The Athletic Football Show: A show about the NFL - The most interesting teams of the offseason, part 3: Bengals, Ravens and Eagles

Episode Date: February 26, 2026

We wrap up our combine beat writer series with three teams that suffered through various levels of disappointing seasons in 2025. First, Paul Dehner Jr. joins Robert Mays to break down the offseason f...acing the Bengals. After that, Jeff Zrebiec hops on with Robert to discuss the Ravens' transition to new coach Jesse Minter. Finally, Zach Berman and Robert dive into how a team coming off consecutive division titles, just one season removed from a Super Bowl Championship, could possibly be in as much tumult as are the Eagles.Connect with The Athletic Football ShowBuy our merch! http://theathletic.lnk.to/tafsmerchYT: https://www.youtube.com/@TAFootballShowPodcasts: https://podfollow.com/the-athletic-football-show/viewX: https://x.com/TA_FootballShowIG: https://www.instagram.com/tafootballshowTikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@tafootballshowDiscord: http://discord.gg/theathleticfootballshowCall us: 847-448-0701Email us: athleticfootballshow@gmail.comHost: Robert MaysWith: Paul Dehner Jr., Jeff Zrebiec, Zach BermanExecutive Producer: Michael BellerVideo Producer: Katy DuffyAudio Producer: Michael BellerSocial Producer: Scott KrinchFollow Robert on Bluesky: @robertmays.bsky.socialFollow Derrik on Bluesky: @qbklass.bsky.socialFollow Robert on X: @robertmaysFollow Derrik on X: @QBKlassTheme song: HauntedWritten by Dylan Slocum, Trevor Dietrich, Ruben Duarte, Kyle McAulay, and Meredith VanWoert / Performed by Spanish Love SongsCourtesy of Pure Noise / By arrangement with Bank Robber Music, LLC Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Welcome to the athletic football show. I'm Robert Mays. Our most interesting teams of the off-season series rolls on, but also comes to its conclusion today. Three teams that are in an interesting spot just because we're used to them being kind of playoff fixtures and contending level teams. But for each of them, some level of turnover and consternation, maybe, this off season. We started things off with a conversation with Paul Danaer, who covers the Bengals for us about the Bengals plan for fixing their defense. in what is becoming an increasingly important year for Zach Taylor and that staff. Followed that up with a great conversation with Jeff Zerrebeck about the Baltimore Ravens,
Starting point is 00:00:41 who, I mean, this is a new situation for a team that spent 18 years with the same head coach. A lot of financial things looming over the Ravens, more needs than typical for the Ravens who have to figure out how they're going to scrounge up the money to fill some of those needs. And then our old buddy, Zach Berman, who covers the Eagles for us and does a fantastic job, came out to chat a little bit about just the state of the Eagles. The last time we talked to Zach, we were talking about the offensive coordinator search in Philly. It was before Sean Manning got hired. But after that, we have Jeff Stoughtwin moving on.
Starting point is 00:01:09 We have Lana Dickerson and Lane Johnson contemplating retirement. So talk to Zach about how much of this is just another year of Eagles tinkering and how much of this is actual cause for concern with the path that the Eagles were on. Really enjoyed all of these conversations and every discussion that we've had with our B-Writers this week. Hope you guys do as well. Let's get to it right now. Joining us now, it is our esteemed Cincinnati Bengals writer here at the athletic Paul Nader Jr. How you doing, buddy? I'm doing great.
Starting point is 00:01:41 This is one of my favorite moments of the Combine, because you always pick the Bengals because it's always something weird happening. It's so I love doing this. It's mostly because I like talking to you about the Cincinnati Bengals. It's like 60% of it. The Bengals are always an interesting team because it always feels like there's something looming over the Bengals. Last year, it was T. Higgins.
Starting point is 00:01:58 This year, it's not as much drama, but I think it's in really pivotal offsees. just because of how bad the defense was last year. And they do have some resources to spend. So I think that's where a lot of my intrigue lies with this Bengals team is. Okay, here is a pile of money. A smaller pile than I thought, by the way. But here is a pile of money that we're going to need to use to fix this defense. What is that process going to look like?
Starting point is 00:02:23 And that's what I want to dig into today. Yeah. You talk what's looming over them. I think Bengals fans would be like, I think what's looming over this year's existential dread. You know, of like, this is... The feel-good fairy dust has worn off. This is it, okay?
Starting point is 00:02:37 It's, this is the year. Everything has, is kind of... We've been talking about this a lot over the last couple of months. We haven't had a lot else to talk about. But is how every single thing that's happening right now feels like is just another underline under the arrows pointing towards this year. It has to happen. Or else...
Starting point is 00:03:01 There is nothing you can count on beyond that. I mean, from Joe Burroughs' words himself, right? Like, there was a reason why I wanted to ask the most pointed question last year, which is, are you here next year? Like, let's just talk specifics. Yes. Anything beyond that, you think about a lot of things was what he said. You know, like that, the coaching staff,
Starting point is 00:03:23 this is the first time we've ever seen de facto GM, Duke Tobin, named in a support statement from Mike Brown. everything that's been known as this is who the new era bengals are with Zach Taylor and Joe Burrow and everything is about to maybe change if they can't make it work this time because they have the continuity they have year two of Al Golden as coordinator you have almost everyone back on this offense that they have that Zach Taylor and Dan pitcher have built around Joe Burrow and Jamar Jason T. Higgins like all of it points to, it needs to happen now or there is going to be a lot of questions that no one quite
Starting point is 00:04:07 knows the answers to in terms of how deep it will go? The urgency is very real. And I think the urgency would have been real for most franchises last year. This is a different team. They operate a little bit differently. We know that. I was talking to a coordinator yesterday. We were just discussing what head coaching jobs might come open next year. It's one of the first ones we started talking about. It's like, if this goes poorly, the Bengals job will be open, potentially with Joe Burrow, potentially maybe not. Like, right? There's a lot of stuff
Starting point is 00:04:32 hanging in the balance for this Bengal season specifically. I mean, I would say most likely with Joe Burrow. Can I, here's my thing about... Can I just do one thing here? Because the national conversation often goes to,
Starting point is 00:04:45 how can we get Joe Burrow out of Cincinnati, right? Here's the thing that no one ever talks about in that conversation. Joe's not going to leave his guys. He got Jamar and T signed. They want to play football together. They love playing football together. And he's not going to
Starting point is 00:04:59 be like, deuce's boys, enjoy that. I'm out of here. Okay. Now, when all their contracts run out, which isn't that far off in the distance, it's a totally different story. But that's not necessarily what's going to happen. But the dynamic changes. Those guys just want to win. Joe Burrow has been a lot of times scoring a million points, losing games, and getting hurt. Okay? It's frustrating. He's frustrated. So, yes, but he just wants to win. I think they all would be perfectly happy playing in Cincinnati if they can just do what they think that they can do each off season that hasn't quite turned out. So that's kind of the part of it. I think that often gets overlooked in this conversation.
Starting point is 00:05:42 I want to be clear about this. I don't think Joe Burrow will leave Cincinnati. That was more nodding at you just saying that like who knows what will happen beyond this year. The idea that like Joe Burroughs is not going to be on the Bengals is going to force his way out or Joe Burroughs is going to get traded next off season. Like that is very, very far away. from my radar or like, to me, it's like the most remote possibility. I do not think that's going to happen, nor do I care if it happens. But the dynamic changes in terms of how loud the groundwork about his future in the NFL is.
Starting point is 00:06:12 Yes, right? Like, this is a very pivotal crossroad season for them in terms of if you can't win here under these circumstances where all they've got to do is fix the defense. And I know that's saying a lot when you consider where it was. And you have all of this continuity around one. an elite quarterback and maybe the best receiver in the NFL and maybe the best 1A, as Jamar Chase will call him T. Higgins in the NFL. You have all of these pieces, good coordinators.
Starting point is 00:06:39 You have all of that. If you can't do it now, everything needs to kind of be rethought. And I think that would be something we've heard Joe Burrow be very loud publicly about trying to get the team to do things in the past. I just think all the dynamics change if you're like, we can't do it with this, what can we do? And that ends up leading the next five years of Bengals' conversation potentially. So it's just, it's pivotal year to show that they can do it because they're set up to as much as it may feel far away last year.
