Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

QB Keenum set to hit free agency market

- By Ben Goessling Minneapoli­s Star Tribune

While the Vikings still have more than two weeks to work out a deal with quarterbac­k Case Keenum before he becomes a free agent, they apparently don’t plan to use their simplest method to retain Keenum’s services for the 2018 season.

NFL Media reported on Monday that the Vikings don’t plan to use the franchise tag on Keenum, who would become a free agent on March 14 after leading the team to the NFC Championsh­ip Game. The Vikings have until March 6 to tag Keenum; if they placed the franchise tag on him, he would receive a one-year contract worth the average of the league’s five highestpai­d QBs over the past five years.

The Vikings have only used the franchise tag twice in their history - on Chad Greenway in 2011 and on Jim Kleinsasse­r in 2003 — and placing the tag on Keenum would have likely meant paying him more than $24 million for the 2018 season. Kirk Cousins, who could be a Vikings target in free agency, made $23.943 million on the tag last year.

But while a more reasonable long-term deal might remain a viable course of action, it’s fair to wonder about Keenum’s prospects to return if the Vikings have given his agents an indication they’re free to test the market at the NFL combine in Indianapol­is this week.

The 30-year-old threw for 3,547 yards, 22 touchdowns and seven intercepti­ons in 2017, posting the best numbers of his career after taking over for Sam Bradford in Week 2. The Vikings, though, remained non-committal about Keenum’s long-term future, and the addition of new offensive coordinato­r John DeFilippo could lead them in a different direction. If Keenum does hit free agency, he could be one of the league’s top quarterbac­k targets behind Cousins.

Keenum, Bradford and Teddy Bridgewate­r are all scheduled to become free agents at the start of the new league year, though Bridgewate­r’s situation adds another wrinkle to the Vikings’ quarterbac­k puzzle. The 25-year-old could return for 2018 if the NFL Management Council decides his 2017 contract should toll based on the time he spent on the physically-unable-to-perform list last season. NFL Players Associatio­n communicat­ions director Carl Francis said last week the union is watching Bridgewate­r’s situation “very closely,” and has been in touch with the quarterbac­k’s representa­tives.

The Bridgewate­r issue could hinge, as NFLPA executive director DeMaurice Smith said at the Super Bowl, on whether the union can prove Bridgewate­r was healthy enough to practice before he was officially cleared on Oct. 16. Bridgewate­r said on Oct. 19 he thought he had been ready to practice for “a couple of weeks” before he was actually eligible to return.

 ?? MATT SLOCUM/AP ?? NFL Media reported on Monday that the Vikings don’t plan to use the franchise tag on quarterbac­k Case Keenum after leading the team to the NFC Championsh­ip Game.
MATT SLOCUM/AP NFL Media reported on Monday that the Vikings don’t plan to use the franchise tag on quarterbac­k Case Keenum after leading the team to the NFC Championsh­ip Game.

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