Tuesday, March 3, 2026

Franchise Tag Deadline Day

The deadline is today for NFL teams to use the franchise tag (or transition tag) to restrict the movement of one of their impending free agents. The tags have been around since free agency was born in 1993. Teams used to rely more heavily on this tool to retain players than they have in recent years. Are teams better at securing deals for most-prized players in advance of free agency? Are teams simply less willing to use the tags? Who knows? What is known is that the franchise tag has gotten pretty pricey. 

Franchise Tag Numbers:
QB - $47.4 million
WR - $28.0 million
OL - $27.8 million
LB - $27.6 million
DT - $27.4 million
DE - $26.7 million
CB - $20.8 million
S - $20.8 million
TE - $16.0 million
RB - $14.2 million
K/P - $6.8 million

The tags are pretty pricey but they are a reflection of the booming NFL economy. Most teams can easily afford those numbers. It’s really just a question of whether they want to spend it. The best option for teams and players is always to get a long-term deal done. 

In advance of tagging deadline day, only three teams have slapped one of the their players with the franchise tag. 

Tagged Players:
George Pickens, WR, Dallas Cowboys
Kyle Pitts, TE, Atlanta Falcons
Breece Hall, RB, New York Jets

Some of the teams that have tagging decisions to make before today’s 1pm PT deadline.

Potentially Tagged Players:
Daniel Jones, QB, Indianapolis Colts
Alec Pierce, WR, Indianapolis Colts
Kenneth Walker III, RB, Seattle Seahawks
Trey Hendrickson, DE, Cincinnati Bengals 
Odafe Oweh, Edge, Los Angeles Chargers

A team can use only one tag so the Indianapolis Colts might have a decision to make. I believe that the Colts will get a long-term deal done with one of Daniel Jones or Alec Pierce and tag the other. Today should be a furious day in Indianapolis.  It’s been reported that it’s unlikely that the Seattle Seahawks and Cincinnati Bengals use a tag on Kenneth Walker III and Trey Hendrickson, respectively. Whether it’s through tagging or a long-term deal, the Los Angeles Chargers should find a way to keep Odadfe Oweh. He was a pass-rushing revelation when he joined the Chargers through trade during last season. 

Today’s tagging deadline is the next step on the way to next week’s start of free agency. 



Monday, March 2, 2026

Mock Draft Monday

Following the completion of the Scouting Combine, here’s another swing at a mock draft of the first round. 

1.   Las Vegas Raiders: Fernando Mendoza, QB, Indiana
2.   New York Jets: Arvell Reese, Edge, Ohio State
3.   Arizona Cardinals: Francis Mauigoa, OT, Miami
4.   Tennessee Titans: David Bailey, Edge, Edge
5.   New York Giants: Sonny Styles, LB, Ohio State
6.   Cleveland Browns: Rueben Baine Jr., Edge, Miami
7.   Washington Commanders: Jeremiyah Love, RB, Notre Dame
8.   New Orleans Saints: Caleb Downs, S, Ohio State
9.   Kansas City Chiefs: Carnell Tate, WR, Ohio State
10. Cincinnati Bengals: Olaivavega Ioane, G, Penn State
11. Miami Dolphins: Mansoor Delane, CB, LSU
12. Dallas Cowboys: Akheem Mesidor, Edge, Miami
13. Los Angeles Rams (from Falcons): Jermod McCoy, CB, Tennessee
14. Baltimore Ravens: Makai Lemon, WR, USC
15. Tampa Bay Buccaneers: Cashius Howell, Edge, Texas A&M
16. New York Jets (from Colts): Jordan Tyson, WR, Arizona State
17. Detroit Lions: Keldric Faulk, Edge, Auburn
18. Minnesota Vikings: Dillon Thieneman, S, Oregon
19. Carolina Panthers: KC Concepcion, WR, Texas A&M
20. Dallas Cowboys (from Packers): Avieon Terrell, CB, Clemson
21. Pittsburgh Steelers: Denzel Boston, WR, Washington
22. Los Angeles Chargers: Kenyon Sadiq, TE, Oregon
23. Philadelphia Eagles: T.J. Parker, Edge, Clemson
24. Cleveland Browns (from Jaguars): Spencer Fano, OT, Utah
25. Chicago Bears: Caleb Banks, DL, Florida
26. Buffalo Bills: CJ Allen, LB, Georgia
27. San Francisco 49ers: Monroe Freeling, OT, Georgia
28. Houston Texans: Kadyn Proctor, OT, Alabama
29. Los Angeles Rams: Emmanuel McNeil-Warren, S, Toledo
30. Denver Broncos: Peter Woods, DL, Clemson
31. New England Patriots: Caleb Lomu, OT, Utah
32. Seattle Seahawks: Jadarian Price, RB, Notre Dame

Until the next one. 