Starting point is 00:07:05 One good offseason, inflicting the defense, can get you to where you want to be. And here's where some of the frustrations about what the Bengals are start to creep at, because this is a pivotal off season. I think most other teams in this situation, the Bengals has right now looking at something like over the cap of about $50 million in cap space. If they restructure Joe Burroughs contract, they would give themselves instantly, another $20 million in cap space. And if they wanted to seek out three to four new starters on defense and do the exact same thing they did in 2021, where they completely microwave the defense with free agents and it got them to the Super Bowl, in theory, they'd have more money to do that.
Starting point is 00:07:42 Duke Tobin was asked yesterday during his combine media availability, is he going to restructure Joe Burroughs contract? And the answer, in many, many words to say nothing, seem to be no. It seemed to be we have a plan that we can do what we think we need to do this offseason without having to jeopardize future years or they have 150 million dollars in cap space next year yeah what what i mean jeopardizing future years well yeah i mean talk in term yeah i'm just saying this is a philosophy and i mean i feel like every time we talk to duke we we ask him some version about this is there ever going to be a time where you go a little bit more all in and his points i'm always all in i'm all trying we know
Starting point is 00:08:22 you're trying hard like we know we know it matters to you we know it the bottom line is an all in is is that move like is is saying hey we have a chance to get make a fitzpatrick or we have a chance to get to make a trade for whatever it is some add that somebody at the top jalen phillips or whatever you want to do it's like well that wasn't in our plan but that's available to us if we're willing to just hey let's just use the borough money like most quarterbacks with those types of deals do it's obviously a reluctance so you would if you did that and just looking at the math on the top of my head. He has how many more years left on his deal? He's 329. Yeah. So he has three more years left on his deal after this. So if you prorate that $20 million, it's an extra
Starting point is 00:09:06 $7 million on the cap each of the next three years. It's nothing. Right. It's nothing. And so, like that's how the frustration starts to creep in a little bit. Yeah, you sound like every Bengals fan I talk to you. Yeah. I mean, it's, there's no doubt. But this has been their philosophy. They just don't believe in doing it that way. They believe in having the contracts set the way that they set them. Now, in fairness, we don't know what they're going to do. He didn't rule it out. He didn't say we wouldn't do it. His point was, we feel like we have a plan where we don't have to. So they have done things differently in regards to Burrow. So they, I mean, his contract looks different than any other Bengals contract that's ever been signed. It was 100% in line with
Starting point is 00:09:51 all of, in structured way that all the major quarterback's contracts are. So maybe it is. Maybe, Maybe they are holding that in their back pocket, and they just don't feel like I need to talk about it. I don't know why you would want to hide that as much as maybe they kind of do, which suggests that maybe they're not going to do it. But I'm not going to, like, cross it all the way off. But, you know, we'll see. If there's a player and there's an opportunity in free agency and the reason they didn't do it was because of money or that's used as an excuse, it's hard not to hold that against them if they don't use that lever. You look at what's happening right now.
Starting point is 00:10:23 if it ends up settling somewhere around that 50 million. The positions of need, you laid it out kind of as like a big board positionally on the athletic, I think it was last week. Defensive tackle in your mind is still probably the number one need on the team. You set that for the second straight off season. And I can understand that, right? So you have Chris Jenkins, you drive from the second round. He has not come along.
Starting point is 00:10:42 TJ Slate is a run stuffer. BJ Hill was banged up last year. He's getting a little bit older. And you do have some young edge rushers in the pipeline. The problem is you laid out. Free agency is not the place to be looking. for an interior defensive lineman. So the thought might be in the first round,
Starting point is 00:10:57 there might be guys at that spot available when they pick. So interior specifically makes sense as like a round one target for the Bengals. Yeah. I mean, the problem is who's that? Yeah. Wrong year for that. You know, I mean, 10 overall.
Starting point is 00:11:13 Yeah, that's the problem. If they're picking 25 again, there's a lot of guys. Go back and, you know how it. You go back and you look through past drafts, you'll find some really nice defensive tackles from that like 8 to 15 range, man. There's a ton of dudes that are some of the highest paid defense tackles in history.
Starting point is 00:11:28 That's where they've come off the board. And then this year, it's just not there. Now, you can talk yourself into somebody, and maybe they're going to do that this week with whoever. But it's not. Now, I think the depth you like better, but that doesn't fix your current problem. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:11:43 And is that whoever you bring in, if you draft another second round defensive tackle, well, is that you're still in the same spot that you're at with B.J. Hill and Chris Jenkins and these guys. So to me, you know, John Franklin Myers is not going to be the world's greatest pass rushing three technique. He's flawed as a top of the free agent guy at that position, but he's better than anything else they got. And so if you're going to extend yourself somewhere, like we were kind of talking about, like that would be the direction that you would go. But again, now you're in this bucket with all these other people that need the
Starting point is 00:12:22 exact same thing and he's the only real guy that looks like that kind of. So I'm interested to see if they have any real pursuit over him to add into their mix. Because for their situation, I think he would be a nice piece that it's okay. Like you can put other guys around him a little bit. He doesn't have to be a star, but you just got to pay him. Like, you're just going to have to pay the price. At every position, I think defensive tackle, edge rusher, linebacker, corner maybe now. We know that two starting outside corners are and they probably need one starting safety.
Starting point is 00:12:51 but at defensive tackle, edge rusher and linebacker, I think all three of those positions, my question is, which of those spots do they feel comfortable with like in-house development from young guys? And which of those spots are they like, you know what? We can't rely on that.
Starting point is 00:13:06 Because linebacker to me feels like the position where even if they invested in it last year in the draft, the gap that those guys have to close to get to a level where you feel good about them is so big that I would argue that trying to solve it in for you, agency and just saying like, you know what, this didn't work. We need an instant solution. You can justify that even if you spent two draft picks on guys last year. They used the term
Starting point is 00:13:29 force multiplier a lot yesterday in terms of like, you know, like they need, we talked to the linebackers coach, Mike Hodges, who's went through it last year, two rookie linebackers. It was tough to watch. We talked to him at the end of the year. And it was like, let's just wait to the end of year to have this conversation, right? And his point was, I've never talked to anyone that's had to coach two rookie linebackers starting next to each other. And I was like, let me go double check and look it up. I had to go all the way back in terms of the amount of snaps that they played. They both were well over 100 tackles, a ton of over 700, 800 snaps.
Starting point is 00:14:02 I had to go all back to 2012 to find two rookie linebackers that play that much next to each other. It's defensive suicide. You can't do that. A defense cannot operate in this league at this moment with guys that don't know what's going on at the Kortech. Like, you can't do that. And so to me, I point to somebody, like, there's a number of veteran linebackers that are out. The DeMario Davis's, the Bobby Wagner's, there's a ton of guys in their early 30s that could be
Starting point is 00:14:31 players for you. Or even if you just need somebody who can stabilize that group, but to let those guys actually develop and not feel like they're just trying to stop from drowning every day, every game. And that was so much, amongst many things, the core of what was going wrong. And we would laugh because what must it have been like last year to be an offensive coordinator playing the Bengals during the week? And be like, what can we do to mess with these guys? Every week it was reverses and like all this stuff, all this crazy stuff.
Starting point is 00:14:59 You'd see their heads pop in real time every single week. Offensive coordinators were having so much fun just toying with the linebackers every week. And they had no clue what was going on. So adding in some sort of leader at the center that can I think that can make those guys. You can feel better about those guys. if you just have somebody else that can help stabilize things for them. And then the other side is the Shamar Stewart quandary that they put themselves in. Because he was hurt.
Starting point is 00:15:28 He also looked really lost when he was out there, like really lost. And he was always going to be a project. He was raw, great athletic ability. But now you're in a spot where you don't want to block him if you believe in him. Miles Murphy did finally break out last year. You were like, I'm out on Miles Murphy last year. He eventually finally did it. It took three years, but he did finally come along last year.
Starting point is 00:15:51 That's the problem. Do they have another three years to wait for Shamar Stewart? I don't think they do. They don't. But you can't block him, but it needs to be better. Now, they can move him around. He's more of a moving, versatile piece where he can kick inside. So I've used the name like Draymont Jones, who you could pair with him nicely,
Starting point is 00:16:10 who's versatile in and out as well. So they're both on the field in different roles. You're not blocking him, but you are augmenting your pass rush. So there's players that probably can fit what Shamar needs so he's still playing. But it's a tough spot because Duke's number one thing is pass rush is king. I have to get the pass rush better. It hasn't been good enough. It's the core of so much of what's going wrong for them there as well.
