”


Discussion topics

Pro Football Talk

Last Week Tonight tackles sports betting


In the latest episode, the topic was sports betting.

It’s worth watching. It shines a light on issues like the three-leg parlay, termed a “sucker” bet because it’s so hard to win. Oliver explains that one study showed parlays account for a quarter of the bets made but more than half of the betting revenue.

Think of it this way. If the odds are set properly so that each leg is a 50-50 proposition, it’s like winning a coin toss three times in a row. Statistically, that has a 12.5-percent chance of happening.

The show also delves into the problem of gambling addiction. At one point, it was mentioned that 86 percent of online gambling profits come from only five percent of the gamblers.

The fact that gambling is happening via mobile devices makes it even easy to develop the same kind of habits that are developed on the various other things that can be done on a phone. And it sets the stage for some bettors to lose and lose and lose and lose until there’s nothing else to lose.

Seven years after the Supreme Court opened the floodgates, the gambling industry remains in its Wild West phase. Regulation is needed. For the NFL, a major scandal seems inevitable. Even without it, many will get hooked on betting through “sucker” bets like parlays, and some will keep chasing their losses until there’s nothing left to lose.


All aTwitter


LT Laremy Tunsil on getting traded from the Houston Texans to the Washington Commanders: pic.twitter.com/eb6g62vLGX

— Sam Fortier (@Sam4TR) March 17, 2025

#Commanders LT Laremy Tunsil on playing with his new QB Jayden Daniels:

“I damn sure can’t wait to block for Jayden Daniels.” pic.twitter.com/JTlQzuG5ip

— brandon (@JayDanielsMVP) March 17, 2025

Laremy Tunsil on his first view of the Commanders' "culture" from his visit over the weekend: "The energy in that building is off the charts, really. Everybody is happy, everybody is energetic, everybody is looking to win."

— Nicki Jhabvala (@NickiJhabvala) March 17, 2025

New Washington LT Laremy Tunsil: "I can make a huge impact... pass protector, damn good run blocker.... They traded for me for that reason."

— John Keim (@john_keim) March 17, 2025

Tunsil: "Those 19 penalties I had last year were unacceptable."

— John Keim (@john_keim) March 17, 2025

Yes LT Laremy Tunsil (LTLT) led the league in total penalties

Total yards lost in penalties over 18 games: 95

Total yards lost in penalties by Marshon Lattimore in 4 games with Commanders: 96 pic.twitter.com/fixB6qW77R

— RefTheDistrict (@RefTheDistrict) March 16, 2025

Tunsil played 1041 snaps.
He messed up on 19 of them.
The other 1,022 he was one of the most dominant left tackles in football.

— John Tayman (@BangRadioHour) March 16, 2025

Jayden Danielspic.twitter.com/FUhQH1VZCG https://t.co/89fhVRBXg7

— COMMANDERS FOOTBALL (@HogsHaven) March 17, 2025

Tahj Brooks is intrigued by the Commanders due to their Texas Tech tree of Kliff Kingsbury and Anthony Lynn on staff. @heykayadams | @just_tahj pic.twitter.com/w7mNvlxEKr

— Up & Adams (@UpAndAdamsShow) March 17, 2025

Despite winning the Nagurski Award, Kyle Kennard isn't mentioned with the top pass rushers. But he isn't taking it personally. "The people who make decisions in the rooms don't really have Twitter accounts. So I take it all with a grain of salt." pic.twitter.com/SgQaGG79zp

— TURRON DAVENPORT (@TDavenport_NFL) February 26, 2025


Reading the notes of an Over the Cap article, I noticed this info about Bobby Wagner earning a $750K bonus in 2024.

End-of-season bonuses are an important part of the salary cap puzzle that require teams to keep a contingency reserve for cap compliance.https://t.co/fDrBn5rksA pic.twitter.com/LRINDQa209

— Bill-in-Bangkok (@billhorgan2005) March 18, 2025


Patriots OT Morgan Moses' 3-year, $24 million deal.

• $4.2 million signing bonus.
• $2.3 million base in 2025.
• $4.5 million of 2026 money is fully guaranteed.
• $15 million over first two years.

— Albert Breer (@AlbertBreer) March 17, 2025

Few things to keep in mind as the #Bengals try to extend Trey Hendrickson:

-Uptick in talks occurred late last week, before the Higgins/Chase started to get locked in
-There is definitely trade interest. But the Bengals have not shown an eagerness to deal him
-This will…

— Jeremy Fowler (@JFowlerESPN) March 17, 2025


way too early NFC West winner?#NFL #NFLDraft #FTTB #RamsHouse #BirdGang #Seahawks

— Rich Eisen Show (@RichEisenShow) March 17, 2025

What have you heard AJ

We're asking you @OfficialAJHawk #PMSLive https://t.co/Cvr7iui51q pic.twitter.com/H1V2zAd5d7

— Pat McAfee (@PatMcAfeeShow) March 17, 2025

Yikes! 3 years ago, this was our reality. Life comes at you fast #RaiseHail pic.twitter.com/9abrGUYzU6

— Commanders Squad CLT (@CommandersCLT) March 17, 2025

Heaven Birthday, "Slingin'" Sammy Baugh ️

The #NFL's first true star quarterback

• PFHOF Inaugural Class (1963)
• NFL 75th Anniversary Team and NFL100 All-Time Team#HTTR #RaiseHail pic.twitter.com/Jpgig77vnR

— Kevin Gallagher (@KevG163) March 17, 2025


Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/2025/3/18...terview-with-new-commanders-cb-jonathan-jones
 
Washington Commanders Free Agency: Former Chargers OT Foster Sarell signed

NFL: AUG 20 Preseason - Cowboys at Chargers

Photo by Brian Rothmuller/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

New OT!

The Washington Commanders are still making additions to their roster, and they have reportedly signed OT Foster Sarell. He has been with the Los Angeles Chargers for the last four seasons. He was originally signed by the Baltimore Ravens as an UDFA from Stanford after the 2021 draft. He was on the Ravens and Giants practice squads his rookie season, before getting signed by the Chargers. He didn’t get playing time until his second season when he started 3 games and appeared in seven games. He’s been a backup since then appearing in 28 games, but he wasn’t re-signed for a second year with head coach Jim Harbaugh.

Washington is reshaping their offensive line again, and they need solid depth and competition at every position. Laremy Tunsil was added via trade to lock down the LT position, freeing up last year’s starter Brandon Coleman to go to RT or inside to guard. RG Sam Cosmi tore his ACL in January, and could be replaced by last year’s starting RT, Andrew Wylie. Cornelius Lucas has been the team’s swing tackle, but he left in free agency, while Trent Scott re-signed. Sarell would likely be in competition for a backup role in Washington

Added protection up front pic.twitter.com/J8KcJab6bM

— Washington Commanders (@Commanders) March 18, 2025
Washington is signing OT Foster Sarell. He spent the past four years with the Chargers. In the last three years he started three games and appeared in 35.

— John Keim (@john_keim) March 18, 2025
GamesOff.Def.ST
YearAgeTmPosNo.GGSNumPctNumPctNumPct
202224LACT737325050%00%147%
202325LACT73170484%00%6815%
202426LACT73110406%00%4716%
Career3380129

Snap Counts Table
Provided by Pro-Football-Reference.com: View Original Table
Generated 3/18/2025.

Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/2025/3/18...gency-former-chargers-ot-foster-sarell-signed
 
Ashton Gillotte Is a Rugged Pass Rusher That Could Help the Commanders

Louisville Cardinals v Virginia Cavaliers

Photo by Chris Bernacchi/Diamond Images via Getty Images

Hogs Haven takes a look at 2025 NFL Draft prospects that could contribute to the Commanders

Ashton Gillotte, DE/EDGE
School:
University of Louisville | Conference: Atlantic Coast Conference
College Experience: Senior
Height / Weight: 6’3”/ 264 lbs
Projected Draft Status: 3rd-4th round

Player Comparison: Olivier Vernon

College Statistics

TacklesDef InterceptionsFumbles
SeasonTeamConfClassPosGSoloAstCombTFLSkIntYdsIntTDPDFRYdsFRTDFFAwards
2021*LouisvilleACCFRDL131541984.000000000
2022*LouisvilleACCSODL1212122487.000012001
2023*LouisvilleACCJRDL142322451511.000001003
2024*LouisvilleACCSRDL12232043104.500000000
Career5173581314126.500013004

Defense & Fumbles Table
Provided by CFB at Sports Reference: View Original Table
Generated 3/19/2025.

Player Overview


A three-star two position recruit (DE/TE) from Boca Raton HS (FL), Ashton Gillotte chose Louisville over Maryland, Pitt, Syracuse, Duke, and Kansas. Gillotte became a starter in his second season, turning heads with his conference honorable mention honors. In his last two seasons, Gillotte has become the premier defensive lineman of the ACC, accumulating 120 total pressures (sacks + hurries + hits). Ashton had 15.5 sacks and 25 TFL (tackles for loss), and 3 FF (forced fumbles). Gillotte leaves as one of the most refined and productive defensive lineman in the conference.

Ashton Gillotte profiles as a versatile, refined power rusher. While scouts project Gillotte’s sawed-off build to limit his upside, Gillotte is able to make the most of his physical tools. His best attributes are his arm length and his heavy hands that he uses to mow down tackles and collapse the pocket. Gillotte shows the capability to anchor against double teams and set the edge in run defense. This is also coupled with his motor and effort in pursuit. He has a solid floor as a pass and run defender, capable of rushing from different positions. While he is not the exceptional athlete desired for the position, Ashton is a prospect who can be an immediate rotation player with a path of becoming a starter.

