The Daily Briefing Wednesday, July 15, 2020

AROUND THE NFL

Daily Briefing

Wuhan Covid-19 fear has gripped the twitter followers of Mike Florio of ProFootballTalk.com:

Two months from tonight, Week One of the regular season will end with a Monday night doubleheader. Unless it doesn’t.

 

Everything remains in flux as NFL training camps prepare to open, and no one knows whether pro football will be able to overcome the various hurdles that stand in the way of playing football in a pandemic that continues to spread, fueled by equal parts stupidity and selfishness with more than a dash of deliberate misinformation and distortion from media outlets hoping to get clicks and likes from people looking for someone, anyone to justify their stupid and selfish behavior.

 

So will there be a Week One? We put the question out to Twitter on Monday. Based on more than 20,000 responses (which is more than enough to establish a trend), 64.9 percent believe that Week One will not happen.

 

The construction of the regular-season schedule created a very clear sense that the league is determined to get through Week One and then, if necessary, press pause and reassess. As the virus keeps spreading and hot spots keep raging, it’s becoming harder to envision football thriving, as Dr. Anthony Fauci said several weeks back, in anything but a bubble. And at this point it’s far too late to construct a bubble for 32 teams of 53 players plus coaching staffs and practice squads and everyone else who would be kept inside the bubble for five or six months.

 

We’re extremely hopeful that the NFL will find a way to make it work. But we’re also realistic. Ultimately, whether the current plan works is out of the league’s control. A full 2020 season of NFL football will happen only if the virus will let it, and the virus is proving over and over again that it’s not going to be doing us any favors.

Here are some thoughts from Andrew Brandt, once an NFL exec, now a college prof:

@AndrewBrandt

The issue with the NFL is this: back in March/April/May we (I) said “The NFL has the luxury of time; they can sit back and watch.  This thing will definitely be better by July/August!”  But the reality is…”this thing” is worse. Much worse.

We would debate his conclusion.  It is not “much worse” than it was in April.  But, it has not gone away.

More thoughts:

@AndrewBrandt

I can see a “mandatory face shield inside helmet” becoming an issue between the NFL/NFLPA. 

Players say “We’re not wearing that!”

League says “You said you wanted us to make you safe!”

 

@AndrewBrandt

I do think some players will opt out, including well-known ones. Hard to predict how many.

Dan Wetzel of YahooSports.com notes other governors and mayors itching to bring the hammer down:

 

In the face of a continuing surge of coronavirus cases in California, home to three NFL teams, Gov. Gavin Newsom on Monday ordered the closing of bars and indoor dining statewide, plus fitness centers and malls in 30 select counties.

 

“We’re continuing to see hospitalizations rise and we continue to see an increase in the rate of positivity in the state,” Newsom said. “We are moving back into a ‘modification mode’ of our original stay at home order.”

 

In Texas, home to two NFL franchises, Gov. Greg Abbott recently mandated face masks be worn in most counties and provided for restrictions on gatherings of over 10 people while warning that a continued increase in cases could result in “the necessity of closing Texas down.”

 

More specifically, in hard-hit Houston, the mayor has discussed the possibility of a localized two-week “step back.”

 

“We’re going to need a shutdown for a period of time,” Mayor Sylvester Turner predicted if there isn’t a turnaround in the spread.

 

Meanwhile, school districts in, among other NFL places, Nashville and Atlanta will have school years begin with remote learning.

 

Call it a retreat on the reopening.

 

Or call it a concern going forward for the NFL – and Major League Baseball – who may be able to draw up plans and procedures for a 2020 season, but can’t guarantee how the virus will behave or how local governments with the power to stop just about everything will react to it.

 

The NFL training camps are expected to open later this month and the regular season is set to begin on Sept. 10. If there is one thing this pandemic has proven it’s that predicting anything two weeks out, let alone two months, is dangerous. Things ebb and flow. Places that were once safe are now hot spots. And vice versa.

 

Back in April, in the early days of this, the executive officer of Santa Clara County (home to the San Francisco 49ers) said he didn’t expect “any sports games until at least Thanksgiving, and we’d be lucky to have them by Thanksgiving.”

 

That prediction hasn’t held as the 49ers and every other NFL team are currently green-lit to play. However, it highlighted the challenges of trying to stage a normal season. Can a single county, or a single outbreak in a single market, upend everything?

 

Maybe you could deal with one. Maybe. What if it’s three? Will the playing of a season not be the decision of commissioner Roger Goodell but rather a fairly unknown county commissioner somewhere? Or would no elected official risk the wrath of being the person that shut down the NFL?

 

No one knows. No one ever knows with this thing.

 

The NBA and NHL have gone the bubble route in an attempt to complete their 2019-2020 seasons. Basketball is in Orlando. Hockey went to Canada (Edmonton and Toronto) where the virus is far less prevalent than the States. Those leagues can control a lot of things. If the bubble holds, then they’ll be successful.

 

Football can’t do that. The idea of a safe zone for 32 massive NFL operations running from late July training camp to a February Super Bowl is impossible.

 

Same for MLB, which is slated to begin on July 25 and especially college football, which at its highest level is played by 130 teams in 43 states in communities ranging from L.A. to Laramie.

 

“It is clear that current circumstances related to COVID-19 must improve,” said SEC commissioner Greg Sankey, arguably the sport’s most influential person, about the prospect of a season.

 

Already the Big Ten and Pac-12 have cut their schedules to only nine conference games. Those decisions were made by the schools themselves, not local officials. That might change.

 

No one has cancelled anything yet. Everyone is barreling toward a season with the best intentions of normalcy. Yet pessimism sits on the horizon. An influential NFL agent told Yahoo Sports he expects the season to last 6-10 games before the patchwork of decision-making becomes untenable. It’s just an informed prediction, though.

 

What’s clear is that whatever the NFL’s plans are, they can be upended by state and county politicians who are reacting to localized circumstances that don’t care about national television contracts.

 

That leaves the NFL to attempt what amounts to a seven-month slog (training camp to Super Bowl) dealing not just the back-and-forth of a pandemic, but the whims and opinions of politicians who don’t answer to them.