Starting point is 00:16:34 Well, how do you do it when you're also then you are ultimately counting on Shamar Stewart to be part of that? He's your first round pick last year. And so if he is not, if it does take another year, that could be what, brings the whole thing down. The nice part about this, when you look at the needs that they have, the guys who will be available in free agency and the amount of money that they have, you can imagine a scenario where this does come together in a way that works because the positions they really need. And this free agent class, we're going to talk about it next week. There are not a lot of stars at the top. You mentioned a couple of the edge rushers who are going to get paid,
Starting point is 00:17:09 whether they're in that market, I think, remains to be seen. But for the most part, this free agent class is thin at the top, but there is a middle ground of, players where there are a lot of starting caliber guys. And especially at positions like linebacker and safety, you can find starting caliber guys as a very reasonable price. So the idea that you can go out and sign a, I don't know, let's say it's a Quincy Williams or like a Devin Bush or guys like that for seven to $10 million a year at linebacker. You can go find a starting safety for that price. You can go find a complementary rotational edge rusher for that price. Like you can find three or four guys to add to the mix here that add up to $50 million and maybe
Starting point is 00:17:45 feel pretty good about where you stand at the end of it. That is possible in this free agent crop specifically. And that has been the Bengals' primary approach in free agency over time, is to try to take advantage of hitting in the mid-tier. And when they've been at their best in 20, 21, and 22, that's what they did. Mike Hilton, Chita Bayousier, Von Bell, Larry Ogen, Joby, all guys that were huge pieces of the, maybe the best two-year run franchise history, it was built on the back of mid-tier free agents. And so I think they see that as their path here. Because what I've been using is the phrase is they need floor raisers. I think they're inevitably, their ceiling is inevitably going to be decided by all the young players that they've
Starting point is 00:18:31 drafted, whether they develop or not. But they have to bring in floor raisers that can help it so it can't look like last year. There has to be a level that it's just, if you have enough players that are solid, reliable. They just didn't have starting level players playing last year. And if that's what's available in free agency, you can take advantage of that. There's areas that we can talk about, and we have about the pastures.
Starting point is 00:18:56 Like, I don't know how you're going to get to the ceiling that you need to get to, but you can raise the floor enough that you can get it where maybe guys can develop the force multiplier thing around them. And so I think that's, it feels like the most likely approach, the most Bengals approach,
Starting point is 00:19:10 you know, a, a, a, a, a, Draymont Jones, Caden Ellis, and maybe their stretches like, hey, Minka becomes available and they're able to add a Mink on the back end of Staple. It's like, that feels like a plan. Like, that feels like a thing that you would see maybe happening with them. It's interesting because I think safety is the one position where there are so many guys available that that feels like a spot where you could skimp a little bit in terms of like the tier
Starting point is 00:19:36 of guy you're seeking out and still get somebody you feel decent about. Like, Nick Cross is 24 years old. Yeah. You know, could you get somebody like that? and feel like that's an upgrade over what you had before. And I think linebackers the same way. It's just, it's one of those things where I feel myself already talking myself into the idea like, oh, yeah, this could be okay.
Starting point is 00:19:52 And then the offense is going to be great. And I just know the rug is going to get pulled out from under me again. Right. And then it's Thursday of free agency. And you're like, how come the bagels didn't sign anybody? Right. Like, it's just weird things like that have happened. They've just, it's found ways for it to go sideways and what's felt like unforced airs a lot.
Starting point is 00:20:08 You know, they last year were so focused on T and Jammar. that they essentially lost their focus and sat out on free agency on accident. And it hurt them all year. They didn't have the starting level players that they should have added on Wednesday of free agency because they were getting those deals done and dealing with the Trey Hendrickson debacle that just got worse and worse and worse. And they obviously didn't handle his situation properly. You can't have the unforced errors in an offseason where you just,
Starting point is 00:20:36 they don't have to be perfect, but they need to be B plus. You can't just have a bunch of unforced airs and not signing the right type of guy. And they get it thrown back in their face when they say, we've done this before, we can do it again. They have had multiple seasons, runs of success in free agency, understanding how to handling it and being successful.
Starting point is 00:20:59 I think that they can do that. They just haven't in the last couple of years. I don't think they forgot how to do it. But this is it. It goes back to the beginning of the conversation. now or never man like because everybody that's here making these decisions right now might not have a chance to make them again if you don't do it right and you feel that change in dynamic as somebody that's there every day you feel you feel that there's like there's a level of urgency here that there just hasn't
Starting point is 00:21:23 been before in like that's taylor era yes unquestionable and i think you know no one said this and but i mean i i think everyone understands like this is it for zach taylor man like it probably should have been. I think he got the benefit of the doubt on the burrow injury last year and the fact that they were changing over coordinators and so much many problems happened in trying to build personnel
Starting point is 00:21:47 in connection to what Al Golden actually wanted and that blew up in their face. It's like, okay, well, we'll give you a chance to build this other defensive vision now with everything you've got and we understand what Al Golden wants now in year two. I think we didn't understand that properly
Starting point is 00:22:03 last year and now it needs to go work or else, you know, it's going to be new coach time in Cincinnati. And it would be a job. I mean, the idea of going to get to play with Coach Joe Burrow is not a tough one to sell. It's so funny because there are factors and arguments on both sides, right? Coaching the Bengals and the way that the Bengals operate as a franchise, their challenge is there that there wouldn't be in a lot of other buildings. You also get Joe Burrow.
Starting point is 00:22:29 Yes. So, like, it's their competing forces on both sides. That is something where if it seems like, we're headed to a place in the middle of the season or in the back half of the season. It's week 13. They're under 500. It feels like this is going to be over. I'm very much looking forward to asking people in and around the league. Is this a good job? Yeah. Like is the Bengals head coaching job a good job? Because I think that there are arguments that it absolutely is on a bunch of different levels. You get a top five quarterback no matter how you slice it. You get arguably the best
Starting point is 00:22:59 offensive skill position player in the NFL. It's easy to make that case. And you get an organization where there's going to be real patience to allow you to see this through. So even if the resources and some of the spending and some of the support staff isn't at the level of an average NFL organization, there's still plenty of arguments for why this is actually a good spot to land as a head coach. And then you also have to deal with being the coach at Cincinnati Bengals, which is, it's a different, it's just a unique challenge in understanding how this ownership operates differently. and that takes time. The good news is they'll give it to you, but it does take time to understand why things are different here
Starting point is 00:23:41 compared to other places and figure out how to work around that. I mean, after 2019 and 2020, when they hired it, he was 625 and won. And they were like, run it back. And they went to the Super Bowl, and so that's validated. Yeah. So, you know, they're going to sit there and say,
Starting point is 00:23:58 well, last time we were really patient with our guy, and so you're going to get that. So what's important? You know, if you're a coach and you're, if that was where we were at, what's important to you in a job? Is it just getting, you know you'll probably get that third year of the check? You'll win, whatever it is. Like, I don't, I don't, it depends probably on the coach.
Starting point is 00:24:17 I just say never bet against Joe Burrow and being with that guy is probably going to work out well for most people. That's typically what I would say. Yeah, that's typically what I would say. And I think, again, they're like, we don't have to dig into this fully, but when you talk about ownership groups and which ownership groups are, there are some teams. Like the Titans in this cycle. I think that there were some coaching candidates that were scared off just by the nature of the ownership and how volatile it's been over the last few years.
Starting point is 00:24:42 The Bengals ownership isn't volatile. It's just very cautious. And so there's a difference between having an ownership or having an owner that's consistently meddling and making your job harder in that way. And having an owner that's probably not giving the things you need to be on proper footing to compete in the NFL. And that is where Cincinnati is. And so those are two different sets of problems. Yeah, I mean, it's a different scenario and you get in there and then you have to find what are the workarounds?
