Saturday, July 25, 2015

Steelers extend G.M. Colbert

Stability has been the name of the game in Pittsburgh in recent decades, not only in the win column and on the sidelines, but in the front office, as well.

Days after the Steelers inked an extension for only their third head coach since 1969, they gave the same security to their G.M., Kevin Colbert, who they extended through 2018. He, like Mike Tomlin, had been signed originally through next season.

"I am happy to announce that we have extended Kevin Colbert's contract for two additional years," Steelers president Art Rooney II said in a team statement. "Kevin's work and footprint on our football operations have been a key factor in our success. We are excited Kevin will continue to lead our personnel department for at least the next three years."

A native of Pittsburgh, Colbert grew up along the Ohio River, not far from where Heinz Field stands today. An almunus of North Catholic High School, he was named the franchise's first-ever general manager in 2010 after spending 11 years as the Director of Football Operations.

"I am truly grateful to Art and Mr. Rooney for the opportunity to continue my career with the Pittsburgh Steelers," Colbert said. "It is with great anticipation that we enter into the 2015 season in pursuit of another Super Bowl championship."

The Steelers acquired two of those during his 15 years with the program, along with 11 winning seasons, and a third appearance in the big game.

@MrJamesParks

Friday, July 24, 2015

Where is the Redskins' defensive strength?

It wouldn't quite qualify as breaking news to note the Redskins weren't scaring many offenses last season. They allowed 35 passing touchdowns, the most in football, and surrendered the third-most points all told per game (24.7). 

Washington placed 20th in football in total yards allowed per game (357) and permitted 107.6 yards every Sunday on the ground. They secured 36 quarterback sacks (nearer to the bottom than the top of the standings), of which a third belonged to Kerrigan (13.5). 

With their struggles against the pass in 2014, it seemed logical that Scot McCloughan, in his first year with the franchise, would get to work on some decent cornerbacks and safety men. That he did, adding Chris Culliver from the 49ers, and Dashon Goldson from Tampa and Jeron Johnson from the Seahawks to fill out the secondary. 

The club drafted Preston Smith for some depth behind Trent Murphy and Keenan Robinson at the right linebacker spot, and Ryan Kerrigan will hold down the left spot in a decent pass rush. Murphy will be watched closely in his second season after a poor effort in the sacks department, the reason he was brought in.


But the game begins and ends, on offense and defense, in the trenches. A secondary and linebacking corps has to be counted on to stop plays because a defensive line first couldn't stop them. So, over a few days in late February and March, McCloughan revamped the Redskins' defensive line. 

Barry Cofield and Stephen Bowen were released and Terrance Knighton and Stephen Paea signed up. Ricky Jean Francois came over from the Colts and Jason Hatcher was retained to likely start at right end. 

"I think the type of guys you see, you see Paea and Ricky Jean Francois, they can get up the field and rush," head coach Jay Gruden said this spring. "They're active, and we're trying to get off the line of scrimmage more so a little bit than play at the line of scrimmage."

Gruden will implement a more attacking front than in seasons past, and will look to Paea and Hatcher to flank a spirited rush for the quarterback. Knighton, nicknamed "Pot Roast" for a reason, will hunker down at the nose position and set himself against running backs in the hole. That domination on the inside will, Redskins coaches hope, propel opponents to venture more attempts to the outside, and into the waiting arms of linebackers with more freedom to impose themselves.

"It would not only affect the running game, passing game," Gruden said. "[But] if you have a penetrating defensive tackle getting into the backfield on pass and run, that would do damage to the offense.

"It frees up the linebackers, obviously, to make plays, and makes people bounce things outside right to Kerrigan," he added. "Which is what we want. It helps out a lot."

Knighton held down the center of the Broncos' defensive front last season in dominating fashion, and Stephen Paea tallied a career-best six sacks as a member of the Chicago Bears.

"To have great depth in rotational defensive linemen and keep them with the day of the no-huddle and different phases of football," Gruden said. "To have different types of defensive linemen will be a benefit to us."

