The Day

NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE NOTES

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AP source: Jay Cutler agrees to terms with Dolphins

Jay Cutler has decided to postpone retirement for the chance to be Ryan Tannehill's replacemen­t. Cutler agreed to terms Sunday on a contract with the Miami Dolphins, a person familiar with the situation said. The person confirmed the agreement to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because the Dolphins weren't expected to announce the deal until Cutler signed the $10 million, one-year deal. Cutler will compete with Matt Moore for a starting job while Tannehill remains out with a left knee injury that could sideline him for the entire season. Dolphins coach Adam Gase was offensive coordinato­r for the Chicago Bears when Cutler had a career-best quarterbac­k rating with them in 2015. Gase joined Miami in 2016, and Cutler parted with Chicago in March after eight seasons. Cutler, 34, drew little interest in the spring as a free agent, perhaps partly because of his prickly personalit­y and tendency for turnovers. "I guess I know a different guy than what everybody else portrays," Gase said in May, when Cutler was hired by Fox as an analyst to work on its No. 2 NFL team. Tannehill, who missed the final four games of last season with two sprained ligaments in his knee, reinjured it a week into training camp Thursday. The damage is similar last year's injury, a personal familiar with the diagnosis said, which has left the Dolphins consulting with specialist­s to determine whether surgery is the best option for Tannehill. He's expected to be sidelined a minimum of six weeks, but the deal with Cutler signals the Dolphins anticipate Tannehill will need a lengthier recovery. Cutler is 68-71 as a starter with a career quarterbac­k rating of 85.7, 208 touchdown passes and 146 intercepti­ons. Several NFL starting QBs are older, including New England's Tom Brady, who just turned 40. Moore turns 33 next week and has 28 starts in 10 seasons. Last year he helped the Dolphins clinch their first postseason berth since 2008, going 2-1 as a starter to end the regular season before a first-round playoff loss at Pittsburgh. Gase gave Moore only a tepid endorsemen­t Friday, saying: "Right now Matt is our quarterbac­k." The Dolphins decided not to pursue Colin Kaepernick, who parted ways with the San Francisco 49ers in March and remains unsigned. Kaepernick knelt during the national anthem at games last season to protest police brutality, and there has been speculatio­n he's unemployed because of his politics.

Falcons' Collins suspended

For the second straight year, Atlanta Falcons cornerback Jalen Collins will be suspended for the start of the season for a violation of the league's policy on performanc­e enhancers. This time, the suspension carries a bigger bite: 10 games. The NFL announced Sunday that Collins has been suspended without pay for the first 10 games of the 2017 season. He was suspended for the first four games in 2016. Collins, a second-round pick in 2015, has said he failed drug tests at Louisiana State. The suspension will be costly to the Falcons' depth. Collins started six games last season and had two intercepti­ons. He moved into the lineup after star cornerback Desmond Trufant was placed on IR with a torn pectoral muscle. Collins will be eligible to return to the active roster following the team's game against Seattle on Nov. 20. Falcons general manager Thomas Dimitroff said he and coach Dan Quinn face "decisions going forward," which could affect Collins' future with the team. "We are extremely disappoint­ed that for the second straight season we are dealing with a suspension for Jalen," Dimitroff said in a statement released by the team. "Such are the consequenc­es when certain choices are made. Our decisions going forward will be based on what Dan and I feel is best for the team." Trufant and Robert Alford are the projected starting cornerback­s in Atlanta's base defense this season.

A visit to a specialist has Buffalo Bills starting left tackle Cordy Glenn feeling reassured regarding a sore left foot that's bothered him for much of the offseason. “I just wanted to know what was going on,” Glenn said Sunday, three days after being examined by Dr. Robert Anderson in Charlotte, North Carolina. “I feel good about the plan we've got in place right now, and I'm just going to stick with that.” Glenn declined to reveal what has been causing the soreness or disclose what plan the team and Anderson have put in place. He returned to practice after missing the previous two sessions, and after Glenn worked on a limited basis during the first six days of training camp. The sore foot also prevented Glenn from taking part in the Bills' entire series of spring minicamps. Glenn expects to be ready for the start of the regular season and answered, “No, not right now,” when asked if he feels there is any risk of further damaging the foot.

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