Starting point is 00:25:10 Yeah. Like, how do I, that's why it's a unique job to take. Like, how do I find a way to work around in terms of managing up and down and dealing with whether it's less resources or different voices that you talk to and, you know, approaches to free agency and contracts and all that stuff? So it's a unique job. But for now, it, Zach Taylor, you know, who's the last man standing in the AOC North Sunday, somehow. It could be the next John Harbaugh here. Because guess what? If it did come together and they made
Starting point is 00:25:41 a run that Joe Burroughs more than capable of, he ain't going anywhere for a while. But you buy yourself even more time. Yeah. And they will be like, look, we know this guy can do it. Now he's done it multiple times and different, you could see that being the end game. Or it's over. And that's all the pressures on this year because this is that crossroad season. Paul Dana, always great to chat with you, sir. Great to see you. We will do this again very soon. I look forward to seeing what we're talking about next. All right, before we get to Jeff Zerebeck, let's take our first quick break. Joining us now, it is our Ravens writer here at the athletic Jeff Zerebeck. Jeff, how you doing? Good, Reverend. How are you? Doing very well. The Ravens are a part of this discussion, in part, because for the first time in 18 years, they have a
Starting point is 00:26:34 a new head coach and a new coaching staff. So a very new feel to what is going on in Baltimore after John Harbaugh moves on. Jesse Minter is hired. Your initial kind of thoughts, reactions to what the first month or so of that staff has been like is you've got to ask them some questions, watch the actual coaching staff come together, all of that stuff. Yeah, it's been interesting. I've been covering the Raven since 2011, and this was my first head coaching change. and I've had one general manager change, and it was the most comfortable transfer of power as you can possibly have. And, you know, once Harbaugh got let go, the number of our writers who have dealt with this on an every other year basis just taunting me saying, yeah, now you know how we feel.
Starting point is 00:27:22 So, yeah, it was an interesting. I thought the process was really interesting. I mean, you know, they interviewed 20 people. They interviewed three college coaches, names haven't even basically come out because that wouldn't be fair for them with the recruiting benefits you'd get and all that or, you know, how it could hurt your recruiting. And just how, you know, I think you went in knowing Jesse Minter's history, knowing the whole factor of Mike McDonald and there could be a feeling, look, we missed on this one. I'm not saying Jesse's Mike McDonald, but the mold. So you thought he was kind of the favorite going in or at least one of the favorites, and that's how it ended up. But to get there, you know, to interview 20 people and do what they did there.
Starting point is 00:28:04 And then even their coordinator search, I mean, it wasn't really predictable. Like, there's not a ton of guys that Jesse, you know, from the Chargers staff, you have a couple. But, you know, Declan Doyle wasn't really on my radar when we started this, you know. But it's an interesting staff. I think Jesse did a really nice job for being a first year head coach. And obviously DeCosta and his staff helped them a lot, just getting out of his comfort zone. and bring in guys from, you know, they have three college coaches on their defensive staff. So it's an interesting group.
Starting point is 00:28:34 Yeah, when I watch all that come together and how a new head coach builds the staff, why they build the staff for those reasons is always so interesting to me. And you mentioned it. There's a bunch of college guys on that staff. I think that not only do they bring Jesse Minter back and kind, maybe trying to do a tone in a little bit for letting Mike McDonnell out of the building, but bringing Anthony Weaver back as the defensive coordinator, that was part of the problem in the year one of the Zach Orr regime is that it
Starting point is 00:28:59 wasn't just losing Mike McDonald's that you lost a half dozen assistance off of that 2023 staff. And so bringing back Jesse Minter and Anthony Weaver to kind of bolster that side of it. And you may not have had Declan Doyle on your radar. I can tell you he was on mine. So it's seeking out trying to figure out how to tap into that offensive system that the Bears and the Lions have had so much success with over the last couple years. That to me is one of the more fascinating questions about all of this is that, I mean, the Ravens offense with Lamar Jackson is very different than what the Bears did last year with Ben Johnson and what Ben Johnson has been doing in Detroit.
Starting point is 00:29:35 And so where they land and who they want to be and how close it is to what that offensive structure looks like in Chicago, that becomes a fascinating question. And so on every single level, the guys that they ended up with from the head coach on down make me more interested in what the 2026 Ravens are going to look like. Yeah. And credit to Anthony Weaver too for having the humility to come back. He was a finalist for that head coach. coaching job. He had been passed over twice for Ravens' defensive coordinator job. But for him to be able to come back, and I think that'll be a huge resource for Jesse Minter. He needs somebody to command that room. Well, Anthony Weez is a really good coach, first of all. And we saw how many issues they had
Starting point is 00:30:15 with just the defense not appearing to be on the same page and, you know, just the breakdowns they consistently had and not playing up to the talent that they had on that group. And he'll help there. But Jesse really needs a guy that's going to run that room, run those meetings, and they need to start developing some young defensive linemen, too. That's been an issue here that we've seen play out. So, yeah, it's definitely an interesting staff. And, you know, the other aspect of it is Lamar Jackson's, you know, input on it. You know, he met with Declan Doyle for a while. He was involved in the mentor process. And, you know, this is the offseason of Lamar and Baltimore. It seems every offseason is. It's just what's the question.
Starting point is 00:30:58 But they're pretty pleased so far at his level of engagement in all these things because they want him involved. It's up to him to kind of step in and be involved. The other element of this being an offseason of Lamar, $75 million cap it for Lamar Jackson as it currently stands. That needs to be addressed in some way. The base salary is astronomical. Like if they wanted to just convert it, they would be able to.
Starting point is 00:31:20 But then I think you're looking at like an $87 million cap it next year. And so based on everything I've raised. the questions you guys have asked, it seems like the best solution here for the Ravens to get that number to a tenable place that would allow them to do some things in free agency is for Lamar to sign an extension. There have been some not competing messaging about that, but I think it was DeCosta kind of came out and said, we need this to happen before free agency in order to give us a little bit of wiggle room. Jesse Minter was not quite as firm about that at the timeline. So where do you think this ends up settling? Do you think they get an extension done with Lamar before we get into the
Starting point is 00:31:55 free agency period so they can spend a little bit. Call me skeptical because I've covered these Lamar negotiations before and nothing ever happens quickly. Yeah, we're two weeks away. Yeah, I know. So to think that it's going to get done in short order, I think at some point they will reach an agreement on an extension with them. But I see, you know, Steve Bishotti was pretty clear when he talked about it.
Starting point is 00:32:18 And thankfully, because we've talked about this before, Robert, the walking on eggshells around all things Lamar Jackson in the organization. I don't think it helps anybody, and I think it hurt John Harbaugh in the end. So Bashati just put his cards on the table, said, we want to sign him an extension. We need to sign him extension. But if we can't, we're just going to add void years to the back of his deal. And he's going to have a similar cap number in the ad last year, and we're going to have the room to do what he needs to do. If I'm guessing, I think that's probably the route this goes. And then they agree to a deal at kind of a later date. But that's fine. Yeah, exactly.
Starting point is 00:32:53 The biggest problem is if you, again, if it's an $87 million cap it next year because you restructure it, eventually you're going to need to sign that extension, but that gives you an entire another year to figure that out. Yeah, I could see them buying themselves some time, and I'm sure we'll get into it a little bit, but I can't remember, you know, I've been covering this team for a while. It's been a long time, Robert, since they've had this many needs that need to be addressed. So they need that money. They need that space. You can't just figure, you can't just depend on the 11 draft picks, most of them on day three to fill some of these holes.
Starting point is 00:33:22 There are such big, looming financial questions surrounding this team right now. And I think that the first set of those questions is the guys currently on the roster or guys hitting free agency. So the Lamar question, you talked about this is something you wrote this week. Marlon Humphrey is a $26 million cap hit. They would save $7 million. They moved on from him. He did not play at the level of a guy making $26 million last year. Nomda Madameh at BK has a $30 million cap hit this season.
Starting point is 00:33:48 We don't know what his future looks like. And so there are just so many kind of load-bearing pillars. Roquine has a $32 million cap hit this year. There are just so many load-bearing kind of pillars of this team as we've come to understand them that have at least some questions hanging over them as we get into March. Very true. I cannot see Humphrey being back at that number. And he's another guy.
Starting point is 00:34:10 He doesn't have an agent. So those pay cuts become harder to navigate. How many guys this team? Does Roquan have an agent? No. So Roquan, Lamar, and Marley-Huffrey don't have agents. It's great stuff. Three of the top.
Starting point is 00:34:21 So I can't imagine Eric DeCost is getting a whole lot of sleep these days dealing with some of that stuff. But yeah, like I can't imagine Marlins back under that current deal. But I also think he's a proud guy who it matters to him to be in Baltimore. He'd love to finish his career. So he'll probably play ball with them. And he's not getting anywhere close to that on the open market. So maybe there's some leeway there. The Matabike thing is the biggest head scratcher.