Awards & Recognition:

  • All-ACC Honorable Mention (2022)
  • First Team All-ACC (2023)
  • Second Team All-American (2023)
  • Second Team All-ACC (2024)
  • All-ACC Academic Team (2024)

Metrics


PFF: 87.8 overall graded. 89.9 pass rush grade (2024)


Ashton Gillotte is a DE prospect in the 2025 draft class. He does not qualify for a #RAS due to a lack of measurements.

40 and agilities pending at pro day.https://t.co/15fnCM6EBY pic.twitter.com/Or85N7g5hm

— Kent Lee Platte (@MathBomb) February 28, 2025

Strengths

  • Violent hands, effectively using them to combat blockers' punches.
  • Great closing burst combined with a good motor and effort.
  • Able to collapse the pocket as a bull rusher. Has a decent swim move.
  • Effective rushing inside and outside.
  • Versatile, effective as a 3-tech, 5-tech, or wide-9.
  • Able to set the edge as a run defender, taking on blocks with solid pad level.

Weaknesses

  • Scouts consider him a tweener.
  • Does not have coveted high-end speed.
  • Limited athletic upside.
  • Average bend, with some hip stiffness.
  • Doesn’t have the flexibility to be a great finesse rusher.

Let’s See His Work


Louisville EDGE 9 Ashton Gillotte ... you have my attention sir pic.twitter.com/awhWuzrXqn

— Russell Brown (@RussNFLDraft) February 26, 2025

.@AshtonGillotte reppin' The Ville in Indy

#NFLCombine on @nflnetwork #GoCards pic.twitter.com/pwQwaK4dVJ

— Louisville Football (@LouisvilleFB) February 28, 2025

Interviews

How Will He Fit On The Team


After the first wave of NFL free agency, the Commanders have addressed the defensive end position by signing two players. Barring any trades, it is suspected Washington will draft another defensive end to pair with Dorance Armstrong. Given the archetype of defensive ends Dan Quinn prefers, Ashton Gillotte would be a fit for the defense line that prefers versatility and a well-rounded game. Washington should be able to find ways to use Gillotte in various defensive line alignments.

Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/2025/3/19...her-that-could-help-the-waahingtpn-commanders
 
Daily Slop - 19 Mar 25 - Re-live the second half of the ‘24 season with Commanders Log: Season 4, Episode 2

temp_winning_time_moments.0.jpg


A collection of articles, podcasts & tweets from around the web to keep you in touch with the Commanders

Commanders links

Articles​

Commanders.com

Five things to know about S Will Harris


He’s got a good connection with Marshon Lattimore.

Harris is eager to get himself acquainted with his new teammates, but he already has a close relationship with one of the Commanders’ defensive backs. For the first time since Week 9 last season, Harris will get to work alongside Marshon Lattimore again.

“That’s my dog,” Harris said of Lattimore. “That’s my guy. Definitely super excited to reconnect with him. Obviously, enough can’t be said about [Lattimore]. He’s a super competitor. The guy’s been doing it at a high level for so long.”

Lattimore was the first big move the Commanders made to revamp their secondary by trading for him from the New Orleans Saints. He only played in two regular season games because of a hamstring injury, but the coaches like the competitiveness he brings to the field and believe he’ll get back to playing at a Pro Bowl level with a full offseason of recovery in their program.

But Harris knows the kind of player Lattimore can be when he’s healthy. It wasn’t long ago that Lattimore was a regular selection for the Pro Bowl and getting double-digit pass breakups. That talent flashed at times when Harris and Lattimore were on the field together, and Harris is excited to be paired up together again.

“When you’re playing the safety position, it definitely makes your job a little easier having guys like that out there,” Harris said.


ESPN

2025 NFL free agency: Experts debate best, worst signings

What was the biggest head-scratcher signing of free agency?​


Solak: The Commanders signing Kinlaw. It is a big overpay, though it’s not surprising why it happened. Commanders general manager Adam Peters drafted Kinlaw with the 49ers, and he remains one of the most physically impressive defensive tackles. Dan Quinn’s defense is a good fit for his skill set, too — simple, upfield responsibilities. But $15 million per year is a huge number for a player who hasn’t strung together consistent, starting-caliber play.


Washington Post (paywall)​

The Commanders added 10 new players. Here’s how they fit in.


Adam Peters and the Washington Commanders prioritized adding big bodies on both offense and defense in free agency. Here’s a deeper look.

Washington Commanders General Manager Adam Peters started the offseason by retaining 18 internal free agents and signing or trading for 10 new players. Peters prioritized helping quarterback Jayden Daniels and bringing in big bodies. Seven of the 10 new players are linemen, and they are big in different ways.

Defensive tackle Javon Kinlaw, for example, is 6-foot-5, 319 pounds and has 34⅞-inch arms — those metrics, according to a database of scouting combine figures, are all in the 84th percentile or higher for defensive linemen.

The team also added backups with size: edge rusher Deatrich Wise Jr. (96th percentile arms), defensive tackle Eddie Goldman (94th percentile weight) and guard Nate Herbig (93rd percentile weight).

The emphasis on heft seems like a direct response to the Philadelphia Eagles, whose famously big and talented lines helped them win Super Bowl LIX.

But the strategy also seems more nuanced than that. Let’s look at how all 10 players might fit with the team, including a “one-liner,” which is used by many NFL scouts to summarize player reports.

LT Laremy Tunsil​


Elite, force-multiplying left tackle who lets play-callers set their clocks to island time.

Tunsil (6-5, 313) is the most important addition of the offseason so far because of how he should upgrade Daniels’s protection. He’s one of the league’s best pass blockers. Expect offensive coordinator Kliff Kingsbury to leave him one-on-one against top pass rushers.

DT Javon Kinlaw​


Big, disruptive lineman who has a good motor, and though his attacking style can lead to misses against the run and on tackles, the Commanders are betting they can maximize his size and pass-rush strengths.

Kinlaw’s three-year deal worth up to $45 million was one of the most widely panned moves of free agency. One critic, salary cap analyst Jason Fitzgerald, graded the signing an “F.” A rival NFL personnel executive, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss another team’s signing, called it “a pretty big bet.”

The deal could make better sense if the Commanders use Kinlaw more as a pass rusher. He struggled with the New York Jets as a run-stopping nose tackle last year but flashed improvement at the end of a lost season. Kinlaw, who struggled with knee injuries in college and early in his NFL career, played every game the past two seasons and is just 27, meaning the optimistic take is that the Commanders bought low on a potentially ascending player.

Former NFL tight end Logan Paulsen, now a Commanders analyst, suggested on an episode of the “Take Command” podcast that Washington’s defense could use Kinlaw as a big end. Coach Dan Quinn had a similar role for a similarly sized player in Red Bryant (6-5, 326) when he coached Seattle’s defense.

S Will Harris​


Whack-a-mole hammer who can line up anywhere and deliver tone-setting hits.

Harris (6-1, 206) will likely get the first crack at replacing safety Jeremy Chinn, who signed with Las Vegas, but Harris is truly versatile. In his first six seasons — five with Detroit and one with New Orleans — he played both safety spots, slot corner and outside corner. Last year, he started 13 games and played mostly safety.


Sports Illustrated​

Commanders starting WR provides major update


The Washington Commanders received good news regarding wide receiver Noah Brown’s 2024 season-ending injury.

During Washington’s week 13 matchup against the Tennessee Titans, Brown suffered an injury that isn’t all that common on the football field. It took some time for the injury to be announced but when it was, Brown was hit with a season-ending kidney injury that cut his season short immediately.

With his future up in the air following the end of the 2024 season, the Commanders did right by the veteran wideout, re-signing him to a one-year, $4.5 million deal this free agency period and when speaking with the media, Brown gave an update on his rehab from his season-ending kidney injury that Commanders’ fan should be joyous about.

Commanders’ receiver Noah Brown says he’s been fully cleared from his season-ending injury for about two weeks now and is working hard toward the upcoming season.


ESPN

Commanders 2025 free agency tracker: Offseason moves, signings

Foster Sarell, OT​


The former Charger joins Washington on a one-year deal.

What it means: Depth. Washington needed more offensive line competition, especially for a swing tackle. The Commanders do have the veteran Scott, who was a No. 4 tackle last year; and starting right tackle Andrew Wylie might be an option if they move Coleman to his spot. But they needed another young player — Sarell is 26 — to compete for a job. Of his 328 offensive snaps the past three years with the Chargers, 290 came at right tackle.

What’s the risk: None. Sarell still has to make the team and the Commanders just needed more players to fill out the roster. He does offer some size at 6-foot-6, 322 pounds and that’s needed as well. The Commanders would be wise to find more young interior depth to develop via the draft but Sarell does not impact that ability at all.


Podcasts & videos

Winning Time Moments | Commanders Log: Season 4, Episode 2​



Where have the Commanders gotten better?

The Trap or Dive Podcast with @LetMualTellit @DCSportsDre & @SaintWah is live! #RaiseHail https://t.co/DZtJkoVbqf

— Trap or Dive Podcast (@TraporDive) March 18, 2025


Episode 1,030 - When's the last time Washington had a QB1-LT1-WR1 trio as good as Jayden Daniels, Laremy Tunsil & Terry McLaurin? I discuss that & more off Tunsil's impressive press conference.

Also: impact of Chase/Higgins extensions on the Commanders.https://t.co/xSMOHgJmF9

— Al Galdi (@AlGaldi) March 18, 2025

The 10 Offensive Gems of the 2025 NFL Draft​


NFC East links

Bleeding Green Nation

Brandon Graham officially announces his retirement


The Eagles’ 2010 first-round pick made his announcement on Tuesday during a press conference at the NovaCare Complex.


Brandon Graham: “I gave everything I had. I have no regrets.” #Eagles pic.twitter.com/EPpyYbjNQs

— Brandon Lee Gowton (@BrandonGowton) March 18, 2025

Pro Football Focus

The Eagles have let several key contributors walk, but that’s OK


After winning the franchise’s second Super Bowl, the Eagles had some decisions to make in the offseason. They let several key players walk in free agency, including Milton Williams, Josh Sweat, Mekhi Becton, Darius Slay, James Bradberry, Isaiah Rodgers and Oren Burks, while also trading Chauncey Gardner-Johnson to the Texans. That sounds like a lot. But the Eagles are built to survive such high-volume departures.

