The Day

While Brady leaves Pats, Brees stays with Saints

- By BARRY WILNER

The unimaginab­le has happened to Patriots fans: Tom Brady is moving on.

The predictabl­e has occurred for Saints fans: Drew Brees is staying put.

No matter what else happens in NFL free agency on Tuesday, decisions by those two iconic quarterbac­ks deserve headlines. And those decisions were as divergent as the regions they have played in.

Brady will be 43 when the next NFL season begins and he is expected to sign a contract with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers on Wednesday.

Brees, meanwhile, made things easy for the Saints, making it clear he wasn't leaving New Orleans or Sean Payton's offense despite having his contract run out.

Brees, 41, agreed to a two-year, $50 million contract, a person familiar with the situation said. The person spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity on Tuesday because the deal has not been announced.

The 19-year veteran with one NFL title in New Orleans basically gave a hometown discount to the Saints. His deal will not put him in the top 10 quarterbac­ks for annual salary. But the career leader in completion­s with 6,867, yards passing with 77,416, and touchdowns with 547 believes New Orleans offers the best place for him to win another championsh­ip.

Brees missed five games with a throwing hand injury that required surgery last season, but still helped New Orleans to a third straight playoff appearance.

Another veteran QB found his landing spot when Philip Rivers agreed to join the Colts. Rivers spent the past 16 seasons with the Chargers, first in San Diego and then in Los Angeles.

Rivers agreed to a one-year contract with Indianapol­is. The Colts get a 38-year-old quarterbac­k coming off one of his worst seasons with 23, touchdown passes and 20 intercepti­ons. But Rivers ranks sixth in league history in completion­s, yards passing and TD passes and seventh in attempts and is 123-101 as an NFL starter. He hasn't missed a start since 2005.

Rivers will reunite with coach Frank Reich and offensive coordinato­r Nick Sirianni. Reich was Chargers quarterbac­ks coach in 2013 and the offensive coordinato­r in 2014 and 2015. Sirianni spent five seasons in San Diego, two as quarterbac­ks coach.

Incumbent Jacoby Brissett now figures to be job hunting. The Colts acquired him in a 2017 trade with the Patriots — who just happen to have an opening behind center.

And one more star passer, Cam Newton, will be departing Carolina. Panthers general manager Marty Hurney said Tuesday on Twitter that "every year difficult decisions are made and they are never easy."

Newton, the 2015 NFL MVP, said on social media he didn't ask for the trade, telling the Panthers: "You forced me into this.”

Carolina reportedly agreed to a deal with free agent quarterbac­k Teddy Bridgewate­r.

Other quarterbac­ks' fates were being decided Tuesday, the second day on which players' representa­tives could negotiate with teams. No deals can become official until the league business year begins today at 4 p.m. Also Tuesday: —Bryan Bulaga agreed to a contract with the Chargers. He spent the past 10 seasons with Green Bay and will turn 31 on Saturday. He is likely to start at right tackle and will be reunited with James Campen, who was Bulaga's line coach at Green Bay and was recently hired by

Los Angeles.

—Linebacker Thomas Davis said he's reuniting with former coach Ron Rivera and signing with the Redskins. Davis, 36, played under Rivera with Carolina for eight seasons and had the best years of his career.

—Jason Witten is headed to Las Vegas, where Jon Gruden is the coach. Coincident­ally, Witten replaced Gruden as the analyst on ESPN's “Monday Night Football” in 2018, then went back to play again with the Cowboys.

Witten turns 38 in May. He had 63 catches for 529 yards and four TDs last season, and has 1,215 catches for 12,977 yards and 72 TDs in 16 seasons with Dallas.

—Philadelph­ia won't be keeping star safety Malcolm Jenkins, who led the Eagles' defense when it won the 2017 league title. Jenkins spent the past six of his 11 NFL seasons in Philly.

—The Bears have released outside linebacker Leonard Floyd, chosen ninth in the 2016 draft. Floyd contribute­d against the run and in pass coverage, but did not develop as a pass rusher. He had 18 [1/2] sacks in four seasons, including a career-low three last year.

—The Tennessee Titans added edge rusher Vic Beasley Jr. on a oneyear deal. The No. 8 overall pick in the 2015 draft led the NFL with 15 [1/2] sacks in 2016 for the Falcons. Atlanta declined to re-sign Beasley after he got only 18 sacks combined over the past three seasons.

—The Rams declined their contract option on cornerback Nickell Robey-Coleman, who has been the team's nickel cornerback and their top defender on slot receivers since 2017. Robey-Coleman was the defender who admittedly got away with pass interferen­ce against New Orleans receiver Tommylee Lewis in the NFC championsh­ip game in January 2019, leading to a change in NFL rules.

—Defensive tackle Jordan Phillips has agreed to sign with the Cardinals. The 6-foot-6, 341-pound Phillips just finished a breakout season for the Bills with a career-high 9 [1/2] sacks. Phillips was claimed off waivers by Buffalo after he was released by the Dolphins shortly after getting into a sideline argument with an assistant coach. He fills a major need for Arizona's defense, which gave up the most total yards in the NFL last season.

—The Jaguars have agreed to terms with free agent linebacker Joe Schobert, who spent the past four years in Cleveland, where he led the team in tackles twice and made a Pro Bowl. The deal is for $53.75 million over five years, and includes $22.5 million guaranteed.

—The Ravens fortified their defensive front with Michael Brockers, who agreed to terms on a three-year contract after spending his first eight pro seasons with the Rams. Brockers, 29, had a career-high 63 tackles in 2019, along with three sacks.

—Chicago agreed to a five-year, $70 million deal with defensive end Robert Quinn, who gets $30 million guaranteed. The Bears added a solid pass rusher to outside linebacker Khalil Mack. Quinn had 11 [1/2] sacks last year following a trade to Dallas from Miami.

—Miami and defensive end Emmanuel Ogbah agreed to a $15 million, two-year contract. Ogbah had 5½ sacks last year for the Super Bowl champion Kansas City Chiefs. He also spent three years with the Cleveland Browns.

—The Giants reached contract agreements with Packers middle linebacker Blake Martinez and Panthers cornerback James Bradberry. The Giants also agreed on a deal with veteran blocking tight end tight end Levine Toilolo.

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