Times Standard (Eureka)

Free agent deals aren’t yet official

- By Arnie Stapleton and Barry Wilner

Tom Brady preparing to trade the red, white and blue threads of this century’s most successful franchise for one of the NFL’s bottom feeders served as the highlight of a topsyturvy start to the league’s new year Wednesday.

Brady, 42, will take his six rings from his unparallel­ed 20-year reign in New England to Tampa, where the Buccaneers have sat out the playoffs every season since 2007.

During that time, Brady has won 18 playoff games and half of his record-tying six Super Bowls.

Like the rest of everyday life that’s been upended by the new coronaviru­s pandemic, the start of free agency was anything but normal, with Brady’s deal and most every other one in semi-limbo.

Free agent contracts and trades agreed upon in recent days or weeks won’t become official until players can undergo physicals and sign their new deals — meaning they aren’t being paid under their new deals. The NFL has barred travel to team facilities by free agents and also has banned team personnel from traveling to meet with players as a safeguard against the new coronaviru­s.

Several people familiar with a memo the league sent to the 32 teams on Tuesday night tell The Associated Press that while teams can announce reaching agreements with free agents or concluding trades, nothing is official. The people spoke on condition of anonymity because the informatio­n has not been made public by the NFL or the teams.

Among the players moving in free agency in one of the busiest years of action are such stars as Brady, Philip Rivers and Jason Witten. While they certainly can afford to wait for everything to become official, it’s a strange dynamic in what, of course, is a strange time.

The NFL has delayed the offseason schedule of practices amid the uncertaint­y — meetings and organized team activities (OTAs) would have begun in April. Becoming familiar with new surroundin­gs, teammates and coaching staffs for the likes of veterans Brady, Rivers and Witten — who collective­ly spent 52 years with their original teams — and the dozens of other players changing addressed must wait.

While Brady’s representa­tives and the Buccaneers worked out details of their contract, teams went ahead with their plans to bolster their rosters amid all the uncertaint­y:

DOLPHINS >> From tanking to banking, the Dolphins have been the busiest team on a spending spree, committing a whopping $133 million in guarantees to seven players.

After making Byron Jones the NFL’s highestpai­d cornerback, the Dolphins also have agreed to deals with C Ted Karras, LB Kyle Van Noy, DEs Shaq Lawson and Emmanuel Ogbah, RB Jordan Howard and G Ereck Flowers. The total value of the new deals is more than $222 million.

That’s big change — and a big change for a franchise that began stockpilin­g money and draft picks a year ago with a roster dismantlin­g so drastic Miami used an NFL record 84 players and was accused of tanking.

BRONCOS >> A day after losing out on NT D.J. Reader to the Bengals, the Broncos made their second big trade by acquiring five-time Pro Bowl DL Jurrell Casey from the Tennessee Titans for a 2020 seventh-round pick, people familiar with the deal told the Associated Press.

Casey, due $11.2 million this season and under contract through 2022, plugs a gaping hole on Denver’s Dline just as the free agent acquisitio­n of C-G Graham Glasgow (four years, $44 million) fills a big need on the O-line.

STEELERS >> Pittsburgh turned the opening day of free agency into a family affair for the Watt family, agreeing to terms with OLB T.J. Watt’s older brother, FB Derek Watt, on a three-year contract worth $9.75 million.

Their other brother, J.J. Watt, is a three-time Defensive Player of the Year for Houston.

CARDINALS >> Arizona bolstered its struggling defense by agreeing to deals with DL Jordan Phillips and LB Devon Kennard. But as has usually been the case over the past year in Arizona, the loudest buzz is surroundin­g the offense. Arizona’s biggest move came on Monday, when the team added elite WR DeAndre Hopkins in a trade with Houston that sent RB David Johnson to the Texans.

CHARGERS >> CB Chris Harris Jr. is remaining in the AFC West after agreeing to a contract with the Los Angeles Chargers, a person familiar with the situation told the AP. Harris spent nine seasons in Denver, anchoring the “No Fly Zone” defense that helped the Broncos win Super Bowl 50.

SAINTS >> Veteran free agent safety Malcolm Jenkins has agreed to a four-year, $32 million contract with the Saints a person familiar with the situation said.

Jenkins returns to the team that made him a first-round draft choice out of Ohio State in 2009. Jenkins, 32, has played 11 NFL seasons — his first five with the Saints and past six with the Philadelph­ia Eagles, who declined to pick up his option for the 2020 season.

COLTS >> The Colts have confirmed they have acquired All-Pro defensive tackle DeForest Buckner for next month’s first-round draft pick, No. 13 overall.

 ?? DAVID J. PHILLIP — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, FILE ?? Patriots quarterbac­k Tom Brady, left, hugs coach Bill Belichick after the AFC championsh­ip against the Jaguars in January 2018in Foxborough, Mass.
DAVID J. PHILLIP — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, FILE Patriots quarterbac­k Tom Brady, left, hugs coach Bill Belichick after the AFC championsh­ip against the Jaguars in January 2018in Foxborough, Mass.

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