Truro News

Vikings, others face tough decisions as free agency nears

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Rick Spielman came to this year’s annual NFL scouting combine with a quarterbac­k quandary.

He has two first-round draft picks trying to recover from injuries and a third-stringer, who led the Minnesota Vikings to the NFC championsh­ip game.

Now, instead of reaping the benefits of his smart moves and abundant riches, Spielman faces one of the most challengin­g decisions a general manager can with all three set to become free agents in less than two weeks.

“I believe in Case Keenum,” Spielman said. “He did a phenomenal job and he has a knack for making big plays. We’re very excited about what he was able to accomplish.”

The more telling question might be how eager others around the league to sign Keenum, Teddy Bridgewate­r and Sam Bradford?

Spielman is running short on time as the carousel spins. He says he won’t make any decisions until he returns to Minneapoli­s next week.

Meanwhile, the off-season has started with a bang.

Alex Smith was traded from Kansas City to Washington, essentiall­y assuring Kirk Cousins becomes a free agent. Blake Bortles and Jimmy Garoppolo each signed contract extensions with Garoppolo getting a reported five-year, Us$137.5-million deal. Garoppolo won his first five starts in San Francisco after a midseason trade from New England and is now 7-0 as a starter.

The new deals have Green Bay contemplat­ing a new deal for Aaron Rodgers. New general manager Brian Gutekunst acknowledg­ed “it’s not going to be inexpensiv­e.”

But this could be just the start to a wild and wooly off-season.

The free agent market opens March 14 and Keenum, Bridgewate­r and Bradford could all be attractive options for quarterbac­k-needy teams.

Keenum seemed to find a home last year after spending two-plus seasons in Houston and two-plus seasons with the Rams.

Bridgewate­r was considered the Vikings’ next big star until he tore the ACL and dislocated his knee in August 2016. He made it back briefly late last season and now the Vikings await a ruling that could force Bridgewate­r to stick around one more season before hitting free agency.

Spielman doesn’t sound hopeful about Minnesota’s chances.

“I don’t personally believe, with what I know today, that his con- tract will toll,” he said.

One big advantage the Vikings have: they know Bridgewate­r’s prognosis and exactly where he stands in the rehab process.

Bradford, the 2010 NFL offensive rookie of the year, missed all but two games last season with a knee injury and there are longterm questions about the stability of his left knee. The 30-year-old has a long history of injuries but a needy team might be willing to take a calculated risk on the 2008 Heisman Trophy winner and top pick in the 2010 draft.

Other prominent names could be on the move, too.

Cousins and Mike Glennon are expected to be available after the Bears announced this week they would release Glennon, and 39-year-old Drew Brees will be a free agent if he doesn’t re-sign with the Saints in the next two weeks. The convention­al wisdom suggests Brees will remain in New Orleans.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? Case Keenum is one of three Minnesota free agents in less than two weeks. Vikings quarterbac­ks set to become
AP PHOTO Case Keenum is one of three Minnesota free agents in less than two weeks. Vikings quarterbac­ks set to become

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