Sunday, March 1, 2026

Another Minnesota Vikings Mock Draft

With the Scouting Combine coming to an end, it’s definitely NFL Draft season. Here’s another swing at a Minnesota Vikings Mock Draft.

1. Emmanuel McNeil-Warren, S, Toledo
2. Chris Johnson, CB, San Diego State
3. Emmett Johnson, RB, Nebraska
3. Tim Keenan III, DL, Alabama
5. Ted Hurst, WR, Georgia State
6. Logan Jones, C, Iowa
7. Kage Casey, OT, Boise State
7. Eli Heidenreich, FB, Navy
7. Cole Payton, QB, North Dakota State

I sure wish the Compensatory picks would be announced so that we know exactly how many and what picks the Vikings will have. Every 7-round mock draft seems to have a different accounting of the team’s picks. 

My initial thoughts on the first round were focused on the cornerbacks and maybe defensive line. The Vikings 18th pick seemed to fit nicely with the players at those positions. The more I familiarize myself with the players in this draft the more I see depth at corner and a drop-off at safety. Emmanuel McNeil-Warren and Chris Johnson would be excellent additions to the Vikings secondary. I really like the defensive lineman potentially available in the first round. It’s tough to pass on them for the secondary. Tim Keenan III in the third will immediately help the run defense. 

Center, running back, and receiver are the top offensive needs. Emmett Johnson, Ted Hurst, and Logan Jones nicely address those needs. 

While I really like the players in this mock, I don’t like that linebacker isn’t addressed. At the start of the draft process, I didn’t really think of linebacker as a first-round option. Now, I’m thinking a player like Georgia’s C.J. Allen as a legitimate option. Future mocks might include him. 

Saturday, February 28, 2026

The Salary Cap Is In!

The NFL salary cap for the 2026 season will be $301.2 million. That’s a $22 million increase over last year. The cap has increased 40% since the pandemic-altered 2020 season. The NFL is doing just fine. 

The NFL introduced the salary cap when they were forced to accept free agency. Seeing as the salary cap is a reflection of league profits, it’s an interesting evolution.

NFL Salary Cap Through The Years (in millions)

1994: $34.608 
1995: $37.100
1996: $40.753
1997: $41.454
1998: $52.388
1999: $57.288
2000: $62.172
2001: $67.405
2002: $71.101
2003: $75.007
2004: $80.582
2005: $85.582
2006: $102.000
2007: $109.000
2008: $116.000
2009: $123.000
2010: NA
2011: $120.375
2012: $120.600
2013: $123.000
2014: $133.000
2015: $143.280
2016: $155.270
2017: $167.000
2018: $177.200
2019: $188.200
2020: $198.200
2021: $182.500
2022: $208.200
2023: $224.800
2024: $255.400
2025: $279.200
2026: $301.200

The 2010 season cap was uncapped due to the expiration of the 2006 Collective Bargaining Agreement. 

Despite being well aware of the unrelenting growth of the NFL, it still amazes me that the salary cap has jumped nearly $100 million since 2022. 

It’s also amazing that there are current players with an annual salary equal to the salary cap for an entire team during the 1998 season. 

With the salary cap set at $301.2, the Minnesota Vikings are $45,506,353 over the cap. There’s some work to be done over the next two weeks just to get even. The Vikings need to get better than even. 

Friday, February 27, 2026

The Grades Are In!

Due to a handful of sensitive owners, the league hoped they’d put an end to the NFLPA’s report cards on the teams. The NFL succeeded in court to prevent the public release of the grades. The ruling couldn’t stop the NFLPA and the players from continuing to grade the teams. With so many involved in the process, leaks are inevitable. ESPN’s Kalyn Kahler has long been covering the NFLPA’s Report Cards and she collected those leaks. The grades are in!

The top three graded teams are the Miami Dolphins, Minnesota Vikings, and Washington Commanders. The bottom three teams are the Cleveland Browns, Arizona Cardinals, and Pittsburgh Steelers. Perhaps the most remarkable reveal in the four-year history of the NFLPA’s grades has been the rise of the Commanders. When Josh Harris purchased the team from idiot Daniel Snyder, the Commanders were at the bottom of the team grades. Now, they are a the top. If nothing else, Harris showed that a horribly run team can be flipped. He also showed that it can be done quickly. I can’t imagine Art and Dan Rooney being happy with the way the kids are currently running the Steelers. The senior Rooneys were a couple of the most player-centric owners to ever own an NFL team. They took care of their players from 1933 until Dan Rooney’s passing in 2017. Seeing the Steelers failing at taking care of their players doesn’t feel right. 