Starting point is 00:34:47 They just kind of, he's been in the building. everyone says is upbeat. He said some stuff on social media that lead you to believe he's gotten some good news. But they won't talk about it and he won't make himself available to talk about it. So, yeah, they have so many decisions. They have both an offensive and defensive line that badly need to be fortified. They have questions at receiver. They need a high impact edge rusher.
Starting point is 00:35:09 So Eric DeCosta has his hands full this offseason. I will be so interested in what their free agent shopping looks like. Yeah. Because I think beyond those. there are certain spots, and this is going to be a theme as we talk about all of these teams that have needs at this position. Hollowie Gilman and Adairis Washington are hitting free agency. We know this is a team that you want two capable starters at safety so you can use Kyle Hamilton the way that you want to. This is a free agent group where you can pay $7, $8 million a year for a starting safety and find one.
Starting point is 00:35:37 I assume they might be in that market. But other than that, you look at some of the other guys available and the price they'd have to pay to get them. It's out of character for what the Baltimore Ravens normally are. but if you can get Lamar's number down in a big way and you have some money to throw around, this is actually the team where I look at a guy like Jalen Phillips and I'm like, you know what? You could talk me into that pretty quickly.
Starting point is 00:36:00 Yeah, I think, you know, we had this discussion last year. I remember distinctively, do this the offseason? They need to take a big swing. They need to go out and get themselves an edge rusher that can change a game. You know, you want to stop blowing leads? Get an edge rusher that's going to get you off the field late in the fourth quarter.
Starting point is 00:36:18 You want to create more turnovers when you get to the playoffs. They don't create turnovers when they get to the playoffs. That's part of the issue. They turn the ball over. They don't create. You get a guy that can strip sack and get to the quarterback and do all that. They just, they've had some okay pass rushers. I think Mike Green will eventually be good, but you need that high.
Starting point is 00:36:36 You have a bunch of guys hitting free agency. So even beyond, you can still be mildly optimistic about Mike Green's development and still come to the conclusion of we need to be aggressive here. Yeah, exactly. And if Matabike doesn't come back and is not able to play, you know, Travis Jones is a nice piece, but you need two other guys there. So, yeah, there's a real lot and a lot of uncertainty. And, you know, the DeCosta angle is interesting to me because he's a very celebrated general manager. He's done a very good job in a lot of ways.
Starting point is 00:37:08 I do not think he had a good offseason last year. You know, John Harbaugh is one of his best friends. I think this has really hit him hard. just having to let go with John. And, you know, now it's kind of on Eric. John shielded a lot in this organization over the years where he took a lot of arrows that other people didn't take. So I could see a very motivated Eric DeCoste saying, you know what, I know how we do things here,
Starting point is 00:37:32 I know how I've always do things. We need to change it up a little, get a little more aggressive on different fronts. Maybe they go out and get a, make a trade for a legit piece here and willing to give up some draft capital. Maybe that's signing one of the top edge rushers like Jalen Phillips, that's going to be available in free agency. But you'd say all that, and they need to get their finances in order. They need to create a little more flexibility to do some things. Looking at their picks, I'm always curious what picks will be in the couch cushions for the
Starting point is 00:37:58 Baltimore Ravens. We have four fifth round picks for the Ravens this year. It's just every single year it's hilarious. You open it up like a present and you're just wondering what's in there. So the Ravens right now, one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, ten. They have 11 picks, which is actually on the low end for them, which is, That's the funny part about this. And so they'll do the same things they typically do when it comes to the draft,
Starting point is 00:38:21 but they do have some pieces to throw around if they did want to make a trade. I think that's kind of the point here. So the defensive line, Metabikee becomes the biggest swing piece. Because if he comes back, that's the biggest piece that you can have. That's one of the biggest things they could do in the entire offseason. It would be the biggest addition, a healthy Matabika. He comes in and if he can be even close to the player he used to be, what that does to your interior pass rush obviously elevates the entire unit.
Starting point is 00:38:43 If they go out and get an edge rusher, I agree with you in the fact that it seems like this might be the time to get a little bit aggressive with it. Like, O'Dafayo is a free agent. There are guys that, of their guys available, that can give you juices, pass rushers. So trying to go out and get that piece in the market, I think that makes sense.
Starting point is 00:38:58 Again, a starting caliber safety that may be a little bit more of a modest ad. That makes sense. But then you go to the offensive side, there are still needs on the offensive side. Like you, right now, I think you could make a very serious argument that they probably need to address
Starting point is 00:39:13 all three interior starting offensive lines. spots in some way with Falle Lele and Linderbaum hitting free agency. I would agree with that 100%. Now, they do like Emery Jones, their third round pick last year. But you can't leave it to a young player who basically had a red shirt year last year. If that's one of, if that's a solution at one of the guard spots, fine. But that still leaves two other spots where Lederbaum, obviously, that's the biggest question. But do you feel good about Andrew Voorhees after the last, way the last couple of years went?
Starting point is 00:39:42 I mean, I think that's up for discussion. Yeah, they, yeah. And then, you know, swing tackle is a huge position in Baltimore when Ronnie Stanley has hurt a lot. Like, you need another starting tackle. So, and that's absolutely right because you look at different things. And, you know, yeah, Marlon Humphrey, legitimate cut-can it. Well, what do you do at cornerback? Who's starting opposite Nate Wiggins?
Starting point is 00:40:05 Who's your number three cornerback? And then you open, you can't keep opening these holes. Like at some point, you need to figure out with the guys you have because you already have enough holes to fill. And yeah, absolutely two starting offensive linemen interior. And, you know, we'll see about the Linderbom situation. But I think there seems to be a groundswell among the fans of let them go. Like, that's too much for center. We have too many needs. But that's daunting to find three starting interior offensive linemen in the offseason. Now, people say the Bears did it. But there's different levels to what they need, how much they can spend, how you go about doing this. And look, I just
Starting point is 00:40:43 think you kind of, yeah, you're going to have to overpay Linderbom, but it's one of those things where what's the alternative? The alternative isn't pretty when you have to fill three starting interior spots in front of Lamar Jackson. I want to walk through just the process with Linderbom with you, because obviously, DeCosta comes out this week says we've offered him a market setting contract, okay? So whatever that means, it doesn't really matter the details, but they're willing to go to an aggressive place to bring him back reportedly. But if that's the case, why did it take this long for them to give him or offer him that sort of deal. Like the fact that we're on the eve of free agency
Starting point is 00:41:17 and these are kind of the dynamics we're playing with, something about it just feels a little bit off. Like why weren't they more motivated to get this done earlier if they saw him as that type of player? Well, a couple things. Well, one, the comments from DeCosta and anybody who's followed the Ravens like you have obviously and know how Eric does business,
Starting point is 00:41:36 for him to put that on the street when he won't even confirm offers ever certainly tells you there's probably some frustration right now and how those negotiations are going. And he wants to... Maybe that's the story, right? It takes two sides. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:41:49 Yes. But like, could you blame Neil Cornridge, Linderbom's agent for, you know, we know these talks happened this week, for shopping them around, seeing what's out there and saying, okay, we could get this, Ravens, what are you going to give us? But so I think it's clear that the engagement between both sides, there hasn't been a lot of cooperation. There hasn't been a lot of aggressiveness here to get a deal done. and Linderbaum's side is pretty content where he is.
Starting point is 00:42:14 The other thing which I found interesting, Robert, they declined his fifth year option, right? Well, that's the interesting part about this set of negotiations overall, is that for a lot of players, if you were willing to offer a market-setting contract to a player, the answer would be if you can't figure something out, you just tag a guy. But because we're in a spot
Starting point is 00:42:32 with the offensive line franchise tag and some of the, just the quirks around how you'd have to pay a center in that situation, that's how you arrive here. Yeah, and there's two reasons why they decline the fifth year option. And none of them have anything to do with them not wanting to have Tyler Linderum. One was the number was so ridiculously high because of how centers are grouped with tackles. The other was, if you recall, like two summers ago, Lenderbom had the neck issue,
Starting point is 00:43:00 missed most of training camp with the neck issue. So I don't think that's an everyday issue they're worried about, but we know necks in the Ravens organization. It's not been a good story. So if they picked up the fifth year option, it would have been guaranteed for this year. So if he went out last year and had a recurrence of that issue and had a major deal, he would have already been guaranteed this year. So I think they kind of were protecting themselves by not picking that up,
Starting point is 00:43:25 where if something happened with that situation and there was a recurrence of it, they weren't on the hook for it for this coming year. But now they got to deal with it. And, you know, he's going to get paid. He's going to get paid well over $20 million, whether it's by them or somebody else. And, you know, I could see both sides of it, but you better have a plan to replace them. You know, and that plan can't be using one of those day three picks to try to find a plug-and-play guy.
