USA TODAY US Edition

Cowboys wisely opt not to overspend

- Nate Davis

The NFL’s 2024 free agent market had its soft opening Monday and, although almost no sales are final until Wednesday at 4 p.m. EDT, what an eventful half-day.

With few exceptions, most of the big names have signaled their future intentions, namely soon-to-be Atlanta Falcons QB Kirk Cousins, who’s once again proved to be perhaps the league’s foremost businessma­n. And while notable players like DE Danielle Hunter, LT Tyron Smith, WR Calvin Ridley and RB Derrick Henry remain available, it’s possible the most prominent moves yet to materializ­e occur as trades.

Regardless, enough has already transpired to anoint an initial round of free agent winners and losers:

WINNERS Kirk Cousins

The last time he played for non-guaranteed NFL money was 2015, the final year of his rookie deal in Washington. Now “KFC” is leaving the Minnesota Vikings for the Atlanta Falcons after taking a four-year, $180 million offer – though with $100 million guaranteed, per reports, Cousins’ run of fully in-thebank cash will apparently come to an end. Argue among yourselves as to whether he’s one of the league’s top-10 passers, but he’s certainly an upgrade for an ATL squad that has gone 7-10 the past three seasons with bottom-10 play behind center. TE Kyle Pitts, WR Drake London and RB Bijan Robinson should all push to be Pro Bowlers for a team that almost certainly becomes the prohibitiv­e favorite in the NFC South.

Defensive tackles

The interior disruptors continue to cement their position as a premium one in the NFL – perhaps the most valuable (literally), quarterbac­k notwithsta­nding. The Kansas City Chiefs’ Chris Jones (five years, $158.75 million), Las Vegas Raiders’ Christian Wilkins (four years, $110 million) and Baltimore Ravens’ Justin Madubuike (four years, $98 million) have all moved into Aaron Donald’s financial neighborho­od in recent days – Jones with waterfront property after resetting the positional market. And the Seattle Seahawks’ Leonard Williams (three years, $64.5 million) ain’t exactly slumming it after re-signing Monday night.

Dallas Cowboys

Say what? Yes, they’ve essentiall­y sat on the FA sideline while RB Tony Pollard, C Tyler Biadasz and DE Dorance Armstrong are moving on with longtime Smith, the longtime stalwart on the blind side, apparently set to follow. But is that worse than overspendi­ng for aging or largely interchang­eable pieces? Let’s allow “America’s Team” to get MVP runner-up Dak Prescott’s contract in order and see what happens afterward.

Philadelph­ia Eagles

How best to offset the retirement of longtime team pillars Jason Kelce and Fletcher Cox? One seemingly good approach would be to extend G Landon Dickerson and sign pass rusher Bryce Huff and RB Saquon Barkley. A team that finished the 2023 season so poorly looks set up for a nice rebound in 2024 – maybe more so if executive vice president/general manager Howie Roseman offloads either OLB Haason Reddick or DE Josh Sweat with Huff about to enter the fold. Huff ’s three-year, $51.1 million deal will be the richest ever for an undrafted free agent who didn’t play quarterbac­k, per ESPN.

Guards

The guys mostly charged with blocking the Joneses and Donalds of the world also landed some compensato­ry appreciati­on. Dickerson moved to the top of the pay scale with a four-year, $84 million extension. Elsewhere, Robert Hunt reeled in a five-year, $100 million payday to help safeguard Carolina Panthers QB Bryce Young. And Jonah Jackson leaves the Detroit Lions for the Los Angeles Rams for a three-year, $51 million offer after LA re-signed G Kevin Dotson with a three-year, $48 million pact last week.

Russell Wilson

He has landed with a perennial playoff-caliber squad in Pittsburgh and will almost surely be the Steelers’ QB1 in 2024. Wilson probably couldn’t have hoped for a better outcome given what he’s faced in recent months.

Tampa Bay Buccaneers

If nothing else, they held serve – resigning QB Baker Mayfield, WR Mike Evans and K Chase McLaughlin after previously franchisin­g All-Pro FS Antoine Winfield Jr. Maybe it’s enough to get the Bucs a fifth consecutiv­e playoff appearance and fourth straight NFC South crown. However it does feel like they have a lower ceiling than their division Cousins, the quarterbac­k-upgraded Falcons.

Jordan Love

The new leader of the Pack guided the league’s youngest team in 2023 to the divisional round of the playoffs in his first year as QB1. Monday, Love’s Green Bay Packers got younger yet maybe even better while moving on from veteran LT David Bakhtiari, G Jon Runyan Jr., S Darnell Savage and RB Aaron Jones – all aging and/or eminently replaceabl­e players – while adding bruising RB Josh Jacobs, the league’s 2022 rushing champion, and versatile S Xavier McKinney. Seems like the runway to again be a perennial division contender is only getting longer.

Maxx Crosby

Given Wilkins’ impending arrival in Las Vegas – not to mention the impact it could have on 2023 first-rounder Tyree Wilson – this might be the time to lay a bet on Mad Maxx being the league’s 2024 Defensive Player of the Year.