The Minnesota Vikings have been crushing these grades. They were at the top in the first year. They’ve been a touch behind the Miami Dolphins each of the last three years. It must be the weather. 

Minnesota Vikings Grades

Treatment of Families: A
Home Game Field: B
Food/Dining: B-
Nutritionist/Dietician: B+
Locker Room: A
Training Room: A-
Training Staff: A-
Weight Room: A-
Strength Coaches: A
Position Coaches: B+
Offensive Coordinator: A-
Defensive Coordinator: B+
Special Teams Coordinator: A-
Team Travel: B+
Head Coach: A
General Manager: A
Team Ownership: A+
Overall Rank: 2

Actually, the difference between the Dolphins might be the weather. Due to their northern location, the Vikings have to play indoors on turf. The Dolphins plush grass field will always grade higher than the Vikings turf. 

The Vikings have always scored in the “B” range in the food/dining and nutritionist/dietician categories. While those would be amazing grades for some teams (Bengals), they shouldn’t be acceptable for the Vikings. They recently changed their dietician and that brought a bit of a bump. A “B-“ in food/dining must be addressed. If a team gets a “B-“ in anything, some players gave it a “C,” or lower. In the amazing, beautiful TCO Performance Center, nothing should be getting lower than a “B.” 

Perhaps the most eye-catching of the Vikings grades is the “A” for general manager. Kwesi Adofo-Mensah was fired after the season. While his drafts may have tilted towards unacceptable, it looks like his relationship was terrific with the players he drafted. 

Through the four years of these grades, “Treatment of Families” has emerged as the category that I value the most. It’s easy to focus on the grades for coaches, weight room, training staff, etc. as they might translate into on-the-field success the most. Those grades are certainly important. It shows how much ownership wants to win. How ownership treats the families of their players shows how much they care. When the Bengals get an F-, it shows that Mike Brown does not give a shit about the players or their families. Seriously, how does a free agent ever choose the Bengals? If the Vikings ever get below an “A” for how they treat the families, I’ll be very disappointed. 


Thursday, February 26, 2026

Backup Quarterback Preferences

It’s just gotten started and this Minnesota Vikings offseason is already shaping up as a repeat of last offseason. It’s all about the quarterback. In the NFL, it’s always about the quarterback. Last offseason, the Vikings quarterback question started with Sam Darnold. After some casual negotiations, the Vikings “let” him walk. They “let” him walk because that was always the plan. The Vikings quarterback plan, hatched two years ago, was to pair Sam Darnold with first-round draft pick J.J. McCarthy. Play Darnold in 2024 and turn to McCarthy in 2025. It was a nice succession plan. I never understood why there were any other thoughts last offseason. Darnold playing well in his single season in Minnesota wasn’t a reason for the Vikings to deviate from the quarterback plan and break the bank for him. Why? Every quarterback that’s managed to stay upright has played well in Kevin O’Connell’s offense. Darnold playing well for the Vikings wasn’t a surprise. He was just the next quarterback to do so. The plan was for McCarthy to be the one after Darnold. It made sense to stick with that plan. The wrinkle in the plan was the unexpected availability of Daniel Jones late in the 2024 season. The Vikings signed him and had him in the building for a prolonged tryout as McCarthy’s backup in 2025. It seems pretty clear that the Vikings assumed that McCarthy and Jones would top their quarterback depth chart. When Jones opted for a starting opportunity with the Indianapolis Colts, it forced the Vikings to alter their quarterback plans. That resulted in a nauseating offseason with the persistent, and idiotic, reporting that Aaron Rodgers was in the mix. Nothing good would’ve come from that signing. Rodgers is a turd and the farther he is from Minnesota the better. If I could change one thing about the Vikings 2025 offseason, it would’ve been signing Carson Wentz soon after Jones signed with the Colts. The Sam Howell experiment was a failure and adding Wentz just days before the start of the season was desperate. 

When it comes to the all-important quarterback position, this offseason is shaping up a lot like last offseason for the Vikings. J.J. McCarthy is the starter. Hopefully, he sees all 20(!) starts in 2026. A reliable, competent backup is still needed. Here are my preferences.