 

What the past couple weeks have shown is that what’s open today isn’t always what will be open tomorrow.

 

Buckle up.

We would note that there was incredible gloom at one point over MLB having a season, but now the teams are in camps, semi-bubbled, and we hope and pray we have a start to the season in just over a week.

So maybe, if people look for reasons to make it happen and assume just a tiny bit of extra risk to an already dangerous sport, it can happen in football, as well.

NFC EAST

PHILADELPHIA

Philadelphia’s city officials have pro-actively taken any decision-making power about fans at Eagles games away from the team.  Tim McManus of ESPN.com:

City officials say that no fans will be in the stands for Philadelphia Eagles and Philadelphia Phillies games in 2020, citing safety concerns amid the coronavirus pandemic.

 

“The Eagles are still going to be allowed to play, although without crowds. The Phillies will continue to be allowed to play, although without crowds,” managing director Brian Abernathy said, according to the Philadelphia Inquirer.

 

“We have been in communication with the Eagles. We have told them our expectations are that they don’t have fans.”

 

Philadelphia health commissioner Thomas Farley said he believes that baseball and football games can be played under the safety protocols suggested by both leagues, but having fans in the stands would be too big of a risk.

 

“I do not think that they can have spectators at those games. There’s no way for them to be safe having a crowd there,” he said. “I can’t say what the plans are for the league, but from a safety perspective, they can play games but not [have] crowds.”

 

The Eagles have yet to publicly comment.

 

“We are gathering information on Philadelphia,” said NFL spokesman Brian McCarthy, who added that what happens in Philadelphia will not impact the NFL’s decision-making for the other 31 teams.

 

“Decisions on the number of fans at stadiums will be determined on a market-by-market basis,” McCarthy said.

 

The NFL has said from the onset that safety decisions will be made in conjunction with guidance from public health experts and in accordance with local and state guidelines.

 

The city officials’ comments came on the same day mayor Jim Kenney announced that all large-scale events in Philadelphia would be canceled through February 2021.

 

Earlier this month, the Eagles told season-ticket holders that they had the option of deferring their tickets for the 2020 season, noting that some might have concerns about attending games in person.

Abernathy talks about “expectations” so it unclear exactly what legal ordinance or power he believes the city can use to enforce the edict. His declaration comes as he is on his way out the door following the city’s response or lack thereof to the George Floyd protests/riots.

Jared Schwartz of the New York Post has more on the city’s belief it can shut down private events for the next six months or so.

The city on Tuesday announced that all public events over 50 people that require a permit are prohibited until February because of the coronavirus pandemic. Although NFL games are considered private events, the NFL’s guidelines give local authorities the right to ban spectators from games. As such, city officials can overrule the team if they attempt to allow fans.

 

The ban affects college football as well. The annual Army-Navy game is scheduled to be played at Lincoln Financial Field on December 12, while Temple University plays its home games at the stadium. All will be played without fans.

 

Abernathy, who oversees the city’s operational departments, will resign in the coming weeks due to unrest after the killing of George Floyd, according to the Inquirer.

 

The ban also excludes private events with fewer than 50 people, though they must adhere to local health guidelines.

So no weddings of more than 50 people?  No funerals of more than 50 people?  No church services?  We won’t even get into protests.  But what if fans want to protest the city government at Lincoln Financial Field during the game?

It’s hard to tell exactly how prevalent Wuhan Covid-19 is in southeastern Pennsylvania at the moment.  Pennsylvania, one of the hardest hit states in the early going, reports about 100,000 cases from its population of 12.8 million, but the vast majority of them were long ago and easily recovered from.  We’re thinking there might be about 2,000 active cases in the whole state at the moment, similar in South Jersey.  Most just positive tests with minimal symptoms.

The more we think about this, the more incensed we get.  Presumably, I could rent the Linc and host a wedding reception in the club for 50 people.  Why can’t 20 “weddings” of 50 people be held in various sections of the Linc on Sunday afternoons?  Maybe 100 “weddings”?

There surely would be plenty of social distancing.  Of course, they’d all be wearing masks and entering the stadium on at a time with a temperature check and signing waivers…

The one size fits all solution, to cover six whole months, dictated here is infuriating.

We note that the team has been silent upon learning of these off-the-cuff restrictions.

 

WASHINGTON

Something that Jason LaCanfora of CBSSports.com abhors is about to happen with the Redskins, or so he teases in a tweet on Tuesday evening.

@JasonLaCanfora

The warped and toxic culture of the Washington Football Team is about to be exposed in a sickening fashion … Again

AFC WEST

 

DENVER

We admit we didn’t have S JUSTIN SIMMONS on our list of players who had been franchise tagged.  Kyle Newman of the Denver Post:

Broncos safety Justin Simmons signed his franchise tender on Tuesday, according to a league source.

 

If Simmons and the Broncos don’t reach agreement on a long-term contract by 2 p.m. on Wednesday, he will be paid $11.441 million this year.

 

The team’s leader with four interceptions last year, Simmons told the Broncos last week he intended to sign the tender, which means he will report to training camp, tentatively scheduled for later this month.

 

A second-team All Pro in 2019, Simmons will be eligible for free agency in March 2021 if the Broncos don’t tag him again.

KANSAS CITY

The Chiefs and EDGE CHRIS JONES beat the deadline for a big-money deal.  ESPN.com:

The Kansas City Chiefs and defensive tackle Chris Jones have reached agreement on a four-year contract, sources told ESPN’s Adam Schefter.

 

According to the sources, the $80 million contract includes:

 

$37 million, due at signing

 

$60 million, guaranteed for injury

 

$5 million in incentives, making the value of the contract up to $85 million

 

The Chiefs and Jones, who received the team’s franchise tag, had until Wednesday’s deadline to agree to a long-term contract.

 

The extension comes a week after the Chiefs and quarterback Patrick Mahomes agreed to a 10-year contract that could be worth up to $503 million. The extension does not begin until the 2022 season, so the Chiefs took on little in the way of additional salary cap obligations in 2020 and 2021 for Mahomes in extending his contract. Mahomes in 2020, for instance, will have a cap cost of about $5.3 million, or less than 3% of the Chiefs’ cap.