The story of this group, however, is that of a collection of decent talent. Which is, in the words of Jay Gruden, a "good dilemma." 

But that singular personality, that No. 1 guy who is the declared and understood leader in the huddle -- this unit still requires that force. That leader may emerge sometime in the near future, perhaps as early as training camp. Knighton is the likely candidate -- his boisterousness and confidence have already led him to nickname the line "Capitol Punishment" in honor of their hometown.

Knighton will also be motivated, having only the one year his deal calls for to show management his long-term value. A lot of the ability for the Redskins to push upfield and collapse pockets will depend on the pressure to either side of him, something they seem to have answered with the addition of Paea, and what Jason Hatcher can do when healthy. 

The Redskins thought they did good enough in the free agency period to address offensive line needs early in the draft, eventually selecting tackle Brandon Scherff in the first round. I think they were right to do so, considering the skill sets all three players bring to this front, as it stands the best feature of their defense this season.

@MrJamesParks

No talks yet between Giants, Manning

Those contract negotiations that were supposed to be ongoing between the New York Giants and their quarterback? Yeah, they're not happening.

That, according to Rand Getlin of NFL Network, who on Friday evening on Twitter reported the absence of any "meaningful, substantive contract talks between Eli Manning and the Giants in some time."

The Giants had hoped to sign Manning to an extension before the training camp period, but the apparent daily silence between the two camps renders that an unlikely occurence. New York reports to camp on July 31.

Manning is heading into the final year on his current deal, and will be paid $15 million for this season. The two-time Super Bowl champion is coming off a banner campaign in 2014, throwing 30 touchdowns on 4,410 yards. In his first year under new offensive coordinator Ben McAdoo, he tossed only 14 interceptions after throwing a career-worst 27 two years ago.

It's almost an impossibility that the Giants would allow Manning to hit the open market as a free agent, especially with their offensive unit prone to take another step forward this season. The team would do itself much good by getting his signature down as early as possible to avoid the inevitable cavalcade of negative attention his absence would bring.

@MrJamesParks

Cardinals and TE Gresham agree to deal

The Arizona Cardinals were expected to enter the tight end market after team-leader John Carlson suddenly announced his retirement at the end of last season.

That problem may have been solved after they and former Bengals tight end Jermaine Gresham came to terms on a deal on Friday afternoon, the team announced.

Consistently thought the best at his position on the free agency market this offseason, the 27 year old Gresham signed a one-year deal.

He had 62 receptions on 79 targets last season with Cincinnati on 460 yards and five touchdowns, though he missed the final game of the 2014 campaign after a surgery to correct a herniated disk in his back. 

The former Oklahoma Sooner has 280 career catches for 2,722 yards and 24 touchdowns since entering the NFL as a No. 21 overall selection in 2010.

@MrJamesParks

Browns' Manziel working out with Jon Gruden

After a barnstorming tour of duty away from the field, and a lifestyle that at times rivalled Caligula, Browns quarterback Johnny Manziel is trying to put himself on the right road. 

A stint in rehab and some solemn promises have been forthcoming, but as his head coach Mike Pettine said, actions speak louder than words.

To right his brief, yet already failing, NFL career, Manziel has been taking private practices with former head coach and current ESPN analyst Jon Gruden, according to Charlie Campbell of Walter Football.

"Gruden took a liking to Manziel before the 2014 NFL Draft and was effusive in his praise of Manziel," Campbell said. "Thus, Gruden is also motivated to help Manziel to get straightened out."

Last year, Gruden also hosted pro quarterback Josh Freeman to do some work in the film room and improve his throwing fundamentals.

Gruden spent 20 years in the coaching ranks, including two stints with the Raiders, culminating in a Super Bowl championship with the Buccaneers in 2005. Today, he's known as the color commentator on ESPN's "Monday Night Football" broadcasts and for hosting "Gruden's Quarterback Camp" for the network.