Mac Jones 
Kirk Cousins

My preferences start with two oft-mentioned possibilities. Both come with big “ifs.” It would take a trade for the Vikings to pry Mac Jones from the 49ers. I don’t want the Vikings paying the draft pick price the 49ers are apparently asking. As for Kirk Cousins, he’s made a career of maximizing his contracts. Those demands have to come down if he wants to sit the bench in Minnesota. So, I don’t think either Jones or Cousins are realistic. Cousins is probably a bit more realistic than Jones.

After Jones and Cousins, my backup quarterback preferences are:

Carson Wentz
Geno Smith
Derek Carr
Marcus Mariota
Jimmy Garoppolo
Case Keenum
Jake Browning

It’s not a scintillating group. Then again, being forced to go with the #2 quarterback isn’t a scintillating situation for any team. My hope for the Vikings is that J.J. McCarthy misses zero games and the only snaps for the backup are victory snaps. He was able to stay healthy in high school and college. Hopefully, he can revert back to those healthy ways for the remainder of his NFL career. 

As long as I don’t have to hear any idiotic Aaron Rodgers rumors, this backup quarterback search shouldn’t be as tiresome as last season. That’s mostly because I don’t expect it to last as long. Deciding on the backup quarterback early in the process might be my greatest preference. 


Wednesday, February 25, 2026

2026 Minnesota Vikings Coaching Staff

On the eve of the 2026 Scouting Combine, the Minnesota Vikings released their roster of coaches for the 2026 season. The weeks of patiently tracking the additions and subtractions and piecing the staff together are finally over. It’s done and I can move to the next phase of the Vikings offseason. 

In total, eight coaches departed:

Mike Pettine - Assistant Head Coach - retired
Michael Hutchings - Assistant DBs Coach - swiped by Cal
Chris Kuper - Offensive Line Coach - contract expired 
Marcus Dixon - Defensive Line Coach - contract expired
Daronte Jones - DBs/Pass Game Coordinator - swiped by Washington Commanders
Imarjaye Albury - Assistant DL Coach - swiped by Texas Tech
Tony Sorrentino: Assistant Receivers Coach - swiped by Arizona Cardinals
Brian Angelichio: TEs/Pass Game Coordinator - swiped by Pittsburgh Steelers

Seven new coaches were hired:

Frank Smith - Assistant Head Coach
Gerald Alexander - DB/Pass Game Coordinator 
Ryan Nielsen - DL/Run Game Coordinator
Derek Warehime - Assistant Offensive Line
Chili Davis - Assistant Special Teams
Kyle Caskey - Offensive QC
Will Johnson - Defensive Assistant 

Apparently, the Vikings will have one fewer coach than they had last season. 27 is still much more than the handful of coaches that got things done for Bud Grant. The league has changed greatly in the last 50 years. One of those changes is the incredible increase in size of coaching staffs across all level of football. A Vikings player roster of 53 players has 27 coaches. That’s a cozy situation of only two players for every coach. Even if you throw in the 16-member practice squad it’s an incredibly small player:coach ratio. Bud Grant spent much of his retirement years wondering what all of the coaches did on the rapidly growing staffs. During my brief and modest playing days, the coaches could comfortably fit in a Fiat while the players filled two school buses.

The remaining coaching changes on Kevin O’Connell’s fifth Vikings coaching staff were a handful of shuffles and promotions. Here’s what we have. 

Minnesota Vikings Coaching Staff

Head Coach: Kevin O’Connell

Assistant Head Coach: Frank Smith
Offensive Coordinator: Wes Phillips
Defensive Coordinator: Brian Flores
Special Teams Coordinator: Matt Daniels

Offense:

QBs/Pass Game Coordinator: Josh McCown
Assistant QB/Pass Game Specialist: Jordan Traylor
Assistant Offensive Coordinator: Chris O’Hara
RBs/Run Game Coordinator: Curtis Modkins
Receivers: Keenan McCardell
Assistant Receivers: Derron Montgomery
TEs/Pass Game Coordinator: Ryan Cordell
Offensive Line: Keith Carter
Assistant Offensive Line: Derek Warehime
Offensive Quality Control: Kyle Caskey
Offensive Assistant: Ben Ellefson
Assistant to the Head Coach: Henry Schneider IV

Defense:

DL/Run Game Coordinator: Ryan Nielsen
Assistant Defensive Line: Patrick Hill
Outside LBs: Thad Bogardus
Inside LBs/Senior Defensive Assistant: Mike Siravo 
Assistant LBs: Dalmin Gibson
DBs/Pass Game Coordinator: Gerald Alexander
Assistant DBs: Chenzo Funari
Defensive Assistant: Charlie Frye
Defensive Assistant: Will Johnson

Special Teams:

Assistant Special Teams: Chili Davis