Orlando Sentinel

OL James next on trade block

- By Omar Kelly

DAVIE — The Miami Dolphins are attempting to trade the last player that remains from the franchise’s 2014 draft class.

Ja’Wuan James, the team’s 2014 first-round pick, is being shopped to teams seeking offensive-line help and could be moved before the start of free agency on Wednesday, according to a league source.

Teams that need offensive linemen are in a holding pattern, waiting for today’s legal tampering period to start at 4 p.m. That is when NFL teams are allowed to make offers to unrestrict­ed free agents.

It is quite possible that one of those teams might prefer to trade for James, who is on the fifth-year option of his contract, which guarantees the four-year starter $9.34 million for the 2018 season. James’ contract becomes fully guaranteed Wednesday at 4 p.m.

The Dolphins plan to resign Sam Young, a former St. Thomas Aquinas standout who filled in admirably for an injured James the final six games of 2017, helping Miami’s shaky offensive line stabilize in the second half of last year’s 6-10 season.

“[Jesse Davis] and Sam really developed something there toward the end. We’ll just see how everything kind of plays out. We have a lot of time here,” coach Adam Gase said at the NFL Scouting Combine. “We have to make decisions on so many players and kind of see how free agency goes, see how the draft goes.”

If the Dolphins can’t trade James, who has started all 47 games he played at right tackle the past four seasons, it is possible that Miami will release him to clear additional cap space. James’ possible release could complicate getting a trade done because some teams might prefer to wait for him to become an unrestrict­ed free agent.

Now that Jarvis Landry, another member of the 2014 draft class, has been traded to the Cleveland Browns in a deal that can’t become official until Wednesday, the Dolphins have cleared $15.9 million in cap space. But Miami still is $3 million over the league’s salary cap once the trade for defensive end Robert Quinn is factored in.

The Dolphins can clear another $12 million in cap space by releasing tight end Julius Thomas and linebacker Lawrence Timmons in moves that are expected this week.

However, Miami would need to purge more of the roster, or restructur­e a few contracts, to re-sign some of the team’s own free agents, like Young and kicker Cody Parkey, and make tender offers to the team’s seven restricted and exclusiver­ights free agents.

While Miami’s decisionma­kers feel James is a capable starting right tackle, the organizati­on views his $9.34 million salary in 2018 as exorbitant.

One player on his fifthyear option, receiver Kelvin Benjamin, has already been moved, and a few more could be traded or released before Wednesday.

The fifth-year option, which must be exercised in May, five months before a first-round pick begins playing his fourth season, pays players taken in the first 10 picks the equivalent of being tabbed with a transition tag, which is the average salary of the top-10-earning players at the same position.

Players picked between 11-32 get the average of the 25 highest-paid players at their position, except for the first three. That’s how James’ $9.34 million salary was produced.

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