Ottawa Citizen

What to make of a wacky week of free agency in NFL

- BARRY WILNER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Maybe everyone should have known from the way the Super Bowl ended that the beginning of the NFL’s business season would be wild.

Chip Kelly made one stunning move after another. The normally free-spending Cowboys let DeMarco Murray, the league’s top offensive player, walk — to Kelly and division rival Philadelph­ia.

Three players retired in their primes. The Colts loaded up on veterans, a clear message they believe 2015 is their year to make super things happen.

Then the Jets brought back the two key players from their outstandin­g secondary under Rex Ryan. But wait, Ryan is now in Buffalo, remaking the Bills’ roster. And the Dolphins added Ndamukong Suh. All three teams want to mount some sort of challenge to the Patriots.

Things should slow down now, although who really knows given the frantic nature of this week.

Some observatio­ns on all that frenzied action: PLAYING ALL HIS CHIPS: Giving Kelly the keys to the kingdom in Philly after he won his power struggle with GM Howie Roseman led to the kind of bartering rarely seen in the NFL. Kelly fully believes in the offensive system he brought from Oregon and has gone 20-12 in his two regular seasons with the Eagles. His vision of the players he wants is undeterred by cost — QB Sam Bradford brings a $16.58 million cap hit; RB Murray will get $42 million over five years.

Not only is Kelly changing the face of his franchise by moving around so many pieces, he might be altering the way teams look at making trades. As the salary cap continues to rise through the remaining six years of the labour agreement and all 32 clubs have more spending power, bold steps (leaps really) could become less frightenin­g throughout the NFL. ALL-IN IN INDY: The Colts have a budding superstar quarterbac­k in Andrew Luck. They have a strong coaching staff led by Chuck Pagano and have systematic­ally rebuilt the roster since Peyton Manning left.

After making the playoffs the last three years and advancing one step farther each time, they believe a Super Bowl trip is their 2015 destiny. So GM Ryan Grigson has surrounded Luck and some of his younger regulars with a slew of veterans.

Luck gets a Hall of Fame calibre receiver in Andre Johnson, and a workhouse runner in Frank Gore. Both bring solid leadership to the clubhouse. They also brought in linebacker Trent Cole, defensive end Kendall Langford and guard Todd Herremans.

Super Bowl or bust? Could be for Indy. OUT OF HERE: With all this money being thrown around, it was somewhat surprising that three players nowhere near the end of their productive football years called it quits.

Perennial Pro Bowl LB Patrick Willis left millions on the table in departing the 49ers after a borderline Hall of Fame quality eight pro seasons. Steelers free agent LB Jason Worilds likely would have gotten a very nice contract somewhere. And Jake Locker’s upside at age 26 was enchanting in a quarterbac­k-driven sport.

Each of them felt they either weren’t healthy enough or passionate enough to keep going.

 ??  RONALD MARTINEZ/GETTY IMAGES ?? The Philadelph­ia Eagles signed running back DeMarco Murray to a fiveyear, $42-million contract.
 RONALD MARTINEZ/GETTY IMAGES The Philadelph­ia Eagles signed running back DeMarco Murray to a fiveyear, $42-million contract.

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