Manziel is looking at a likely No. 2 position with Cleveland this season after the team signed veteran Josh McCown following Manziel's disastrous rookie campaign. He passed for 80 yards and two interceptions against the Bengals in a shutout defeat, and completed three passes against the Panthers before leaving with a hamstring injury as the Browns' otherwise promising season collapsed down the stretch.

Cleveland opens their preseason when they host the Redskins on Aug. 13.

@MrJamesParks

Chiefs' Smith suspended 3 games

The Chiefs will be without one of their best defensive backs for the early part of this coming season.

Sean Smith was suspended three games by the NFL for violation of the substance abuse policy after he pleaded guilty to a DUI charge in Kansas City. He will have two years of probation as a result.

The league calls for a two game suspension for offenses against its substance abuse policy, but allows for increased punishment for what they call aggravating circumstances. Smith was pulled over by police after his car collided with and broke a light pole.

Smith's absence could derail the Chiefs' pass defense early on. They host Peyton Manning and the Denver Broncos to Arrowhead Stadium on Sept. 17 and two weeks later Aaron Rodgers and the Green Bay Packers, teams that were fourth and sixth, respectively, in total offense last season.

@MrJamesParks

Thursday, July 23, 2015

NFL rewrites reception rules

Dez Bryant missed it by that much.

That would-be 4th-and-2 reception from Tony Romo near the goal line that frosty afternoon in Lambeau Field, originally called a good catch inches from pay dirt.

Then, it wasn't.

Down by five points with four minutes remaining, the Cowboys were set up to take the lead against an Aaron Rodgers-led Packers squad that hadn't lost in that building in two calendar years.

Packers coach Mike McCarthy called the striped gang over to contend Bryant actually didn't have possession throughout. That decision paid off.

But the NFL, preferring receptions to incompletions, took to their rule book to clarify any confusion that may still result from that play and any other that may come along in the future. 

A player is considered to be going to the ground if he does not remain upright long enough to demonstrate that he is clearly a runner. If a player goes to the ground in the act of catching a pass (with or without contact by an opponent), he must maintain control of the ball until after his initial contact with the ground, whether in the field of play or the end zone. If he loses control of the ball and the ball touches the ground before he regains control, the pass is incomplete. If he regains control prior the ball touching the ground, the pass is complete. 

Not that any amount of words will ever clear anything up in the scuffle following a catch or a replay that doesn't quite show everything clearly, and certainly not anything that will convince Cowboys fans that Dez Bryant didn't have that ball.

@MrJamesParks

Champ Bailey scared that Wes Welker wants to play

Former Patriots and Broncos wide receiver Wes Welker isn't currently on any NFL roster. That doesn't stop him from wanting to be on one, and thinks he can still play pro football.

Something that deeply concerns his former teammate in Denver, Champ Bailey.

"I don't want Wes to play for my own personal reasons," he told Fox Sports. "I've seen him get concussions. It scares me."

Despite his very real fears, Bailey still has faith that Welker could still produce for a franchise.

"I think he can still play, but I don't want him to play because of these concussions," he added. 

"This thing is no joke. It's a serious thing when you start talking about your head. And for him to have to worry about that at a young age that he is now, he has to think about that for years to come and I just hope he hangs it up."

He said how hard it is to tell another football player that he should hang up his cleats for good, also noting how it's Welker's desire for another Super Bowl that keeps him optimistic another team will sign him.

"I understand why he has that desire to play, he wants the ring," Bailey said. "He still has that hunger, I just don't want to see it."

@MrJamesParks

Storylines coming into Eagles camp

The Eagles will be coming into camp on August 2, filing in two-by-two into NovaCare Complex in South Philadelphia to gear up for what could become a momentous 2015 season.

For the first time since his days in college, Chip Kelly will be fielding largely a roster of his own creation. Many words have already been written and said about the sudden change in demographics on the Eagles, the incomings and outgoings that grabbed headlines on a regular basis this offseason.

Naturally the question remains, Will it work?


