2009 Fantasy Football Draft Sheet
2009 Fantasy Football Draft Sheet
Fleaflicker NFL Fantasy Football

The Dallas Cowboys' window for contending is closing, and Jerry Jones sees it.

  The team's owner told the NFL Network that he is concerned about wasting the prime years for some of his players.

  “My window is getting shorter. Time goes by,” Jones told NFL Network. “I do feel real pressure because we do have players not only in (quarterback) Tony Romo, but (tight end) Jason Witten (and outside linebacker) DeMarcus Ware, to leave out several that are (also) in the prime of their career. And we need to strike and strike soon with those guys.

  “(Coach) Jason Garrett feels exactly the same way about it and understands how urgent it is. Candidly, you're looking through rose-colored glasses if we all don't realize that now is the time to compete on the field.”

  The Cowboys won three Super Bowls in the 1990s, but have only one playoff win in the previous 15 seasons. They missed the playoffs in each of the last two years.

  Jones thought the Cowboys could challenge for a Super Bowl last season until a New Year's Day loss to the New York Giants with the NFC East title and a playoff berth in the balance. Seeing the Giants win a championship reinforced his belief that the Cowboys could contend.

  “When we see a team like the Giants come back with nine (regular) season wins and be world champion, then we know it's there for most clubs,” Jones told NFL Network.

Outside linebacker Clay Matthews collected most of his 29.5 sacks lined up on the left side, but he's on the move to make room for rookie Nick Perry.

  Matthews and Perry will be interchangeable but the base formation calls for Matthews to move to right outside linebacker. He'll take on more elite pass blockers, but Perry's size and mass make him the ideal fit on the “power” side of the defensive formation.

  “It's all about mismatches and preferable lineups,” Matthews said Tuesday. “Whenever we can take advantage of that, playing on the right side, left side, middle, wherever you want me to play, we're all about that, so I hope that's the case.”

  The goal of defensive coordinator Dom Capers is to move Matthews around the formation to take advantage of his explosiveness off the snap. Capers has devised an expanded role at multiple positions for other players, including cornerback Charles Woodson. Woodson often is charged with what he called “playing the quarterback” than he is manning a single position.

  Using Matthews as a pass-rush specialist and sliding him around the formation wouldn't be a new approach. Whereas past generations relied on right defensive ends and outside linebackers to be the superior pass rushers on the defense, getting pressure from all sides is becoming the norm.

  “Things have changed a little bit (in that regard),” agreed Denver coach John Fox. “The rush doesn't always come from the right side, like it used to. People are getting lots of pressure anymore from the (left) side as well.”

  Fox should know. His prize rookie, Von Miller, played primarily on the strong side, rushing generally from the left edge of the defense, in 2011.

  The league's reigning defensive rookie of the year, Aldon Smith of San Francisco produced some of his 14 sacks in '11 from the left side. Philadelphia left end Jason Babin collected 18 sacks season, and he has 30.5 with the Eagles in 2011 and with Tennessee in 2010, while rushing from the left side.

Dallas Cowboys rookie receiver Danny Coale broke a bone in his foot on the first day of team activities Tuesday, NFL.com reported, based on sources.

  Coale, a fifth-round draft pick from Virginia Tech, broke the fifth metatarsal in his left foot, and that could sideline him for up to a month.

  Earlier, Cowboys rookie linebacker Kyle Wilber, a fourth-round pick, broke his index finger in rookie minicamp, and cornerback Morris Claiborne, the sixth overall pick, is out with a wrist injury.

Four months after botching a pair of punt returns in January's NFC Championship Game loss to the Giants, Kyle Williams opened the 49ers' first organized team practice for veterans on Tuesday in a battle for a roster spot.

  San Francisco brought in significant competition at the position, signing free agents Randy Moss and Mario Manningham and using their first-round pick last month on Illinois' A.J. Jenkins in an effort to improve the league's 29th-ranked passing game.

  Williams said he isn't running from the memory of how the 49ers' 2011 season ended and is trying to learn from the experience.

  “I haven't really stopped ever since a week after that last game, I've been going,” Williams told local reporters after Tuesday's practice, which was closed to the media. “It was a tough time, obviously - for me and for the whole team. But the way these guys had my back, they continue to have my back, the way they continue to have my back. That coupled with the work ethic has kind of been a good therapy for me.”

  The sixth-round pick in 2010 is bringing a competitive mindset as he faces a stiff test to make the 2012 roster. He was third on the 49ers in receptions last season, but that was with just 20 catches for 241 yards as Michael Crabtree and tight end Vernon Davis combined for 139 receptions - hence the offseason moves to bolster the receiving corps.

  Williams called the competition “intense,” but he's looking forward to the challenge.

  His name has also been tied to one of the biggest stories in the NFL during the offseason following audiotape that indicated Saints defensive coordinator Gregg Williams instructed his players to target Williams during the 49ers' playoff victory over New Orleans. Williams said he has suffered four concussions through his first two NFL seasons, but that it comes “with the territory.”

  --The 49ers also added to their backfield with the free agent addition of bruising running back Brandon Jackson and rookie playmaker LaMichael James. They join Frank Gore, Kendall Hunter and Antonio Dixon, but Gore isn't concerned about his role diminishing.

  “I feel I can still do everything pretty good ... catch, run, block,” said Gore, who is entering his eighth season. “I'm going to do what I've always been doing.”

  Gore led the 49ers with 1,211 rushing yards and eight touchdowns on the ground while averaging 4.3 yards per carry last season. However, his last 100-yard rushing game of the year came in Week 9, although he did average 5.6 yards in the team's two playoff games.

  Gore said he took six weeks off after the season to recover from “bumps and bruises” physically and the mental pain of losing the NFC Championship Game.

  “All of us running backs have different styles,” said Hunter, who finished his rookie season second on the team with 473 yards on 4.2 yards per carry. “All of us are going to compete to make the team.”

  --Second-year offensive lineman Daniel Kilgore, drafted as a guard, has been taking snaps at center as well, although starter Jonathan Goodwin returned for Tuesday's practice.

  “It definitely benefitted me being able to take the snaps with the ones,” Kilgore told the team's website. “I know Goody's a great player and a great teammate. I know he's been working hard as well, probably as much, if not more than I have.

  “I'm glad he's back so I can learn from him.”

Players will be required to wear thigh and knee pads beginning with the 2013 season, the NFL announced Tuesday.

  The players' union could still oppose the move because it wasn't collectively bargained.

  “While the NFL is focused on one element of health and safety today, the NFLPA believes that health and safety requires a comprehensive approach and commitment,” the NFLPA said in a statement. “We are engaged in and monitor many different issues, such as players' access to medical records, prescription usage and the situation with professional football's first responders, NFL referees. We always look forward to meeting with the NFL to discuss any and all matters related to player health and safety.”

  Atlanta Falcons president Rich McKay, chairman of the competition committee, said at an owners meeting Tuesday that the league can implement it unilaterally because it is a playing rule, according to multiple reports.

  The rule won't go into effect until 2013 to give equipment manufacturers time to work on safety and comfort.

  Whether the new rule will help prevent concussions and other injuries was a popular topic at the Broncos' practice Tuesday.

  “That's great for high school kids and college kids, but I don't know,” said Broncos defensive tackle Justin Bannan. “I think if you're going to have an injury happen, a knee pad or a thigh pad isn't going to save you. I had a thigh pad on and gotten just as deep of a thigh bruise as you can have with the thigh pad on.”

  Other rules changes intented to reduce concussions include redesigned helmets.

  “They're changing a lot of things, helmets. I've been wearing the same helmet for 15 years. Champ (Bailey has) been wearing it longer than me,” said Broncos cornerback Drayton Florence, who is also an NFLPA representative. “This year we have to switch to a new helmet because of concussions and things that have been coming up - the thigh pads. My opinion is that I don't want to wear them but you have to follow the rules and policies.”

  Meanwhile, other players applauded the new rule.

  “I'm a believer in it. I've been wearing them since my rookie year,” said cornerback Tracy Porter, who joined the Broncos this offseason from the Saints. “Some guys are superstitious to say that wearing the thigh and knee pads slows them down, but for the most part, I think it's a myth. I still feel pretty fast when I'm out there with thigh and knee pads. It's all about what a guy likes.”

NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell said Tuesday that the NFL plans to make public the evidence that bounties were paid by New Orleans players, NFL.com reported Tuesday.

  Asked at the Spring League Meeting whether he expected the proof to be revealed, Goodell said, “Yes, I do. Eventually.”

  Goodell said no more information will be released to the public until the appeals and grievance processes are finished.

  He also said the NFL players union “expressly told the players not to cooperate in the bounty investigation.”

  “I invited them in and they decided not to do that,” Goodell said.

With the new collective bargaining agreement limiting the amount of on-field time coaches get with their players during the offseason, new Dolphins coach Joe Philbin is making the most of every minute with fast-paced practices during this week's OTA sessions.

  “You have 'X' amount of time that you are allowed to be on the field and we want to maximize the time that we do have and we want to give every player an opportunity,” Philbin said. “I stood in front of the team and said to them in a team meeting, 'Every guy is important to us', 'Every guy is going to get coached', 'Every guy is going to be provided opportunities to show what they are capable of doing and make the ball club'.

  The most scrutinized competition is at quarterback. Incumbent Matt Moore is learning a new offense, while first-round pick Ryan Tannehill's learning curve is aided by the Dolphins' offensive coordinator, Mike Sherman, being his former college coach. Veteran David Garrard is also learning a new offense after sitting out last season with a back injury.

  “I'm in there and try and ensure that No. 1 spot,” Moore said. “I mean I guess that's what I'm doing every time. I'm just trying to learn and you know we're moving quickly in this offense which has been good.

  “I feel really good. Obviously we need to learn new terminology, but I mean you need to be prepared for something. ... As a quarterback you really need to quicken up your feet and be sure of your reads and the things like that. So there's a lot of differences but it's the same. I know that sounds really dumb but that's the way it is.”

  Moore has been impressed with how Tannehill throws the ball and said he'll “help anyway I can,” but believes the rookie has a good handle on what needs to be done.

  “I mean it kind of is what I thought it would be,” Tannehill said of the speed of NFL practices. “It's faster. Guys are faster. The play happens faster. But I was expecting it. You know, I wasn't in a situation where I kind of sat back and said, 'Wow, so fast.' It is what it is. It's faster and just about getting adjusted to it.”

  Owner Steven Ross has said he expects Moore to win the starting job.

  “Anybody have Steve's number around here?” Philbin said, laughing. “I have to check who the treasurer is, I know he is the owner but he might not sign my check, I think the treasurer does (laughing).

