The Macomb Daily

Teams scramble to catch K.C. as free agency begins, but Chiefs staying quiet

- By Arnie Stapleton

Calvin Ridley is heading to the Tennessee Titans, the highlight of the official start of free agency Wednesday when teams began reshaping their rosters in a quest to unseat the two-time defending champion Kansas City Chiefs.

Ridley — who had been expected to re-sign with the Jaguars — and the Titans agreed on a four-year, $92 million contract with $50 million guaranteed, a person with knowledge of the terms told The Associated Press.

Ridley gives young Titans quarterbac­k Will Levis another playmaker. He started all 17 games for the Jaguars last season and finished with 76 receptions for 1,016 yards and eight touchdowns. Ridley, however, hasn’t always been so reliable. He missed most of the previous two years because of a broken foot, a mental health break and a yearlong gambling suspension.

The Titans also added a veteran quarterbac­k, agreeing with Mason Rudolph on a one-year contract, another person familiar with the decision told the AP.

Also Wednesday, the Washington Commanders continued rebuilding their defense by luring six-time Pro Bowl linebacker Bobby Wagner from Seattle.

Many of the top available free agents — including quarterbac­k Kirk Cousins and running backs Saquon Barkley and Derrick Henry — agreed to deals during the two-day negotiatin­g period leading up to the start of the league’s new year.

Their deals set in motion a major reshufflin­g of backfields in 2024 with a dozen seasoned QBs and more than a dozen veteran running backs switching teams.

And the Houston Texans continued their remarkably rapid rise from cellar to stellar by luring perennial Pro Bowl edge rusher Danielle Hunter from the Vikings to play opposite AP Defensive Rookie of the Year Will Anderson on Houston’s defensive line.

Hunter had a career-best 16 1/2 sacks last year. His deal is a $49 million, twoyear contract with all but $1 million guaranteed, a person with knowledge of the deal told the AP.

The Texans went from worst to first in winning the AFC South last season, advancing to the divisional round of the playoffs under first-year coach DeMeco Ryans

and rookie quarterbac­k C.J. Stroud.

After losing the AFC championsh­ip at home to the Chiefs, Baltimore made a splash in free agency by luring Henry away from the Titans.

The two-time NFL rushing champ joins a Baltimore team that annually produces one of the league’s leading ground games, and he’ll partner with MVP quarterbac­k Lamar Jackson.

Henry will be running behind a reworked Baltimore offensive line. The Ravens agreed to trade tackle Morgan Moses and a fourth-round draft pick to the Jets on Wednesday for New York’s pick earlier in the fourth round and a sixth-round selection. Baltimore had already lost guard John Simpson to the Jets in free agency.

How much have the Ravens, Texans and others really closed the gap with the Chiefs, who have won three titles in the six seasons Patrick Mahomes has been their starter?

The champs didn’t stand pat during the free-agency frenzy this week as general manager Brett Veach once again bucked the time-honored trend of champions losing core veterans to other teams.

Veach kept All-Pro defensive tackle Chris Jones from leaving Kansas City with a five-year, $158.75 million contract.

The deal was structured so that it only cost $7.35 million against the cap this year.

Chiefs backup linebacker Drue Tranquill also signed a three-year, $19 million deal to return before Wednesday’s official start to free agency, and defensive tackle Mike Pennel returned to the Chiefs on a one-year deal after playing well in their Super Bowl win over the 49ers.

Also, Mahomes agreed to restructur­e his contract to free up salary cap space.

The additional flexibilit­y could mean that cornerback L’Jarius Sneed remains in Kansas City.

The Chiefs used the franchise tag on him, which would equate to a one-year, $19.8 million deal, but many expected them to ultimately trade Sneed for draft compensati­on and cap relief.

Now, the Chiefs could keep him at the tag number or use their newfound wiggle room to sign him to a long-term deal.

“There isn’t much of a recruiting pitch that needs to be made with Kansas City,” Tranquill said Wednesday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States