 

The Chiefs are now the only team in the NFL with three players making at least $60 million guaranteed with Jones joining Mahomes ($140 million) and defensive end Frank Clark ($62.3 million).

 

Mahomes and Jones both took to Twitter to celebrate after news of Jones’ deal broke.

 

Earlier this month, tweeting a reply to an NFL Network video on his contract talks, Jones had hinted he would hold out unless he received a long-term deal.

 

Jones, 26, led the Chiefs in sacks in each of the past two seasons.

 

Here’s a chart:

Most Guaranteed Money, Defensive Players

 

Chris Jones will become the seventh current defensive player with at least $60 million guaranteed in his current contract.

 

PLAYER           GUARANTEED $

Khalil Mack                    $90.0M

Aaron Donald                  $86.9M

Von Miller                       $70.0M

DeMarcus Lawrence       $65.0M

Fletcher Cox                   $63.3M

Frank Clark                   $62.3M

Chris Jones                  $60.0M

 

— Source: Roster Management System

AFC NORTH

 

CLEVELAND

EDGE MYLES GARRETT, last seen bashing Steelers QB MASON RUDOLPH with his helmet, is going to ink a big money contract soon.  Jake Trotter of ESPN.com:

The Cleveland Browns are finalizing a massive five-year extension worth $125 million with star pass-rusher Myles Garrett, a league source confirmed to ESPN. The deal is not done yet, but the sides are said to be close.

 

The deal, which is worth a total of $144 million over seven years, would make Garrett the highest-paid non-quarterback in the NFL. Garrett entered the offseason with two years left on his rookie contract after the Browns picked up his fifth-year option.

 

Garrett, 24, is expected to sign the contract as early as Wednesday after passing a physical Tuesday, a source told ESPN. NFL Network first reported Tuesday that a deal was imminent with the 2017 No. 1 pick out of Texas A&M.

 

Garrett had 10 sacks in 10 games last season. But he was suspended the final six games for hitting Mason Rudolph with the Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback’s own helmet during a skirmish at the end of their game on Nov. 14. The NFL reinstated Garrett in February.

 

Garrett has been a dominant pass-rusher since entering the league, ranking fourth in sacks-per-game (0.82) since 2017. According to ESPN’s Stats & Information, opposing quarterbacks’ QBR drops by more than 20 when Garrett is on the field compared to when he is off.

 

By signing the deal, Garrett would pass Chicago’s Khalil Mack ($23 million) as the highest-paid defensive player in average annual salary.

AFC EAST

 

NEW ENGLAND

The Patriots have a plan that should be reasonable even for Covid-diligent officials.  Matt Vautour of MassLive.com:

The New England Patriots would still need state and local approval to allow anyone into Gillette Stadium amidst the coronavirus pandemic, but they told season ticket holders this week that they’re building a plan to allow fans at games at 20 percent capacity.

 

Gillete’s listed capacity is 65,878 so 20 percent would be close to 13,000.

 

The team already announced that parking would be free. Creating entrance and exit plans with limited contact is likely to also be part of any working plan.

 

From the Patriots’ release:

 

“Pending state and local approval, should Gillette Stadium be allowed to have fans in the stands this season, it is expected to host about 20 percent of its total capacity. Ticketed parties will be asked to maintain physical distancing of at least six feet from other parties, tickets will be arranged in blocks of 10 seats or less, and the first eight rows of stadium seats will not be used. Additionally, face coverings will be required at all times inside the stadium to keep all attendees safe.

 

Although game days will look different this year as a result of the many safety precautions being implemented, the Patriots organization is committed to delivering a positive experience for all who attend.

 

Recognizing that some flexibility will be required by fans who attend games in these unique circumstances, the Patriots also announced that parking for 2020 home games will be free of charge in all Gillette Stadium parking lots. Additionally, walk-up sales at the Patriots ticket office will be suspended, and all tickets will be mobile.

 

Patriots Putnam Club and Season Ticket Members will have the first opportunity to purchase individual game tickets if fans are allowed, and any remaining ticket inventory will go on-sale to the general public once the member process is complete.”

 

Of course to have fans, they first have to guarantee having a season. The owners and the players association are still examining protocols to remain safe during the pandemic. Spikes in positive tests around the country have created a growing concern that the NFL might consider delaying the start to the 2020 season.

 

The Patriots are the latest among several NFL teams hoping to play with fans in attendance. The Red Sox have also explored possibly having fans at Fenway Park later in the season.

That said, Michael David Smith of ProFootballTalk.com finds Patriots players getting antsy:

Multiple players on the Patriots are expressing their doubts about how anyone can simultaneously play football and follow public health guidelines to reduce the spread of COVID-19.

 

Patriots cornerback Jonathan Jones wrote on Twitter, “I don’t know who needs to hear this but you can’t social distance football.”

 

Teammate Dont’a Hightower replied to that with, “Ain’t no way.”

 

Teammate Patrick Chung added, “Not a damn shot. They are trippin.”

 

Patriots defensive backs Jason McCourty and Devin McCourty wrote at SI.com that players are in the dark about what the plans are.

 

“So many questions with virtually no answers,” they wrote. “As fear continues to grow for our nation, it is also being spoken about among us players. Will we have an option to opt out of the season? Will we be making our full salary? What if there is a COVID outbreak within the league? It’s so hard to make a decision of whether we will play or not without knowing what the exact plan is.”

 

With training camps set to open in less than two weeks, these questions need to be answered soon.

 

THIS AND THAT

 

WEAPONS ANALYSIS

Bill Barnwell of ESPN.com ranks teams “weapons” – non-QB skill position players 32 to 1.  As always with Barnwell, it is long.  So we’ll give you the bottom 5 and the top 10 with analysis.  If your team is in the middle, check the whole thing out here.

Here are his rules of engagement:

Imagine if every team’s running backs, wide receivers and tight ends were dropped onto a new team with an average quarterback, average offensive line and average coaching staff. Which offense would be the most productive after you throw the likes of Deshaun Watson and Kyle Shanahan out the window? A few clarifications:

 

Contract value doesn’t matter. I’m strictly focusing on performance here, so while there are players on this list who might be considered bad values, the only thing that matters is what they do on the field.

