The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Some veterans prosper as free agency begins

- By Barry Wilner

As the NFL opened its business year Wednesday, veterans Trent Williams, A.J. Green and Emmanuel Sanders prospered.

Some teams officially announced deals that consistent­ly leaked during the “legal tampering” period that began Monday, and others stayed pretty silent. That trio of players with a total of 31 pro seasons made out very well despite not getting big offers immediatel­y.

The 49ers held onto the best tackle who could have become a free agent by giving Williams the richest contract ever for an offensive lineman. Williams is a particular­ly intriguing case. His agents at Elite Loyalty Sports said the deal agreed to early Wednesday will pay Williams $138.1 million over the next six years, surpassing the $138 million deal David Bakhtiari got from Green Bay a year ago. Williams also will get the biggest signing bonus ever for an offensive lineman at $30.1 million, as well as $55.1 million guaranteed.

Basically, he gambled on himself. Seeking to get out of Washington, where Williams believed the medical staff botched a cancer diagnosis, he sat out 2019. Midway through that season, he hoped to be traded before the deadline, which didn’t occur. Williams was banished from the Washington facility by former team president Bruce Allen.

He landed in San Francisco in a draft-day trade for a 2020 fifth-round pick and a 2021 third-rounder.

“Trent’s a game changer,” said fullback Kyle Juszczyk, who signed a five-year contract to stay in San Francisco earlier in the week. “He’s somebody that teams have to scheme around. They have to change what they’re doing because he’s out there, and he’s a guy that we can just completely count on and know that he’s going to get his job done and then some. You can’t pay too much for a guy like that. Those are guys that really make a difference and put you over the top and and put you into that championsh­ip caliber.”

Green joins the Cardinals and ends a decade in Cincinnati, though he has been plagued by injuries recently and sat out 2019. Arizona, which also acquired center Rodney Hudson from the Raiders for a third-round draft pick, already has a No. 1 receiver in DeAndre Hopkins, and long-time star Larry Fitzgerald has not made a decision on returning for an 18th season. He got a one-year deal worth $8 million. The Cardinals added veteran placekicke­r Matt Prater, who owns the NFL record with a 64-yard field goal made in 2013 with Denver.

Sanders, joining his fourth franchise, didn’t make out quite so well as Green as he heads to Buffalo. But he gets to join AllPro receiver Stefon Diggs catching balls from Josh Allen for a team on the rise that went to its first AFC title game since the 1993 season before losing at Kansas City. Sanders also played for Pittsburgh and Denver, where he won a Super Bowl, and spent last season with New Orleans. He’ll get about $6 million for 2021. Elsewhere: — Quarterbac­k Tyrod Taylor agreed to a one-year contract with Houston, giving

the Texans an insurance policy if they trade Deshaun Watson or if they don’t trade him and he decides to sit out this season. Watson has been unhappy with the direction of the team and has requested a trade.

— Eight-time Pro Bowl cornerback Patrick Peterson left Arizona after 10 seasons to join the Minnesota Vikings, who agreed with the 30-year-old on a one-year contract worth up to $10 million, according to a person with knowledge of the negotiatio­ns, speaking on condition of anonymity to the AP because the team had yet to announce the deal.

– The Buffalo Bills agreed to sign former Chicago Bears starter Mitch Trubisky to a one-year contract on Thursday, and serve as Josh Allen’s primary backup.

Trubisky was the No. 2 pick in the 2017 draft who has struggled through inconsiste­ncies since leading the Bears to the playoffs in 2018.

Trubisky went 29-21 with Chicago and lost the confidence of the team prior to last season. The Bears declined to pick up the fifthyear option on the quarterbac­k’s contract, while also acquiring Nick Foles in a trade with Jacksonvil­le.

The 26-year-old was not re-signed and the Bears signed Andy Dalton to a oneyear, $10 million contract.

— The Panthers went for defense with linebacker­s Haason Reddick and Denzel

Perryman and end Morgan Fox.

Reddick played under Panthers coach Matt Rhule at Temple. The 13th overall pick in the 2017 draft is coming off a breakout season with 12 ½ sacks, six forced fumbles and 15 tackles for a loss.

— Raiders coach Jon Gruden, who likes speedy wideouts as much as he enjoys watching game film, added John Brown, recently cut by Buffalo. Brown could be a veteran deep threat in Las Vegas after Nelson Agholor left in free agency for New England. But Brown, who turns 31 in April, is coming off the second-least productive season of his career and was limited to nine games because of knee and ankle injuries.

— Seattle made its first big move to bolster its offensive line and appease quarterbac­k Russell Wilson by acquiring veteran guard Gabe Jackson from Las Vegas for a fifth-round draft pick.

— Kansas City agreed to a $5 million contract for next season with three-time Pro Bowl guard Kyle Long, who will come out of retirement. Earlier this week, the Chiefs gave an $80 million, five-year deal to Patriots offensive lineman Joe Thuney. KC’s offensive line was a sieve in its Super Bowl loss to Tampa Bay.

The Chiefs also agreed to one-year deals to keep running back Darrel Williams, linebacker Ben Niemann and defensive end Taco Charlton.

 ?? RICK SCUTERI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? The San Francisco 49ers locked up offensive tackle Trent Williams (71) to the richest contract ever for an offensive lineman, a six-year, $138.1 million deal.
RICK SCUTERI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE The San Francisco 49ers locked up offensive tackle Trent Williams (71) to the richest contract ever for an offensive lineman, a six-year, $138.1 million deal.

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