  “Look, last time I checked, he is on board. I told him and we have been very upfront with him, we want a competitive situation at that position as well as the other positions. These guys work hard; they deserve the opportunity to compete for a job on this team, a starting position on this team. So the quarterback position in my mind is no different. I like the group of guys that we have, we have a long way to go I mean a million miles to go and so we will see how it shakes out.”

  For now, it appears all three quarterbacks are being supportive during the early stages of the competition.

  “They're both great guys,” Tannehill said of Moore and Garrard. “From day one they kind of welcomed me into the quarterback room. I was kind of wondering how it was going to be walking into that room but they're great guys.

  “Talking through plays. Talking through reads. Asking questions. Whatever it is, they're great about sharing information and we're all competitors. We all want each other to succeed but we're here to compete so it's nothing where we're trying to hold each other down and compete ourselves.  We want the best the best player to play because we want this team to win.”

  --Cornerback Vontae Davis did not practice Tuesday. “I am not going to get into any of that,” is all coach Joe Philbin would say. The younger brother of Davis and 49ers tight end Vernon Davis recently was charged with murder in Washington D.C. from an alleged April 24 incident involving hammer attacks, but the Palm Beach Post reported Tuesday that Vontae Davis has an undisclosed injury.

The special master who heard the appeal of the Cowboys and Redskins granted the NFL's motion to dismiss a grievance, upholding two-year penalties structured to dissolve $36 million of cap space for Washington with Dallas losing $10 million.

  “We pursued our salary cap claim pursuant to the CBA and we respect and will abide by the arbitrator's decision to dismiss,” the team's said in a joint statement Tuesday.

  The arbitration hearing in which the Cowboys and Redskins separately made appeals on their salary-cap penalties was heard May 10.

  League system arbitrator Stephen Burbank, who heard the arguments earlier in the month, made the call to dismiss the appeal according to NFL counsel Jeff Pash.

  Each team was docked for using the uncapped 2010 year to create what was characterized as an unfair competitive advantage going forward, putting large base salary numbers into 2010 on player contracts. Dallas did it in the contract of wide receiver Miles Austin, while Washington structured contracts with extra money in 2010 for cornerback DeAngelo Hall and defensive tackle Albert Haynesworth.

  ----Seahawks offensive lineman Allen Barbre was suspended the first four games of the 2012 season, Howard Balzer of the The Sports Xchange has learned.

  Barbre, 28, plays guard and tackle. He's not guaranteed a roster spot and his suspension complicates his chances of making the 53-man roster out of camp.

  The Seahawks pursued multiple offensive linemen in the offseason and also get second-year guard John Moffitt back. Second-year offensive lineman James Carpenter (knee) could return, but his health remains a question.

  ---Players will be required to wear thigh and knee pads beginning with the 2013 season, the NFL announced Tuesday.

  The players' union could still oppose the move because it wasn't collectively bargained.

  “While the NFL is focused on one element of health and safety today, the NFLPA believes that health and safety requires a comprehensive approach and commitment,” the NFLPA said in a statement. “We are engaged in and monitor many different issues, such as players' access to medical records, prescription usage and the situation with professional football's first responders, NFL referees. We always look forward to meeting with the NFL to discuss any and all matters related to player health and safety.”

  ---Cleveland Browns linebacker Scott Fujita said he's innocent in the New Orleans Saints' bounty scandal, according to multiple reports.

  Fujita received a three-game suspension from NFL commissioner Roger Goodell for his alleged role in a bounty program in place during the four years he spent with the Saints.

  He expressed his disappointment that his reputation has been tarnished by the league's claim that he contributed money to the “bounty” pool.

  Fujita, 33, is appealing his suspension. He is a member of the players' union executive committee.

  ---Raiders coach Dennis Allen said he has contingency plans for all positions, so he's not overly concerned about what will happen should inside linebacker Rolando McClain face discipline from the NFL stemming from an assault conviction in Alabama.

  “Right now, as we look at it, Rolando is part of our family, he's part of our team. We're going to let the whole process play out before we do anything,” Allen said. “Once the legal proceedings are finished, then we'll determine what, if any, action we need to take.”

  McClain is taking part in the offseason program despite being convicted of assault stemming from a Nov. 30, 2011 incident in Decatur, Ala. while he was away from the team to attend his grandfather's funeral.

  -- Quarterback Kyle Newhall-Caballero signed with the Raiders. With Rhett Bomar released recently, Newhall-Caballero joins Carson Palmer, Matt Leinart and Terrelle Pryor as the quarterbacks on the roster.

  An undrafted rookie out of Brown, Newhall-Caballero was named second-team All-Ivy League as a redshirt senior after completing 226-of-369 pass attempts for 2,356 yards and 18 touchdowns last year.

  ---Colt McCoy took the first snap with the Browns' offense during the team's OTA practice Tuesday, but coach Pat Shurmur cautioned against reading into it that McCoy is the “starting” quarterback.

  “It's easy to look out there and say, 'This guy is doing this so he must be the starter and he must be the backup.' There were a lot of combinations out there today and I think what's important is in some of the areas that we have touched on all winter, we are watching guys compete,” Shurmur said. “I wouldn't say we are deferring to anybody at this point.”

  The Browns spent a first-round pick on Oklahoma State's Brandon Weeden, and veteran Seneca Wallace remains in the fold.

  ---The Dolphins and offensive tackle Jonathan Martin finalized a four-year contract expected to be worth $4.9875 million.

  Martin was a second-round pick in April. The junior was an All-American at Stanford at left tackle but is competing at right tackle with Lydon Murtha. He has never played right tackle but is considered a polished athlete capable of making the change.

  ---Defensive tackle Josh Chapman, a fifth-round pick out of Alabama, signed with the Colts.

  Terms were not disclosed.

  Chapman, 6-0, 316 pounds, started 25 of 54 games at Alabama and totaled 88 career tackles (44 solo), 2.5 sacks, 13.5 tackles for loss, one quarterback pressure and four passes defensed. He was part of two BCS National Championship teams in 2009 and 2011.

  ---The NFL approved the extension of the Bills' current arrangement to play one regular-season home game in Toronto at Tuesday's owners meetings in Atlana.

  John Kryk of Sun Media first reported the extension through 2017 with only final details to be ironed out between stadium executives at Rogers Centre in Toronto and the Bills.

  The five-year agreement worth a reported $78 million expires at the end of this season, when the Bills host the Seattle Seahawks.

  ---Wide receiver Preston Parker signed a one-year contract extension with the Buccaneers.

  He was an exclusive rights free agent and scheduled to make $540,000 in 2012. The extension, according to NFL.com, adds a $1 million base salary in 2013 and a $50,000 signing bonus. The bonus is the only guaranteed money in Parker's deal.

  Parker excels on kick returns and caught 40 passes for 554 yards in 2011. He was an undrafted free agent in 2010.

  ---If the NFL doesn't push the Pro Bowl from its annual schedule, the game could be played in New Orleans on Jan. 27, one week before the city hosts Super Bowl XLVI.

  NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell, who has previously expressed his displeasure with the game's lack of competitiveness, said in February cancelling this year's game is one of the options on the table. The Super Bowl is scheduled for Feb. 3 in New Orleans, but a game site for the Pro Bowl is very much in flux.

ATLANTA - Allowing that the caliber of competition at the league's annual Pro Bowl game has slumped dramatically, NFL commissioner Roger Goodell will meet soon with NFLPA executive director DeMaurice Smith about the much criticized contest and could decide its fate shortly thereafter.

  “We realize it's an all-star game,” Goodell said Tuesday afternoon as the league concluded its one-day spring meetings here. “But we also realize that our fans expect more.

  “That's the issue.”

  This year's game, won by the NFC by a 59-41 count, was the second highest scoring contest in Pro Bowl history. It produced 1,142 total yards and was criticized even by some of the participants for the lack of effort or half-hearted performances from many of the players. The game, essentially, devolved into a seven-on-seven drill, with little physicality.

  ESPN reported last month that the league could suspend the game. Goodell on Tuesday did not dispute that possibility. He emphasized that a decision on the game's future has not been made and said that, if the 2013 Pro Bowl is played, it will be in either New Orleans or Honolulu.

  New Orleans is the site of Super Bowl XLVII.

  The NFLPA has said players prefer to have the Pro Bowl game, citing its tradition and role as part of the fabric of the sport. But the NFLPA will have to convince its constituents that the game is more than a glorified touch-football exercise.

  Said the commissioner: “You've got to make it better or not play it.”

Raiders coach Dennis Allen said he has contingency plans for all positions, so he's not overly concerned about what will happen should inside linebacker Rolando McClain face discipline from the NFL stemming from an assault conviction in Alabama.

  “Right now, as we look at it, Rolando is part of our family, he's part of our team. We're going to let the whole process play out before we do anything,” Allen said. “Once the legal proceedings are finished, then we'll determine what, if any, action we need to take.”

  McClain is taking part in the offseason program despite being convicted of assault stemming from a Nov. 30, 2011 incident in Decatur, Ala. while he was away from the team to attend his grandfather's funeral.

  “We're starting anew. We're not going to take into account past since necessarily for everyone's actions,” Allen said regarding the team's approach to off-field issues. “But I think everyone knows what the expectations are around here.

  The Raiders don't have a lot of depth at inside linebacker. Travis Goethel has been an intriguing prospect since being selected in the sixth round in 2010, but has struggled with injuries during his first two seasons. Nathan Stupar was also selected in the seventh round last month.

  “If he can stay healthy, he has a chance to be a pretty good player for us,” Allen said. “I've been pleased with the way he's been out here working. We'll continue to have him get healthy one day at a time, and if he does that, he'll have a chance.”

  Meanwhile, Allen praised McClain's on-field leadership, physicality and instincts, while acknowledging he has areas to improve on.

  “He's very instinctive. He's smart out there. He's taking command of the huddle. So those things I've been please with,” Allen said. “I think the one thing he needs to improve on, and he knows this, is the pass coverage aspect. He's really smart and understands the defense and has done real well in that regard.”

  -- Quarterback Kyle Newhall-Caballero signed with the Raiders. With Rhett Bomar released recently, Newhall-Caballero joins Carson Palmer, Matt Leinart and Terrelle Pryor as the quarterbacks on the roster.

  “I don't think we bring in anyone just for charity. We bring in guys that we think have a chance to compete and have a chance to be pretty good football players,” Allen said. “That was the plan all along, to bring in four quarterbacks. We want to bring four to camp. I think he's smart, he's athletic and he's got a strong arm.”