 

Only 2020 matters. Long-term value doesn’t matter, so I’m strictly considering how each player is likely to perform in the 2020 season after accounting for his quarterback, line and coaching staff. The NFL can be a mystery, but I’m trying to use aging curves, recent history and the typical value produced by draft picks to estimate performance. I’m also factoring in injuries for players such as Deebo Samuel and injury histories for players such as Will Fuller V when estimating their availability.

 

Wide receivers matter more than other positions. The league considers wide receivers more valuable than running backs or tight ends. The top 10 multiyear deals for wideouts are worth an average of $17.4 million per season. The top 10 running back deals average $9.3 million per year, while the top 10 tight ends are at $7.8 million per campaign. I don’t weigh the value of wide receivers to be quite as significant as those numbers suggest, but a great wideout is worth more than a similarly effective running back or tight end.

 

Top-level talent is worth more than depth. Since an NFL team will typically run out some combination of five running backs, wide receivers and tight ends on the vast majority of its offensive snaps, I focused on the five most valuable weapons. I handed out a bonus for players who would widely be considered among the best at their respective positions, including Travis Kelce and Michael Thomas. When two teams were close, I broke ties by considering those teams with more depth at the skill positions, such as the Patriots, Eagles and 49ers.

 

Not everyone who was considered gets mentioned. While I looked at the entire depth chart in evaluating each team’s weapons, listing and writing about every single player in those groups would make this column longer than it already is. If I don’t mention someone in a write-up, it’s not because they were ignored or not considered.

The bottom 5

 

32. Washington

2019 rank: No. 28 | 2018 rank: No. 18

 

It’s rock-bottom for Washington, which has a budding star in No. 1 wideout Terry “F1” McLaurin and little else after the 24-year-old. McLaurin was second among rookies in receiving yards and yards per route run behind A.J. Brown, and his speed proved to be absolutely devastating, especially when stretching defenses out of the slot. He was a couple of long misses away from a 1,000-yard, nine-touchdown season.

 

After McLaurin, though, the weapons for second-year quarterback Dwayne Haskins are underwhelming. Washington has moved out disappointing additions like Josh Doctson and Paul Richardson, but the receivers who replaced them were Kelvin Harmon and Steven Sims, the latter of whom averaged just 9.1 yards per catch. Trey Quinn ranked No. 103 out of 111 wideouts in yards per route run. The organization is optimistic about Harmon and 6-foot-4 fourth-round pick Antonio Gandy-Golden, but over the past decade, less than 16% of fourth-round picks have topped 500 yards during their rookie season. And while it seemed like Washington would add tight ends to replace the departing Jordan Reed and Vernon Davis, those replacements were Logan Thomas and Richard Rodgers.

 

The running back depth chart looks like someone is dedicating a homage to your fantasy waiver wire of a year ago. Adrian Peterson and Peyton Barber are low-ceiling, run-only veterans who serve little purpose for a rebuilding organization. Derrius Guice and Bryce Love have serious injury histories and have combined for 95 pro snaps over their first three seasons. The big hope here is hybrid weapon Antonio Gibson, who is converting from serving as a wideout in college, but it would be a surprise if he’s an impactful player from the jump. The bright side is that this is one of the youngest groups in the league.

 

31. Jacksonville Jaguars

2019 rank: 32 | 2018 rank: 25

 

Like Washington, the Jags have a quietly impressive young wideout (DJ Chark), a hybrid draft pick they’re excited to integrate into the offense (Laviska Shenault) and … not much else. While Chris Conley averaged 16.5 yards per reception last season, he also dropped six of his 89 targets. I wish they would give more time to Keelan Cole, who impressed as a rookie and has seen his playing time drop with each passing year. Also with each passing year, the Dede Westbrook breakout doesn’t appear to be arriving. Tight end Josh Oliver, a third-round pick in 2019, is a theoretical breakout candidate given his athleticism, but injuries limited him to 117 snaps as a rookie, and the Jaguars used some of their limited cap space to sign Tyler Eifert, who was only able to average 10.1 yards per catch last season, his first full 16-game season.

 

I’m confused by Jacksonville’s plan at running back, where it spent all offseason trying to foist off Leonard Fournette on any team that would take the former fourth overall pick, yet didn’t bring in anybody to push or replace the 25-year-old. Fournette soaked up a ton of volume in 2019, but he was one of the league’s least efficient runners and doesn’t appear to be in the Jags’ future plans. Despite this, the only backups for Fournette of note are Chris Thompson and 2019 fifth-rounder Ryquell Armstead. There’s a significant gap between the two teams at the bottom of this list and the other 30 organizations.

 

30. Miami Dolphins

2019 rank: 30 | 2018 rank: 31

 

While the Dolphins made major strides in upgrading just about every other position on their roster this offseason, it was a surprise to see them mostly leave their weapons alone. The only additions they made were at running back, where they formed a new one-two punch with efficient veteran Jordan Howard and big-play option Matt Breida.

 

I’m not optimistic about either living up to expectations. Howard ranked in the top 10 in both DVOA and success rate in his lone season in Philadelphia, but that was behind one of the league’s best offensive lines and out of line with what he did during his final two season in Chicago. He won’t have that caliber of line in Miami. Breida’s yards-per-carry figures belie middling success-rate marks, as he ranked 30th and 31st over the past two seasons. I’m also skeptical of undrafted backs moving out of Kyle Shanahan offenses, but Breida undeniably has home run ability and is likely to hit one or two this season.

 

I was surprised the Dolphins didn’t make additions at receiver. DeVante Parker finally had his breakout campaign and was re-signed, but what happens if he’s more like the guy we saw over his first four seasons? Preseason darling Preston Williams looks like an NFL contributor, but he had the league’s 12th-worst catch rate before tearing his ACL in November. Veterans Allen Hurns and Albert Wilson haven’t been healthy. While Miami will likely move starting tight end Mike Gesicki all around the formation, new offensive coordinator Chan Gailey’s spread attack typically uses plenty of 10 and 11 personnel groupings. If Parker and Williams live up to expectations, the Dolphins could be in the market for another wide receiver next offseason. If they don’t, one might not be enough.