Starting point is 00:43:51 It's a really interesting conversation about resource allocation and how much you're willing to stretch yourself at one position specifically. And let's say, let's just play this out hypothetically. Let's say he moves on. He gets, what is the highest contract for a center in the NFL right now? 18 million for Creed Humphrey. So let's say it ends up becoming $20 million for Tyler Windermbaum because you have four to five teams in the mix here, which wouldn't surprise me whatsoever. You got teams like the Raiders who need a starting center. Chargers that have a ton of money to throw around.
Starting point is 00:44:21 That's what drives the number up. Let's say it ends up settling somewhere around $20 million. There are other guys in free agency just throwing out hypothetical names, Cade Maze, people like that, where you could potentially pay 55% of that for starting caliber center. And so that's the calculus of your Eric Dacosta that you have to play with a little bit here. Yep, yep. And I'm sure those conversations will be had in this week. Who else we could get? And when you need a guy on the center's right and the center's left, that adds to it.
Starting point is 00:44:51 Like how many guys, how many realists? You can two starters for that $20 million. Exactly. Yeah. Like how many guys can we get for this and who could some of these guys on the radar? And look, the quarterback's had a heavy role in everything they've done. And he's pretty close to Tyler Linderbaum. And you wonder how much Lamar Jackson?
Starting point is 00:45:06 Jackson's opinion, look, we can't let this guy leave. And you wonder how that opinion adds to the situation. It's a very tough call. You know, but you just know the Ravens and how they do business. Rarely do they let guys like Tyler Linderbaum walk out of the building without a significant fight. Sometimes they just throw up their hands in the air and say, look, we can't afford the guy. We know he's a great player. We love him. But go get your money because we'll take the comp, because we can't afford them. But man, given their situation with where they are in the interior offensive line, that would be a tough one just to let walk out of the building.
Starting point is 00:45:40 So this feeling that we're talking about here with increased urgency, they need to spend a little bit more. Do you think that's something that we're projecting onto them? Or as you've talked to people and gotten a sense of where they are, do you think that's the feeling they have right now? I think there's a feeling that they clearly need to be more aggressive this offseason. You've got a fan base. I'm into that.
Starting point is 00:46:02 Yeah, you've got a fan base that's really frustrated. You're going to want to hit the ground running with Jesse Minter and give him every opportunity to succeed immediately. You know, and I just, and I think you've got to motivated Eric Acosta, who knows it's kind of on him now. Not that it wasn't before, but, you know, all eyes are pointed at him now. And you've got the quarterback situation. So, yeah, I expect them to be more aggressive than what we're used to.
Starting point is 00:46:32 that aggression comes in different ways, right? It doesn't necessarily mean thrown money at the top free agents, but I think they're going to have to do that. They're going to have to make a couple forays onto the free agent market because you know they don't like going to the draft with major holes. Yeah, you know, they want to be able to sit at 14 and not worry about position, just say, okay, we're going to pick the best guy. You can't do that unless you start filling some of these holes before the draft.
Starting point is 00:46:56 Yeah, it's a different sort of feeling for the Baltimore Ravens offseason. and I will be paying a lot more attention to what the Ravens are going to do on the first couple days of free agency than I would in a typical year, I would say. Jeff Sarrebeck, always great to chat with you, sir. Sincerely appreciate the time. We'll do it again very soon. Enjoyed it, Robert. Thank you. All right, before we talk to Zach Berman about the Eagles, we're going to take one more quick break.
Starting point is 00:47:22 Joining us now, it is one of our wonderful Eagles writers here at the athletic. Zach Berman, how you doing, man? Doing great. Thanks for having me. We could start this conversation in a bunch of different places. Here's where I want to start it. From the outside looking in, because since the last time you and I talked, it was about speculation about who the offense coordinator would be.
Starting point is 00:47:41 We talked a lot about Sean Manion, and that's why I didn't feel like, I feel like the conversation held up, even though he got hired two hours after he stops talking. Since that happened, a million things have taken place with the Philadelphia Eagles. From the outside looking in, if I'm somebody who doesn't understand all of the context and the nuance around this, and I watch Jeff Stoutland retire. Is that the right phrase? No, I would not say retire. Okay.
Starting point is 00:48:05 I would say leave. If I watch Jeff Stoughtland leave, yes. If I see the speculation about, is Landon Dickerson going to play in 2026? Is Lane Johnson going to play in 2026? It feels to me like there's just a little bit of smoke about what is going on in that building and just how tenuous things feel there. Do you think that is a fair representation? and I want I want you to tell me how I should feel about everything that's happened in
Starting point is 00:48:33 at the Novacare complex in the last three or four weeks. Yeah, it's a fair question. I think I would separate those two things. Like the, I think the Jeff Stoutland question and all that goes around with it has more to do with the changes in the coaches that have changes in the offense. I think the Lane Johnson, Landon Dickerson, speculation before, you know, it was determined they would come back was, that was, that's, more health-related, right? That's kind of just players who play a physical position beat up at the end
Starting point is 00:49:03 of the year. So I would separate those two things. But I think the first one, the coaching staff changes, the scheme changes, some of the philosophical changes, I think that's real and it has a major effect because Jeff Stoutland, I've covered the team. This will be my 15th year. He's the best assistant coach I've seen. I'm looking at this team and I think that, you know, you listen to Howie Rosam talked yesterday and you know, the idea of trading AJ Brown and, you know, do we really want to be in the business of trading away good players? And I think there are two different ways that I'm looking at the situation that Eagles are currently in. One, is this another offseason where you tinker with some members of the coaching staff,
Starting point is 00:49:39 you add a couple new pieces, and you thrust this team right back into contention? Or is this an offseason where it feels like this is a group playing out the strength? And I don't know where between those two places I land right now. Yeah, it's a good point because a lot of it depends on what happens with AJ. I do think there's a window with this offensive core. And part of this is if you just follow the money, the Eagles have had all these defensive players on rookie contracts. Those guys are going to have to start getting paid in the next one to 15 months, let's say, right?
Starting point is 00:50:12 And so that's going to naturally all these $20 million year players that they have on offense, whether it's the offensive line, wide receiver, that's going to start the change. And so there is going to be an influx of young, cost-controlled offensive talent. That said, that young cost-controlled offensive talent's not going to be what helps them win a Super Bowl next year. And that's obviously their goal. So there's a window with this offensive core that has been to two Super Bowls. That's one-one. But a lot of that depends on what happens with A.J. Brown. And if A.J. Brown forces the issue. Because there's no, I don't think there's a good argument for trading A.J. Brown from a football perspective.
Starting point is 00:50:50 But if you're like, look, the toothpaste can't go back in the tube, AJ has, he's been on record stating he wants to be the best receiver in the league. If he doesn't feel that can be accomplished here based on scheme, based on personnel, however you want to frame it, then you move on, get compensation. I don't think they would willingly do it. I think it's more if the issue gets forced on them. And I think there's a real chance that could happen. And if AJ's not on the team, he's such a special player that the offensive dynamics change. And then it goes into, you're definitely not playing out the string. Then you're tinkering for sure. The AJ Brown question, and just the problem for me is if I'm looking at it and just the mechanics of dealing him and the money, I'm sure you've looked at this.
Starting point is 00:51:32 Can you just talk me through just the practical reality of what it would mean if they were to trade him? Like, how could they afford to do that with the dead money that they would incur as I'm looking at it just like from the outsider's perspective? Yeah. So if, now, if they were to trade him post-June 1st, yes, that's easy doable. Yes. but even pre-June 1st, one thing I know about the Eagles is they're not scared of dead money. A lot of it's how they structure contracts with avoid years to begin with. They're actually much more interested in potential cash savings.