  An undrafted rookie out of Brown, Newhall-Caballero was named second-team All-Ivy League as a redshirt senior after completing 226-of-369 pass attempts for 2,356 yards and 18 touchdowns last year.

  MEDICAL WATCH:

  --Linebacker Aaron Curry and wide receiver Denarius Moore sat out Tuesday's practice with what coach Dennis Allen said were of the “soft tissue” variety and simply precautionary.

  --Safety Mike Mitchell remains sidelined while rehabbing a knee injury. “I don't look for him to participate for a little while now,” Allen said.

  --Defensive end Matt Shaughnessy remains out while he rehabs from shoulder surgery. “I would expect that'll he be full go for training camp, but probably won't see much of him before then,” Allen said.

  --Defensive tackle Tommy Kelly was excused from practice for personal reasons.

  --Fullback Manase Tonga had a knee scope and is expected back in time for the team's June minicamp.

  --Cornerback Ron Bartell has recovered from a knee injury and is practicing.

Veterans David Garrard and Matt Moore might be feeling more like rookies than Ryan Tannehill, but the playing field is far different come August.

  “It's weird. (Rookie quarterbacks) usually come in with a question mark on his face,” Garrard said. “He has starry eyes trying to figure out what's going on, but this is the offense he ran in college, or a lot of it. A lot of times, he is giving us tips on things, but the quarterback position is more than learning your own plays. You have to know what the defense is out there doing each week and there's 16 weeks and you are going to get 16 looks at defenses with variations and some (that are) just completely different. That's a lot to put on a rookie quarterback. Some guys can do it and some guys have a tough time with it.”

  Garrard hasn't played since 2010. He said he's recovered from back surgery. He has 76 career starts in 10 seasons, but at 34, he's at best second fiddle.

  Incumbent starter Matt Moore started 12 games last season and compiled a passer rating of 87.1 with 16 touchdowns and nine interceptions. Moore figures to be the favorite to start ahead of Tannehill, especially after owner Stephen Ross offered a prediction Monday from the owner's meetings in Atlanta that Moore would start the regular-season opener.

  “Whatever the situation is I'm here to compete,” said Tannehill. “I'm here to one day play, so I'm going to go out and give my best every day and whatever the decision is at the end of camp then that's what it is.”

  Moore knows, even if he does start Week 1, the backup quarterback -- given Tannehill's physical talents and that he was a first-round pick -- will be popular in Miami. Moore's first impression of the rookie were positive.

  “Hey he can spin it.  He definitely can throw the ball,” Moore said. “It looks good. Day-by-day, obviously I'm getting to know him a little better. He's a good kid. I mean he kind of just, he's quiet right now but you can tell he's definitely a quality, quality player. I'm looking forward to getting to see him play more and you know it's been good so far.”

  First-year coach Joe Philbin, who previously downplayed the advantage Tannehill might have in coming from offensive coordinator Mike Sherman's offense at Texaa A&M to a Sherman-coached West Coast offense at Miami, said he has specific criteria in grading his quarterbacks in the OTAs. He spoke to the team, and specifically quarterbacks, about playing decisively.

  “We are looking for productivity, we're looking for decision-making, we're looking for leadership, we're looking for them to obviously throw the ball accurately and make good decisions back there and just see if we can get a feel for who has got the best command of the offense and the unit in particular,” said Philbin.

Colt McCoy took the first snap with the Browns' offense during the team's OTA practice Tuesday, but coach Pat Shurmur cautioned against reading into it that McCoy is the “starting” quarterback.

  “It's easy to look out there and say, 'This guy is doing this so he must be the starter and he must be the backup.' There were a lot of combinations out there today and I think what's important is in some of the areas that we have touched on all winter, we are watching guys compete,” Shurmur said. “I wouldn't say we are deferring to anybody at this point.”

  The Browns spent a first-round pick on Oklahoma State's Brandon Weeden, and veteran Seneca Wallace remains in the fold.

  “I have a room full of quarterbacks that are great competitors and very fine players,” Shurmur said, answering a question about how the quarterbacks are handling the situation. “The room is fine, it's fine.”

  Shurmur allowed that the quarterbacks made some mistakes Tuesday, but he's pleased about the on-field work in general. Weeden has a particularly steep learning curve as a rookie coming out of a system that ran almost primarily out of shotgun formations.

  “I thought he handled it well. I thought he was generally efficient,” Shurmur said. “He missed a couple of throws, but I think all of the quarterbacks did. I thought he executed pretty well. As you saw, most of what we did today was under center and I know that is a question that will come up.”

  --Placekicker Phil Dawson is not at this week's OTAs, but coach Pat Shurmur said he expects the veteran to join the team for the team's minicamp June 5-7.

  --Cornerback Sheldon Brown will not be moving to safety this year, as had been speculated during the offseason.

  “Sheldon Brown is a corner. He is an outstanding player at corner and to move him to safety is not something that we are planning to do,” Shurmur said.

  Brown will be competing with Dimitri Patterson for the starting job opposite Joe Haden, although all three will see significant playing time in nickel packages.

  --Greg Little and Mohamed Massaquoi are slated as the starting wide receivers, and Little in particular stood out Tuesday.

  “I think it's his first true offseason as a pro and I think what he has done is he has taken good care of his body,” Shurmur said. “He is much leaner looking to me than he was when he came into training camp a year ago. I think he has worked on his diet and nutrition, and has gotten himself in shape to come out here and run a lot, which receivers have to do. I think that will help his development.”

  --Former Oregon quarterback Darron Thomas, who was at the Browns' rookie minicamp after going undrafted, was not invited back for the OTAs.

Players will be required to wear thigh and knee pads beginning with the 2013 season, the NFL announced Tuesday.

  The players' union could still oppose the move because it wasn't collectively bargained.

  “While the NFL is focused on one element of health and safety today, the NFLPA believes that health and safety requires a comprehensive approach and commitment,” the NFLPA said in a statement. “We are engaged in and monitor many different issues, such as players' access to medical records, prescription usage and the situation with professional football's first responders, NFL referees. We always look forward to meeting with the NFL to discuss any and all matters related to player health and safety.”

  Atlanta Falcons president Rich McKay, chairman of the competition committee, said at an owners meeting Tuesday that the league can implement it unilaterally because it is a playing rule, according to multiple reports.

  The rule won't go into effect until 2013 to give equipment manufacturers time to work on safety and comfort.

Quarterback Kyle Newhall-Caballero signed with the Raiders. An undrafted rookie out of Brown, Newhall-Caballero was named second-team All-Ivy League as a redshirt senior after completing 226-of-369 pass attempts for 2,356 yards and 18 touchdowns last year.

  With Rhett Bomar released recently, Newhall-Caballero joins Carson Palmer, Matt Leinart and Terrelle Pryor as the quarterbacks on the roster.

Defensive tackle Josh Chapman, a fifth-round pick out of Alabama, signed with the Colts.

  Terms were not disclosed.

  Chapman, 6-0, 316 pounds, started 25 of 54 games at Alabama and totaled 88 career tackles (44 solo), 2.5 sacks, 13.5 tackles for loss, one quarterback pressure and four passes defensed. He was part of two BCS National Championship teams in 2009 and 2011.

ATLANTA -- In the public relations battle that has continued well beyond last summer's collective bargaining agreement, a contentiousness that has rendered the term “labor peace” a relative misnomer, score one for the league.

  The NFL owners voted here Tuesday morning to make it mandatory for all players to wear thigh and knee pads for the 2013 season. The influential competition committee removed hip pads from the proposal before the vote.

  There was no immediate reaction from the NFLPA to the league move, which had been suggested but not formally proposed before Tuesday. But on Monday, the union contended that any such unilateral change would have to be bargained.

  In an era in which player safety has become one of the primary platforms of commissioner Roger Goodell -- with several of his key lieutenants spending much of a Tuesday afternoon news conference explaining and reviewing greater emphasis on issues such as head trauma and general player wellness -- any such stance is a PR loser. And one that will generate little sympathy from a public whose consciousness of head trauma, concussions and safety has been significantly elevated by player deaths and, most recently, the suicide of linebacker Junior Seau.

  Sure, padding the players' thighs and the knees won't curtail concussions, not even with the kind of high-tech protection the league made available for media inspection on Tuesday. It might even, joked former NFL cornerback and current league vice president of player engagement Troy Vincent, “give some guys a headache” to think about it. But it's the right thing to do. And fighting it, if the NFLPA so decides, is both short-sighted and misguided.

  Competition committee chairman Rich McKay allowed that the change will have to be “discussed” with the NFLPA, and the union's input acknowledged. “But it's a playing rule,” emphasized McKay, the inference being that the league retains the right to implement the change without union approval. “It a safety rule.”

  “It's good for the game; it's the way it should be done,” Vincent said.

  Ironically, Vincent conceded that he played minus some pads during much of his 15-year career in the league. Nearly as ironic is that Vincent, 41, once worked for the NFLPA and attempted to become the union's executive director following the death of Gene Upshaw.

  But he is a noteworthy advocate for player safety, might do well to speak with players, and perhaps to try to convince some of the NFLPA officials that it is not in their best interests to challenge every league initiative. Particularly the ones aimed at making the game safer for the rank-and-file.

  Look, make no mistake, the NFL is reacting in part to the events of the past several years, the deaths of Seau and Dave Duerson and others, and the motivation is not without some degree of self-serving. Altruism is not one of the league's strong suits. But the recent events have also heightened the awareness of the NFL in terms of its inherent responsibilities not only to those in the game, but to its potential future practitioners as well.

  “We want our game and our players,” said league vice president Jeff Pash, “to set the standard for safety.”

  Vincent candidly allowed that the psychology of players is a major reason for not wearing pads. The rationale: “You wear less pads,” Vincent said, “you're faster. You think that it'll work, that you'll play better.”

  What won't play well is the potential for the NFLPA, which feels it is compelled to tilt at every windmill that the league erects, to fight the “padding” rule.

The NFL approved the extension of the Bills' current arrangement to play one regular-season home game in Toronto at Tuesday's owners meetings in Atlana.

  John Kryk of Sun Media first reported the extension through 2017 with only final details to be ironed out between stadium executives at Rogers Centre in Toronto and the Bills.

  The five-year agreement worth a reported $78 million expires at the end of this season, when the Bills host the Seattle Seahawks.

The special master who heard the appeal of the Cowboys and Redskins granted the NFL's motion to dismiss a grievance, upholding two-year penalties structured to dissolve $36 million of cap space for Washington with Dallas losing $10 million.