 

29. New York Jets

2019 rank: 20 | 2018 rank: 32

 

After ranking last in 2017 and 2018, the additions of Le’Veon Bell and Jamison Crowder helped push the Jets toward the middle of the pack last offseason. Crowder lived up to expectations, but Bell was a disaster. Bell, who tried to make the argument in Pittsburgh that he was a transcendent offensive weapon, got behind a dismal offensive line in New York and looked like an ordinary running back, ranking 46th out of 47 backs in yards per carry (3.2) and last in first down rate (14.7%). His 7.0 yards per reception ranked 166th out of 173 receivers. Sheer chance would suggest Bell should produce more big plays in 2020, but he has one gain of 40 yards or more on 717 touches since the start of 2017. The Jets brought in Frank Gore and fourth-rounder La’Mical Perine to supplement their lead back.

 

Sam Darnold’s receiving corps got a makeover, with Breshad Perriman coming in for Robby Anderson and second-round pick Denzel Mims moving in for Demaryius Thomas; in both cases, the Jets are swapping a higher floor for a higher ceiling. Quincy Enunwa’s career might be over after suffering a neck injury. The big unknown is Chris Herndon, who only played 18 snaps after spending the offseason landing on breakout lists. His debut season in 2018 drew comparisons to future breakout contributors like Zach Ertz and Jordan Reed, but his statistical neighborhood also included guys like John Carlson, Tony Moeaki and Tim Wright, who all failed to top their rookie yardage total over the remainder of their careers.

 

28. Chicago Bears

2019 rank: 17 | 2018 rank: 9

 

Allen Robinson deserves better than this. Having spent his entire career catching passes from Blake Bortles and Mitchell Trubisky, he will get a comparative upgrade this season if the Bears start Nick Foles. The former Penn State star held up his end of the bargain a year ago, racking up 1,147 yards and seven touchdowns on 154 targets. Anthony Miller finished the season with 656 yards and averaged nearly 1.5 yards per route run, but drops and shoulder injuries have been a concern through his first two seasons, and the former second-rounder likely profiles best as a full-time slot receiver.

 

 

The other weapons on this roster all failed to live up to expectations, although much of that was due to injuries. (Tarik Cohen’s seven drops on 103 targets are the exception.) Players like Cohen, Ted Ginn Jr. and Cordarrelle Patterson could be intriguing supplemental pieces in the right scheme, but it’s difficult to count on coach Matt Nagy making the most of their ability. Free-agent signee Jimmy Graham’s contract was universally panned, but even leaving the money aside, he was anonymous last season in a Packers offense desperate for a second receiving option and turns 34 in November. David Montgomery is the big hope for the Bears to climb up these rankings, but as a rookie, he was below-average by every running measure I could find.

Then abbreviated 27-11:

27. Houston Texans

2019 rank: 16 | 2018 rank: 12

 

Replacing DeAndre Hopkins with Brandin Cooks and Randall Cobb will do that.

 

The big name to look out for is the guy the Texans got in the Hopkins trade, but David Johnson is now three full seasons removed from his star turn in 2016 without a repeat performance

 

26. Indianapolis Colts

2019 rank: 12 | 2018 rank: 27

 

After a one-year rise up the charts, disappointing seasons from virtually every skill-position player drops the Colts back into the bottom quarter of the weapons rankings.

 

25. Detroit Lions

2019 rank: 18 | 2018 rank: 21

 

Heading into last year, Lions fans were excited about a new big three of Kerryon Johnson, Kenny Golladay and T.J. Hockenson. One out of three ain’t bad!

 

24. Las Vegas Raiders

2019 rank: 23 | 2018 rank: 19

 

The Raiders found a star receiver last season, but as everyone was looking toward a former Steelers star, their breakout player was former Ravens draftee Darren Waller.

 

23. Cincinnati Bengals

2019 rank: 13 | 2018 rank: 16

 

If we could pencil in 16 games from A.J. Green for first overall pick Joe Burrow, the Bengals would be further up these rankings.

 

22. Tennessee Titans

2019 rank: 21 | 2018 rank: 14

 

The Titans might have landed on an absolute superstar in A.J. Brown.

 

Offensive coordinator Arthur Smith can also boast of last year’s rushing leader in Derrick Henry, although his impact as a receiver mostly consisted of one 75-yard touchdown on a screen.

 

This is a top-heavy group.

 

21. New England Patriots

2019 rank: 9 | 2018 rank: 8

 

I’m quietly optimistic about the Patriots’ weapons, especially if you’re comparing them to what you saw at the end of 2019, when Julian Edelman and Mohamed Sanu were both compromised by injuries.

 

20. Baltimore Ravens

2019 rank: 26 | 2018 rank: 24

 

The Ravens finished 2019 as the league’s best offense by DVOA, of course, but so much of the credit for that success has to go to the offensive line and league MVP Lamar Jackson, who aren’t a part of this discussion.

 

19. Green Bay Packers

2019 rank: 19 | 2018 rank: 23

 

The Packers can argue that they have two of the best players in the league at their respective positions in Davante Adams and Aaron Jones. After that … there’s mostly hope.

 

18. San Francisco 49ers

2019 rank: 24 | 2018 rank: 26

 

If these rankings were focused more on depth than top-tier talent, the 49ers would rank close to the top of the charts. San Francisco is deep at running back and wide receiver, even after trading Matt Breida and Marquise Goodwin in April.

 

Outside of Kittle, though, they are more about threatening you with consistent speed and YAC than any one particular target.

 

17. Minnesota Vikings

2019 rank: 5 | 2018 rank: 5

 

Minnesota broke up over the offseason what might have been the league’s best one-two punch at wide receiver by trading Stefon Diggs to the Bills. LSU star Justin Jefferson, a first-round pick, will replace Diggs, but it’s asking a lot of any rookie to step in for one of the most productive wideouts in football.