Williams can be replaced by Moro Ojomo, who came on late last season and earned an 89.5 PFF overall grade in the Super Bowl. Jalyx Hunt started to see an increased role late in the year and could be a very capable replacement for Sweat. And we all saw what the Eagles’ rookie cornerbacks accomplished last season to know they are in good hands despite losing their veteran options.

General manager Howie Roseman has built his roster to allow the Eagles to reload for next season rather than rebuild.


NFL league links

Articles​

ESPN

2025 NFL mock draft: Mel Kiper’s Round 1 pick predictions

3. New York Giants​


Shedeur Sanders, QB, Colorado

Even if the Giants land Aaron Rodgers or Russell Wilson, they need to think about the future under center. Rodgers is 41. Wilson is 36. Neither would be the long-term fix. That’s why I still think the Giants could draft Sanders at No. 3. And signing one of those veterans — two guys who have won Super Bowls — then double-dipping at the position with Sanders would only help the rookie learn and develop. There would be no pressure to start Sanders right away or be the guy in Week 1.

In Sanders, New York would get a super accurate passer (74.0% completion rate in 2024) who is tough as nails. Despite taking the most sacks in the FBS over the past two seasons (94), he also tied for second in touchdown passes (64) during that time frame. Sanders could provide some QB stability to New York for the first time since Eli Manning was taking the snaps.

12. Dallas Cowboys​


Omarion Hampton, RB, North Carolina

No change on my Cowboys pick projection from my last mock draft. Hampton actually firmed up his first-round case at the combine, running a 4.46-second 40-yard dash and leaping 10 feet, 10 inches in the broad jump. He is a home run hitter who could spark something in this Dallas running game, which has been dormant for the past two campaigns. The Cowboys averaged 4.0 yards per carry over that time, tied for fourth worst in the league.

So, even after signing Javonte Williams and Miles Sanders to low-risk deals, I think the Cowboys could draft Hampton. He is the kind of difference-maker they need at the position. He rushed for 3,164 yards and 30 touchdowns over the past two seasons.

29. Washington Commanders​


Maxwell Hairston, CB, Kentucky

Hairston also was my projected pick for the Commanders before the combine. It makes sense. Washington is in win-now mode, and cornerback remains a question mark even after the team traded for Marshon Lattimore at the deadline last year.

The Commanders signed Jonathan Jones and Noah Igbinoghene to replace Benjamin St-Juste, but Hairston could still work his way into a starter role on the outside. He can create takeaways (six INTs over the past two seasons). And he ran a 4.28 at the combine, the fastest 40-yard dash across all positions this year. Figuring out the outside corner spots would allow Mike Sainristil to settle back into the slot, where he’s at his best.

32. Philadelphia Eagles​


Walter Nolen, DT, Ole Miss

This would be the third time in four years that the Eagles draft a defensive tackle, and GM Howie Roseman has historically favored the trenches on Day 1 of the draft. We just talked about the Chiefs’ offensive line issues, and it was the Eagles’ defensive line that gave it fits at the Super Bowl. Milton Williams had two sacks in that game. Williams also is now in New England on a big free agent deal, so Roseman could go back to the trenches again to find a replacement.

Nolen is very disruptive thanks to explosive traits and strong hands. He had 6.5 sacks and 15 run stops last season. And while he didn’t go to Georgia, Nolen at least keeps the Eagles’ direct line to SEC defensive tackles alive.


NFL.com

WR Olamide Zaccheaus sees similarities between Commanders under Jayden Daniels, Bears with Caleb Williams


Following a roller-coaster season, the key will be Williams becoming as efficient and dynamic as Daniels is in Washington.

“The biggest thing, I think, is just the mental aspect of it for any young quarterback, especially Caleb,” Zaccheaus said Monday, via the team’s official transcript. “He has all the talent that you need to be a top-tier quarterback in the league. A lot of it’s just going to be the mental aspect of it and kind of just slowing the game down.”

Zaccheaus noted that he knew Daniels had the goods after an impressive throw during OTAs but that the rookie proved his mettle and growth throughout the season.

“The biggest thing is just the connection,” he said. “That was one thing that [we] prided ourselves on doing is just being able to connect as quickly as possible. That’s how you really take off. The connection throughout the building, not just from player to player, player to coach, coach to players — but media team to player, player to chef, training room, everybody in the building has to connect as fast as possible. Then we’ll see what that takes us, but that puts you in the best position to be able to have success.”


NFL.com

Top 101 free agents of 2025: Aaron Rodgers, Stefon Diggs among best available players in free agency

BEST AVAILABLE​

Rank 11 - Amari Cooper - WR · Age: 31​


Cooper’s one year on, one year off pattern continued in two places last season. By all accounts, he was playing through injuries late in his Bills stint, which helps explain his lack of production. Teams could buy the dip for one last big season at a reasonable price.

Rank 21 - Asante Samuel Jr. - CB · Age: 25​


Knocked for his poor tackling and inability to play press coverage, Samuel is a playmaker who steadily improved in his Chargers tenure. He’d be a big asset in the right system.

Rank 25 - Aaron Rodgers - QB · Age: 41​


Watching some Rodgers film from 2021 recently was a reminder of just how much slower he is these days and less willing to take a hit. With that said, he was still accurate in 2024 and improved as the season wore on. He’s a good bridge quarterback if you can live with the drama that comes with him.

Rank 27 - Cam Robinson - OT · Age: 29​


Twice given the franchise tag by the Jaguars, Robinson will probably be viewed as a league-average starting left tackle. That’s an upgrade for plenty of teams.

Rank 28 - Stefon Diggs - WR · Age: 31​


Diggs was transitioning to a cagey slot option before tearing his ACL with the Texans. A stay in Houston would make sense for both sides.

Rank 29 - Teven Jenkins - OG · Age: 27​


Young starting guards with draft pedigree don’t usually last in free agency. Jenkins has turned his career around after a slow start in Chicago.

Rank 34 - Calais Campbell - DT · Age: 39​


This may seem like a high ranking for a year-to-year guy who turns 39 in September, but Campbell is consistently one of the best players on every team he joins. I’m sick of constantly ranking him too low!


Discussion topics


@Mike_Callow joined the show today and we had a great discussion about the #Commanders uniform updates.@DougMcCrayNFL and I asked him about potential timelines, and here is what he had to say. #RaiseHail pic.twitter.com/zbKddf8sqp

— George Carmi (@Gcarmi21) February 10, 2025

NFL.com

NFL Power Rankings: Bears, 49ers rise after early 2025 free agency moves; Texans tumble


[L]ast year is really last year, and it no longer matters.

That is, of course, only partly true. The top of the rankings actually look remarkably similar to our post-Super Bowl edition, so there’s clearly some natural carryover. If we’re being honest with ourselves, of the dozens of offseason additions we’re spending so much time parsing these days, only a few might pay real dividends. Some of the losses we’re lamenting will only hurt so much.

Rank 1 Philadelphia Eagles​


Life’s good in Philly, where the Eagles have taken some hits this offseason — as expected — but no one seems all that concerned. One reason for that: General manager Howie Roseman has drafted so well and seems to have planned out, years in advance, how the big picture should and will look.

Rank 6 Washington Commanders​


The Commanders likely were always going to be aggressive this offseason, but when Jayden Daniels started balling out last season and the team moved into the ranks of presumptive contenders, their focus apparently tightened. That’s why you’re seeing targeted, go-for-it trades for Deebo Samuel and Laremy Tunsil. Those have been the two biggest moves so far, but the remainder of their additions (and there have been plenty) to this point have been on the defensive side of the ball, which still needs help, while the offense is pretty darned close. Most of these acquisitions on D were smaller upgrades at best, and don’t forget that Washington also released Jonathan Allen. So we have to keep our expectations fair here, especially knowing the Commanders have used up a good amount of draft capital via trades, both for this year and next.

Rank 22 Dallas Cowboys​


The recent drama following DeMarcus Lawrence’s exit may not have a lasting imprint on the Cowboys, but it does paint an interesting picture of the current leadership. This is Dak Prescott’s team, but it’s also CeeDee Lamb’s and Micah Parsons’ team, too. Parsons technically hangs in the balance prior to his extension, but it feels as if the Cowboys will lock him up long-term at some point soon. That naturally will elevate his voice even more in the locker room, which is transitioning from Mike McCarthy to Brian Schottenheimer.

Rank 31 New York Giants​


The Giants have had an interesting offseason, and we haven’t even really gotten to the good stuff yet. They’ve made some pretty notable additions on defense with CB Paulson Adebo, S Jevon Holland and DE Chauncey Golston. The offensive signings have been mostly of the depth variety. The most exciting buzz has been at quarterback, with Russell Wilson and Aaron Rodgers most closely connected. This is a team acting like its only issue was the lack of a functioning QB last season. That scares me a little. The G-Men are poised to make a big imprint on the draft, and there’s still time to get this thing right. But what if their veteran QB options dry up? I’ll be really interested to see how GM Joe Schoen plays the next six weeks.


All aTwitter


The 2024 season: Part 2 @Seatgeek | #RaiseHail

— Washington Commanders (@Commanders) March 18, 2025

When you have special players like Terry, you better appreciate them while they’re around. Because you’re not gonna get another like him. #Commanders #RaiseHail pic.twitter.com/QPR2cgz0OI

— Cedonia Ave. (@KMBmoreX) March 19, 2025

Added protection up front pic.twitter.com/J8KcJab6bM

— Washington Commanders (@Commanders) March 18, 2025

Commanders signed OT Foster Sarell (6-6, 322), another big body in the trenches.