  “We pursued our salary cap claim pursuant to the CBA and we respect and will abide by the arbitrator's decision to dismiss,” the team's said in a joint statement Tuesday.

  The arbitration hearing in which the Cowboys and Redskins separately made appeals on their salary-cap penalties was heard May 10.

  League system arbitrator Stephen Burbank, who heard the arguments earlier in the month, made the call to dismiss the appeal according to NFL counsel Jeff Pash.

  Each team was docked for using the uncapped 2010 year to create what was characterized as an unfair competitive advantage going forward, putting large base salary numbers into 2010 on player contracts. Dallas did it in the contract of wide receiver Miles Austin, while Washington structured contracts with extra money in 2010 for cornerback DeAngelo Hall and defensive tackle Albert Haynesworth.

The special master who heard the appeal of the Cowboys and Redskins granted the NFL's motion to dismiss a grievance, upholding two-year penalties structured to dissolve $36 million of cap space for Washington with Dallas losing $10 million.

  The arbitration hearing in which the Cowboys and Redskins separately made appeals on their salary-cap penalties was heard May 10.

  League system arbitrator Stephen Burbank, who heard the arguments earlier in the month, made the call to dismiss the appeal according to NFL counsel Jeff Pash.

  Each team was docked for using the uncapped 2010 year to create what was characterized as an unfair competitive advantage going forward, putting large base salary numbers into 2010 on player contracts. Dallas did it in the contract of wide receiver Miles Austin, while Washington structured contracts with extra money in 2010 for cornerback DeAngelo Hall and defensive tackle Albert Haynesworth.

Seahawks offensive lineman Allen Barbre was suspended the first four games of the 2012 season, Howard Balzer of the The Sports Xchange has learned.

  Barbre, 28, plays guard and tackle. He's not guaranteed a roster spot and his suspension complicates his chances of making the 53-man roster out of camp.

  The Seahawks pursued multiple offensive linemen in the offseason and also get second-year guard John Moffitt back. Second-year offensive lineman James Carpenter (knee) could return, but his health remains a question.

Wide receiver Preston Parker signed a one-year contract extension with the Buccaneers.

  He was an exclusive rights free agent and scheduled to make $540,000 in 2012. The extension, according to NFL.com, adds a $1 million base salary in 2013 and a $50,000 signing bonus. The bonus is the only guaranteed money in Parker's deal.

  Parker excels on kick returns and caught 40 passes for 554 yards in 2011. He was an undrafted free agent in 2010.

If the NFL doesn't push the Pro Bowl from its annual schedule, the game could be played in New Orleans on Jan. 27, one week before the city hosts Super Bowl XLVI.

  NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell, who has previously expressed his displeasure with the game's lack of competitiveness, said in February cancelling this year's game is one of the options on the table. The Super Bowl is scheduled for Feb. 3 in New Orleans, but a game site for the Pro Bowl is very much in flux.

  “We're either going to have to improve the quality of what we're doing in the Pro Bowl or consider other changes, or even (consider) eliminating the game, if that's the kind of quality game we're going to provide,” Goodell said in February after backlash from players, coaches and fans about the poor effort in the 2012 event.

  Green Bay Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers, who played in the first quarter of that game, said at the Super Bowl in Indianapolis that he was surprised by the players' lack of interest and effort and felt some “embarrassed themselves.”

  Goodell has discussed potential changes with NFL Players Association executive director DeMaurice Smith.

  “I know players love to be in Hawaii, but we have to start with the quality of what we're doing,” Goodell said. “If the fans are responding negatively to what we're doing, we (had) better listen.”

  The Superdome has been reserved for Jan. 27 by the NFL. Even without a game, the league will keep its Pro Bowl balloting process to name the top players and direct teams to negotiate Pro Bowl clauses into player contracts and honor Pro Bowl incentive clauses to avoid a conflict with the players association.

Tight end Kellen Winslow Jr. was acquired by the Seattle Seahawks from Tampa Bay for an undisclosed 2013 draft pick.

  Winslow said earlier Monday that he had been told by the Bucs that he no longer fit into their plans and to not attending this week's offseason program. Tampa Bay then signed nine-year veteran Dallas Clark and moved quickly to deal Winslow.

  Winslow led the Bucs in receptions each of the past three seasons, but angered rookie head coach Greg Schiano with his absence from the team's early OTA sessions. Acquired from Cleveland in a 2009 trade, Winslow averaged 72.6 catches in his three seasons with the Bucs.

  In Seattle, he will team with 2011 free agent acquisition Zach Miller, who turned into a key blocker last season due to injuries along the offensive line. Seattle was in need of another tight end in offensive coordinator Darrell Bevell's offense with John Carlson signing with Minnesota after missing last season due to injury.

  Winslow, the son of Hall of Fame tight end Kellen Winslow, was a first-round pick by Cleveland out of the University of Miami in 2004, and has 437 career catches for 4,836 yards and 23 touchdowns.

New York Jets nose tackle Kenrick Ellis was sentenced on Monday to 179 days in prison, with 89 days suspended, for misdemeanor assault and battery, ESPNNewYork.com reported.

  The sentence, which was announced in Hampton, Va., includes two years of supervised probation.  However, Ellis, who is from Jamaica and is not a U.S. citizen, will not be deported, which could have happened had he been convicted of a felony.

  Ellis will serve 45 days with good behavior, his attorney, Timothy Clancy, told ESPNNewYork.com.

  Ellis won't miss any OTAs or the Jets' minicamp. The Jets report for training camp July 26, so he will miss a few days of training camp.

  Ellis could still be subject to penalties by the NFL based on the league's personal-conduct policy.

Last week, Ellis had reached a plea agreement to accept a lesser charge. He will report to the city jail on June 15. 

  Ellis was a student at Hampton University in 2010 when he was arrested and charged with malicious wounding, a felony that could carry a sentence of up to 20 years in jail.

    Ellis was involved in a fight on April, 10, 2010, when he assaulted a Hampton student on the Hampton campus. Ellis said he was defending his girlfriend.

  He also faces a $3 million civil suit last April by the victim, Dennis Eley.

Free agent tight end Dallas Clark officially signed with the Tampa Bay Bucs, The Sports Xchange confirmed Monday.

  The move followed Kellen Winslow's announcement earlier in the day that he has been apprised to remain away from the team's OTA sessions because he no longer fits into the franchise's plans.

  Clark recently met with Tampa Bay coaches and team officials, but it appeared he still had some options with the other two clubs Clark visited with in recent weeks, New England and Kansas City, remaining in contact. It's not clear if the Patriots or Chiefs tendered a formal contract proposal to the nine-year veteran.

  The interest in the former Pro Bowl tight end essentially debunked a recent report that he might never play again because of injuries. Last month, agent Neil Cornrich told The Sports Xchange that he “would be surprised” and that “it would be news to (Clark)” if the report was accurate.

  Clark, who will be 33 next month, has started only 16 games (17 appearances) the past two seasons because of wrist and fibula injuries. For his career, he has 427 catches for 4,887 yards and 46 touchdowns. In 2010, his last healthy season and the only year in his career in which he started all 16 games, Clark had 100 catches.

  Winslow's absence from early OTA sessions were said to have angered rookie coach Greg Schiano, and the Bucs clearly needed a tight end with the kind of receiving ability Clark has demonstrated in his career.

  There are six other tight ends on the current Tampa Bay roster, in addition to Winslow, and none has more than a dozen career receptions. In fact, the six tight ends, two of whom are rookies, total only 19 receptions among them. Acquired from Cleveland in a 2009 trade, Winslow averaged 72.6 catches in his three seasons with the Bucs, and led the club in receptions each of the past three years.

  Clark has generally been a “flexed” tight end much of his career, and the former Colts first-round choice was often aligned in the slot, or flanked as a wide receiver because of the matchup problems he created for secondaries. Because he is not regarded as a strong blocker, Clark might not be a perfect fit for the physical, run-first philosophy Schiano has espoused, but he will provide a presence in the middle of the field for the passing game if he proves healthy.

  Even with the Bucs adding Clark, second-year veteran Luke Stocker, a fourth-round pick in 2011 who started nine games as a rookie, could remain the starter because of his in-line blocking skills.

Running back Peyton Hillis finally hit the field with his new teammates as the Chiefs opened this week's OTA sessions.

  After a disappointing and injury-plagued 2011 season in Cleveland, Hillis is being counted on along with Jamaal Charles coming off knee surgery to lead Kansas City's ground game.

  “It was really the first time for full-team activity and guys were working together and stuff like that. It was good, good to get back into the groove of things, not just coming in and working out, but actually getting some football in,” Hillis said Monday. “We really enjoyed it and I think it was another step forward and we'll keep going from here.”

  The offseason program is especially important for teams like the Chiefs, who have a new offensive coordinator in Brian Daboll.

  “I think we get a lot out of these OTAs,” quarterback Matt Cassel said. “I think every day that we can be out here together as a unit, as a group, build that camaraderie and continue to tone our skills and work together is going to be a step in the right direction. These OTAs are pivotal for us, especially being that it's a new offense, new offensive terminology and scheme, and just try to get better each and every day.”

  Cassel said there are subtle changes to the offense that the team has studied in the film room but finally has a chance to work through on the field.

  “There's some similarities, but it's definitely a different offense, so for us, we just have to continue to work hard,” he said. “It is going to be a process, so we can't get frustrated with the facts, some days are going to be better than others, but at the same time, I think as long as we keep getting better each and every day, we'll become a good offense.”

  For right tackle Eric Winston, one of the team's big offseason signings from the Houston Texans where he was in a zone-blocking scheme, the changes are far more than just the subtle variety.

  “With this system, everyone's got to be together, everyone's got to be working together and not just working, but communicating and things like that,” Winston said. “It's a big change obviously for everybody. It's going to be tough, there are going to be some tough days ahead and I think you have to prepare for that.

  “I think the thing is, I think we have the right personnel, we have the right coaches and we have the right scheme to be successful. I think we just have to keep pushing and keeping moving towards that goal and have to just work through that part as we go.”

  --Free safety Kendrick Lewis is making good progress from surgery on the labrum in his right shoulder, although he hasn't been cleared for contact. “I'm just playing it by ear, waiting it out,” he said. “Everything is going smooth, according to plan, so whenever they're ready to release me, that's when I'll be back.”

  --Dexter McCluster is back at slot receiver after serving as a change-of-pace running back last season. “It felt great. I'm learning everything I can learn,” he said. “That's the best thing about this sport, you learn as much as you can so whenever you're asked to do something, you know what to do.”