1. A lot of important positions are filled with new faces.

Talent is one thing, but chemistry and cohesion quite another. The novelty around this team is exciting, but it's also pressing. These players had some time to get acquainted with each other in the springtime OTAs, but they'll only have about a month to grow into each other on the field, to gain trust, and to acquire proper timing with one another.

2. The quarterback predicament is also noteworthy. 

How could it not be? The Eagles did a deal for Sam Bradford in exchange for Nick Foles to, what one must presume, is what they feel the long-term answer under center. Why else would they bring him aboard? There's no team in football that would pay over $13 million for anything approaching a back-up, so the plan has to be for Bradford to be their face this autumn.

It would take a serious health concern for Bradford to not be the starter from the word "Go." He's said as much. Kelly expects Bradford to be throwing passes when training camp begins. There's technically an open competition between he and Mark Sanchez, but if it's the latter taking the snaps in Atlanta in Week 1, not only is Bradford's future under suspicion. So is Chip Kelly's.

If a decision of his that important doesn't pan out that early, there would be more than some rumblings about his inability to find a franchise quarterback. He's been through a few now. 

3. Rookie watch.

Chip Kelly is normally someone who likes to ease his rookies into the fold, but that tact could be in jeopardy this time around. The Eagles' leading receiver last season, Jeremy Maclin, took the money and ran out of town for Andy Reid's Chiefs. That left a gaping hole in the pass game that needs filled as soon as possible.

Kelly and the Eagles are placing their faith in Nelson Agholor to fill that hole. Taken in the first round from USC, he's presumed the No. 1 option. An excellent run after the catch talent, that skill-set should make him at home right off the bat. His hands ability and speed are qualities that have never been questioned. 

Agholor jumped out of the gate in 2013, improving in receptions, yards, and touchdowns over two seasons. He added 4 touchdowns on punt returns, a position he could have early on in the preseason. 

He could produce a threatening receiving tandem alongside Jordan Matthews, who last season had the best outing of any rookie Eagles receiver, and the possibility of Agholor repeating that feat is not out of order. And while Philadelphia rarely puts out pass catching tandems, recent years show a somewhat different picture. 

Here's a list of wide receiver combos in recent seasons who grabbed headlines (and yards):

2014: (2,190); Jeremy Maclin 1,318; Jordan Matthews 872

2013: (2,167); DeSean Jackson 1,332; Riley Cooper 835

2010: (2,020); DeSean Jackson 1,056; Jeremy Maclin 964

True, most of that involved players who currently play elsewhere. But if anything can be known from Chip Kelly's tenure in Philadelphia, it's his friendliness to up-tempo, receiver-friendly offenses, and his willingness to insert new names and faces into his schemes. His Eagles posted a top-five offense last season, surpassing 6,300 total yards, and posting the sixth-best yardage per game (272). 

4. Secondary should be No. 1 defensive priority.

The Eagles last season gave up what they call "X-plays" by the bushel -- plays involving extra yards. It was a consistent problem: their stout front seven held teams firm near the line, then came the long bomb -- 18 plays all told of 40 yards or more, the most in football since the Chiefs allowed 22 of them.

Philadelphia allowed an average of 12.3 yards per completion, the second worst in the NFL, and became the first team in history to allow more than 4,000 yards while also limiting opposing quarterbacks to less than 62 percent completion rates. 

DeSean Jackson hauled in an aggravating 81 yard touchdown in his first chance at revenge since joining the Redskins. Larry Fitzgerald snagged an 80 yarder and John Brown the game-winning 75 yard catch-and-run in a match at the Cardinals. Eli Manning connected with Odell Beckham, Jr. for a 63 yard pass play. They allowed three unanswered touchdowns from a Rams squad quarterbacked by Austin Davis with a 34-7 lead. Dez Bryant had three scores in the second Cowboys game on a Sunday night. There are more.

