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NFL Moves Roundup: Jaguars get busy as teams race for salary cap compliance

The NFL's “legal tampering period” in free agency began Monday with a slew of deals even as many teams released veterans to clear salary cap space before the league's business year begins Wednesday.

Most aggressive was the worst team in the league. The Jacksonville Jaguars, which has the first overall selection in the draft next month for the second straight year, got busy early.

The Jaguars agreed to sign Arizona receiver Christian Kirk, Washington guard Brandon Scherff, Atlanta linebacker Foyesade Oluokun and New York Jets defensive tackle Folorunso “Foley” Fatukasi, according to a person familiar with negotiations.

All four newcomers should be starters. Kirk figures to replace DJ Chark as Trevor Lawrence’s top target. Scherff has been a dependable blocker when healthy in Washington. Oluokun led the Falcons with 192 tackles last season, and Fatukasi is a force against the run.

Also agreeing to move on were New England cornerback J.C. Jackson to the Los Angeles Chargers; linebacker Haason Reddick, from Carolina to Philadelphia; guard Laken Tomlinson from San Francisco to the New York Jets; running back Chase Edmonds from Arizona to Miami; offensive lineman Ted Karras from New England to Cincinnati and offensive lineman Alex Cappa from Tampa Bay to Cincinnati; offensive lineman Rodger Saffold from Tennessee to Buffalo; and quarterback Mitch Trubisky from Buffalo to Pittsburgh and safety Xavier Woods from Minnesota to Carolina— with many more switches to come.

Staying put

Tampa Bay centre Ryan Jensen, a key protector of Tom Brady, re-signed with the Buccaneers.

James Conner and QB Colt McCoy committed to the Cardinals while safety Devin McCourty re-upped with the Patriots. The Seattle Seahawks signed safety Quandre Diggs and tight end Will Dissly to extensions.

Other notable extensions include: All-Pro kick returner Braxton Berrios with the Jets, Defensive end Emmanuel Ogbah with the Dolphins, linebacker Preston Smith with the Packers, centre Brian Allen and tackle Joseph Noteboom with the Rams, centre Mitch Morse with the Bills, linebacker Alex Anzalone with the Lions; centre Ben Jones and tight end Geoff Swaim with the Titans.

“We are excited to have Preston continue his career with the Packers,” general manger Brian Gutekunst said. “Since coming to Green Bay, he has not only contributed with production on the field but has been a great presence in the locker room and a leader for this team.”

Noteboom is nearly certain to be the Rams’ starting left tackle because NFL Man of the Year Andrew Whitworth, 40, is expected to retire.

Salary cap compliance

Yes, 32 teams are in scramble mode, for a variety of reasons. Some desperately need to get under the $208.2 million cap, which is up by nearly $26 million after two pandemic-impacted seasons. The Packers, Saints, Rams, 49ers and Chiefs are among those.

Set free and able to sign with another team even before Wednesday, were Browns receiver Jarvis Landry; Packers linebacker Za’Darius Smith and versatile offensive lineman Billy Turner; Bears nose tackle Eddie Goldman; and Panthers cornerback A.J. Bouye and defensive end Morgan Fox.

Others are clearing out players with large cap hits to add more spending room or because they plan to bring in replacements. Such is the case in Cleveland with Amari Cooper about to become the No. 1 wideout, so Landry is gone despite the many positives he brought to the Browns.

“Jarvis’ on-field production and fiery competitiveness speaks for itself, but his leadership and team-oriented attitude impacted our culture in a way that will last in time even beyond his release," Browns general manager Andrew Berry said. “These decisions are always difficult, but we wish Jarvis well and we look forward to the day when he returns as a storied Browns alumnus.”

The biggest scramble, of course, centres on adding players for positions of need. Trubisky in Pittsburgh makes some sense with Ben Roethlisberger retired. Reddick, from the Philly area and a sack force in recent years, should boost a defence in need of exactly what he brings. Miami badly needs a reliable running back and gets one in Edmonds, who would have been a backup to Conner in Arizona.

Jackson should solidify an under-performing cornerbacks group with the Chargers. The 26-year old Jackson earned his first Pro Bowl selection last season, leading the league with 23 passes defended, and was second with eight interceptions. He has 25 picks over the past four seasons, most in the league.

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