Recent Forum Topics › Forums › The Rams Huddle › Eagles upped offer in bid to keep Bradford…and (3/1) he signs
- This topic has 6 replies, 3 voices, and was last updated 8 years, 8 months ago by zn.
-
AuthorPosts
-
February 28, 2016 at 2:03 pm #39747AgamemnonParticipant
Sources: Eagles have upped offer in strong bid to keep Bradford
Will the Philadelphia Eagles be able to keep quarterback Sam Bradford?
Mark L. Baer / USA TODAY Sports
By Mike Garafolo @mikegarafolo
Feb 28, 2016 at 11:55a ETThe Eagles upped their offer to Sam Bradford during meetings with Bradford’s agent at the NFL Scouting Combine last week as a way of making a strong push to close out a multi-year deal for the quarterback before the start of free agency, sources told FOX Sports.
The terms of the offer aren’t available, but sources indicated the Eagles believe it’s a very strong offer for Bradford — one that’s at the top of his expected range on the open market and one that should help get him under contract before that market opens on March 9.
Though former Eagles coach Chip Kelly is the one who brought Bradford to Philly, sources have repeatedly said Howie Roseman likes what he saw from Bradford last year, as do Doug Pederson and his offensive coaching staff.
The Eagles have a few backup plans if they can’t get Bradford under contract. One of them is Chiefs quarterback Chase Daniel, whom Pederson coached in Kansas City. During his press conference at the Combine, Pederson pumped up Daniel as both a backup and a potential starter if given the chance. Even if the Eagles re-sign Bradford, Daniel could be an option as a free agent to serve as a backup to Bradford.
Former Eagles quarterback Nick Foles, whom Roseman drafted, could soon be on the outs with the Rams. Foles is due a $6 million guaranteed roster bonus and a non-guaranteed salary of $1.75 million. Rams coach Jeff Fisher already made it clear Foles won’t be the team’s starting quarterback this season. It won’t take much compensation from another team to pry Foles from the Rams, especially if the club picks up a portion of the guaranteed money owed to Foles.
Mark Sanchez remains on the Eagles’ roster as well. He’s set to earn $4.5 million this upcoming season.
Bradford is coming off a season that produced mixed results. He had career highs in completion rate (65 percent) and yards per attempt (7.0) as well as a solid stretch run in which he threw for 1,061 yards over his last three games. But Bradford had only 19 touchdowns and some uneven play as he worked his way back from two torn ACLs.
Pederson said last week he understands that, as a former player, “you have to want to be somewhere and I think Sam wants to be in Philadelphia.” The Eagles have made it clear with their latest offer they want Bradford there, too.
Now, it’s just a matter of seeing if the sides can close it all out.
http://www.foxsports.com/nfl/story/philadelphia-eagles-sam-bradford-contract-offer-increased-022816
February 29, 2016 at 12:00 pm #39803znModeratorSam Bradford talks will determine Eagles’ plans
Phil Sheridan
ESPN Staff Writerhttp://espn.go.com/blog/nfceast/post/_/id/71967/sam-bradford-talks-will-determine-eagles-plans
PHILADELPHIA – The offseason picture is a little bit clearer for the Philadelphia Eagles as they return from the NFL scouting combine.
They are negotiating with quarterback Sam Bradford, according to a report by Fox Sports. That’s not surprising, considering executive vice president Howie Roseman said last week that the team wanted to work out a deal with Bradford.
That deal may seem more urgent after the Eagles’ brain trust got a firsthand look at the quarterbacks available in the draft. And it certainly seems more workable now that the Eagles know exactly how much salary cap space they have to work with.
The league announced a 2016 salary cap of roughly $155 million. That leaves the Eagles with $27.8 million of cap space. The official franchise and transition tag numbers also were released. For quarterbacks, the franchise tag is $19.95 million.
Tagging Bradford would eat up most of the Eagles’ cap space, leaving them with just a few million dollars to spend in free agency (they will have to set aside a few million dollars for their draft picks). Because of that, there is real incentive for the Eagles to get a long-term deal done with Bradford. The contract could be structured to spread the salary cap hit out over four or five years. That would give the Eagles more flexibility under this year’s salary cap.
The timing makes sense, too. The Eagles are the only team that can talk to Bradford until next week, when the so-called “legal tampering” window opens. On March 9, Bradford is scheduled to become an unrestricted free agent.
There is a chance that another team, or teams, will bowl over Bradford with a big offer. But the Eagles can avoid taking that risk by working out a deal over the next week.
When free agency begins, the Eagles should know where they stand with Bradford. If he’s under contract, the team can consider taking a quarterback on the second or third day of the draft. They can use their first-round pick – No. 13 overall – on the best player available. That would allow them to add an offensive lineman, a defensive back or a wide receiver, filling another hole and helping give Bradford some support.