There was little shock, but much pleasure, then, when cornerbacks Bradley Fletcher and Cary Williams were dismissed. Walter Thurmond and Byron Maxwell were brought over and Malcolm Jenkins will get a second chance to head up the safety position. There are nine new defensive backs all told, and a new DB coach, Cory Undlin.

It's hard to say those problems have been answered after only an OTA session. But it's not hard to say an improvement has already been made. The secondary in 2014 was listless and uninspired, and replaced by players with accomplishments to their names, not to mention an air of confidence. If these are the right moves, the Eagles could post one of the elite defenses in the league alongside a stout and deep linebacking corps and an attacking defensive line. 

@MrJamesParks

Terrance Knight nicknames Redskins' D-Line

The first order of business Redskins G.M. Scot McCloughan had when he walked in the door was to restore the team's shaken and stirred fundamentals. Over the course of a week, he revamped the defensive line, adding Ricky Jean Francois, Stephen Paea, and nose tackle Terrance Knighton.

The latter of whom, who has wasted no time making himself at home on his new roster, has christened the unit with a new nickname.

"The D-Line, we call ourselves 'Capital Punishment', being in Washington, D.C.," the man they call "Pot Roast" said, via ESPN.

Giving a team, or part of a team, a nickname this early in the game has proved less than reliable in predicting future fortunes recently. Former Philadelphia quarterback Vince Young famously baptised the Eagles "The Dream Team" prior to the 2011 regular season.

The Birds went 8-8, then 4-12, and Young hasn't been heard from since.

The Redskins, meanwhile, permitted 27.4 points per game last season, the third worst in that department league-wide. They were a respectable 12th against the rush, but allowed 35 passing touchdowns, the most in the NFL. Defensive line seems to be a position the team improved on this offseason, that is, in theory.

Knighton, who called himself the greatest steal of the offseason, will be counted on to shore up the Redskins' rush defense. Jason Hatcher was retained to anchor the right side, and Paea will occupy the left of the unit. Jean Francois and Chris Baker remain for depth.

@MrJamesParks

Steelers extend Mike Tomlin

If there's anything the Pittsburgh Steelers are known for besides winning, it's consistency. The model of stability and tradition, the franchise on Wednesday announced they would give a two-year extension to their third head coach since 1969.

Mike Tomlin, who succeeded Bill Cowher in 2007, will remain with the Steelers through 2018, the team announced. The deal will make him among the five highest paid coaches not merely in the NFL, but all sports.

"Mike has proven he is one of the top head coaches in the National Football League, and we are confident he will continue to lead the team in our pursuit of another Super Bowl championship," Steelers president Art Rooney II said.

The Steelers have never suffered a losing campaign under Tomlin's guidance (82-46), and have made the postseason in five seasons, winning four AFC North titles, culminating in two Super Bowl appearances, and one victory.

"I very much appreciate this contract extension, but my sole focus has been and will continue to be meeting the challenges that lie ahead for the 2015 season," Tomlin said in a statement following the announcement.

"These past nine years in Pittsburgh have been a wonderful experience for my family, and I look forward to pursuing what is the Steelers' goal every year - bringing another Super Bowl championship to the city of Pittsburgh."

Wednesday, July 22, 2015

Experts tag Redskins' RGIII as lost cause

"Winning takes care of everything," Redskins quarterback Robert Griffin III is wont to say.


A statement that, if true, proves the point that very little of anything is being taken care of in Washington these days. After a rookie campaign in 2012 that saw Giants defensive end Justin Tuck admit to suffering nightmares about the terror he saw in the little man under center, a bushel of injuries and coaching changes have the Skins languishing for answers once again.


The litany of losing has every Tom, Dick, and Harry looking forthem, and as the losses pile up, so does the anger. As does the anger, so does the blame. Head coaches and quarterbacks are first in the sights of those seeking answers. Especially the anonymous.


Who, in droves, spoke recently with ESPN's Mike Sando about the epidemic of losing in Washington. The source of their ire almost exclusively was the Redskins’ quarterback.