Sarell, a UDFA out of Stanford in 2021, bounced around the league before landing with the Chargers.

Over the last 3 yrs, 35 games (three starts). Depth.

— Sam Fortier (@Sam4TR) March 18, 2025

New Commanders WR Deebo Samuel officially will wear No. 1 in Washington. pic.twitter.com/0qcWFaRbIh

— Adam Schefter (@AdamSchefter) March 18, 2025

Commanders WR Noah Brown said he's been fully cleared for about two weeks now. He suffered a kidney injury that ended his season early last year.

— Nicki Jhabvala (@NickiJhabvala) March 18, 2025


Commanders WR Noah Brown on new left tackle Laremy Tunsil: "We definitely got our security guard on the left side. He’s the real deal…Laremy’s a great dude." pic.twitter.com/NlpV6aLHrq

— JP Finlay (@JPFinlayNBCS) March 18, 2025


Jameis Winston Leaves Giants Visit Without Deal https://t.co/1CCrEiquWn

— NFLTradeRumors.co (@nfltrade_rumors) March 18, 2025

@AlbertBreer

The #Bengals really paid their two superstar wide receivers — how did the deals get done and how does it affect Trey Hendrickson?#NFL #NFLDraft #RuleTheJungle pic.twitter.com/5LznYGUAaE

— Rich Eisen Show (@RichEisenShow) March 18, 2025

I have no reason to believe it won’t be done or can’t be done soon just telling you I now have 3 sources telling me deal isn’t done and 2 telling me they wouldn’t characterize the talks as meaningful enough right now to put pen to paper. Reading between the lines? Communication… https://t.co/bB6vNswD15

— Jane Slater (@SlaterNFL) March 19, 2025

Here’s what we think are the best and worst contracts signed during free agency so far ✍ pic.twitter.com/wsYFyjlyLz

— PFSN (@PFN365) March 19, 2025


.@MJD released his best RBs in this year's #NFLDraft

Full RB prospect rankings from 1-31 ➡️ https://t.co/L5gJ8hlz8j pic.twitter.com/4UT9YRfaW1

— NFL (@NFL) March 18, 2025

Pressure rates allowed among offensive tackles in this class on true dropback passes (non-screen, non-RPO, non-PA) pic.twitter.com/lj03Fo1ayT

— Brett Kollmann (@BrettKollmann) March 19, 2025


Get ready for the 7th Annual Bob Earley Memorial Golf Tournament! It's going to be an incredible day filled with golf, prizes, food, drinks, and more. Don't miss out on sponsorship opportunities and exciting raffles.

Sign up today! https://t.co/7n6idkcnb3 pic.twitter.com/W2XjtaL9oX

— Hogfarmers Charitable Foundation (@TheHogfarmers) March 19, 2025

Jayden Daniel’s clowns his Ex LSU teammates Malik Nabers & Brian Thomas Jr for not making the playoffs

Jayden: “I’m spending my playoff bonus checks”

Nabers: “I wanted to go home”#nfl #lsutigers #jaydendaniels #brianthomasjr #maliknabers #nygiants #jaguars #commanders pic.twitter.com/o6u1cON3jp

— JetSki Skip (@iLoveSkip) March 18, 2025

posting a photo from last season every day until OTAs pic.twitter.com/GRu7g3b3VZ

— Washington Commanders (@Commanders) March 18, 2025

Tyquan Thornton had a 4.28 at the combine and then came out and ran routes like this.

So, yea, 40 time ain’t everything.

pic.twitter.com/Vb2wg44cKY

— Savage (@SavageSports_) March 17, 2025

THIS. IS. MARCH.

UNREAL POTENTIAL ENDING FOR ALABAMA STATE

Unreal first four game between the Hornets and St. Francis ‍

pic.twitter.com/xQqj3TliUS

— Last Take™ (@TheRealLastTake) March 19, 2025

St Francis on the inbound pic.twitter.com/9WNFwmGpWF

— Pardon My Take (@PardonMyTake) March 19, 2025


Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/2025/3/19...season-with-commanders-log-season-4-episode-2
 
Michael Gallup talks about retiring, Dan Quinn, and playing with Jayden Daniels

Screenshot_2025_03_20_141330.0.png


New WR Michael Gallup talks to the media

Michael Gallup visited with the Washington Commanders last week, and his signing was announced today. He spoke to the media and talked about why he retired last year, what made him come out of retirement to sign with Washington, his relationship with Dan Quinn, and more in his introductory presser. Gallup spent his first six seasons in the NFL with the Dallas Cowboys, but a torn ACL in 2021 sidelined him and he hasn’t been the same since. He signed with the Las Vegas Raiders last year after getting released by the Cowboys, but retired from the NFL before the start of training camp.

Commanders officially sign WR Michael Gallup, who recently cam out of retirement. Gallup spent most of his career with the Cowboys and knows Quinn well. Should provide the receiver room with experienced depth https://t.co/XHBsEYTOds

— Zach Selby (@ZachSelbyWC) March 20, 2025

LIVE: WR Michael Gallup speaks to the media after signing https://t.co/6OrCNViyak

— Washington Commanders (@Commanders) March 20, 2025

Retiring after signing with the Raiders last year:

Michael Gallup said he wasn't "in the right head space" last year when he retired, but feels he has a lot left.

— Nicki Jhabvala (@NickiJhabvala) March 20, 2025
Michael Gallup said he knew when he retired that he wanted to come back.

Gallup said the transition from Dallas, after spending so much time with the Cowboys, was difficult to process.

— Nicki Jhabvala (@NickiJhabvala) March 20, 2025
WR Michael Gallup said he retired last year because he “wasn’t in the right head space” because of how things ended in Dallas.

Now he’s ready to get back to football. pic.twitter.com/lQqfLBIhQJ

— Sam Fortier (@Sam4TR) March 20, 2025

Joining Washington’s WR room:

Michael Gallup addressing the media. Said he's excited to learn from the other receivers in the room. Wants to bring competitiveness to the Commanders WR position

— Zach Selby (@ZachSelbyWC) March 20, 2025

Dan Quinn:

Gallup said Dan Quinn is a great dude you want to have as a coach. "He's great people," Gallup said, and acknowledged he wouldn't be where he's at without Quinn

— Zach Selby (@ZachSelbyWC) March 20, 2025

Jayden Daniels:

Gallup on Jayden Daniels: the way he can throw the ball and read defenses is uncanny. Just wants to be a reliable target for the second-year QB

— Zach Selby (@ZachSelbyWC) March 20, 2025
Gallup said he's already spoke with Jayden Daniels over FaceTime. Already looking forward to linking up and getting to work this offseason

— Zach Selby (@ZachSelbyWC) March 20, 2025
Michael Gallup said he face-timed with Jayden Daniels 30 minutes ago.

— Ben Standig (@BenStandig) March 20, 2025

Washington’s momentum:

Michael Gallup on Washington's momentum and getting to play with Jayden Daniels: "I want to get behind that train."

— Ben Standig (@BenStandig) March 20, 2025

Terry McLaurin:

Gallup said after every game they played Washington he'd seek out Terry McLaurin and said he would tell him, "you're a dawg. I enjoy watching you."

— John Keim (@john_keim) March 20, 2025

Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/2025/3/20...ing-dan-quinn-and-playing-with-jayden-daniels
 
Deebo Samuel talks about requesting a trade, joining the Commanders and motivation

Screenshot_20250321_002844_YouTube.0.jpg


Welcome to Washington Deebo Samuel

Deebo Samuel was at Washington Commanders headquarters in Ashburn, VA today with some other players who were signing their contracts and getting some time with the local media. Samuel said he wanted to come to Washington because they're winners, and they showed last year they knew how to win with QB Jayden Daniels under center. He got a lot of positive feedback about Daniels over the last few years from his former 49ers teammates, and one of Daniels' best friends, WR Brandon Aiyuk.

Samuel was asked about rumors about his weight last year, bit he quickly brushed them off and reiterated that he's very motivated and ready to bring his dog mentality to Washington. Adam Peters traded for him, and knew him from their time in San Francisco. Samuels' contract was reworked, adding guaranteed money, and some incentives. He said that shows what they think of him and it was appreciated.

.@19problemz has arrived pic.twitter.com/noKvenonbF

— Washington Commanders (@Commanders) March 20, 2025

Joining the Washington Commanders:

WR Deebo Samuel on coming to the Washington Commanders:

“They’ve already proven they can win. … I’m just coming in to add my dog mentality.” pic.twitter.com/miWcFrzgCA

— Sam Fortier (@Sam4TR) March 20, 2025

Why was Washington one of the five teams on Deebo Samuel's list after requesting a trade? "I like winners," he said.
Samuel also said he's bringing his "dawg mentality" and that "they're getting a motivated Deebo."

— John Keim (@john_keim) March 20, 2025
I like winners. I’m not one of your biggest losers. They’ve got a good team for sure and they were just standing out.

Dog mentality:

They’ve already proven they can win. I’m just coming to add my little dog mentality and contribute to the offense in any aspect they need me.

Injury and weight concerns from last year:

WR Deebo Samuel on reports that he was overweight last season:

“That don’t move me, man.” pic.twitter.com/QXfsWvXEp9

— Sam Fortier (@Sam4TR) March 20, 2025
Deebo Samuel on reports about injury and weight concerns: "That don't move me."

— Ben Standig (@BenStandig) March 20, 2025

Requesting a trade:


Deebo Samuel said requesting a trade was "tougher than you think." Said it was tough to have that conversation with coach Kyle Shanahan but, he said, both parties "understood" why it needed to happen.

— John Keim (@john_keim) March 20, 2025
One of the hardest things was walking into the office and talking to Kyle about this because of the relationship we built. He was my coach at the Senior Bowl. He’s always been a man of his word. It was a tough conversation. But we both understood where I was coming from, and I understood where he was coming from.

