Tagged Players:
George Pickens, WR, Dallas Cowboys
Kyle Pitts, TE, Atlanta Falcons
Breece Hall, RB, New York Jets
Daniel Jones, QB, Indianapolis Colts
All but Daniel Jones were slapped with the franchise tag. For whatever reason, the Indianapolis Colts decided to get cheap with the little-used transition tag. The last time a quarterback received the transition tag was in 1996 when the Atlanta Falcons used it to keep Jeff George. For a savings of only $6 million, the Colts only get the opportunity to match any contract offered to Jones. If he was to sign with another team, the Colts would receive no draft-pick compensation. I’ve never understood why a team uses the transition tag. It seems that the potential for draft-pick compensation alone is worth the difference in savings. There’s a reason the transition tag isn’t offered used. It’s been 30 years since it was last used on a quarterback. The professionals with the Colts obviously see the right to match any contract Jones might be offered as reason for the cheaper tagging route.
George Pickens, Kyle Pitts, and Breece Hall were all slapped with the non-exclusive franchise tag. So, the other teams can negotiate with the tagged players. However, it’s highly unlikely that any team would be willing to pay the two first-round draft picks it would cost to sign any of the three players.
The Colts had a tagging decision to make as both Daniel Jones and receiver Alec Pierce are a week away from free agency. They hoped to get Pierce signed before the deadline. One of the holdups in the deal was Pierce wanting certainties as to his quarterback. I wonder if Jones receiving the transition tag provides that certainty. For $6 million more, the Colts could’ve provided more certainty. I’m guessing that both Jones and Pierce will be in Indianapolis next season.
With the tagging deadline in the books, the next thing on the NFL Calendar is biggie. NFL Free Agency is a week away with the Monday opening of the “legal” tampering window.