Starting point is 00:52:02 So, like, they really separate the cap and the cash. So they can take something on the chin cap-wise sometimes, structure new contracts in such a way that they have low-cap numbers, but have cash to spend. And if they were to trade AJ, it would save a significant amount of cash that can then be redistributed. for, let's say in theory, a Jalen Carter contract extension, a Jordan Davis contract extension, eventual Cooper DeGine and Quigioninichael contract extensions, or even short-term a Jalen Phillips contract, although, you know, I mean, that's independent of A.J. Brown. But I think they can absorb a cap hit. It could limit them in some other areas, but, you know, they have some real smart people in that building. Bryce Johnston is one who really kind of puts the cap numbers together.
Starting point is 00:52:50 there are opportunities there that I don't think it would preclude them from putting the roster that they want together and they're actually cash savings. I think it's more, it's not a financial question, it's a football question. How do you have the offense you need without A.J. Brown? Looking at their cap is just hilarious every single time I open it. So the only players right now on the Philadelphia Eagles who don't have a base salary under like $1.3 or $1.4 million, are all the guys on rookie contracts. So Jordan Davis, Morrow, Jomo, Tyler Steen, Nolan Smith, or Michael Carter, who was not an Eagle when he signed that contract.
Starting point is 00:53:31 I assume he's going to be a cap casualty. Yes, exactly. In some point in the next spring. So essentially, every single player on the Eagles, other than the rookie contract players, have base salaries of $1.3 million or less. Yes, but then, fascinating, I'm glad you brought this up. This is actually a topic that really interests me, and I'm writing about it on the Athletic this week, is the.
Starting point is 00:53:48 the Eagles haven't constrained it's a bad roster if you believe in the middle class their roster strategy is stars and then rookie contracts and one-year lottery ticket players because you pointed out the base salary and you're correct about that but then if you look at the average annual salary they have they went into last season with as many 20 million year players as anyone in the league they only had one guy making between seven and 15 million dollars going into the year they don't do the middle class but then i think they had eight or nine players making above 17 million. And that's, you know, I've spoken to Howie Roseman about this.
Starting point is 00:54:23 And his whole point is difference making players. You pay for difference making players. And then you have to make tough decisions elsewhere. But so let's kind of look at their free agents in conjunction with this conversation. They have four big free agents, Jalen Phillips, Dallas Goddard, Reed Blankenship, Nikobe Dean. If you just look at it from like a financial perspective, read blanketships probably, let's say, like a $10 million year player.
Starting point is 00:54:46 That's not the type of market that the Eagle. tend to shopping. Jalen Phillips is probably a $25 million year player. That's the market to Eagle shopping. So they're more apt to keep Jaylon Phillips and let the other three go than they would be to sign three middle class players from my perspective. Yeah, that makes sense. And I think that that's the Zach Bond comparison is the one you would make with the Jaylen Phillips thing, where when Zach Bond has a season that he has, he suddenly becomes one of those players and that's why he gets retained. In your estimation, do you think that Jalen Phillips does come back? I think they're going to try like crazy to do it. I think, and knowing Howie,
Starting point is 00:55:18 he'll have a walkaway number. So there's a, but I think that's a premium player at a premium position. You know the fit. The interesting thing about Jaylon Phillips is because they traded for him, that's typically the type of guy who they would have tried to sign to an extension early, right? So if he was Jalen Carter or he was Jordan Davis, like you're trying to get that deal done before he's a contract year. Instead, they trade for him halfway through his final season, but he was, and I don't need to tell you,
Starting point is 00:55:47 he was terrific. He's what Vic Fangio looks for on the edge. And I think he is the type of player they would pay. But this is a bad free agent's class. And he is, I mean, Daniel Popper did outstanding rankings, as we know. It's bad free agents of class for the Eagles, right? Like, it's those are the, they're not the types of players. The Eagles are going to be signs.
Starting point is 00:56:05 It's a free agency class full of Reed Blankenships. Sure, exactly. Well said. And so, like, you know, Jalen Phillips is the number three player on Daniel Popper's board. if you're looking at 27 million, that might be too rich for the Eagles. And I think, like, last year, the Eagles really liked Milton Williams. They knew they had no shot of signing Milton Williams. Now, it's a different situation because they had D-Tackles in the building already.
Starting point is 00:56:28 But there will be a number that might be too high for Jalen Phillips, and then they need to pivot. Other than Edge and potentially bringing Jayden Phillips back, you said D-Tackle is a position where they have multiple guys they feel good about. Obviously, you draft John Campbell in the first round last year. That allows you to move on from the Kobe Dean. Safety in corner feels like those are two spots where something probably needs to happen and they probably need to address those. How do you think those second safety and corner spots get addressed this offseason? It's a great question because that's one where they've tried to plug some players in the draft and it hasn't quite worked the way they wanted to.
Starting point is 00:57:02 You know, they used the third round pick to trade up for Keeley Ringo. They traded for Jacorian Bennett last year. They drafted Mack McWilliams. And like you're hoping one of these guys would emerge into a starter opposite, Quignon Mitchell, and with Cooper DeGine. And so I should start with this. They feel like they have two elite elite cornerbacks. And they feel like Cooper the Gene can play every position in the secondary.
Starting point is 00:57:26 And so, but I spoke to Cooper about this. He wants to play the slot. He thinks that's where. It's the best solution. When you have a guy that's elite in that position, one, just streamlining what they're doing, I think makes them better in that role. And two, we've just seen over the last couple years how valuable it is. is to have an elite player in that position specifically.
Starting point is 00:57:44 You're absolutely right. So then who's that corner on the outside opposite of Quignon Mitchell? Last year was Adoree Jackson. I don't think that was the desired outcome going into the year. I think they would have loved Keelie Ringo on that job. It was a problem from day one. Like literally the first game of the season, we realized how much of an issue was going to be.
Starting point is 00:58:00 And so Adore improved over the year, but I don't think they're going to keep Adore. I think that's the type of thing where you probably look for this year's Adore, which is like a veteran on a one-year deal, and he's competing in camp, and you know, you try to figure it out that way. The second safety spot's harder because read-blanketship on papers, the type of guy you would want to keep. I mean, he's a captain of the team, homegrown player, went from undrafted rookie to defensive captain, started for them for Super Bowl champs. But I don't see them paying $10, $11 million for re-blanketship. So how do you solve that spot next to Drew McCuba?
Starting point is 00:58:37 could be a rookie. I mean, they were hoping Sidney Brown would develop. That hasn't really happened. So I think that's also where Howie knows that you can't have blue chip talent at every spot. And even if you look at the Super Bowl rosters this year, like, you know, the safeties, they had some weaknesses. You look at the Patriots, you know, that they were getting by with some league average
Starting point is 00:58:59 safety. There's one year deals for Jaylon Hawkins, fourth round pick for Craig Woodson. Even if you look at the Seahawks, like it's the guys that they have, Kobe Bryant was a mid-round pick. Who's the other Seahawks safety that I'm blanking on right now? I can't remember. It was Julian Love. Julie Love. Yeah. So it's, there are guys that you're not paying a ton of money. And that
Starting point is 00:59:16 not even just the makeup of the best teams and the best defense is the NFL. But if you look at it, the Eagles in terms of how they view positional value, it has been somewhat of a moving target based on how the league has changed, right? Like, the idea that the Eagles would sign Sequin Barclay to that contract eight years ago would have seemed shocking. The idea that the Eagles would draft Jahad Campbell in the first round would have
Starting point is 00:59:35 seem shocking. But Drew MacCuba is the highest draft of safety the Eagles have had since when. Malcolm Jenkins? Well, they signed Jenkins. Oh, that's right. That's right. Yeah. So since Jaquan Jarrett, I would, or Nate out, yeah, since the, since the, since Jaquan Jarrett. Yeah, it's been a long time. Even for a second round pick at safety for the Eagles is kind of out of character. So I would not be surprised if they kind of, all right, let's take a couple low-cost dice rolls and see if one works out. The other question that I'm really interested in, how he said something when Brooks Camina wrote about it yesterday, and just kind of recapping what Howie said at the Combine.
Starting point is 01:00:08 He said something that I don't know if a lot of other people would pick up on, but for me it's like my Spidey Sense started tingling. He was talking about the types of tight ends. He usually seeks out. And he was saying that, again, talking about, and I think how he deserves a lot of credit for this, where over time he has not been dogmatic and how he sees certain types of players and what their value is.
Starting point is 01:00:27 And so he was talking yesterday about how, when you look at the types of tight ends, he has sought out for the roster. It has often been past catching type guys. Exactly. your Calcutterr, your Kyle and Grances, even Dallas got her as a more well-rounded player than this, but especially the depth at tight end. Blocking tight end has not been a role on this team.