Brandon Aiyuk on Jayden Daniels:

That’s all B.A. used to talk about, ‘My boy is about to win the Heisman. My boy is about to do this, my boy’s about to do that. He won the Heisman and came to the league and played extremely well. Everything Aiyuk said would happen, happened.

Just to see him grow and see how well he played last year I was like, man why not try to come over here and help in any aspect that I can.

Contract adjustment:


A reworked deal for Deebo in DC: the Commanders are guaranteeing $17 million of Deebo Samuel’s previously non-guaranteed salary for this season, along with adding another $3 million worth of incentives, per sources. Samuel now will play this season on a one-year deal worth up to… pic.twitter.com/H5pfBs5gUf

— Adam Schefter (@AdamSchefter) March 19, 2025
That meant a lot. It kind of shows what they think.

Trust:

They put this much trust in me. I can’t come in here and let them down.

Motivated:

I’m very motivated,. It’s not just me, but everybody around me is motivated. … I’m going to push myself to get to where I need to be.

They’re getting a motivated Deebo. You get a dawg out there. These young legs are still moving, this body is still working pretty well.

Taking his game to another level:

Everyone wants to see me take my game to a level I don’t think it can go,” he said, “but everyone says there’s another level so I’ll push myself to that level.

Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/2025/3/20...a-trade-joining-the-commanders-and-motivation
 
Daily Slop - 21 Mar 25 - Deebo Samuel is motivated and ready to get back to work

Detroit Lions v San Francisco 49ers

Photo by Michael Owens/Getty Images

A collection of articles, podcasts & tweets from around the web to keep you in touch with the Commanders

Commanders links

Articles​

NFL.com

Deebo Samuel: Commanders ‘getting a motivated Deebo’ after trade from Niners


“They’re getting a motivated Deebo,” Samuel said of the Commanders Thursday in his introductory video conference with reporters via the Associated Press. “I’m very motivated. I’m just ready to get back to work. I’m just ready to get around a group of guys, meet with the players and we just go from there.”

Samuel was admittedly overweight last season, had sideline outbursts and complained about his usage in Kyle Shanahan’s offense. Following the trade, the 29-year-old is out to show he’s still a playmaking force.

The Commanders showed their faith by guaranteeing his $17 million salary and adding $3 million more in incentives.

“It just kind of shows what they think,” Samuel said. “For me on my end, it’s just like they put this much trust in me to do the things they as far as my contract, I can’t come in here and let them down. I’ve got to give it my all. I’ve got to do all the things that I need to do to be the best version of myself when I come here.”


who's excited??? @19problemz | #RaiseHail pic.twitter.com/dquyAhYFnu

— Washington Commanders (@Commanders) March 20, 2025

Pro Football Talk

Deebo Samuel on trade to Washington: I like to win


Samuel said in his introductory news conference Thursday that his decision was “tougher than most people think” because of the relationships he developed in San Francisco. He gave the 49ers a list of five preferred destinations, with Washington one of the five.

“Being in San Francisco, I like winners. I like to win,” Samuel said, via David Bonilla of 49erswebzone. com. “I’m not one of your biggest losers. They went to the NFC Championship.”

The Commanders had several draws for Samuel, including his familiarity with General Manager Adam Peters, who previously served as the 49ers’ assistant G.M., and his desire to return to the East Coast. The Commanders’ immediate turnaround with quarterback Jayden Daniels also was a plus.


Big day in the DMV @19problemz | #RaiseHail pic.twitter.com/cN48e5WJBH

— Washington Commanders (@Commanders) March 20, 2025

Washington Post (paywall)​

New WR Deebo Samuel promises Commanders are ‘going to get a dog’


Washington gave up a fifth-round pick to acquire him, a small price for a potentially significant return. Finding players with something to prove has been a theme for the Commanders in consecutive offseasons, but with Samuel, they raised the stakes further.

The Commanders tacked on $3 million in incentives to his contract while also guaranteeing his salary, according to a person familiar with the terms. Samuel has only a year left on his contract. It’s a small show of trust, but it also stokes Samuel’s competitive fire. Instead of trying to extend his contract before seeing how he performs, the Commanders kept it at one year, with a $17.5 million salary cap charge this season.

Anything more is up to Samuel.


Sports Illustrated

New Commanders receiver Deebo Samuel ready to team up with Terry McLaurin


The Washington Commanders have a dynamic duo at receiver, and the newest one is looking forward to getting together with Terry McLaurin.

“I’m ready to come in here and work right alongside of Terry,” Samuel said. “We got drafted together...he’s been playing at a high level for the past six years–we’re going on seven–so they kind of consider us old, but I don’t consider us old. I think these young legs (are) still moving (and) his body’s still working pretty well.”

McLaurin is coming off his second Pro Bowl selection and fifth-straight 1,000 yard season for the Commanders while Samuel’s 806 yards of offense in 2024 was the second-fewest in his career thus far.


Commanders Wire

Why did Michael Gallup retire and then decide to return?


On Thursday, Washington introduced Samuel to the media while quietly signing a veteran wide receiver that fans should know: Michael Gallup.

Gallup actually visited Washington during the first week of free agency but left without a contract. Just over one week later, the Commanders signed the former Dallas Cowboys third-round pick for a one-year deal worth the veteran minimum.

So, why did Gallup retire?

After signing with the Las Vegas Raiders, Gallup said he wasn’t in the “right head space” and retired in July. Before signing with Las Vegas, all six of Gallup’s NFL seasons were in Dallas.

“The way I was let go from being in some place for so long and then jumping right into a whole other team and not being able to process it,” he said. “I never went through that before. So, trying out how to process that and everything, I think it was just fast for me, and I wasn’t there yet.”

It...helped coming to the Commanders, where Jayden Daniels is the quarterback, and Dan Quinn is the head coach. Gallup was in Dallas all three years that Quinn served as defensive coordinator.

Gallup said that Quinn, even though he was on the defensive side of the ball, was always checking on him, and that mattered to him personally. Gallup acknowledged the opportunity with Washington would not have happened if Quinn had not advocated for him.


Commanders.com

Five things to know about CB Jonathan Jones


He was one of the best high school hurdlers in the country.

Jones was a versatile player for Carrolton High School. He was one of the best cornerback prospects in the country but also received some snaps as a running back and kick returner. He even returned a kickoff 99 yards for a touchdown in the Georgia All-Star game.

But Jones wasn’t just a star on the football field. He also excelled on Carrolton’s track and field team and was ranked as one of the top hurdlers in the country. He placed third in the New Balance Nationals and won the USA Track and Field Junior Olympics National Championship in the 110-meter hurdles with a time of 13.72.

Jones used his speed throughout his high school career to outpace opponents. During his junior year, he won state outdoor 110-meter and 300-meter hurdles events and claimed the Georgia Class 3A all-points trophy.


NFL.com

Ten best moves of the 2025 NFL offseason so far: Bears, Bengals, Rams among teams trending up


Washington Commanders trade for Deebo Samuel. Commanders general manager Adam Peters has made a flurry of moves over the last few weeks — including the trade that delivered left tackle Laremy Tunsil — but Samuel is the one that should generate the most excitement around D.C. Even though the 29-year-old wide receiver is coming off one of his worst seasons (51 reception for 670 yards and three touchdowns), he also was playing on a 49ers team that struggled through an assortment of health problems, including a season-ending knee injury to wide receiver Brandon Aiyuk. This trade now pairs Samuel with a rising star quarterback (Jayden Daniels) in an offense that already has a No. 1 receiver (Terry McLaurin). It’s not hard to see Samuel thriving with that type of talent, as well as a rushing attack that ranked third in the league last season. These are basically the same variables that were in play during his peak years in San Francisco and you saw the production that came as a result. Samuel is a physical receiver who also brings added versatility as a runner and gadget-play option. You have to assume offensive coordinator Kliff Kingsbury already has spent ample time contemplating all the ways he can utilize that skill set next season.

[Ed note: despite the sentiment from Jeff Chadua in this NFL.com article, my sense is that Commanders fans are more excited about the Laremy Tunsil trade than the one for Deebo. Of course, this site is called “Hogs Haven” for a reason.]


Podcasts & videos


Episode 1,033 - Discussion of Deebo Samuel's intro press conference, Commanders signing Michael Gallup & telling comments from Tress Way on the improved culture.

I also talk Caps clinching a playoff spot, Kevin Willard's savage move on Damon Evans & more.https://t.co/OnHfhQlmdR

— Al Galdi (@AlGaldi) March 21, 2025

Best Moments Bracket, Bram Weinstein on Free Agency & NFL Draft | Get Loud | Washington Commanders​



NFC East links

Blogging the Boys

Cowboys FB Hunter Luepke may suffer from changing offense


It is going to be interesting to see how the Cowboys work Hunter Luepke into their plans.

One young Cowboys player with a lot of fans is fullback Hunter Luepke. But after two years on the roster in Mike McCarthy’s offense, Luepke now has to reprove his worth to a renovated coaching staff. Based on history, particularly Brian Schottenheimer’s, Luepke’s versatility may not have the same value now as it has the last two seasons.

Fullbacks probably get more attention in Dallas than most of the NFL because of our deep-rooted appreciation for Daryl “Moose” Johnston as a beloved figure from the 90s dynasty. Two strong years from Richie Anderson in the early 2000s helped to stoke the fire a bit, too. But even as the position teeters on extinction throughout most of the league, the Cowboys have generally kept one on the roster most seasons.

Now with Schottenheimer taking full control of the Cowboys’ offense, Luepke’s value could take a hit. Fullbacks have never really seen the ball much in Schottenheimer’s offenses, going back through his past stops with the Seahawks, Rams, and Jets. They may see plenty of work as traditional run-blockers but either he hasn’t had any with much offensive skill or hasn’t chosen to feature it. In Seattle, converted linebacker Nick Bellore was the fullback and only touched the ball five times in two seasons under Schottenheimer.