  QUOTE TO NOTE: “It's a little different for me, for the first time in like seven years, I'm just walking around saying 'Hi, I'm Stanford,' introducing myself to people and asking people 'where's this room and where's that room?' It's going pretty good. Everybody's been real helpful and it's helping my transition a whole lot.” - Cornerback Stanford Routt, who spent his first seven NFL seasons with the division-rival Raiders.

Peyton Manning was back on the field Monday and looked like his old self.

  A large media contingent turned out for the Denver Broncos' first OTA session and the 36-year-old quarterback appeared to the throw the ball with authority.

  “It felt good to be out there,” Manning said. “I haven't really been out there like this for a year and a half. It's a day I've been waiting on for a long time.

  “I've always believed you develop your timing for the passing game in the offseason. You can't just show up in September and expect to be on the same page. Offseason workouts, it's a great time to make an impression on the coaches. Coaches are always evaluating.”

  Manning said his recovery from neck surgery last year is still a work in progress.

  “I try to get better every day,” he said. “That's my goal. I really need to use this time. I do think there's a difference when you are on the field, in helmets, going up against the defense. Up until now we haven't been able to go against a defense, so this will be great work for me.”

  Coach John Fox and most of Manning's teammates were impressed with him Monday -- but continued to praise his ability to perform game-related tasks away the field.

  “We've had the opportunity to see him the past few weeks in Phase Two (workouts), and he does have great command. He understands the game,” Fox said. “As much as he's accomplished on the field, the things he does off the field in a leadership role is tremendous.”

 

  ---New York Jets nose tackle Kendrick Ellis was sentenced on Monday to 179 days in prison, with 89 days suspended, for misdemeanor assault and battery, ESPNNewYork.com reported.

  The sentence, which was announced in Hampton, Va., includes two years of supervised probation for his part in an altercation while he was student at Hamptoin University..  However, Ellis, who is from Jamaica and is not a U.S. citizen, will not be deported, which could have happened had he been convicted of a felony.

  Ellis will serve 45 days with good behavior, his attorney, Timothy Clancy, told ESPNNewYork.com.

  Ellis won't miss any OTAs or the Jets' minicamp. The Jets report for training camp July 26, so he will miss a few days of training camp.

  Ellis could still be subject to penalties by the NFL based on the league's personal-conduct policy.

    --- Some NFL players have shunned the use of leg pads, but they may no longer have that option.

  Thigh and knee coverings could become mandatory after a scheduled vote on a proposal Tuesday by NFL owners that would require all players to use a complete set of pads for their protection, Fox Sports reported.

  --- Free agent tight end Dallas Clark is most likely to sign with the Tampa Bay Bucs, as various Monday reports indicated in the wake of Kellen Winslow's announcement that he has been apprised to remain away from the team's OTA sessions because he no longer fits into the franchise's plans.

  But the Bucs still have some competition for Clark's services, league sources told The Sports Xchange on Monday afternoon. The other two clubs Clark has visited with in recent weeks, New England and Kansas City, have remained in contact with him. It is not clear if the Pats or Chiefs have tendered formal contract proposals to Clark, but they have retained a dialogue with the nine-year veteran and his representatives.

    Winslow could be traded or released by the Buccaneers to save approximately $5.25 million of salary cap space. His receiving production is expected to be filled by wide receiver Vincent Jackson, who signed a $55.5 million deal as a free agent in March.

  --- Raiders linebacker Rolando McClain was on the field with teammates during Monday's organized team activities.

  McClain was convicted of assault Thursday in Decatur, Ala., but has appealed the ruling. He could be punished as part of the NFL's off-field conduct policy, but the league is likely to allow the legal process to run its course first.

  McClain is also facing a civil lawsuit. He was sentenced 180 days in jail but appealed to the circuit court for a jury trial. His attorney, Harvey Steinberg, said the verdict was “meaningless.”

  --- Dolphins owner Stephen Ross told NFL Network that he expects veteran incumbent Matt Moore to start at quarterback in the regular-season opener.

  That might come as an upset to some, considering Ross voiced his support for Ryan Tannehill to be drafted in the first round.

  --- Defensive tackle Kheeston Randall, a seventh-round pick out of Texas, signed with the Dolphins. Terms were not disclosed.

  A three-year starter for the Longhorns, he played in 47 games with 35 starts. Randall was credited with 98 tackles (49 solo), four sacks (31 yards) and 21.0 tackles for loss (66 yards). He also registered one forced fumble, deflected six passes and blocked two kicks.

  --- Texans wide receiver Andre Johnson joined quarterback Matt Schaub as a spectator as offseason team activities began on Monday.

  Johnson said he had a minor arthroscopic procedure on his left knee and should be ready to fully participate in training camp in July.

  Schaub was scheduled to be on the sideline. Coach Gary Kubiak said last week he would be extra cautious with Schaub, who is recovered from right foot surgery.

  --- Redskins coach Mike Shanahan got so close to the action at Monday's practice that he became part of it and was planted by rookie defensive back Brandyn Thompson.

  Shanahan remained on the ground for several minutes and the Redskins said he was fine but “woozy” after the incident and would unavailable to meet with media as planned.

  --- The Lions welcomed running backs Mikel Leshoure and Jahvid Best for the starts of organized team activities at their Allen Park facility on Monday.

  The bigger story was the absence of wide receiver Titus Young, who was reportedly held out because of a fight last week with free safety Louis Delmas. The incident was first reported by Booth Newspapers. Young caught 48 passes for 607 yards and six touchdowns as a rookie in 2011.

  Leshoure, a second-round pick in 2011, was on the field in full capacity for the first time since rupturing his Achillies in training camp last August.

  Best, who missed the final 10 games last season recovering from what is believed to be his third concussion since his junior season at California, was also a participant in the on-field workout. However, Best is not yet cleared for contact.

    ---The Eagles signed third-round pick Nick Foles to a four-year deal.

  Foles broke several of Drew Brees' high school passing records at Westlake High School near Austin, Texas, and left Arizona as the Wildcats' all-time leader in yards (10,011), touchdowns (67), attempts (1,369) and completions (933).

  Foles is one of five quarterbacks on the Eagles' offseason roster.

  ---Rookie defensive tackle Derek Wolfe and the Denver Broncos agreed to terms Monday on a four-year, $5.2 million contract.

  The deal included $3.2 million worth of guarantees for the team's No. 36 overall pick in the second round from Cincinnati, the Denver Post reported.

  Wolfe was not on the field for the team's workout Monday because classes are still in session at Cincinnati. Rules stipulate a player cannot participate until his college class graduates.

 

  --- The Tennessee Titans have reached a contract agreement with rookie linebacker Zach Brown.

  Brown, the team's second-round pick, had 105 tackles, three interceptions and 5.5 sacks for North Carolina last season.

  Four of the Titans' seven draft picks from the draft in April have now agreed to terms.

 

  --- First-round draft pick Morris Claiborne was hoping he could be on the field for the Dallas Cowboys' June minicamp, but that apparently won't happen.

  Claiborne is recovering from surgery on his left wrist in March and won't be ready to make his debut until training camp in late July, according to a report on DallasCowboys.com.

Free agent tight end Dallas Clark is most likely to sign with the Tampa Bay Bucs, as various Monday reports indicated in the wake of Kellen Winslow's announcement that he has been apprised to remain away from the team's OTA sessions because he no longer fits into the franchise's plans.

  But the Bucs still have some competition for Clark's services, league sources told The Sports Xchange on Monday afternoon. The other two clubs Clark has visited with in recent weeks, New England and Kansas City, have remained in contact with him. It is not clear if the Pats or Chiefs have tendered formal contract proposals to Clark, but they have retained a dialogue with the nine-year veteran and his representatives.

  A resolution of the three-pronged pursuit of the former Indianapolis star probably will come in the next day or two, most likely with him ending up with Tampa Bay, where he recently visited with coaches and team officials. But it appears that Clark, released by the Colts in March, has some options and at least a modicum of leverage in negotiations.

  Interest in the onetime Pro Bowl tight end essentially debunks a recent report that he might never play again because of injuries. Last month, agent Neil Cornrich told The Sports Xchange that he “would be surprised” and that “it would be news to (Clark)” if the report was accurate.

  Clark, who will be 33 next month, has started only 16 games (17 appearances) the past two seasons because of wrist and fibula injuries. For his career, he has 427 catches for 4,887 yards and 46 touchdowns. In 2010, his last healthy season and the only year in his career in which he started all 16 games, Clark had 100 catches.

  If the Bucs trade or release Winslow, whose absence from early OTA sessions were said to have angered rookie coach Greg Schiano, the team would clearly need a tight end with the kind of receiving ability Clark has demonstrated in his career.

  There are six other tight ends on the current Tampa Bay roster, in addition to Winslow, and none has more than a dozen career receptions. In fact, the six tight ends, two of whom are rookies, total only 19 receptions among them. Acquired from Cleveland in a 2009 trade, Winslow averaged 72.6 catches in his three seasons with the Bucs, and led the club in receptions each of the past three years.

  Clark has generally been a “flexed” tight end much of his career, and the former Colts first-round choice was often aligned in the slot, or flanked as a wide receiver because of the matchup problems he created for secondaries. Because he is not regarded as a strong blocker, Clark might not be a perfect fit for the physical, run-first philosophy Schiano has espoused, but would provide a presence in the middle of the field for the passing game.

  Even if the Bucs add Clark, second-year veteran Luke Stocker, a fourth-round pick in 2011 who started nine games as a rookie, could remain the starter because of his in-line blocking skills.

Free agent tight end Dallas Clark is most likely to sign with the Tampa Bay Bucs, as various Monday reports indicated in the wake of Kellen Winslow's announcement that he has been apprised to remain away from the team's OTA sessions because he no longer fits into the franchise's plans.

  But the Bucs still have some competition for Clark's services, league sources told The Sports Xchange on Monday afternoon. The other two clubs Clark has visited with in recent weeks, New England and Kansas City, have remained in contact with him. It is not clear if the Pats or Chiefs have tendered formal contract proposals to Clark, but they have retained a dialogue with the nine-year veteran and his representatives.

  A resolution of the three-pronged pursuit of the former Indianapolis star probably will come in the next day or two, most likely with him ending up with Tampa Bay, where he recently visited with coaches and team officials. But it appears that Clark, released by the Colts in March, has some options and at least a modicum of leverage in negotiations.

  Interest in the onetime Pro Bowl tight end essentially debunks a recent report that he might never play again because of injuries. Last month, agent Neil Cornrich told The Sports Xchange that he “would be surprised” and that “it would be news to (Clark)” if the report was accurate.

