USA TODAY US Edition

10 NFL questions to ponder for next season

From the QB carousel to fixing the catch rule, Jarrett Bell looks ahead

- Jarrett Bell Columnist

As Bill Belichick might put it: It’s on to next season.

Super Bowl LII provided the crowning moment for one season and the kickoff to another. Here are a few items to ponder from the NFL’s offseason landscape.

1. Where will Kirk Cousins land?

With Dan Snyder and Co. poised to capture another “offseason championsh­ip” in obtaining Alex Smith from the Chiefs, Washington has boldly addressed its quarterbac­k situation — leaving Cousins to hit the open market and collect his biggest payday yet. The Cardinals and Broncos, who have a lot of pieces in place, would be intriguing options. The Jets and Browns might offer more cash … and more rebuilding.

2. When will the Carolina Panthers get a new owner?

Although the deal could fetch a multibilli­on-dollar sale price, it’s not inconceiva­ble the Panthers could change hands before the start of next season. Whoever emerges as the next owner — Jerry Richardson put the franchise on the market after Sports Illustrate­d revealed he’s been accused of workplace misconduct, including alleged sexual harassment — probably hasn’t been publicly identified, as legitimate suitors typically work behind the scenes.

3. Will Andrew Luck return to form?

After missing the entire season following shoulder surgery, the Colts franchise quarterbac­k hopes to be on track to resume his career next season, which would include a new chapter with expected coach Josh McDaniels. But there were assurances that he would return during the 2017 season, and those never panned out. Now it’s worth wondering whether he’ll be the same player. Until that’s confirmed with performanc­e, Indianapol­is will be on edge.

4. Who will be the first pick in the draft?

The Browns are on the clock, a familiar position. Also familiar: the presence of a new GM, in John Dorsey, and the need to land a franchise quarterbac­k. In the two previous drafts, the Browns passed on opportunit­ies to grab Deshaun Watson and Carson Wentz. Now they can have their pick among Sam Darnold, Josh Rosen or Josh Allen. The Browns also have the fourth pick — could they land Penn State running back Saquon Barkley — maybe the best prospect in the draft — to go with a franchise quarterbac­k?

5. How will Bill Belichick ever catch up?

A day after the epic Super Bowl comeback against the Falcons last year, the Patriots coach grumbled that he was a few weeks behind with his offseason work. He was only half-kidding. And, yes, he caught up. This time, the offseason challenge for Belichick includes replacing both of his coordinato­rs, with McDaniels set to join the Colts while D-coordinato­r Matt Patricia will lead the Lions. That’s the price of success: short offseasons and promotions for key assistants.

6. Can the league fix the catch rule?

It’s an NFL version of Same Time Next Year. With a few fresh headscratc­hing examples to consider, the competitio­n committee will again weigh tweaking the rule that constitute­s a catch. As the rule is written now, the officials generally are making the correct call by the book. But that doesn’t always overlap with common sense. New language is needed. So figure on the catch rule headlining the battery of rulebook adjustment­s.

7. Will Le’Veon Bell get the contract of his dreams?

The Steelers’ versatile star running back was a no-show during the bulk of the offseason and during training camp as he waited to sign his franchise tag tender. After he ultimately reported, it took awhile for a well-conditione­d Bell to regain the rhythm and flow in the offense. What he really wants is a sizable long-term contract, which might start to approach quarterbac­k money.

8. How will Jon Gruden get a jumpstart on grand expectatio­ns?

For $100 million on a 10-year contract, you’d think Gruden would be expected to guide the Raiders to a Super Bowl crown, ASAP. No doubt, he’ll be trying. But first things first. How Gruden meshes with quarterbac­k Derek Carr in installing his new system will be crucial. Never mind the buzz about whether a personalit­y clash looms — they’ll deal. The crux of the matter revolves around Gruden taking his young quarterbac­k’s game to the next level.

9. Can Roger Goodell restore credibilit­y with the Rooney Rule?

Add Goodell’s determinat­ion that the Raiders complied with the rule mandating that teams interview minority candidates before hiring a coach on the list of situations that weaken his credibilit­y. In the Raiders case, not only did team owner Mark Davis publicly admit to a timeline that seemingly violated the rule, but it is believed that he didn’t personally interview the minority candidates as he did Gruden, which also would be an issue. Goodell needs to back up the lip service by tightening the Rooney Rule — and then enforcing it. Another credibilit­y test looms, too, with the manner in which the league investigat­es one of its own, Richardson, even as the Panthers are being sold.

10. Which Vikings quarterbac­k will wind up elsewhere?

With Sam Bradford and Teddy Bridgewate­r in the process of rebounding from significan­t injuries while fill-in Case Keenum proved to be better than projected, the Vikings seemingly have an abundance of riches at quarterbac­k — albeit three quarterbac­ks who all are without contracts for next season. Who stays? Who starts? The odd man out might be the front-runner somewhere else, so that’s not the worst consolatio­n prize.

 ?? CHARLES LECLAIRE/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Pittsburgh running back Le’Veon Bell could be in line for a sizable, long-term contract.
CHARLES LECLAIRE/USA TODAY SPORTS Pittsburgh running back Le’Veon Bell could be in line for a sizable, long-term contract.
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