If this trend holds now that Schottenheimer’s calling plays in Dallas, that could be a real problem for Luepke.


NFL league links

Articles​

The Athletic (paywall)​

How much does every NFL owner want to win? A team-by-team breakdown of their efforts

Contention mode​


Philadelphia Eagles

There’s nothing complacent about Jeffrey Lurie’s organization, in which players have no doubt their owner is “extremely committed” to winning, according to the NFLPA report cards. The Eagles lost several key players to free agency, but rewarded Saquon Barkley and Zack Baun for their championship-caliber contributions, flipped Kenny Pickett for Dorian Thompson-Robinson (who has greater potential) and added key veterans such as guard Kenyon Green (trade), pass-rusher Josh Uche and running back A.J. Dillon.

Willing to do what it takes to win​


Washington Commanders

Preaching “people, culture and talent,” owner Josh Harris signed off on another aggressive offseason, which included trades for wide receiver Deebo Samuel and offensive tackle Laremy Tunsil as GM Adam Peters works to fortify the team around quarterback Jayden Daniels. After years of dysfunction and repeated resets under Daniel Snyder, Washington players have showered Harris with praise for his leadership and the support he offers Peters and coach Dan Quinn.

Stuck in struggle mode​


Dallas Cowboys

Jerry Jones loves to claim he wants to win another Super Bowl in the worst way. But above all, Jones loves being the center of attention and maintaining control. That causes him to hold onto coaches too long because he doesn’t want to pay them not to work, or to pass on hiring the most talented coaches because they might want more power than he’s willing to cede. Jones also tends to drag out player negotiations because he’s determined to pay them on his timeline, even if it means ultimately costing himself more in the long run.

New York Giants

They paid Daniel Jones when they knew he wasn’t the guy, and then released him a season-and-a-half later. They opted against paying running back Saquon Barkley when they knew he was special. John Mara is letting GM Joe Schoen and coach Brian Daboll run it back in a bad year to need a quarterback in free agency or the draft.


All aTwitter


addition to the wide receiver room@michael13gallup | #RaiseHail pic.twitter.com/HWEMcdln5y

— Washington Commanders (@Commanders) March 20, 2025

Michael Gallup's deal is for one year for the vet minimum, per source. Worth up to $1.335 million.

— Nicki Jhabvala (@NickiJhabvala) March 20, 2025

Washington signed WR Michael Gallup. In six seasons with Dallas he caught 266 passes and averaged 14.7 yards per catch. He did not play last season.

— John Keim (@john_keim) March 20, 2025

Michael Gallup said he wasn't "in the right head space" last year so he retired. Said it stemmed from going from leaving Dallas and having a tough time adjusting.

— John Keim (@john_keim) March 20, 2025

Rick Snider’s Washington loves the Washington Commanders signing Michael Gallup. Gimme one minute. pic.twitter.com/mkJ9SzerU4

— Rick Snider's Washington (@Snide_Remarks) March 20, 2025

The Ways are back! pic.twitter.com/kWK4QMwUgu

— Washington Commanders (@Commanders) March 20, 2025

pic.twitter.com/1RuaCaxIWQ

— Washington Commanders (@Commanders) March 21, 2025

Tress Way said when he entered the building to sign his new deal, coaches were there to greet him -- music playing, people cheering for him. Called it a surreal moment. "I'm just pinching myself," he said. Said he told Adam Peters he didn't know teams did things like this.

— John Keim (@john_keim) March 20, 2025

you heard the man pic.twitter.com/6QKsdNx0WO

— Washington Commanders (@Commanders) March 20, 2025

As cool as the other side of the pillow pic.twitter.com/4vYJ5B3euw

— Troy Dodd (@troydodd) March 21, 2025


"We're a football school"
- @Cle_Missile after seeing the Clemson score pic.twitter.com/P41sXJMJXt

— Washington Commanders (@Commanders) March 20, 2025



The #Browns signed one of the top remaining free agents on the board today in G Teven Jenkins:https://t.co/AdvZKL460j

— Pro Football Rumors (@pfrumors) March 21, 2025


Each NFL team's last Super Bowl win:

Very surprising...

(h/t @diazenlanfl) pic.twitter.com/fc1pLX0IiJ

— Dov Kleiman (@NFL_DovKleiman) March 21, 2025

Here’s the player from each NFL team who's most likely to step up in 2025 pic.twitter.com/7eZgFipooc

— PFSN (@PFN365) March 21, 2025


posting a photo from last season every day until OTAs pic.twitter.com/O05OND0QQz

— Washington Commanders (@Commanders) March 20, 2025

Excited to Welcome Ron Rivera as the General Manager of the California Football Program! #GoBears pic.twitter.com/i1xscNM6kS

— Cal Football (@CalFootball) March 20, 2025

FINAL: Capitals 3, Flyers 2

Alex Ovechkin scored goal No. 888 of his career as the Caps held on to earn their 100th point. Brandon Duhaime and Andrew Mangiapane scored. Charlie Lindgren was excellent in net with 27 saves. Back at it Saturday vs. FLA

— Ethan Cadeaux (@Ethan_Cadeaux) March 21, 2025

Alex Ovechkin in the right place at the right time. Career goal No. 888. Seven away from the record pic.twitter.com/g1fp8nMmja

— Ethan Cadeaux (@Ethan_Cadeaux) March 20, 2025

The @Capitals grabbed the final #StanleyCup Playoffs spot in their 82nd game last season...

What a difference a year makes. pic.twitter.com/jWpyd35asV

— NHL (@NHL) March 21, 2025

Alright bruh… pic.twitter.com/ZsDXxsLlDu

— Cameron Magruder (@ScooterMagruder) March 21, 2025

Love advice for the fellas.

(The "tough" is implied.) https://t.co/QEYfWAig8W pic.twitter.com/j3X4Vli9kQ

— Kay Adams (@heykayadams) March 21, 2025


Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/2025/3/21...el-is-motivated-and-ready-to-get-back-to-work
 
Film Session: Luther Burden III NFL draft prospect profile

NCAA Football: Missouri at South Carolina

Jeff Blake-Imagn Images

Pro scouting report of Missouri Tigers wide receiver Luther Burden III

Luther Burden III is a junior wide receiver from the University of Missouri. Burden has started 33 out of 38 games with the Tigers.

ReceivingRushingScrimmage
SeasonTeamConfClassPosGRecYdsY/RTDY/GAttYdsY/ATDY/GPlaysYdsAvgTDAwards
2022*MissouriSECFRWR13453758.3628.818884.926.8634637.38
2023*MissouriSECSOWR1386121214.1993.27314.402.493124313.49
2024*MissouriSECSRWR126167611.1656.3911512.829.67079111.38
Career38192226311.82159.6342346.946.2226249711.025

Receiving & Rushing Table
Provided by CFB at Sports Reference: View Original Table
Generated 3/21/2025.

Luther Burden III is a WR prospect in the 2025 draft class. He does not qualify for a #RAS due to a lack of measurements.

Splits projected, times unofficial.https://t.co/ydODxl9EeV pic.twitter.com/Zqs4z2zEyJ

— Kent Lee Platte (@MathBomb) March 1, 2025

From his baseline measurables, Burden III has average weight, below-average height and arm length, and poor hand size for the wide receiver position.

Burden comes into the NFL off of a down statistical season from his impressive sophomore season, where he accumulated 1,212 yards on 86 catches with nine touchdowns. He was a 2023 Biletnikoff Award semifinalist, 2023 Second Team All-America, and First Team All-SEC selection, starting all 13 games. Despite a down 2024 campaign, Burden was First Team All-SEC after starting ten out of 12 games in 2024.

What to make of Luther Burden III as a wide receiver? Here are my takeaways from Burden’s college film.

Burden’s primary alignment is at the slot, where he is most effective the more touches he gets. As the release point, he wins with good foot quickness and lateral agility, mainly using subtle jab steps to manipulate the defender’s hips and get into his route. He shows good initial acceleration climbing vertically within his route stem. He displays good quickness at the top of his routes and can quickly transition out of breaks. He is also an instinctive player, and it shows in scramble drill mode when he converts his routes into zone voids. He has good foot speed to break routes vertically, giving his quarterback a third-level threat if needed.

Burden shows excellent fluidity and body control when adjusting to passes as a pass catcher. He is excellent at tracking the football; he consistently demonstrated the ability to win on back-shoulder and over-the-shoulder situations. What makes him a more significant threat is his late adjustments with eyes and hands to keep defenders away from the football. He can pluck away from his frame, which, for his measurables, is very impressive. His mental toughness to win in critical moments of a game is an additional threat he provides to any offense.

With the ball in his hands, Burden shows elite playmaking potential. Burden has outstanding contact balance and functional strength to stay on his feet and maximize yardage. Burden has natural vision and instincts to feel contact and has a plan to make people miss on designed carries. He showed the ability to consistently distance himself from the nearest defender and beat angles as a runner. He has high-level elusiveness, good lateral agility, and stop/start burst.

What is lacking in Burden’s tape is his ability to separate from defenders. Burden has below-average processing, manipulating defender hips at the breakpoint to win on the second and third levels. He has to finish his routes better at the next level, or he will struggle. Burden lacks competitiveness at the catch point in contested catches over the middle of the field and can drop passes in those situations.

You can watch the full film session of Luther Burden III on YouTube below.

Comment your thoughts on Burden and if you think he is a great fit for Washington.

Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/2025/3/21...-luther-burden-iii-nfl-draft-prospect-profile
 
Will the Commanders Take Another WR Turned CB in Darien Porter?

