The Guardian (USA)

Wentz looks for fourth team in four seasons after release from Commanders

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The Washington Commanders released Carson Wentz on Monday, an expected move that puts an end to a failed oneseason experiment with the veteran quarterbac­k.

After giving up draft picks to acquire him in a trade with Indianapol­is last March, the Commanders were able to get out of the final two years of Wentz’s contract without any salary cap penalty.

Wentz threw for 11 touchdowns and nine intercepti­ons in eight games, going 2-5 as the starter. His season was sandwiched around a broken finger that sidelined him for several weeks.

When Taylor Heinicke struggled late in the season, coach Ron Rivera turned back to Wentz, who had three intercepti­ons in a loss to Cleveland, a performanc­e that contribute­d to knocking Washington out of playoff contention.

From that point forward, Rivera gave no thought to handing the job back to Wentz. Rookie Sam Howell started the regular-season finale and goes into offseason workouts as the starting QB. The former No 2 overall pick was an MVP candidate in 2017 before injury ended his season. The Eagles went on to win that season’s Super Bowl, thanks in part to the stellar play of Wentz’s back-up Nick Foles.

Since then, injuries and inconsiste­ncy have derailed his career.

Wentz, on the other hand, faces an uncertain future at age 30. If signed, he would join his fourth NFL team in as many seasons after flaming out in

Philadelph­ia, Indianapol­is and Washington.

The Commanders also released veteran safety Bobby McCain, whose presence was made redundant by the emergence of Darrick Forrest. McCain’s release saves roughly $2.32m in salary cap space.

McCain, 29, had four intercepti­ons in 34 games over two seasons with Washington but none in 2022 for a defense that often played with three safeties on the field at once.

The Commanders must next decide what to do about standout defensive tackle Daron Payne, who led the team with a career-high 11.5 sacks and could get a big payday in free agency. Putting the franchise tag on him at a price of $18.9m – much less than the money saved by cutting Wentz – is one option.

If Payne is back, Washington’s defense will again have high expectatio­ns, especially with Chase Young fully healthy after recovering from a torn ACL in his right knee.

The Commanders are expected to change more on offense than defense after hiring two-time Kansas City Chiefs Super Bowl-winning assistant Eric Bieniemy as coordinato­r and assistant head coach. That includes at quarterbac­k after Wentz was shown the door.

 ?? Carson Wentz once looked like an MVP candidate foe the Eagles. Photograph: Shaban Athuman/AP ??
Carson Wentz once looked like an MVP candidate foe the Eagles. Photograph: Shaban Athuman/AP

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