"There's no coming back," an offensive coach said of Robert Griffin III. "He is done. The reason is, the injury slowed his legs, and his ego will not allow him to hit rock bottom and actually grind his way back up the right way."


Sando in 2014 engaged on a personal quarterback ratings crusade, taking opinions and commentary from a legion of sources: eight personnel directors, six general managers, four head coaches, five offensive coordinators, five defensive coordinators, three salary-cap managers, two ex-G.M.'s, two ex-head coaches, and one offensive assistant coach.


Yes, they did refuse to give their names. But how else do you get the truth? Men say what they think when and only when they know no one else will beat them up for saying it. You could call it cowardice, and you might be right. Whatever it is, it's honest.


Perhaps too honest for RGIII's ears. And legs. And ego. And anything else prone to being broken in an off-tackle rush attempt.


"To get better in this league, you have to have a degree of humility," a personnel director told Sando. "When [Griffin] looks in the mirror, he is seeing things that everybody else is not seeing. That is why I was surprised when they gave him the fifth-year and said it was an easy decision."


This was the overriding concern among the inquired, that Griffin is too egotistical to lend himself to the counsel of coaching. Cue those memories of Mike Shanahan, who famously said after he left town that RGIII stopped just short of actually demanding which plays be called and which others be stricken from his playbook.


Shanahan was one of the few people connected with the franchise who said what he thought with his name attached. Jay Gruden was the other. Little of it was complimentary on either occasion. But, for Shanahan, Griffin’s being a control freak [allegedly] wasn’t the only thing that concerned him.


"I don't think getting hurt has anything to do with [his regression]," he said in May. "You don't have to have great running ability to run the read-option. You have to be able to know when to slide, when to throw the football away, depending on if you're running or passing."


In other words, decision making. Running and sliding has been the bane of Griffin's existence, so head coach Jay Gruden has been asking him to develop more into a pocket passer, building up the reps in OTAs on what will be their No. 1 priority in training camp next month in Richmond.


He showed progress in that department this spring, finding receivers easier out of their breaks and throwing with more confidence out of a surer pocket. But that continued ailment of his, nervousness and the tendency to flee, has gotten him into some well-documented troubles. His future depends on that habit being broken, fast.


But old habits die hard, as do old gameplans.


“I know how hard it is for a quarterback to go into a system for the first time,” a second G.M. told Sando. “With Griffin, I’m taking into account the new offense, the new personality at head coach, coming off an injury. He showed his rookie year that he could be a [top passer]. He is a young guy. I’m going to give him the benefit because of that.”


So, youth is the silver lining in an otherwise grey and foreboding cloud.


Obviously, the words of some unnamed sources aren’t tantamount to what a quarterback can do once exposed to real-time game action. But they are tantamount to what a quarterback has done once exposed to real-time game action. These are professionals who study game film and assess players for a living. And history tells us that things which begin at the top often fall the hardest. Early success combined with confidence breeds entitlement, and the unwillingness to improve.


The antidote? Humility, perseverance, and toil.


Granted, Griffin has spent much time off the field, particularly last season. But those games he played in 2014 showed few flashes of what his rookie season promised gullible Redskins fans desperate for some prolonged bout of good news. There were flashes amidst a four touchdown showing in seven games, like his performance against the Eagles in Week 16: only seven incompletions on 220 yards in a major upset win that eventually nudged Philadelphia from the playoff race.

That victory came with the help of a prideful run game in the red zone. All three of their touchdowns came from running backs, and the Redskins held firm at the line that night. But it was Griffin who paced drives with short passes to set up those chances. And the occasional bomb for DeSean Jackson, which doesn't hurt.


Football is, lest we forget, a team game. The success or failure of every man is largely, though not entirely, in the hands of every other man on the field. A quarterback depends in very large part on his ability to stay on his feet. Offensive line play has been hard to come by in recent outings for this club, something they hope is in some measure solved with the addition of rookie tackle Brandon Scherff.