COLLEGE FOOTBALL: NOV 25 Iowa State at Kansas State

Photo by Scott Winters/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

Hogs Haven takes a look at 2025 NFL Draft prospects that could contribute to the Commanders

Darien Porter, CB
School:
Iowa State | Conference: Big 12
College Experience: Redshirt Senior | Age: 24
Height / Weight: 6’3” / 195 lbs
Projected Draft Status: 2nd-3rd Round

Player Comparison: Riq Woolen

College Statistics

TacklesDef InterceptionsFumbles
SeasonTeamConfClassPosGSoloAstCombTFLSkIntYdsAvgIntTDPDFRYdsFRTDFFAwards
2019*Iowa StateBig 12300000.000000000
2020*Iowa StateBig 12FRWR1123500.000000000
2021*Iowa StateBig 12SOWR1303300.000000000
2022Iowa StateBig 12JRDB121231500.000010000
2023*Iowa StateBig 12SRDB12731000.000030000
2024*Iowa StateBig 12SRDB121261820.0351.7020000
Career6333185120.0351.7060000

Defense & Fumbles Table
Provided by CFB at Sports Reference: View Original Table
Generated 3/21/2025.

Player Overview


While Darien Porter was a very good high school football player in Iowa, he was arguably a better track athlete. Porter set a state record in the 400m sprint and took home the championship in 2017 and 2019. He has posted a 10.49 second 100m. He used this speed on the football field as a wide receiver to become a three-star recruit. Even though he had offers from Minnesota and Nebraska, Porter stayed in state to play wide receiver for the Iowa State Cyclones.

As a freshman, Porter played in three games but ultimately redshirted. He would see the field more next season as a special teamer, but only had a handful of tackles. The same would be true of his junior year in 2021. After this season, Porter flipped sides of the ball and became a cornerback. While he learned the position over 2022 and 2023, Porter was a special teams star for the Cyclones. He would finally get his chance to start in his sixth year, and he made the most of it. With three interceptions and two pass breakups, Porter helped Iowa State to the Big 12 Championship Game while earning All-Big 12 Honorable Mention.

Strengths

  • Good length for the position
  • Quick feet and agility helps him mirror receivers
  • Excellent speed to stay with receivers or recover if beat
  • Good awareness and reaction time in zone coverage
  • Hands are solid: three INTs and two PDs on limited pass attempts
  • Special teams value with five career blocked kicks

Weaknesses

  • Overall technique needs more consistency
  • Can be slow to react to receiver as he processes route
  • Not a lot of stopping power as a tackler
  • Became full-time starter in sixth year

Let’s See His Work


I predicted Darien Porter would run a 4.30 40 yard dash… and he did ‍♂️

…but there’s more to CB than just speed:
➖ UNREAL 4.7 passer rating allowed in 2024
➖ 3 picks
➖ 2 PBUs
➖ 6’2” 197lbs
➖ Just 17 targets in 11 games
➖ Former WR

Lockdown. pic.twitter.com/88FqBCpPVU

— NFL Draft Files (@NFL_DF) February 28, 2025

I can't say it enough. The movement skills for a CB with this kind of size are exceptional. Darien Porter is a dude. https://t.co/pwviQIOs6M pic.twitter.com/OIltRHiy8H

— Mighty Kaos aka Coach Williams (@mightykaos41) February 28, 2025

Darien Porter is a 4.3 40 yard dash typa guy pic.twitter.com/1ovvemGfom

— NFL Draft Files (@NFL_DF) January 28, 2025
Darien Porter is a CB prospect in the 2025 draft class. He scored a 9.99 #RAS out of a possible 10.00. This ranked 4 out of 2509 CB from 1987 to 2025. Pro day pending for remaining tests. ras.football/ras-information/?PlayerID=27130&ovl=Iowa+State

Kent Lee Platte (Mathbomb) (@mathbomb.bsky.social) 2025-03-12T22:03:07.824Z

Source: nfl.com

How He Fits on the Commanders


The Commanders have been busy remaking their roster in free agency. Out is Benjamin St-Juste. In is Jonathan Jones to go along Marshon Lattimore, Mike Sainristil, and Noah Igbinoghene who was re-signed. While this could be a productive group, the team could look to the draft to acquire more youth and athleticism at cornerback.

Darien Porter is incredibly athletic and had a phenomenal year for the Cyclones. He has all of the physical tools to be a very good cornerback at the next level. Despite having fantastic speed and agility, he needs to be more consistent in his technique. Along with that, he needs to get stronger and pick up the nuances of the position. That’s a tough sell for a sixth-year prospect who is coming off his first season as a starter. The Commanders do have a player in Mike Sainristil that made the transition from receiver to corner in college, so he may assist Porter if Washington drafts him. With Lattimore, Jones, and Sainristil, there is no rush to start Porter while he improves his weaknesses. He can be a special teams ace for the Commanders until he’s ready to start at cornerback.

Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/2025/3/22...rs-take-another-wr-turned-cb-in-darien-porter
 
Daily Slop - 22 Mar 25 - One-on-one with new Commanders receiver Deebo Samuel

temp_deebo.0.jpg


A collection of articles, podcasts & tweets from around the web to keep you in touch with the Commanders

Commanders links

Articles​

Commanders.com

Five things to know about DE Deatrich Wise Jr.


He was a Walter Payton Man of the Year nominee.

The Commanders didn’t just get someone to help their pass rush; they also added a player who has a history of giving back to the community.

Wise was selected as the Patriots’ Walter Payton Man of the Year nominee for his efforts to support the Patriots’ Foundation, receiving the Ron Burton Patriots Community Service Award, given annually to a Patriots player for their contributions to their community. He also started the Wise Up Foundation, which is dedicated to providing underserved student-athletes with educational resources and opportunities.

“Deatrich’s commitment to his craft, constant effort and desire to improve every day has earned the respect and admiration of his coaches and teammates who have selected him as a team captain for the past three seasons,” Patriots Chairman and CEO Robert Kraft said in a statement. “But it is his commitment to positively impacting the lives of everyone he touches that earns him this honor.”

The Wise Up Foundation has several initiatives including football camps, block parties and meals for veterans. Check out more information about the foundation HERE.


ESPN

Commanders 2025 free agency tracker: Offseason moves, signings

Michael Gallup, WR​


The former Raider is joining the Commanders on a one-year deal.

What it means: More veteran receiver depth. Washington added Samuel and re-signed Brown, but needed more quality depth at the position. Luke McCaffrey saw his play time diminish later in his rookie year and is still developing at the position. So they needed more options alongside McLaurin. Gallup has 266 career receptions and, after a brief one-year retirement, says he’s in a much better head space. He provides another receiver who does well making contested catches.

What’s the risk: None. Washington doesn’t attach itself to many — if any — bad contracts. Getting Gallup for a year will provide good insurance. Samuel has been banged up in recent years, though he doesn’t miss many games; and Brown has had his share of injuries. Washington needed another veteran. But the Commanders would be helped if McCaffrey developed.

Foster Sarell, OT​


The former Charger joins Washington on a one-year deal.

What it means: Depth. Washington needed more offensive line competition, especially for a swing tackle. The Commanders do have the veteran Scott, who was a No. 4 tackle last year; and starting right tackle Andrew Wylie might be an option if they move Coleman to his spot. But they needed another young player — Sarell is 26 — to compete for a job. Of his 328 offensive snaps the past three years with the Chargers, 290 came at right tackle.

What’s the risk: None. Sarell still has to make the team and the Commanders just needed more players to fill out the roster. He does offer some size at 6-foot-6, 322 pounds and that’s needed as well. The Commanders would be wise to find more young interior depth to develop via the draft but Sarell does not impact that ability at all.


Commanders Wire

Why did new Commanders receiver retire and then decide to return?


Gallup said that Quinn, even though he was on the defensive side of the ball, was always checking on him, and that mattered to him personally. Gallup acknowledged the opportunity with Washington would not have happened if Quinn had not advocated for him.

Gallup doesn’t need to be Washington’s No. 1 or No. 2 receiver in 2025. If he makes the roster, the Commanders could use Gallup to fill Brown’s (30 receptions) or Zaccheaus’ (45 receptions) production. If he doesn’t, Washington loses nothing. Quinn wanted to give Gallup another shot to make it, and the rest is up to the veteran wideout.


Podcasts & videos

Deebo Samuel Sr. is “READY to ROCK OUT” | Next Man Up | Washington Commanders | NFL Free Agency​


Team 980’s Craig Hoffman on The Approach to Free Agency Thus Far | John Keim Report​


NFC East links

Bleeding Green Nation

NFC East free agency recap


Notable losses: Mekhi Becton, Brandon Graham, C.J. Gardner-Johnson, Isaiah Rodgers, Darius Slay, Josh Sweat, Milton Williams

The Eagles lost four starters and three high level backups/rotation players. They acquired just one player who played in more than half his team’s snaps last year, and only two others played more than 25%. They brought in nobody who will unquestionably be a starter.

After the expected trade of Dallas Goedert, the offense will have 9 starters returning from last season, and the defense will have 8 (whenever Nakobe Dean returns from injury).

The Eagles roster unquestionably took a step back this offseason.


Blogging the Boys

Cowboys may very well have their pick of receivers in the first round


One of the more common predictions for the Dallas Cowboys in mock drafts these days is that the team will take a receiver with the 12th overall pick. It may not be as popular as Boise State running back Ashton Jeanty, but wide receiver is definitely a position of need, even after signing Parris Campbell.

By most accounts, the top two receivers in this year’s draft are Arizona’s Tetairoa McMillan and Missouri’s Luther Burden. You can read scouting reports on both McMillan and Burden here, courtesy of our own Mike Poland and yours truly. There is plenty of excitement around both players among the fan base and social media scouts.

However, recent rumblings from draft insiders have suggested that fans and the media are much higher on these two than actual NFL front offices. In the most recent mock drafts from both Mel Kiper and Daniel Jeremiah, both coming after the first wave of free agency, neither receiver came off the board in the first 20 picks, and Burden didn’t even get taken in the first round.