 

Adam Thielen is still around, of course, but a hamstring injury broke his streak of increasing his receiving yardage after five consecutive seasons. This offense would be in serious distress if Thielen struggled to stay healthy again in 2020, given that the starting wideouts would become Jefferson and Bisi Johnson. Kyle Rudolph’s production also fell last season, with the longtime Vikings tight end averaging his fewest receiving yards per game (22.8) since 2011.

 

The breakout star of the offense in 2019 was unquestionably Dalvin Cook.

 

16. Los Angeles Chargers

2019 rank: 11 | 2018 rank: 10

 

Melvin Gordon’s disastrous holdout and subsequent campaign opened up the door for Austin Ekeler, who averaged 122.5 yards from scrimmage over the first month of the season and earned an extension afterward.

 

Wide receiver Keenan Allen basically posted an identical line in 2018 and 2019, but Mike Williams suffered the indignity of touchdown regression past the mean.

 

The guy who could push the Chargers up the rankings is Hunter Henry, who came back from a torn ACL, only to break a bone in his leg in the opener and miss a month.  Henry has a lot to play for on the franchise tag this upcoming season.

 

15. Seattle Seahawks

2019 rank: 29 | 2018 rank: 28

 

I get a lot of things wrong every year, but if I had to pick the thing I was most wrong about in 2019 with regard to this column, I’d choose DK Metcalf. The 6-foot-4 wideout was an immediate weapon as a rookie.

 

The rest of the Seahawks’ arsenal isn’t quite as imposing.

 

14. Denver Broncos

2019 rank: 31 | 2018 rank: 22

 

After using the past two drafts to rebuild their weaponry, the Broncos have one of the more exciting young cores in the league.

 

I’m less enthused about the Broncos moving Phillip Lindsay out of the starting lineup for free-agent signing Melvin Gordon, who wasn’t effective for the Chargers last season after returning from his holdout and saw the fumble woes from his rookie year reappear. Gordon was still 15th in success rate and is a plus receiver, so he should comfortably be an upgrade on Royce Freeman’s half of the Denver running back rotation.

 

13. Pittsburgh Steelers

2019 rank: 15 | 2018 rank: 4

 

It was almost entirely a lost season in 2019 for the Steelers’ weapons, who had to endure a year with replacement-level quarterback play after Ben Roethlisberger was done for the year in Week 2.

 

12. Atlanta Falcons

2019 rank: 10 | 2018 rank: 3

 

The Falcons are in transition as they try to shift badly needed resources from their offense to their defense. They’ve downgraded by dropping from Mohamed Sanu and Austin Hooper to Russell Gage and Hayden Hurst, although I’m optimistic about 2018 first-round pick Hurst’s chances of repeating Hooper’s production with the expanded role. Running back Todd Gurley is likely an upgrade on the oft-injured Devonta Freeman and will certainly be better as a receiver. Gurley has a high ceiling thanks to this offensive line and a low floor as a result of his knee condition; he could be an Offensive Player of the Year candidate or he could sputter through five games and miss the rest of the year.

 

The Falcons have their core at wide receiver with Julio Jones and Calvin Ridley.

 

11. Los Angeles Rams

2019 rank: 1 | 2018 rank: 6

 

The dream fell apart for the Rams, who responded to a frustrating season by doing something that would have been unimaginable two years ago: trading away Brandin Cooks and cutting Todd Gurley

 

The big three at wide receiver is now a big two with Cooper Kupp and Robert Woods, but Los Angeles still has three devastating receiving weapons when you add tight end Tyler Higbee to the mix.

And now the top 10, surprisingly starting with the Eagles.

10. Philadelphia Eagles

2019 rank: 4 | 2018 rank: 7

 

On paper, the Eagles should be higher. At wide receiver, they can utilize two talented veterans (DeSean Jackson and Alshon Jeffery), two highly drafted young players (JJ Arcega-Whiteside and Jalen Reagor) and two speed demons (Marquise Goodwin and John Hightower). When you throw in Zach Ertz and Dallas Goedert at tight end, this should be one of the best receiving corps in the league.

 

Of course, that group has flaws. Jackson missed most of 2019 with a core injury, and his future with the team is uncertain after he posted anti-Semitic messages on social media. Jeffery suffered a Lisfranc injury in December, and he has no timetable for return. Arcega-Whiteside was a disaster as a rookie, averaging just 0.58 yards per route run while dealing with injuries and making mental mistakes. Goodwin has missed 12 games over the past two season with various injuries and personal absences. Reagor and Hightower are rookies. Chances are that one or two of these guys will turn out to be productive players, but there’s also a realistic chance that Philadelphia is frustrated by its wide receivers again in 2020.

 

 

The workload at running back will fall on Miles Sanders and Boston Scott, although it still seems likely that the Eagles will add at least one veteran back before the start of the regular season. Sanders narrowly topped 800 rushing yards and 500 receiving yards as a rookie. The list of backs to hit the 500-500 club as a rookie since the 1970 merger is pretty impressive: Sanders, Saquon Barkley, Alvin Kamara, Gio Bernard, Reggie Bush, Edgerrin James, Marshall Faulk, Herschel Walker, Earl Cooper and Billy Sims.

 

9. Arizona Cardinals

2019 rank: 27 | 2018 rank: 20

 

The Cardinals have made significant additions to their weapons core via trade. Last season, they traded for Kenyan Drake, who racked up 814 yards from scrimmage and eight touchdowns after being given a reprieve from the tanking Dolphins. Arizona followed up this offseason by stealing DeAndre Hopkins from the Texans in the David Johnson trade, which might have qualified as further addition by subtraction. With Larry Fitzgerald and Christian Kirk both returning, the Cardinals could easily justify a higher position in the top 10.

 

I’m more pessimistic than those names might indicate. Fitzgerald’s numbers have dropped dramatically since his last Pro Bowl appearance in 2017; he is a franchise icon, but his ceiling seems to be a lot lower than we might remember. Drake’s performance over the second half was out of line with his career production and was extremely inconsistent. He scored six touchdowns on eight carries inside the 5-yard line with the Cardinals, when the league-average rate is 45%. Drake also had scored just once on five such touches during his time with the Dolphins. He can be productive in this offense, but I’m not sure I expect the sort of yardage or touchdown pace we saw from him over the second half of 2019 in 2020.