But the road from here to September is still liberally paved in doubt. Andy Benoit of Sports Illustrated ranked Griffin 31st in the league at his position.


“He doesn’t have any sense right now of basic quarterbacking fundamentals,” he said. “He’s got leaps and bounds to go just to being an average NFL quarterback.”


All of these comments are well and good. But it’s G.M. Scot McCloughan, who has been no shrinking violet in his first year at the helm, who makes the decision. He’s made it, giving Griffin his fifth-year option, worth around $16 million. And he believes for good reason.
"I think this season is going to tell a lot," McCloughan said.

Well, yeah.

Titans sign QB Mariota

NASHVILLE, Tenn. -- After a few months of negotiations, quarterback Marcus Mariota and the Tennessee Titans agreed to terms on a contract on Tuesday, the team announced.

Titans G.M. Rushton Webster confirmed a deal had been "done" with the No. 2 overall selection and Oregon's first Heisman Trophy-winning player.

"We are glad to have the deal with Marcus done, and I'd like to thank both Marcus and his representatives for their diligence in working with us to finalize this contract," Webster said in a statement.

"We were confident that Marcus would be under contract before training camp, and we look forward to him starting his career on time with his teammates when we open camp next week. This is an exciting time for the Tennessee Titans organization, and we look forward to a bright future."

Mariota completed 105 touchdowns for over 10,000 yards in 41 appearances for the University of Oregon over three seasons. He threw for 4,454 yards and 42 touchdowns last season, rushing for an additional 770 yards and 15 touchdowns before falling to Ohio State in the national championship game.

Wednesday, July 15, 2015

Cowboys ink WR Bryant to 5-yr deal

IRVING, Tex. -- The Cowboys and wide receiver Dez Bryant came to terms on a deal over five years and worth $70 million, the team announced on Wednesday.

Bryant caught 16 touchdowns last season for the 12-win Cowboys, setting an all-time record in that department, topping Terrell Owens' effort. He also led the team in receiving yards (1,320) and yards per game (82.5), adding 22 receptions of 20 or more yards.

The agreement comes after much speculation and, more recently, a series of ultimatums from Bryant that he would sit out the training camp and potentially a number of regular season games should he not have received a long-term deal to his liking by the deadline this afternoon to sign franchise-tagged players.

"We value him," team owner Jerry Jones said, via their website. "Other than Dez, nobody is prouder of his accomplishments.

"I know that he, like the Cowboys, want him to be a Cowboy all of his playing career."

Bryant was given the franchise tag by the Cowboys worth $12.8 million, a price for which he would have been forced to play this coming season.

He compiled over 381 receptions for 5,424 yards and 56 touchdowns in a five-year career, all with the Cowboys.

Bills' Aaron Kromer placed on indefinite leave

ORCHARD PARK, N.Y. - The Buffalo Bills placed offensive coordinator Aaron Kromer on indefinite paid administrative leave following his arrest over the weekend, the team announced in a statement.

"Over the last few days, our organization has continued to gather information in regards to the alleged incident involving offensive line coach Aaron Kromer," Bills president Russ Brandon said.

"We have been in regular discussions with the league office and have decided to place Aaron on indefinite paid administrative leave in accordance with the league's Personal Conduct Policy while we continue to work our way through the investigative process with the league."

Kromer is accused of misdemeanor battery following an incident in Walton County, Fla., in which the deputy sheriff reported a violent altercation between he and a minor.

Upon arrival at Inlet Beach, sheriffs were told Kromer and his son confronted three boys about the use of his beach chairs.

The alleged victims reported that Kromer threw their fishing pole into the water and pushed one of them to the ground, punching him in the left eye. The sheriff was also told that Kromer threatened to kill the boy's family if they reported him to the police.

The alleged incident took place after 1 a.m and Kromer was released on bond roughly two hours later. A 15 year position coach in the NFL, Kromer was hired by the Bills after spending the last two seasons heading the Chicago Bears' offensive line.

@MrJamesParks