Starting point is 01:00:44 And so him being as kind of forceful and transparent as he was about that yesterday, I think that's going to be a skill set they seek out. And it brings me to a question of, now that we have Sean Manning in the building, and we assume the offense will stray a little bit further from the model we've seen under Nick Siriani for the last five years, how do you think that, impacts personnel decisions and maybe new types of guys they seek out that the Eagles traditionally haven't on that side of the ball. Yeah, I'm curious about this because they clearly wanted to go to this Shanahan McVeigh style.
Starting point is 01:01:19 You know, you're going to see more under center. You're going to see more play action. You're going to see more wide zone running. And, you know, I spoke to Nick Siriani extensively last week about this. And I should say we, the Philly Media did. And yet, this is a change. like this is not going to be the offense you've seen in the past but i don't think howie can totally adjust the player acquisition part of it because you don't know what this is going to look like in
Starting point is 01:01:43 2026 yes you i'm sorry 2027 you still need to just get really good players and then and then the coach know what to figure it out but to your point howley's view of the tight end position has evolved and i think within that there are roles that will be adjusted the fascinating thing is the offensive line because because Howie and Jeff Stalyn, you know, for the past 13 years, if you and I were talking at the combine, I could tell you what a Jeff Stalyn offensive lineman is going to be, right? And you can see, like, the certain critical factors that that player has, there's a lot of traits that, that, because you're, you're kind of saying, if you take a player with traits, he can develop him. You know, Jeff Stowland has that track record of development, and Eagles have had these big physical offensive linemen.
Starting point is 01:02:33 I mean, they're the first guys off the bus that you want to see, whether you're talking about, you know, Jordan Milata, Landon Dickerson, you know, obviously Lane Johnson, a right tackle. I mean, look what he did with Mackay Beckton at right guard. You know, so it's a little different than I think you're going to look for more agility, more speed. It's weird to say speed, but more agility and athleticism at some of those offensive line spots in this system.
Starting point is 01:03:01 But I can't imagine how he deals. deviating from the way he's evaluated offensive linemen. I'll be curious about that because I will say one thing. If you look at, so Mannion specifically comes from Green Bay, right? So when you look at Green Bay, their run game has been a little bit of everything over the last few years. And they do have some guys on the lighter side. But a guy like Aaron Banks is not a small offensive lineman. And so, and then if you even extend that a little bit further, you know, the Vikings have been a decent amount of zone run when Mannion was there.
Starting point is 01:03:29 But then you look at, you can expand it a little bit further. I think the Rams are a really good example of this where even if the DNA of the offense comes from that place, when the Rams got a lot bigger along the offensive line, their run approach changed. It wasn't as much zone. It was a lot more gap scheme stuff as the offensive line got bigger. And so I wonder, because that group has a little bit more size, where do they land in between that like gap heavy world that the Rams have been in and the zone heavy world that these guys traditionally come from? Well said. And I think when when this group's health, and that's a big question because they were really banged up last year.
Starting point is 01:04:05 But there shouldn't be a coach in the league who wouldn't want these five as your offensive line. Like this is a Super Bowl caliber offensive line. So you can make it work. And I think these guys are good enough. And like Lane Johnson can play in any offense. Yeah. He's incredible. I think most of these guys probably could.
Starting point is 01:04:22 Exactly. Yeah. I think the one who maybe you have a little more questions about is Landon Dickerson. But I think Landon Dickerson, too, can play in any offense. Yeah. I was looking at it when you were talking just because I was curious about it. So if you look back at tight ends specifically, the last 15 years for the Philadelphia Eagles, they've drafted four tight ends in the last 15 years, which in and of itself is kind of a shockingly low number.
Starting point is 01:04:45 But there's a couple different considerations there. One, this has been an 11 personnel team for a very long time. And so the fact that they have not prioritized that position is necessarily surprising. But even if you look at those four guys, of those four, only one of them weighed more than two. 240 pounds. And that was Dallas Goddard. And so beyond the fact that they haven't prioritized it, the body types they've sought out, they haven't drafted a blocking tight end in a decade and a half. This might be the year where something like that happens. Yeah, it's a good point. And I personally think blocking tight end is,
Starting point is 01:05:18 you know, you don't need to spend major resources on it. You can get them in the fourth or fifth round. Yes. That's when you get those guys. But assuming, or if Dallas Goddard's not back, you need to figure out who your top tight end is. And you ideally would want to complete tight ends. And Dallas earlier on, you know, I don't think he was the best run blocker this year, but he's been a good blocker in the past. But, you know, you bring up a great point about tight end because really the luxury the Eagles had is they take Zachertz in the second round in 2013.
Starting point is 01:05:49 He takes over for Brent Selk, who is a really good tight end. Zacherts is a starting tight end for them, really through 2021. They take Dallas Goddard in the second round in 2018. And he's the succession plan. He takes over. And so it's kind of like the offensive tackle situation for the Eagles where at left tackle, they went from Trey Thomas to Jason Peters to Jordan Maillow. They went from Brent Selick to Zach Gertz to Dallas Goddard.
Starting point is 01:06:13 The difference here is they don't have someone waiting in the wings to take over here. And so whether it's in the draft via trade, via free agency, they're going to have to find that number one tight end because it is going to be an important role in this offense. this is a team that every single year they're doing something they're replacing coordinators because they got hired to be head coaches they're replacing coordinators because those guys got fired like this is a yearly thing every single winter and spring for the eagles where there's going to be some level of turnover and i think that each year has been a little bit different you know like when they when they replaced those guys after the 2023 season with vik fangio and kell and more i think they're even if
Starting point is 01:06:50 in most years where you're replacing two coordinators that were fired there would be a level of like apprehension and concern. But I didn't feel that that year as much because of the guys that were replacing them, right? Like when you can get Kellynne Moore and Vic Fangio, there's a level of stability that comes along with that. And so I wonder, as you think about this version of the team, how much like uncertainty and instability
Starting point is 01:07:12 does it feel like there is right now compared to previous off seasons? Yeah, offensively, very much so. The reason I hesitate is that is instability is an interesting, word there. I think curiosity, because with Kellan Moore, they wanted an established play caller. This year search, I think Nick started the search looking for an established play caller, Mike McDaniel. I talked about the last time I was on with you, Mike McDaniel and Brian Daebel. As the search evolved, and Nick said he interviewed 17 candidates that had seven in for four second interviews, he softened that prerequisite, if you will, and it really became, there was conviction
Starting point is 01:07:51 that he saw from Sean Mannion there. But it's completely unknown to have a 33-year-old offense coordinator who hasn't caught place who's coaching the NFL for two years. He's been a position coach and nothing else. And now he's, you're taking, I think Jalen is not, I mean, he's a Super Bowl winning quarterback, but he's going to be asked to do things differently
Starting point is 01:08:13 than he's done in the past. I mean, this is going to be a different offense. You have an offensive lineman of blue chip players. You have, we'll see what happens with AJ, but two elite wide receivers. You have one of the best running backs of the past decade, and you're taking these guys and you're saying, all right, let's run a different scheme.
Starting point is 01:08:32 It could be re-energizing, but it could fall flat, right? I think it's a little different than Kellynne Moore when you had a sense of what it was going to look like with Kellynne Moore. Yet another year where it feels like the range of outcomes associated with the Philadelphia Eagles has as wide as you can possibly imagine. Zach Berman, always great to see you, my friend. Always great to chat with you. Appreciate the time. We'll do it again very soon.
Starting point is 01:08:54 I look forward to it. Thank you. All right, guys, that's all we got for today. Thank you so much to Zach. Thank you so much to Paul. Thank you to Jeff Zerbeck. Really enjoyed those three conversations. Hope you guys did as well. We'll be back tomorrow. We'll get the game back together. Me, Derek, Dave, breaking down the week that was at the 2026 NFL Combine. It'll be our last show of the week. Monday. We will have a Combine Recap coming your way with Dave and Dane, who, I mean, Dane is you should see Dane this week. He's just a pig and shit. No one has ever been happier than how Dane Bruegler is when he is at the Combine.
Starting point is 01:09:28 I got to have dinner with him last night, which was shocking that he actually had the time to swing it, but very enjoyable on that front. Great week. Really enjoy talking to all the writers. Really appreciate everybody who took the time to jump on with us. For now, that's all we got. Appreciate you guys listening. We'll talk to you very soon.

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