  Clark, who will be 33 next month, has started only 16 games (17 appearances) the past two seasons because of wrist and fibula injuries. For his career, he has 427 catches for 4,887 yards and 46 touchdowns. In 2010, his last healthy season and the only year in his career in which he started all 16 games, Clark had 100 catches.

  If the Bucs trade or release Winslow, whose absence from early OTA sessions were said to have angered rookie coach Greg Schiano, the team would clearly need a tight end with the kind of receiving ability Clark has demonstrated in his career.

  There are six other tight ends on the current Tampa Bay roster, in addition to Winslow, and none has more than a dozen career receptions. In fact, the six tight ends, two of whom are rookies, total only 19 receptions among them. Acquired from Cleveland in a 2009 trade, Winslow averaged 72.6 catches in his three seasons with the Bucs, and led the club in receptions each of the past three years.

  Clark has generally been a “flexed” tight end much of his career, and the former Colts first-round choice was often aligned in the slot, or flanked as a wide receiver because of the matchup problems he created for secondaries. Because he is not regarded as a strong blocker, Clark might not be a perfect fit for the physical, run-first philosophy Schiano has espoused, but would provide a presence in the middle of the field for the passing game.

  Even if the Bucs add Clark, second-year veteran Luke Stocker, a fourth-round pick in 2011 who started nine games as a rookie, could remain the starter because of his in-line blocking skills.

Peyton Manning was back on the field Monday and looked like his old self.

  A large media contingent turned out for the Denver Broncos' first OTA session and the 36-year-old quarterback appeared to the throw the ball with authority.

  "It; felt good to be out there," Manning said. "I; haven't really been out there like this for a year and a half. It's a day I've been waiting on for a long time.

  "I;'ve always believed you develop your timing for the passing game in the offseason. You can't just show up in September and expect to be on the same page. Offseason workouts, it's a great time to make an impression on the coaches. Coaches are always evaluating."

  Manning said his recovery from neck surgery last year is still a work in progress.

  "I; try to get better every day," he said. "That;'s my goal. I really need to use this time. I do think there's a difference when you are on the field, in helmets, going up against the defense. Up until now we haven't been able to go against a defense, so this will be great work for me."

  Coach John Fox and most of Manning's teammates were impressed with him Monday -- but continued to praise his ability to perform game-related tasks away the field.

  “We've had the opportunity to see him the past few weeks in Phase Two (workouts), and he does have great command. He understands the game,” Fox said. “As much as he's accomplished on the field, the things he does off the field in a leadership role is tremendous.”

  Veteran cornerback Champ Bailey said he's looking forward to finally taking the field with Manning -- not against him. Bailey said receivers were running faster, effort was more constant and consistent throughout Monday's workout.

  There was no physical indication that Manning gathered rust during his season on the sideline.

  “Absolutely not. It's not live, but from what I see right now, the guy hasn't missed a beat,” Bailey said. “I knew it just watching him before the OTAs started that he was going to look good this week.”

Raiders linebacker Rolando McClain was on the field with teammates during Monday's organized team activities.

  McClain was convicted of assault Thursday in Decatur, Ala., but has appealed the ruling. He could be punished as part of the NFL's off-field conduct policy, but the league is likely to allow the legal process to run its course first.

  McClain is also facing a civil lawsuit. He was sentenced 180 days in jail but appealed to the circuit court for a jury trial. His attorney, Harvey Steinberg, said the verdict was “meaningless.”

  The alleged incident in which McClain's co-defendant has already entered a guilty plea and agreed to testify against McClain took place Nov. 30, 2011. McClain was away from the team to attend his grandfather's funeral.

  The Raiders don't have much depth at inside linebacker. Travis Goethel, a sixth-round pick in 2010, and Nathan Stupar, a seventh-round selection in April, are likely to see more reps this summer to prepare for McClain's potential absence.

New York Jets nose tackle Kendrick Ellis was sentenced on Monday to 179 days in prison, with 89 days suspended, for misdemeanor assault and battery, ESPNNewYork.com reported.

  The sentence, which was announced in Hampton, Va., includes two years of supervised probation.  However, Ellis, who is from Jamaica and is not a U.S. citizen, will not be deported, which could have happened had he been convicted of a felony.

  Ellis will serve 45 days with good behavior, his attorney, Timothy Clancy, told ESPNNewYork.com.

  Ellis won't miss any OTAs or the Jets' minicamp. The Jets report for training camp July 26, so he will miss a few days of training camp.

  Ellis could still be subject to penalties by the NFL based on the league's personal-conduct policy.

Last week, Ellis had reached a plea agreement to accept a lesser charge. He will report to the city jail on June 15. 

  Ellis was a student at Hampton University in 2010 when he was arrested and charged with malicious wounding, a felony that could carry a sentence of up to 20 years in jail.

    Ellis was involved in a fight on April, 10, 2010, when he assaulted a Hampton student on the Hampton campus. Ellis said he was defending his girlfriend.

  He also faces a $3 million civil suit last April by the victim, Dennis Eley.

Dolphins owner Stephen Ross told NFL Network that he expects veteran incumbent Matt Moore to start at quarterback in the regular-season opener.

  That might come as an upset to some, considering Ross voiced his support for Ryan Tannehill to be drafted in the first round.

  “I don't think they're going to rush (Ryan Tannehill) into anything,” Ross said. “He's going to have to win the starting job. I think Matt Moore will probably be the starter, and I wish him the best.”

  But Ross said he wants a franchise quarterback, and if that turns out to be Moore, so be it. Ross tempered expectations for Tannehill, drafted eighth overall in April, last weekend. He told the Palm Beach Post the Dolphins wanted Tannehill to be brought along only at the pace the rookie could handle.

  While Tannehill began the offseason with a slight edge over Moore and David Garrard in terms of his grasp of the Dolphins' offense because it's very similar to the one employed at Texas A&M, where he played for current Dolphins coordinator Mike Sherman.

Rookie defensive tackle Derek Wolfe and the Denver Broncos agreed to terms Monday on a four-year, $5.2 million contract.

  The deal included $3.2 million worth of guarantees for the team's No. 36 overall pick in the second round from Cincinnati, the Denver Post reported.

  “It's a relief to get it done,” Wolfe said.

  Wolfe was not on the field for the team's workout Monday because classes are still in session at Cincinnati. Rules stipulate a player cannot participate until his college class graduates.

  He will be able to join the team for its June 12-14 minicamp.

Not since 2003, when the New York Giants' Michael Strahan registered 18.5 quarterback takedowns, has a defender who played predominantly on the strong side led the NFL in sacks.

  But a Sunday report from old friend Dan Pompei of the National Football Post, indicating that Mario Williams has requested to play left end with his new team, the Buffalo Bills, reminded of the trending reality that pass-rushers are lining up all over the place anymore.

  Including on the left side.

  “Things have changed a little bit (in that regard),” agreed Denver coach John Fox. “The rush doesn't always come from the right side, like it used to. People are getting lots of pressure anymore from the (left) side as well.”

  Fox should know. His prize rookie, Von Miller, played primarily on the strong side, rushing generally from the left edge of the defense, in 2011.

  The league's reigning defensive rookie of the year, Aldon Smith of San Francisco produced some of his 14 sacks in '11 from the left side. Clay Matthews has had most of his 29.5 sacks in three seasons from the left side. Philadelphia left end Jason Babin collected 18 sacks season, and he has 30.5 with the Eagles in 2011 and with Tennessee in 2010, while rushing from the left side.

  Robert Mathis of Indianapolis has made four Pro Bowl appearances despite playing nine seasons on the left side, posted the vast majority of his 83.5 career sacks and 39 forced fumbles from the left, and this spring signed a contract extension for four seasons and $36 million. Chris Long of St. Louis plays the left side, and generated 13 sacks last season in a breakout performance. Perhaps most notable is that the second-leading sacker in NFL history, the late Reggie White, played most of his career on the left side.

  Coordinators traditionally have aligned their premier pass rushers on the right side of the defense, and that's largely still the case, but not always. The rationale used to be that the strong side (left) end had to be a power guy, a bulkier player who would principally anchor against the run, with only moderate emphasis on pressuring the pocket. That model, however, has changed a bit in recent years.

  Granted, Mathis has benefitted some from having one of the league's premier pass rushers, Dwight Freeney, drawing considerable attention in opposition protection schemes for his entire career. And there were plenty of occasions where the Giants would sink Strahan inside on third down, and White frequently did the same, to create a speed mismatch against slower guards. But both were terrific strong side rushers in their primary roles. Very early in his career, Williams manned the left side, his college position, for the Houston Texans, and he apparently prefers to return to those roots, with new teammates Mark Anderson and Shawne Merriman attacking the pocket from the right.

  “You can get good matchups on the (left) side as well,” Babin acknowledged, “and (coaches) are taking advantage of that.”

  They are also taking advantage of the talent available to them. It was always difficult to find 290- or 300-pound ends like Kevin Carter to anchor against the run. With the preponderance of “spread” formations at the college level, the task has become even more difficult for 4-3 teams. Facing “spread” looks, college defensive coordinators have taken to countering with quicker, lighter ends. The two pure 4-3 teams in the NFL whose invested first-round choices last month on defensive end selected guys who both weigh 260 pounds or less.

  And there is this factor as well: While offenses have begun to counter with right tackles who possess improved protection ability, that side of the ball has been slow to catch up to the trend, and the emphasis is still on power blockers on the right. That allows quicker left defensive ends some advantage in rushing the quarterback. And in a league that is so much about the pass now, compressing the pocket from all sides has become a priority.

  The stated preference of Williams to line up on the left side might be because he is, reportedly, more comfortable at his college position. But the six-year veteran might also realize it's suddenly become more fashionable to rush from the left side, as well.

Defensive tackle Kheeston Randall, a seventh-round pick out of Texas, signed with the Dolphins. Terms were not disclosed.

  A three-year starter for the Longhorns, he played in 47 games with 35 starts. Randall was credited with 98 tackles (49 solo), four sacks (31 yards) and 21.0 tackles for loss (66 yards). He also registered one forced fumble, deflected six passes and blocked two kicks.

Texans wide receiver Andre Johnson joined quarterback Matt Schaub as a spectator as offseason team activities began on Monday.

  Johnson said he had a minor arthroscopic procedure on his left knee and should be ready to fully participate in training camp in July.

  Schaub was scheduled to be a spectator. Coach Gary Kubiak said last week he would be extra cautious with Schaub, who is recovered from right foot surgery.