All of this comes down to one very simple conclusion, though: it sure looks like the Cowboys are going to have their pick of receivers when they get on the clock this year.

That knowledge may have informed their decision not to pursue Cooper Kupp once they learned about his contract demands, and could also explain their addition of the low-risk Campbell last week. The ability to land the top receiver in the draft without needing a top 10 pick would certainly be a steal, if indeed that is what happens.


Big Blue View

Jameis Winston will sign with New York Giants


The Giants have their veteran bridge quarterback

Jameis Winston and the Giants are reportedly finalizing a two-year, $8 million deal with incentives that could push the deal’s value to $16 million.


Start spreading the neWs

— Jameis Winston (@Jaboowins) March 21, 2025

Winston is a magnetic personality, vastly different from Daniel Jones. Former teammates, though, speak highly of what type of teammate he is.

Winston’s experience as a highly-drafted quarterback who has had plenty of peaks and valleys in his career could make him an excellent mentor for whatever young quarterback the Giants draft.

New York Giants free agency: WR Lil’Jordan Humphrey signs


The 6-foot-4, 225-pound Humphrey had the best season of his career in 2024, catching 31 passes and playing a career-best 546 snaps on offense for the Denver Broncos. Humphrey had a six-reception game and three four-reception games for the Broncos last season.

Humphrey has 62 career receptions in 58 regular season games, including 23 starts. Humphrey has only 76 snaps worth of special teams experience in his career, so he will be on the roster to compete for snaps on offense.

Per Pro Football Focus, 61% of Humphrey’s snaps have come from the slot. Perhaps that leads to him challenging the 5-foot-8 Robinson for slot snaps, at least in some downs and distances.

Humphrey and the other Giants’ receivers are still waiting, of course, to find out who will be throwing them the ball in 2025.


NFL league links

Articles​

ESPN

2025 NFL free agency: Experts debate best, worst signings

Which team has taken a step backward?​


Mike Tannenbaum, NFL front office insider: The Dallas Cowboys. Though some of their signings will add depth and talent to their roster (running backs Javonte Williams and Miles Sanders, in particular), they lost quality players — Jourdan Lewis, DeMarcus Lawrence, Rico Dowdle and Zack Martin. However, the Cowboys’ most fundamental mistake was not signing Micah Parsons sooner. Now that the defensive end market has been “reset” by $6 million more per year because of Myles Garrett’s new contract, Dallas once again will pay a premium after waiting to commit to a star.

Which is the most improved team after free agency?​


Yates: The Washington Commanders. There are certain instances in which quality over quantity matters to me in free agency, and Washington would fit that criteria in this instance. Acquiring left tackle Laremy Tunsil solidifies a premium spot in front of Jayden Daniels, while a small-cost trade for receiver Deebo Samuel Sr. provides a boost as well. Washington should feel emboldened to make moves now following what was maybe the best rookie quarterback season ever.


Discussion topics

Pro Football Focus

Every team’s best trade asset ahead of the 2025 NFL Draft

Dallas Cowboys: EDGE Micah Parsons


There’s no name on this list bigger than Parsons, whose contract situation has yet to be resolved despite players from the subsequent draft class already being extended. Over the past three seasons, Parsons trails only Myles Garrett in PFF overall grade (93.7) and PFF pass-rushing grade (94.3).

The Parsons trade discourse has cooled for now, but Dallas can’t delay this forever. We saw CeeDee Lamb hold out of camp and nearly force a trade to pressure an extension from Jerry Jones. If Dallas knows it can’t pay what Parsons desires as early as the draft, then all bets are off.

New York Giants: EDGE Kayvon Thibodeaux


The Giants are in a strange place from a roster construction standpoint in that they either have untouchable young players or players who seemingly wouldn’t attract much interest. The one player who might fit into an alternate category is Thibodeaux.

The former fifth-overall pick displayed encouraging signs last season with a 72.0 PFF pass-rushing grade, but he saw time on only 593 snaps. Reports have indicated that Thibodeaux’s fifth-year option will be picked up, which would probably nix a trade, but it’s possible that general manager Joe Schoen could deal Thibodeaux, not worry about the option and draft someone instead — such as Penn State‘s Abdul Carter at third overall.

Philadelphia Eagles: TE Dallas Goedert


Eagles general manager Howie Roseman might be the most forward-thinking executive in the sport, which is why it’s not surprising to see him reportedly engage in trade discussions for Goedert.

The 30-year-old tight end was productive yet again for Philadelphia last year, producing a 75.8 PFF receiving grade with 6.6 yards after the catch per reception. At the same time, he played in only 14 of 20 games due to a knee injury and will be a free agent in 2026. There’s a good chance the Eagles will trade Goedert before the draft and select a tight end on Day 2 or 3.

Washington Commanders: RB Brian Robinson Jr.


The Commanders’ offseason has centered on upgrading the pieces around Jayden Daniels. In that sense, it might seem paradoxical to trade Robinson, but there would be good reasons to do so.

His PFF rushing grade has declined in all three seasons, and his 34 missed tackles forced in 2024 tied for 27th out of 31 qualified rushers. With Robinson only under contract for one more year and this draft class being rich at the position, trading him in favor of a rookie would be plausible.


The Athletic (paywall)​

The 8 NFL free-agent signings with the best chance to outproduce their contracts

Joshua Uche, edge, Philadelphia Eagles​

2025 cash: $1.92 million​


The Eagles were the clear winners of free agency in 2024. It is no coincidence they went on to win the Super Bowl. Philadelphia received above-average AV per million returns on several free agents, including linebacker Zack Baun (4.0), running back Saquon Barkley (1.2) and guard Mekhi Becton (1.5). Baun was in the top 10 in AV per million after transitioning to off-ball linebacker and having a breakout All-Pro season.

If the Eagles are going to hit big on a 2025 free agent value signing like they did with Baun last year, Uche is a good bet. He is cheap. He had an 11 1/2-sack season with the Patriots in 2022. He will be playing alongside one of the best defensive tackles in football in Jalen Carter. And we saw in 2024 what kind of impact Carter had on his teammates, including Williams and edge rusher Josh Sweat, both of whom left in free agency. The big question with Uche is whether he can earn playing time in a deep edge rusher room in Philly. Nolan Smith Jr., Bryce Huff and Jalyx Hunt all return. The Eagles also signed Azeez Ojulari to a one-year deal in free agency.


All aTwitter


Fresh ink ️@Cle_Missile x @_tscott78 pic.twitter.com/x8JOjyW8aK

— Washington Commanders (@Commanders) March 21, 2025

73 has reported as eligible

Welcome back @_tscott78! pic.twitter.com/8aP08abdFo

— Washington Commanders (@Commanders) March 21, 2025

Remember when @_tscott78 caught @JayD__5's first career TD pass? pic.twitter.com/3Me2c0q3Oh

— Washington Commanders (@Commanders) March 21, 2025

posting a photo from last season every day until OTAs pic.twitter.com/P5LpS56Qrv

— Washington Commanders (@Commanders) March 21, 2025

Michael Gallup, on why he took a season off for a mental reset ... pic.twitter.com/hJNAyqwZ5t

— Nicki Jhabvala (@NickiJhabvala) March 21, 2025


BREAKING: The #Giants and QB Jameis Winston are finalizing a 2-year, $8M deal, which could be up to $16M with incentives, multiple sources tell @NFLonFOX. pic.twitter.com/kYiVfxgyEe

— Jordan Schultz (@Schultz_Report) March 21, 2025

Jameis Winston “I’m just praying for the Lord to deliver me from pick sixes”

Thanks for the memories @Jaboowins pic.twitter.com/x8C2bB3ocI

— McNeil (@Reflog_18) March 22, 2025

“Hey Russ. Jameis Winston is here. We’re all good.”

pic.twitter.com/jio9M8kX7h

— . (@J0nesToChina) March 22, 2025

The Giants odds to win the Super Bowl before signing Jameis Winston ➡️ +20000

Now ➡️ +20000

LEGEND.pic.twitter.com/KDTZJ6V3Kl

— FanDuel Sportsbook (@FDSportsbook) March 21, 2025

There’s no resolution yet between Aaron Rodgers and the Steelers after he visited the team today. The deliberations are ongoing. https://t.co/HtAOIKjehD

— MarkMaske (@MarkMaske) March 21, 2025


Greatest at his position #RaiseHail https://t.co/DR5CCl7vqz pic.twitter.com/E8iTJCeVY6

— PAIN (@Xommanders) March 21, 2025

The #Terps won by 32 and didn’t play anywhere near their best. Missed 12 FTs. Gave up another 13 offensive rebounds. Ragged at times. Have to be better Sunday against Colorado St. Really happy for DHS!

— Kevin Sheehan (@kevinsheehanDC) March 21, 2025

VCU head coach Ryan Odom has agreed with Virginia to become the Cavaliers' next head coach, sources told Fox Sports. Odom led UMBC past UVA in 2018 in the first 16-over-a-1 in tournament history. Went 44-25 at Utah State, 52-21 in two years at VCU.

Great hire by the Hoos.

— John Fanta (@John_Fanta) March 21, 2025

JUST IN: Boxing legend George Foreman has passed away at the age of 76.

The announcement was made by his family.

“Our hearts are broken. With profound sorrow, we announce the passing of our beloved George Edward Foreman Sr. who peacefully departed on March 21, 2025 surrounded… pic.twitter.com/WYqZb820RU

— Collin Rugg (@CollinRugg) March 22, 2025

RIP to the GREAT George Foreman.

A true legend! #boxing pic.twitter.com/ua4eiWqQLB

— Juan (@SomeJuanElse) March 22, 2025


Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/2025/3/22...one-with-new-commanders-receiver-deebo-samuel
 
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