If Bradford doesn’t sign, the Eagles could consider other quarterbacks in free agency. They could make a big splash by going after Robert Griffin III or set their sights on Kansas City backup Chase Daniel. In that case, the Eagles would be more likely to take a quarterback in the first round of the draft. They would need to spend as much time as possible sorting through the available QBs.
So what happens with Bradford over the next week will affect the Eagles’ strategy for the entire offseason. At least now they know what the salary cap is, and how much room they have to maneuver.
March 1, 2016 at 6:42 pm #39845znModeratorEagles, Sam Bradford agree to two-year contract
Michael David Smith
Eagles, Sam Bradford agree to two-year contract
Sam Bradford will remain the quarterback of the Philadelphia Eagles.
The Eagles announced this afternoon that they have agreed to a two-year deal with Bradford. The agreement came just minutes after they officially declined to restrict him with the franchise tag. No financial terms of the deal have been announced, but Adam Schefter of ESPN reported that the deal is for $36 million and includes $26 million guaranteed.
Bradford arrived in Philadelphia in a trade that sent Nick Foles to St. Louis a year ago. Bradford had an up-and-down first year in Philadelphia, and when Chip Kelly, the coach who acquired Bradford, was fired, there were questions about whether the Eagles would go shopping for a new quarterback.
But Eagles G.M. Howie Roseman and coach Doug Pederson have insisted that they want to keep Bradford, and now they have. He’ll stay in Philadelphia.
March 1, 2016 at 7:41 pm #39853sdramParticipantGood for SB. And, one less team drafting before LA that needs to draft a QB. So, what are the odds that Sam gets hurt before the draft in April?
Maybe the Eagles will trade back to 15 from 9 with the Rams and take Foles back too. Maybe I’ll hit the lottery tonight even though it’s Tuesday and the drawing is Wednesday.
March 1, 2016 at 10:57 pm #39864znModeratorFilm Room: Projecting Sam Bradford In 2016
Sam Bradford is back in 2016 and Alex Smith is joined by Greg Cosell to analyze the quarterback’s 2015 season as the Eagles’ starter and discuss what he’ll look like in new head coach Doug Pederson’s offense …
March 6, 2016 at 11:41 am #40064znModeratorBradford is an elite vertical passer
Jeff Legwold
ESPN Staff WriterCam Newton and Russell Wilson both made strong MVP cases during the second half of the 2015 season, but they could not keep up with Bradford in terms of yards per attempt (YPA) on vertical passes (throws of 11 or more yards downfield). In fact, no one in the league matched Bradford’s 15.1 vertical YPA pace from Weeks 9 through 17.
That Bradford did this with a less-than-stellar pass-catching corps is notable, but it isn’t an anomaly. In the 2013 season, Bradford ranked sixth in the league in vertical YPA (12.5) despite throwing to a mediocre receiving corps consisting of Tavon Austin, Austin Pettis, Chris Givens, Brian Quick, Jared Cook andLance Kendricks. He is one of a small handful of quarterbacks capable of getting excellent downfield production out of subpar receiving.
March 6, 2016 at 1:27 pm #40067znModeratorSam Bradford can win with Doug Pederson — just ask Alex Smith
For all those wondering what the Philadelphia Eagles see in quarterback Sam Bradford, don’t be surprised if this becomes his year of redemption. He’s finally back in a system that works well with his skill set. His new head coach knows a thing or two about mentoring beleaguered signal callers.
In other words, if it can’t work for Bradford this season, it clearly never will.
The financial commitment Philly made to Bradford earlier this week wasn’t earth-shattering in today’s quarterback market — a two-year deal worth $36 million, with $22 million guaranteed at signing — but it didn’t have to be. The Eagles just had to do enough to let Bradford know they still have some faith in him. The rest is on Bradford. It’s up to him to make the most of an opportunity he’s surely been waiting years to find.
Anybody who’s followed Bradford’s first six years in the NFL knows he looked extremely comfortable in the same West Coast offense that first-year head coach Doug Pederson is installing this offseason. Anybody who’s followed Pederson realizes that he built a productive relationship in Kansas City with Alex Smith, another quarterback who had plenty to prove after injuries, inconsistency and an assortment of coaching changes plagued his career. There’s no question Bradford remains a work in progress after an underwhelming season with Chip Kelly. There’s also little doubt that judging him off 2015 isn’t entirely fair.
The 28-year-old Bradford earned the right to remain in Philadelphia by how he performed in his final seven games of last season, after his completion percentage rose (from 62 percent through October, to 68.2 over the remainder) and he threw more touchdowns (10) than interceptions (four). When asked why he believes Bradford can be that same quarterback for an entire season, Pederson said, “You can look at it from an Xs-and-Os standpoint. You also can talk to people that have been around Sam Bradford and understand where he’s come, as far as his development as a quarterback. The fact that he put himself in a leadership role toward the end of the season proves to me that he can handle this role and the opportunity to start.”
