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Showing posts with label miami dolphins. Show all posts
Showing posts with label miami dolphins. Show all posts

Vince Young rumored to Philly after getting released

Vince Young's run in Tennessee is clearly over, but letters accept him bound actuality best up off waivers by the Philadelphia Eagles.

Hours afterwards the Titans appear the Texas product, the Eagles allegedly swooped in and bound up a much-needed advancement for Michael Vick, according to the NFL Network.

The report, citation a antecedent abutting to Young, says the active QB will ink a one-year accord with Philadelphia, which traded second-stringer Kevin Kolb to the Cardinals on Thursday.

It was no abruptness Young was appear on Thursday, as the club abreast him in January that he would no best be a allotment of the team's approaching plans.

"As we accept said back January, it was time for us to go in a altered administration at quarterback and we accept done that," Titans accepted administrator Mike Reinfeldt said.

The Titans have moved on at the quarterback position, agreeing to terms with Matt Hasselbeck on Wednesday and selecting Jake Locker with the eighth overall pick in this year's draft.

Young battled questions about his work ethic, leadership and injuries during his five-year career in Tennessee.

A season-ending thumb injury limited Young to nine games in 2010. He completed 93 passes for 1,255 yards, 10 touchdowns and three interceptions.

Originally drafted by the Titans with the third overall pick in the 2006 draft, Young threw for 8,098 yards, 42 touchdowns and 42 interceptions in 54 games with Tennessee.

The Titans also waived defensive tackle Tony Brown, running back Dominique Lindsay, defensive ends Marcus Howard and Kareem Brown and offensive lineman Jeff Hansen.

Darren Sproles 3 teams in hunt

Having spent four years arena abaft approaching Hall of Famer LaDanian Tomlinson in San Diego, Darren Sproles isn’t absolutely a domiciliary name.

But that doesn’t beggarly a guy with his acceleration and elusiveness is activity to go disregarded on the accessible market. 

Kevin Acee of the San Diego Union-Tribune is advertisement that the chase to acreage Sproles’ casework is bottomward to three teams: New Orleans, Philadelphia and Sproles’ old team, San Diego. 

Considered by some to be too baby (5-6, 190) to backpack a abundant workload, the 28-year-old from Kansas State is a dynamic, bifold blackmail aback who has hauled in 104 passes over the aftermost two seasons while averaging an absorbing 4.6 yards per backpack for his career. 

If Sproles does acreage with one of those three above teams, we accept a activity he'll fit in nicely. After all, Philly, San Diego and New Orleans all ranked in the top-six in absolute breach aftermost season.

New Orleans Saints should allotment with Reggie Bush

It isn't a catechism of whether Reggie Bush will booty a pay cut, alone for which NFL aggregation he will comedy at a bargain salary.
Honestly, because the constant abatement of Bush's numbers -- his accumulated rushing/receiving yards accept alone every division back 2006, his amateur year, and the cardinal of amateur he has played anniversary division about has done the aforementioned -- there's acumen to accept he'll never afresh bout those career highs of 1,307 yards from flat and 16 regular-season amateur in '06.
In best NFL cities, the chat for a amateur like that, who's appointed to acquire $11.8 actor and calculation $16 actor adjoin the bacon cap, is "luxury" rather than "necessity." The characterization is "situational" rather than "star." And the Saints, to their credit, accept accurate time and afresh that their breach doesn't dip in assembly back Bush's assorted talents aren't available.
So if Bush were to be cut because the Saints need to purge salary, and not re-signed because the franchise believes it can function smoothly without him or because he believes he's more valuable and should be better compensated than the Saints are willing to offer, it's not like it would signal the end of New Orleans' offense as we know it.
It's not as if his role has amounted to much more than cameo appearances the past few seasons, a role he obviously believes will dwindle now that the Saints have added first-round pick Mark Ingram to the mix at running back.
The fact is, Bush has nothing with which to leverage the Saints.
That's not to say he can't still be a useful player for the Saints, capable of producing several "Wow" plays per season. Bush may no longer be a game-breaker, and no longer may be the decoy he's chalked up to be -- it's hard to be either when you're not wearing pads on gameday -- but few coaches have worked harder than Saints Coach Sean Payton to max out Bush's appearances.
And the truth is, because of that final fact, Bush actually would be better off if he found a way to remain a Saint.
Obviously, Payton probably isn't -- and shouldn't be -- interested in giving up on Bush, his first draft pick as a head coach, a player who was exactly what the franchise needed when it returned to New Orleans after its temporary, Katrina-forced relocation to San Antonio.
But that star wattage has dimmed considerably, a dip paralleled by his increased inability to make people miss and to stay healthy.
Arguably, Bush has made bigger headlines off the field for his love interests, Heisman Trophy scandal and tweets than he has made on the field for ankle-breaking cuts, world-class speed and supreme athleticism in his career.
So whoever believes the Saints can't make due without his contribution simply is blinded by loyalty, or stuck on the belief that we haven't yet seen the best of Bush.
I'll admit there seems to be validity to that stance. Bush only is 26, an age at which athletes are in or are entering their physical prime. He doesn't have a ton of wear on his body. He has played in 60 of a possible 80 regular-season games. He's a fabulous receiver and on occasion. He reminds Saints fans why they were so euphoric when the Texans chose defensive end Mario Williams with the No. 1 overall pick in '06, which dropped Bush into New Orleans' lap.
But wilting numbers and a lack of availability say the Saints comfortably can make due without Bush.
The addition of Ingram, the return to health of Pierre Thomas, the improvement of Chris Ivory and the likelihood that New Orleans can find another player who can average 7.8 yards per punt return, say that Bush isn't irreplaceable as a running back and returner.
Everyone knows his value is diminished, which is why we all know he won't pocket anything close to the salary he's scheduled to make this season.
The only uncertainty is whether the Saints will be the franchise picking up the smaller tab.
They shouldn't, based on previous returns on the investment, returns that have been diminishing.
That's not to suggest the franchise doesn't want to retain Bush, or that he doesn't want to hang around for the right price. But a compelling, convincing stance can be taken that the Saints don't need Bush, regardless of price, that his decrease in productivity is a career arc.
And it's always best to part ways before the player totally bottoms out.
 
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