 

I want to see more growth and consistency out of Arizona’s younger receivers. Nearly 36% of Kirk’s 709 receiving yards and all three of his touchdowns came in two games. Andy Isabella, a second-round pick last year, had 166 receiving yards across back-to-back games in midseason and just 23 yards otherwise, while fourth-rounder Hakeem Butler was a disappointment in camp before missing the entire season on injured reserve. There are a lot of mouths to feed in this offense, but it would hit another level if Kirk can push ahead of Fitzgerald.

 

8. Buffalo Bills

2019 rank: 25 | 2018 rank: 29

 

The Bills built an entirely new core of weapons for Josh Allen last year, and in many cases, they landed on hits. John Brown played like a legitimate No. 1 wideout, averaging 2.15 yards per route run. Cole Beasley wasn’t far behind. Tyler Kroft didn’t stay healthy, but Dawson Knox emerged as a matchup problem (albeit with drop issues) as a rookie and didn’t give the job back. Devin Singletary helped lead a comeback in the opener, averaged 5.1 yards per carry, finished 13th in DVOA and was versatile enough to take over as an every-down back by Week 16, but he fumbled four times on 180 touches.

 

Now, of course, the Bills have added a superstar wide receiver to that lineup in Stefon Diggs, who ranked third in yards per route run among wide receivers last season. The only guy who averaged more yards when targeted was A.J. Brown. Diggs adds a dominant weapon to the lineup and pushes everybody else down a spot. The 2019 version of John Brown could be the most overqualified second wideout in football outside of Chris Godwin. If the second-year guys such as Singletary and Knox make strides in holding onto the football, the Bills could be a top-5 unit in 2021.

 

7. New York Giants

2019 rank: 8 | 2018 rank: 2

 

If everyone could just get on the field at one time, the Giants would be something to stress out about for opposing defenses. Daniel Jones wasn’t able to get his five key weapons — Saquon Barkley, Evan Engram, Golden Tate, Sterling Shepard and Darius Slayton — on the gridiron together for a single snap in 2019. Jones dropped back 77 times with only Shepard missing from that bunch and posted a passer rating of 100.7, 13 points higher than his season-long total.

 

Slayton was the revelation of the bunch, leading the team with 740 receiving yards and eight touchdowns as a rookie fifth-round pick. The Giants don’t have anybody as valuable as DeAndre Hopkins, but they are deeper one through five than the vast majority of teams and still have position-leading upside at running back and tight end with Barkley and Engram. If they just could stay healthy …

 

6. New Orleans Saints

2019 rank: 7 | 2018 rank: 11

 

While NFL executives named Julio Jones the league’s best wide receiver, Michael Thomas is comfortably the most productive wideout by the majority of measures. The only argument you could have made against Thomas was the idea that he wouldn’t be the same quarterback without Drew Brees at the helm, but across Teddy Bridgewater’s five starts, he actually averaged more receiving yards per game (110.2) and yards per target (10.6) than he did otherwise (106.7 and 8.8, respectively.) We’ve never seen a player absorb as much volume and threaten teams downfield as frequently as Thomas while simultaneously catching more than 80% of the passes in his direction.

 

The Saints found a second weapon behind Thomas in Jared Cook, who set career highs in yards per catch (16.4) and touchdowns (nine). Cook didn’t absorb a ton of volume, and I wonder if there will be enough in the way of opportunities for another big-name addition in Emmanuel Sanders. I’m more pessimistic about Sanders than the market, owing to his age (33), recent injury history and inconsistent production with the 49ers; but as long as Sanders can win his one-on-one matchups for three or four catches a week, he’ll be fine.

 

The only disappointing weapon for the Saints last season was Alvin Kamara, who suffered from some severe touchdown regression past the mean. After he scored once every 15.4 touches between 2017 and 2018, the dynamic running back scored once every 42 touches last season. His receiving efficiency also dropped off, and he fumbled four times after fumbling just once in each of the prior two campaigns. I’m optimistic about Kamara bouncing back in 2020, but asking for the unreal touchdown rate of his first two seasons is probably too much.

 

5. Carolina Panthers

2019 rank: 22 | 2018 rank: 17

 

It’s hard for a running back to be more productive than Christian McCaffrey, who finished with the third-most yards from scrimmage (2,392) in NFL history. McCaffrey scored 19 touchdowns, was efficient as a runner and receiver, absorbed huge volume and only fumbled once on 403 touches. The only hole I can poke in his production is that much of it came with the Panthers trailing; he (453 receiving yards) and teammate DJ Moore (421) ranked Nos. 1 and 2 in receiving yards when their team’s chance of winning was below 10%. It’s difficult to imagine McCaffrey being quite as productive in 2020, but even 80% of his 2019 season would make him one of the NFL’s best backs.

 

 

Everybody knows McCaffrey is a star, but even given those numbers above, I’m not sure people are appropriately valuing Moore. The 2018 first-rounder finished with 1,175 receiving yards despite catching passes from Kyle Allen and a compromised Cam Newton. Moore could be a top-10 receiver with better quarterback play from Teddy Bridgewater this season. I’m not quite as optimistic about Curtis Samuel, who averaged less than 6.0 yards per target a year ago, but new addition Robby Anderson also should benefit from an improved passer. The biggest question is Ian Thomas, who impressed at the end of 2018 and will have the first shot at taking over for Greg Olsen at tight end.

 

4. Tampa Bay Buccaneers

2019 rank: 14 | 2018 rank: 15

 

While a drop in possessions is likely to drag down their cumulative numbers, the Bucs have a strong case for sporting the NFL’s best receiving corps. They have the best one-two punch at wide receiver in the game with Mike Evans and Chris Godwin — who solved his fumble problems and emerged as a great second option. The only downside is that Tampa Bay didn’t really replace third wideout Breshad Perriman, who was one of the league’s most productive wideouts in December after Evans and Godwin went down injured.

 

No team is deeper at tight end with O.J. Howard, Cameron Brate and now Rob Gronkowski. Even if we only see the guy whose numbers declined in 2018, Gronk posted a 47-682-3 line and finished 11th among tight ends in fantasy football. With a year to rest his ailing back, he has more red zone upside than that line would suggest.