“My main objective was to be back in Philadelphia,” said Bradford, who helped Philadelphia go 7-7 in his 14 starts. “It just happened on a two-year deal, and that’s perfectly fine with me. I would’ve preferred a 100-year deal, if they wanted to give it to me. I just wanted to get back in Philadelphia. My agent felt like it was a great deal for both sides. I think the organization felt the same way. As long as I continue to play the way I know I can, it shouldn’t really matter.”
The best thing Bradford has going for him is Pederson. The head coach wasn’t the sexiest pick to replace Kelly — nor was he even the predictable choice — but he has learned plenty from working with Andy Reid, both in Philadelphia and Kansas City. What Pederson realizes is that most coaches don’t have the good fortune of being blessed with a Tom Brady or Aaron Rodgers. The successful ones make the most of the less-gifted signal callers they actually end up having to coach.
Just as Reid and Pederson found ways to maximize Smith’s talents in Kansas City, Pederson’s staff can do the same for Bradford. This is still a quarterback who was promising enough to be the first overall pick in the 2010 draft, a prospect that one former general manager called “as accurate as any quarterback who’s ever come out of college.” Bradford didn’t regress because he was overrated. He has struggled because he’s been a victim of several bad breaks.
The obvious issues have been health-related. He sustained torn anterior cruciate ligaments in both the 2013 and 2014 seasons — and that would be enough to stunt anybody’s development. Bradford also was never a great fit for Kelly’s fast-paced offense. That experiment looked disastrous from the moment we saw defenders launching themselves at Bradford as he carried out his read-option fakes in the preseason.
Pederson still has to prove he can win as a head coach, but does have intimate knowledge of the quarterback position (he spent most of his 12-year NFL career as a backup with four different teams). He should be able to see what didn’t work for Bradford, why it didn’t work and where the quarterback needs to go from here. As Eaglesexecutive vice president of football operations Howie Roseman said, “One of the benefits we have as a staff is having Doug, who played the position, having [offensive coordinator Frank Reich], who played the position, having [quarterbacks coach John DeFilippo], who played the position, and having their input into the evaluation process, as well, and how they see [Bradford] fitting their system.”
The other benefit for Bradford is the offense Pederson wants to run. Bradford won the 2010 NFL Offensive Rookie of the Year award because he started his career in the West Coast offense. He’s always looked most effective when distributing the ball quickly and allowing his receivers to run after the catch. There were West Coast elements in the offense he ran as a Heisman Trophy winner at Oklahoma. It’s also proven to be the system that most fits a quarterback who’s often been lauded for his smarts and his accuracy.
Unfortunately for Bradford, he found himself lost in the same abyss that sometimes claims talented, young quarterbacks. The Rams hired Josh McDaniels to run their offense in Bradford’s second year. They turned to Brian Schottenheimer as their offensive coordinator in 2012, once the franchise decided to replace head coach Steve Spagnuolo with Jeff Fisher. Bradford wound up playing a total of 23 games over the next three seasons before being dealt to Philadelphia last offseason.
That last paragraph is enough evidence to give Bradford one more benefit of the doubt. Smith had three head coaches and seven offensive coordinators with the San Francisco 49ers. It wasn’t until the arrival of head coach Jim Harbaugh in 2011 that Smith’s troubled career turned for the better (aside from a somewhat-promising year with offensive coordinator Norv Turner in Smith’s second season with the 49ers). Bradford has experienced more individual success in his first six seasons than Smith did in the same span, so it’s not hard to imagine a similar mid-career rise.
This isn’t to say there weren’t troubling issues in Philadelphia last year. It’s just that the entire team was filled with problems that had nothing to do with Bradford. Kelly’s offense is built on its breakneck pace, meaning the quarterback doesn’t have much time to read defenses or audible. Bradford is reputed as a quarterback who can win with his mind and his decision making, which is exactly what he’ll do in a more traditional system.
The contract the Eagles gave Bradford might be mystifying to some because, on the surface, it sounds like they overpaid for an underwhelming product. The reality is that Philadelphia, like every other team in the NFL, understands how hard it is to find even a serviceablequarterback in this league. It’s the same reason why Smith found a chance to redeem himself and a journeyman quarterback named Ryan Fitzpatricknearly led the New York Jets to the playoffs. Results can change quickly when certain players are put into better situations.
Bradford has found that opportunity for a new life in Philadelphia. The contract raised more than a few eyebrows and there will be skeptics who’ll want to see the Eagles consider other options. But that doesn’t mean Bradford is doomed to more struggles. If anything, the Eagles might be realizing that there’s still plenty to like about their quarterback’s long-term future.
-
AuthorPosts
- You must be logged in to reply to this topic.