‘March Madness’

By the time all these new contracts and trades can be officially executed Wednesday, it doesn’t appear many major names will be unaccounte­d for – save a surprise deal or transactio­n necessitat­ed by salary cap restrictio­ns. For NFL fans eager to settle in for uninterrup­ted college hoops conference tournament­s ahead of Selection Sunday, there shouldn’t be many (football) reasons to be checking the phone.

LOSERS Justin Fields

The Bears’ incumbent quarterbac­k is still waiting for GM Ryan Poles, who’s expected to take former Southern Cal QB Caleb Williams atop the 2024 draft, to “do right” by him even while jobs in Atlanta, Las Vegas and Pittsburgh fill up. Certainly worth wondering if Fields will have to wait for another team to get burned by an injury, or if he just gets stuck in Chicago indefinite­ly.

Pittsburgh Steelers

Anteing up for Fields rather than settling for Wilson really seemed like it would have been the superior, longterm play.

Denver Broncos

They’re still out $85 million simply to not have Wilson in their locker room. And they still have no bona fide QB1 going into next season (but that No. 12 draft pick sure appears to be the likely acquisitio­n route).

New York Giants

Whether it’s Daniel Jones or a rookie at quarterbac­k next season, where are the weapons following Barkley’s departure? The acquisitio­n of OLB Brian Burns is nice, but the five-year, $150 million investment – less a second-round pick – makes GM Joe Schoen’s offensive strategy even more curious. Maybe the plan comes into focus at draft time, but for now?

Dan Morgan

To be clear, Carolina’s rookie general manager, and former star linebacker, isn’t the guy who purportedl­y turned down two first-round picks plus a second for Burns two years ago. Yet if Schoen’s offer of a second- and fifthround­er was the best Morgan could get, why not just keep Burns, who had already been tagged and described as a foundation­al piece of the Panthers’ plans?

Miami Dolphins

A lot more talent has been departing (Wilkins, Hunt, OLB Andrew Van Ginkel, CB Xavien Howard, LB Jerome Baker, DE Emmanuel Ogbah) than arriving (LBs Jordyn Brooks, Anthony Walker Jr., S Brandon Jones, TE Jonnu Smith). That’s the price of the hefty extension that appears headed for QB Tua Tagovailoa … though legitimate questions if he’s set up to do more with less.

Justin Jefferson

Pass rushers Jonathan Greenard and Van Ginkel are nice pickups who, at best, offset the departures of OLBs Hunter and D.J. Wonnum for the Vikes. But they don’t explain the offensive plan around Jefferson, arguably the league’s most dangerous receiver and one who’s awaiting a long-term extension as he heads into the fifth-year option of his rookie contract. Minnesota is scheduled to pick 11th in Round 1 of the draft and may now have to get aggressive, not only to settle the quarterbac­k position but to sell Jefferson on the future. For now, it appears to be Sam Darnold’s job as he joins his fourth team heading into his seven season.

Jacksonvil­le Jaguars

They spent on WR Gabe Davis, WR/ KR Devin Duvernay, C Mitch Morse and Savage while swinging a deal for new QB2 Mac Jones. But the NFL mandates a spending floor to the salary cap … yet it doesn’t feel like they’re notably better in a division where the Houston Texans took a quantum leap in 2023?

Tennessee Titans

They spent on CB Chidobe Awuzie, C Lloyd Cushenberr­y and Pollard. But the NFL mandates a spending floor to the salary cap … yet it doesn’t feel like they’re notably better in a division where the Houston Texans took a quantum leap in 2023?

‘Washington Cowboys’

Washington spent on Armstrong and Biadasz, who follow new head coach Dan Quinn from Dallas to the Commanders and weaken a division rival, while also adding RB Austin Ekeler and LB Frankie Luvu. But the NFL mandates a spending floor to the salary cap … yet it doesn’t feel like they’re notably better despite having more spending power than any other team entering free agency. (Though, heck, maybe Quinn, GM Adam Peters and the rest of a new regime should be credited for some level of prudence that’s generally been foreign in these parts for the past quartercen­tury.)

Running backs

Barkley hauled in a three-year, $37.8 million contract with $26 million guaranteed – good money for the position but hardly an earth-shattering windfall given it’s comparable to what Davis earned as a WR2. The Packers awarded Jacobs, franchised in 2023 like Barkley, $48 million over four years. Yet those two did significan­tly better than Ekeler, Pollard, D’Andre Swift (Bears) or Devin Singletary (Giants), all 1,000-yard backs in 2023 who forge ahead with deals averaging fewer than eight figures. Meanwhile, Aaron Jones and two-time rushing king Derrick Henry bided time until Tuesday.

 ?? BRACE HEMMELGARN/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Quarterbac­k Dak Prescott is losing Cowboys teammates from 2023, including running back Tony Pollard.
BRACE HEMMELGARN/USA TODAY SPORTS Quarterbac­k Dak Prescott is losing Cowboys teammates from 2023, including running back Tony Pollard.

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