The Commercial Appeal

NFL trade deadline winners, losers

- Nate Davis USA TODAY

The final opportunit­y for NFL teams to attempt significant tinkering – whether they think they’re legitimate contenders or realize they’re actually pretenders – passed at 4 p.m. ET on Tuesday with the expiration of the league’s 2021 trade deadline.

The Rams made the most significant move Monday, acquiring Super Bowl 50 MVP Von Miller. But there were quite a few mid-tier and minor transactio­ns in the preceding weeks ... as well as some notable players who weren’t liberated from their current situations and teams in apparent need that opted to stand pat.

Let’s dig in to who won and lost during the latest waypoint on the NFL calendar:

Winners

Tua Tagovailoa: The Miami Dolphins’ second-year quarterbac­k has consistent­ly received backing from coach Brian Flores. He effectively got more from his employer Tuesday when the Fins passed on trading for Houston Texans QB Deshaun Watson. By all accounts, Miami was the only team that had seriously engaged in negotiatio­ns for Watson, and Tagovailoa has been dealing with the speculatio­n for months. Now, Tagovailoa has nine weeks to prove he should be the long-term face of the franchise.

Alvin Kamara: He averaged more than 5 yards per carry, 6.6 yards per touch and scored 31 touchdowns when paired with fellow RB Mark Ingram II in 2017 and ‘18. Now Ingram has returned and should be able to take on some of the dirty work for a team that may have to heavily rely on its backs with QB Jameis Winston lost for the season.

Kansas City Chiefs: Even after collecting three sacks in their Monday night defeat of the New York Giants, they still rank last in the AFC with 11 on the season. Enter veteran pass rusher Melvin Ingram, obtained from the Pittsburgh Steelers for a sixth-rounder. The threetime Pro Bowler may be nearing the end of the line, but he’s scheme versatile and intimately familiar with the AFC West after spending his first nine seasons with the Chargers.

Zach Ertz: He’s already played two games with the Arizona Cardinals after patiently awaiting an exit in Philadelph­ia. With seven catches, 108 yards and a TD for a first-place team, Ertz is also in an ideal situation to showcase himself for one more nice contract in 2022.

Von Miller: He leaves a team stuck in the mud for arguably the best one in the league. Now Miller, who hasn’t appeared in a playoff game since his epic Super Bowl performanc­e (21⁄2 sacks, 2 forced fumbles) against the Carolina Panthers nearly six years ago, has a bona fide shot to add a second ring.

Los Angeles Rams of the present: They’ve teamed Miller with Leonard Floyd and Aaron Donald, probably the best defensive player of his era, on a unit that was already leading the NFL with 25 sacks. And though LA surrendere­d a pair of valuable draft picks, the team only has to pay about $700,000 in salary while Denver picks up the remaining $9 million of Miller’s contract, per ESPN.

Denver Broncos of the future: Trading Miller was a tough decision but the correct one for new GM George Paton. Collecting a second- and third-round pick for a 32-year-old pending free agent

– draft capital that Paton can use to obtain the quarterbac­k, whether a veteran or rookie, he really needs in 2022 – is a downright coup.

Losers

Denver Broncos of the present: Miller, a civic hero, is gone. And exporting a captain from a 4-4 team for draft equity is a pretty clear signal that Paton doesn’t believe this club, as currently constructe­d, has the goods. Doesn’t bode very well for coach Vic Fangio or incumbent QBS Teddy Bridgewate­r and Drew Lock.

2011 NFL draft class: Quite possibly the greatest draft ever despite the relative lack of quarterbac­k stars – you qualify, Cam Newton – and quite a few have moved on this year. Miller joins J.J. Watt, Patrick Peterson, A.J. Green and Julio Jones among those switching jerseys in their 11th NFL season. The best 2011 draftees who still remain with their original teams? Saints DE Cam Jordan, Steelers DE Cam Heyward and Cowboys LT Tyron Smith.

Aaron Rodgers: Welp. Seems like that trade for WR Randall Cobb – that happened in July – is going to be AR12’S parting gift from management. But the Nfcleading Green Bay Packers could have definitely used another receiver, cornerback and/or tight end.

Tom Brady: While TB12’S Tampa Bay Buccaneers – the still-loaded Tampa Bay Buccaneers – stood pat, the Rams got Miller, the Cardinals added Ertz, and even the division rival Carolina Panthers, who currently project into the NFC playoff field, obtained CB Stephon Gilmore, Brady’s former teammate in New England. At least Brady has the bye week to mull his situation after this blatant lack of support.

Joe Flacco: Just when he gets traded back to the New York Jets, thinking he’ll get a chance to play in the absence of injured rookie QB Zach Wilson, “Magic Mike” White emerges as the league’s next Brady. Sorry, Joe.

Pass catchers: Barring a release for any of them, WRS Odell Beckham Jr. (Browns), Brandin Cooks (Texans), Jamison Crowder (Jets), N’keal Harry (Patriots) and Allen Robinson (Bears) and TES Evan Engram (Giants) and Hayden Hurst (Falcons) will remain in their current situations, several of them suboptimal to say the least.

AFC contenders: With the exception of Kansas City, currently in ninth place in the conference, snagging Ingram, no team in the AFC really made a major acquisitio­n. The Titans and Ravens could certainly use running back help, while the Chargers and Raiders are in need of reinforcem­ents in the trenches. Tragically – meaning the motorist who was killed Tuesday – Las Vegas has even bigger issues in the aftermath of WR Henry Ruggs facing a charge of driving under the influence resulting in death. But on the (trivial) football side, it seems the AFC teams are so tightly packed right now, it’s hard to determine who should be buyers and sellers.

Deshaun Watson: He’s not going to be a Dolphin. Yet. He’s almost surely not going to play football in 2021. He’ll probably have to reassess in a few months for whom he’s willing to waive his no-trade clause. And, more importantl­y, he may have to reassess his legal strategy as 22 civil lawsuits and 10 criminal complaints from women alleging sexual assault and misconduct continue to hover over him. That said, no sympathy for Watson.

 ?? RICH BARNES/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Dolphins quarterbac­k Tua Tagovailoa passes against the Bills on Sunday in Orchard Park, N.Y.
RICH BARNES/USA TODAY SPORTS Dolphins quarterbac­k Tua Tagovailoa passes against the Bills on Sunday in Orchard Park, N.Y.

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