  The Texans opted not to expose Schaub to full-team workouts and a potential freak incident that could lead to re-injury of his foot. The original injury was anything but typical -- Schaub was driving through the line of scrimmage on a quarterback sneak.

Redskins coach Mike Shanahan got so close to the action at Monday's practice that he became part of it and was planted by rookie defensive back Brandyn Thompson.

  Shanahan remained on the ground for several minutes and the Redskins said he was fine but “woozy” after the incident and would unavailable to meet with media as planned.

  “It was pretty bad looking,” linebacker London Fletcher said. “Definitely a very scary feeling for awhile.”

  Rookie quarterback Robert Griffin III showed his loose personality when asked about Shanahan being knocked over in the wide receiver-cornerback drill.

  “He showed some toughness,” Griffin said. “That's a benchmark of our team.”

The Lions welcomed running backs Mikel Leshoure and Jahvid Best for the starts of organized team activities at their Allen Park facility on Monday.

  The bigger story was the absence of wide receiver Titus Young, who was reportedly held out because of a fight last week with free safety Louis Delmas. The incident was first reported by Booth Newspapers. Young caught 48 passes for 607 yards and six touchdowns as a rookie in 2011.

  Leshoure, a second-round pick in 2011, was on the field in full capacity for the first time since rupturing his Achillies in training camp last August.

  He's expected to become a key component in the offense. Jahvid Best, who missed the final 10 games last season recovering from what is believed to be his third concussion since his junior season at California, was also a participant in the on-field workout. However, Best is not yet cleared for contact.

  Perhaps a bigger surprise at the workout was the unbridled participation of rookie wide receiver Ryan Broyles, who was seen moving with ease through individual drills and running routes.

  Broyles tore multiple knee ligaments to end his senior season at Oklahoma on Nov. 5 and said after the draft he wasn't sure what his availability would be entering training camp in late July.

The Tennessee Titans have reached a contract agreement with rookie linebacker Zach Brown.

  Brown, the team's second-round pick, had 105 tackles, three interceptions and 5.5 sacks for North Carolina last season.

  Four of the Titans' seven draft picks from the draft in April have now agreed to terms.

Some NFL players have shunned the use of leg pads, but they may no longer have that option.

  Thigh and knee coverings could become mandatory after a scheduled vote on a proposal Tuesday by NFL owners that would require all players to use a complete set of pads for their protection, Fox Sports reported.

  Safety continues to be a concern in the NFL and some believe that covering the thighs and knees will cut down on bruising and other potential injuries.

  Skill-position players such as receivers and defensive backs have eschewed the leg pads because they believe they are balky and slow them down on the field.

First-round draft pick Morris Claiborne was hoping he could be on the field for the Dallas Cowboys' June minicamp, but that apparently won't happen.

  Claiborne is recovering from surgery on his left wrist in March and won't be ready to make his debut until training camp in late July, according to a report on DallasCowboys.com.

  The cornerback from LSU suffered the injury last fall in a regular-season game against Alabama and didn't undergo surgery until March. In early May, pins were removed from the wrist and Claiborne has been wearing a soft cast.

  The original estimate for his return was training camp, but Claiborne said last week that he was optimistic about his chances to speed up the recovery process and participate in minicamp next month.

Tampa Bay tight end Kellen Winslow's absence from offseason team activities was more than suspicious. On Monday, he shed light on the matter, telling Sirius XM NFL Radio that the coaching staff has informed him the team is going in another direction.

  Winslow could be traded or released by the Buccaneers to save approximately $5.25 million of salary cap space. His receiving production is expected to be filled by wide receiver Vincent Jackson, who signed a $55.5 million deal as a free agent in March.

  The Buccaneers could turn the starting tight end job over to 2011 fourth-round pick Luke Stocker while grooming 2012 seventh-rounder Drake Dunsmore to take over. Dunsmore's versatility as a fullback-H-back-tight end hybrid with excellent hands has drawn numerous positive reviews from coach Greg Schiano. Tampa Bay also added Chase Coffman, a veteran receiving tight end from Missouri who never found his niche with the Bengals.

  Winslow turns 29 next month. He was acquired in a trade from the Browns in Feb. 2009 and signed the richest deal in NFL history for the position at the time -- six year, $36.1 million with $20.1 million guaranteed.

  He was the sixth overall pick in the 2004 draft and came back from a serious knee injury suffered in a motorcyle accident in 2005.

Tampa Bay tight end Kellen Winslow's absence from offseason team activities was more than suspicious. On Monday, he shed light on the matter, telling Sirius XM NFL Radio that the coaching staff has informed him the team is going in another direction.

  Winslow could be traded or released by the Buccaneers to save approximately $5.25 million of salary cap space. His receiving production is expected to be filled by wide receiver Vincent Jackson, who signed a $55.5 million deal as a free agent in March.

  The Buccaneers worked out former Colts tight end Dallas Clark last week. If they don't sign Clark, who is coming off of two injury-shortened seasons, they'll roll the dice with one of many unproven options on the roster. It's likely 2011 fourth-round pick Luke Stocker would get first consideration but 2012 seventh-rounder Drake Dunsmore might be ready take over sooner rather than later.

  Dunsmore's versatility as a fullback-H-back-tight end hybrid with excellent hands has drawn numerous positive reviews from coach Greg Schiano. Tampa Bay also added Chase Coffman, a veteran receiving tight end from Missouri who never found his niche with the Bengals.

  Winslow turns 29 next month. He was acquired in a trade from the Browns in Feb. 2009 and signed the richest deal in NFL history for the position at the time -- six year, $36.1 million with $20.1 million guaranteed.

  He was the sixth overall pick in the 2004 draft and came back from a serious knee injury suffered in a motorcyle accident in 2005.

The Eagles signed third-round pick Nick Foles to a four-year deal.

  Foles broke several of Drew Brees' high school passing records at Westlake High School near Austin, Texas, and left Arizona as the Wildcats' all-time leader in yards (10,011), touchdowns (67), attempts (1,369) and completions (933).

  Foles is one of five quarterbacks on the Eagles' offseason roster and enters training camp behind Michael Vick and Mike Kafka in competition with undrafted rookie Jacory Harris and veteran Trent Edwards for the third quarterback spot.

Cincinnati Bengals linebacker Dontay Moch reportedly has been suspended by the NFL for using a banned substance.

  Pending an appeal, Moch will have to sit four games, according to CBSSports.com.

  Moch was taken in the second round last year after running the fastest 40 time among linebackers and lineman. However, he missed all of his rookie season with a broken metatarsal bone.

  The Chandler, Ariz., native was the 66th overall selection after playing at Nevada.

  --- The Super Bowl XXV ring of pro football Hall of Fame linebacker Lawrence Taylor was sold in an online auction Sunday for $230,401.

  Online auctioneer SCP Auctions did not reveal the name and location of the winning bidder. The auction was won with the 30th bid.

  The ring was given by Taylor to his son, Lawrence Taylor Jr. FoxSports reported last week that Taylor's agent, Mark Lepselter, said the linebacker did not know his son had put the ring up for auction.

  The ring auction gained more attention Friday when current Giants lineman Osi Umenyiora said he would buy the ring if his Twitter account reached 500,000 followers. However, as of Sunday morning his account was just above 54,000 followers.

  ---The NFL will pursue legal action against the maker of the “My Jesus” t-shirt if the company continues to produce the shirts, PorFootballTalk.com reported.

  CubbyTees.com has been selling green t-shirt that reads “My Jesus,” a reference to the Christian faith of Jets quarterback Tim Tebow.

The Super Bowl XXV ring of pro football Hall of Fame linebacker Lawrence Taylor was sold in an online auction Sunday for $230,401.

  Online auctioneer SCP Auctions did not reveal the name and location of the winning bidder. The auction was won with the 30th bid.

  The ring was given by Taylor to his son, Lawrence Taylor Jr. FoxSports reported last week that Taylor's agent, Mark Lepselter, said the linebacker did not know his son had put the ring up for auction. However, the auction listing said the elder Taylor fine with the decision.

  The ring auction gained more attention Friday when current Giants lineman Osi Umenyiora said he would buy the ring if his Twitter account reached 500,000 followers. However, as of Sunday morning his account was just above 54,000 followers.

Cincinnati Bengals linebacker Dontay Moch reportedly has been suspended by the NFL for using a banned substance.

  Pending an appeal, Moch will have to sit four games, according to CBSSports.com.

  Moch was taken in the second round last year after running the fastest 40 time among linebackers and lineman. However, he missed all of his rookie season with a broken metatarsal bone.

  The Chandler, Ariz., native was the 66th overall selection after playing at Nevada.

New England Patriots wide receiver Wes Welker on Saturday took back comments he made two days before that his contract negotiations had “gotten worse.”

  Welker made the comments to the Boston Herald on Thursday, but told ESPN Boston that he used the wrong words to describe his contract situation.

  “That was probably a bad choice of words, saying they've gotten worse,” Welker said Saturday. “They've pretty much -- they've stayed the same. I'm franchised for the year and I'm completely happy with that. I say the same because it's a franchise tender. It was a bad choice of words because it's still one year, nine and a half (million dollars). It's the same. It's the same contract.”

  A team source told the Boston Globe on Friday that Welker's initial comments were not appreciated by the team.

  Welker told reporters at his football clinic on Saturday that he is content with his situation with the team and looks forward to the season.

  “I'm not frustrated whatsoever,” he said. “I know the words that came out maybe seemed that way. But I'm not frustrated at all. I'm making five times more than I did last year. There's no frustration here.”

  Welker also used the term “#leapoffaith” on Twitter during the week to describe his decision to sign the franchise tender. He backed off from that tweet on Saturday.

  “Probably not the wisest choice of words,” he said. “But sometimes you react on emotion every once in a while, and it gets the best of you.”

  Welker said he does not think this will be his last season in New England. He plans to be at the team's organized team activities on Monday.

  He would not answer questions about how his contracts talks are going.

  “I'll keep that between (my agent) and the Patriots and whatever they do,” Welker said. “For me, (I) just stay out of it as much as I can and just focus on what I can do to help the team win.”

Former NFL offensive lineman Lomas Brown, an ESPN analyst, believes more than half of NFL players smoke marijuana.

  Brown made his claim to the Detroit News on Friday.

  He said that three marijuana-related arrests of Detroit Lions players this offseason are just examples of what is a widespread problem in the league.

  “I just don't think you'll be able to curb this,” Brown told the newspaper.

  Brown said the problem was much worse when he joined the NFL in 1985, when he believes perhaps 90 percent of players smoked marijuana.

