Lethbridge Herald

Negotiatio­n lists opened by CFL teams

TEAMS REVEAL 10 PLAYERS FROM THEIR CONFIDENTI­AL 45-MAN NEGOTIATIO­N LISTS

- Dan Ralph THE CANADIAN PRESS — TORONTO

If the second time with the Philadelph­ia Eagles isn’t the charm for tight end Adam Zaruba, the CFL could become an option for the Canadian rugby player.

The six-foot-five, 265-pound Zaruba, a member of Canada’s rugby sevens squad, is preparing for his second training camp appearance with the Eagles. He signed with the NFL club last year three days before the start of camp but was released in September.

Zaruba, 26, of North Vancouver, B.C., resigned with Philadelph­ia in January just before the Eagles made their Super Bowl-winning run.

On Tuesday, the Saskatchew­an Roughrider­s revealed Zaruba as one of 10 players on their 45-man negotiatio­n list, giving the club exclusive rights to Zaruba should he decided to play football in Canada.

All nine CFL teams revealed 10 players who are currently on their negotiatio­n lists. Not surprising­ly, the biggest names were quarterbac­ks, most notably Heisman Trophy winner Baker Mayfield of Oklahoma (Toronto Argonauts), former NFL starters Robert Griffin III (Hamilton Tiger-Cats) and Colin Kaepernick, Louisville’s Lamar Jackson (B.C. Lions), Penn State’s Trace McSorely (Saskatchew­an) and Alabama’s Tua Tagovailoa (Hamilton), who as a freshman came off the bench to rally the Crimson Tide past Georgia 26-23 in overtime in this year’s BCS title game.

Interestin­gly, Minnesota State receiver Shane Zylstra is on Edmonton’s negotiatio­n list. Zylstra’s older brother, Brandon, had 100 catches for 1,687 yards and five TDs last season with the Eskimos before signing with the NFL’s Minnesota Vikings in January.

In January, CFL presidents and GMs met in Banff and agreed to have teams release the names of some players on their negotiatio­n list.

“After meeting with team executives and player personnel earlier this year, it was collective­ly decided to publish a portion of the negotiatio­n list to engage fans, show a glimpse of the talent teams are looking to acquire and continue the momentum regarding the offseason news cycle,” CFL commission­er Randy Ambrosie said in a statement.

CFL teams can have up to 45 players on their negotiatio­n list which gives them exclusive negotiatin­g rights to those players should they decide to play in Canada.

Players can be added, or removed, at a team’s discretion on a first-come, first-serve basis. Clubs own exclusive rights to those players so long as they’re on a negotiatio­n list.

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