 

As was the case a year ago, though, the Buccaneers have the worst group of running backs in football. Ronald Jones improved after a dismal rookie campaign, but his issues with fumbles and pass protection make it difficult to expect Bruce Arians to give the 2018 second-rounder significant volume. The only players of note behind Jones are rookie third-rounder Ke’Shawn Vaughn and Dare Ogunbowale. This is a team crying out for a veteran back such as Devonta Freeman, Lamar Miller or LeSean McCoy.

 

3. Dallas Cowboys

2019 rank: 6 | 2018 rank: 30

 

How do you go from 30th to third over the course of two seasons? Invest. The Cowboys traded a first-round pick for Amari Cooper, and while the move was widely panned at the time, he ranks fifth in receiving yards and is tied for a league-high 14 receiving touchdowns since he joined up with Dak Prescott & Co in 2018. Michael Gallup was a third-round pick awaiting his pro debut at the start of 2018, but he has emerged as a star after an 1,107-yard campaign. The only third-round pick to produce more yards in his second season as a pro is Mike Wallace, with Gallup coming in ahead of guys such as T.Y. Hilton, Kenny Golladay and Terrell Owens. Dallas just added to the fold Oklahoma dynamo CeeDee Lamb, who would profile as the No. 1 wideout for a handful of teams right now. He is Dallas’ No. 3.

 

Jerry Jones’ team also has Ezekiel Elliott, who has led the league in rushing yards per game in three of his first four NFL seasons. The only reason the Cowboys are third is the prospects of their tight end group, for which Blake Jarwin will assume a larger role after Jason Witten left for Las Vegas. Jarwin was productive in a small sample last season, ranking eighth in the league in yards per route run and 11th in yards per target. There’s no way he is going to see significant volume with the other four guys in this offense ahead of him, but if Jarwin can maintain that sort of efficiency, Dallas won’t have any weaknesses.

 

2. Cleveland Browns

2019 rank: 3 | 2018 rank: 13

 

The Browns are back toward the top of these rankings for a second consecutive season. There are fair questions about whether their offense will be effective after a disastrous 2019 campaign, but their weapons aren’t the problem. In some places, they’re better than they looked a year ago. Free-agent signing Austin Hooper’s production was inflated by garbage-time numbers in Atlanta, but he is still a significant upgrade on David Njoku.

 

Nick Chubb kept up his second-half performance from 2018 over a full season in 2019, and while he needs to be more efficient, the idea of Chubb playing in a Gary Kubiak-style rushing attack under Kevin Stefanski in 2020 is scary for opponents. Kareem Hunt was productive in a limited role after returning from suspension, ranking in the top 15 in both yards per target and yards per route run. Baker Mayfield’s numbers improved with Hunt on the field, and Hunt is overqualified for his role as the bottom half of a back rotation.

 

In what would have been a surprise given what we thought last season, my concern about the Browns is mostly with the wide receivers. Jarvis Landry underwent hip surgery in February, and it’s unclear whether he’ll be ready to go in training camp. Odell Beckham Jr. played through a hernia in 2019, and there’s a good chance he bounces back in 2020. But it’s also fair to note that we’re now three years removed from the OBJ who was one of the league’s best wideouts with the Giants. Beckham averaged 95.9 receiving yards per game over his first three seasons, with that number falling to 74.7 yards over the past three campaigns. If he is the guy from Years 1 to 3, the Browns should be No. 1 here. If Beckham has another season in which he fails to live up to that level of play, we probably need to reevaluate our expectations for one of the league’s most talented receivers.

 

1. Kansas City Chiefs

2019 rank: 2 | 2018 rank: 1

 

I’m confident Patrick Mahomes would have been a successful NFL quarterback regardless of where he landed, but it’s not selling the superstar passer short to point out that he has had plenty of help. In addition to the coaching of Andy Reid, just look at those weapons rankings. The Chiefs surrounded Mahomes with talent before he took over as the full-time starter, and they have reaped the benefits.

 

The Chiefs rank first for the second time in three years because they’re so deep with receiving options. Travis Kelce is the NFL’s most productive receiving tight end. Over his three seasons as a starter, Tyreek Hill is sixth in receiving yards and fourth in yards per route run among wide receivers. Sammy Watkins might not live up to the contract he signed or the expectations he had when he was drafted No. 4 overall in 2014, but he racked up 288 receiving yards when the Chiefs needed him in the playoffs, the second-highest total of the postseason. Mecole Hardman quietly averaged 1.90 yards per route run; he only caught 26 passes, but nearly 35% of them went for 20 or more yards, which was the fifth-highest rate in the league. Every one of these guys is a threat to score from anywhere on the field.

 

Re-drafting the NFL

 

We made every NFL player a free agent, then asked our 32 NFL Nation reporters to re-draft four rounds of high-impact stars with a five-year Super Bowl window in mind. Which team is the best?

• Re-drafted NFL rosters: All 128 picks »

• Experts react » | Stacking the QBs »

 

You need to catch passes if you’re going to play running back for Reid, and the Chiefs now have two backs who can do that. Damien Williams has generally been productive when healthy. He has had 15 games as Kansas City’s primary back over the past two seasons, and in those contests, he has carried the ball 205 times for 1,006 yards (4.9 yards per carry), caught 61 passes for 498 additional yards and scored 19 touchdowns. That’s basically Aaron Jones’ 2019 regular season, and a significant chunk of Williams’ work has come in the postseason.

 

What put the Chiefs over the top, though, is the addition of first-round pick Clyde Edwards-Helaire. The major drop-off when the Chiefs cut Kareem Hunt and replaced him with Williams came in the receiving game. Only two backs in the nation averaged more yards per route run last season than the LSU star Edwards-Helaire, who is perfectly capable of splitting out as a receiver and winning matchups at the line of scrimmage. He is likely going to be an insurance policy against Williams’ health and a valuable weapon in his own right from Day 1. It’s just enough to push the Chiefs ahead of the Browns and Cowboys for the top spot.