  A CBS Sports report in April found that four out of 10 draft-eligible players this year failed at least one drug test at school and two of 10 failed more than once.

  About 70 percent of prospects at the draft combine admitted to using marijuana, according to an ESPN report.

  In 2009, roughly one-fourth of all football players admitted to marijuana use over the past year, which was the highest of any sport surveyed, in an NCAA report.

The New Orleans Saints promised that a long-term contract for quarterback Drew Brees will get done.

  Owner Tom Benson told WWL-TV on Friday that he guarantees a multi-year deal will be offered to the franchised quarterback. Brees showed frustration with Saints management Wednesday that talks about a new deal have not progressed, according to NFL.com. The Saints placed a $16.371 million “exclusive” franchise tag on the quarterback in March.

  Brees is coming off a season in which he set the single-season NFL record with 5,476 yards and led the league with 46 touchdown passes. Since signing with the Saints as a free agent in 2006, Brees has passed for 28,394 yards with 201 touchdowns and 93 interceptions. The five-time Pro Bowler led the Saints to their only Super Bowl title in the 2009 season.

  The Saints have until July 15 to reach a multi-year contract extension with Brees.

The Green Bay Packers will wait at least another season to hold a ceremony to retire Brett Favre's No. 4.

  Packers president Mark Murphy said the team will wait “probably in a year or two,” according to the Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel.

Favre led the Packers to two Super Bowl appearances and one title in 16 seasons before ending his career with stops with the New York Jets and the Minnesota Vikings.

  “Yes, he deserves that for what he did as a Packer,” said Murphy. “Probably in a year or two. We want to do it at a time that's meaningful to him.”

--League owners convene a one-day meeting in Atlanta next Tuesday.

  While the agenda isn't exactly loaded with sexy stuff, and much of the unofficial discussion in the corridors of the Buckhead hotel where the league will meet will revolve around safety topics and the Jonathan Vilma defamation lawsuit against Commissioner Roger Goodell, there are some roster-related issues that were tabled in March, and figure to be addressed.

  They include: allowing teams to designate one injured reserve player, who was on the roster through Week 1, to return to action after eight weeks, instead of sitting out the entire season; a roster exemption for a player suffering from a concussion; and moving the trade deadline back by two weeks, from the Tuesday following the sixth week of play until after Week 8.

  One owner told The Sports Xchange that he feels all three changes have a “decent shot” at being approved, particularly the first two.

--If the Seattle Seahawks intend to install a passing game package that addresses the height issues of rookie quarterback Russell Wilson, who measured only 5-feet-10 5/8 at the combine in February, it wasn't evident at the team's rookie camp last weekend.

  Then again, it probably wouldn't be, since the rookie camp is basically designed as an orientation-type session, in which first-year players can get their feet on the ground.

  “The basics first,” quarterback coach Carl Smith acknowledged.

  During the two-hour sessions with helmets only (by comparison, Seattle veterans have only been on the field for roughly 45 minutes-1 hour so far), perhaps the lone concession to Wilson's size was that he might have worked out of the shotgun a little more than normal.

  But there is a suspicion among some Seahawks' veterans that for Wilson to be successful -- and there is considerable skepticism that the third-round draft choice can legitimately challenge Tarvaris Jackson or Matt Flynn for the No. 1 job, as coach Pete Carroll insisted -- offensive coordinator Darrell Bevell will have to implement a package that gets the former North Carolina State/Wisconsin star out of the traditional pocket.

  Seattle officials constantly point to Wilson's over-the-top delivery and high release point, and his strong arm, but those things may not be sufficient for him to mount a march to the starting job.

  Or, to actually contend for it.

  Wilson overcame a lot of odds in his college career, but his height had him off the draft boards of a few teams last month, and some of Carroll's colleagues in the NFL privately question using a third-round pick on a prospect who, competitiveness aside, was graded by some as just a career No. 3 guy.

--Think the rookie wage scale, which formally “slots” players into salary cap values and leaves little or no wiggle room for negotiations, isn't working?

  According to NFL spokesman Greg Aiello, there were 147 draft choices who had reached contract accords by Thursday night.

  That's more than twice as many as the total number of drafted players who had signed by the end of May in the previous seven years.

  Of course, because of the lockout last year, no rookie deals had been completed by the end of May.

  Eight franchises had already signed their entire draft classes.

--The five-year, $45 million extension signed by Philadelphia tailback LeSean McCoy on Thursday -- with the raw numbers provided by “a league source” otherwise known as agent Drew Rosenhaus, seeming to check out as accurate -- merited considerable attention.

  And deservedly so.

  But the megadeal, hinted at earlier in the week by Eagles' coach Andy Reid, also cast some light on the predicament of teams and running backs. McCoy won't be 24 until July, and, while he's been a workhorse for the Eagles the past two seasons, averaging 303.0 “touches” in that stretch, there's still some tread on the tires.

  Philadelphia, where team president Joe Banner relies on an almost actuarial-type model for assessing what a player might have left in the tank, clearly feels confident McCoy has several productive years remaining.

  Still, the bet here is that McCoy's deal will be restructured as least once between now and its end-year, 2017.

  Teams are reluctant to invest heavily in the running back position, based much on age -- although Carolina signed DeAngelo Williams to a fat deal last year at age 28 -- and it will be interesting to see how the contract affects negotiations between the Chicago Bears and “Matt Forte and the Baltimore Ravens and Ray Rice, both “franchised” backs.

  Forte will be 27 in December and Rice turned 25 in January. Sources in both the Rice and Forte camps acknowledged on Thursday night that they are closely scrutinizing the McCoy contract.

  Forte has averaged 20.6 “touches” per game over the course of his four-year career, with all 60 games as a starter. Rice has averaged 22.3 “touches” in his 49 career starts, with an average of 341.3 the past three seasons.

  McCoy has averaged 20.7 “touches” in his 32 career starts. Forte was on pace for 340 “touches” in 2012, but an injury limited him to 12 appearances.

--Unlike the Philadelphia Eagles, who reportedly have decided to dock offensive tackle Jason Peters for his offseason Achilles ruptures -- technically regarded as non-football injuries -- Baltimore officials have made no decision about adjusting the salary of linebacker Terrell Suggs, who is due a salary of $4.9 million and roster bonus of $4.6 million for 2012.

  There have been some discussions about the injury and salary, sources from both sides allow, but the Ravens may wait a while to gauge the rehabilitation progress of the league's reigning defensive player of the year before determining how to handle his case.

  Suggs has insisted he will return at some point in the season, and the Baltimore medical staff is still assessing the situation.

  Also complicating the matter is that Suggs and his new agent, Joel Segal, are hoping to parlay the defensive player of the year award into a contract extension beyond the current deal, which runs through 2014. A resolution isn't expected soon.

--The presence alone of attorney Peter Ginsberg, who represented Michael Vick and tied the NFL in knots when he represented suspended Minnesota defensive tackles Pat Williams and Kevin Williams, makes Jonathan Vilma's defamation lawsuit against NFL commissioner Roger Goodell more than just a nuisance case.

  The veteran Ginsberg knows his way around a courtroom and has in the past parsed the nuances of the league's collective bargaining agreement.

  But most legal experts concur that the New Orleans linebacker faces a difficult task in establishing that Goodell acted with intention and malice, and that the ponderous burden makes it almost impossible for him to prevail.

  What Vilma may do is force the league to reveal some or all of its evidence, including testimony from past or current teammates and coaches, and that could make for an uncomfortable situation. How difficult a chore do Ginsberg and Vilma face?

  The Sports Xchange has learned that at least one player and one of the suspended New Orleans executives considered similar actions but backed off when advised of the burden confronting them.

  They may change their minds, The Sports Xchange was told, but understand that the ramifications will be dicey.

--The Jets agreed to a one-year, $1.4 million deal with veteran safety Yeremiah Bell.

  He weighed a similar offer from the Eagles and visited the Chiefs last week.

  Bell provides veteran insurance behind LaRon Landry, who also signed a one-year deal with the Jets on March 19 but hasn't been a limited participant in offseason workouts because of a lingering Achilles injury that cost him 15 total games over the past two seasons.

  Bell was released by the Dolphins on the same day Landry signed with the Jets in a cap-saving move that wiped $4.3 million off the books for Miami. Bell led the team with 107 tackles last season and is recognized as a vocal leader. The former sixth-round pick was a consistent, reliable performer for the Dolphins, posting four consecutive 100-tackle seasons from 2008-11.

--Cordy Glenn signed with the Bills, giving the team eight of its nine 2012 draft picks under contract.

  Glenn played guard and tackle at Georgia, starting 50 games of the 53 in which he played. The Bills are planning to try him at tackle, where they haven't been able to replace Jason Peters since trading him to Philadelphia in 2009.

  At 6-6, 345 pounds, scouts are stunned by Glenn's light feet and athletic ability. He doesn't always play to his elite skill level, but the Bills view him as a potentially elite blocker in the NFL based on his combination of height, bulk, long arms and footwork.

  Chris Hairston, a fourth-round pick from Clemson in 2011 with similar size -- 6-6, 341 -- is currently listed first on the depth chart at left tackle. General manager Buddy Nix endorsed Hairston as more than capable before the draft, and Hairston started seven games last season.

  “I'm going to make this clear, we think Chris Hairston can play left tackle for us and win,” Nix said. “... we run a lot of empty sets with five blockers, if they bring six (quarterback Ryan Fitzpatrick) better get it out quick or he's going to get hit in the mouth.

  “In this offense he's got to get it out quick. But Chris Hairston, he may not be the prettiest foot athlete but he's got so much length that he can protect the back side. We feel like he can do that.

  Buffalo's quick-read passing attack should also be a good fit for Glenn. He's out of his stance on time and quarterback Ryan Fitzpatrick's speedy delivery helped him avoid sacks -- just 22 in 569 attempts last season and 24 (in 441 attempts) in 2010.

  Third-round pick T.J. Graham is the Bills' lone unsigned draft pick.

--Cornerback Dre Kirkpatrick, the 17th overall pick in the 2012 draft by the Bengals, signed a four-year deal Friday.

  At 6-2, 186, Kirkpatrick has the size, arm length and experience to become a rookie start in defensive coordinator Mike Zimmer's press-cover scheme.

  “He has quick feet. He moves his feet laterally pretty well,” Zimmer said. He does a great job in bump-and-run. The taller corners have an advantage when they're going down the field, because the ball has to go over the top of their outstretched arms.”  Kirkpatrick was an All-American as a junior at Alabama. He'll compete with Nate Clements and Terence Newman for a starting role. Leon Hall, coming back from a ruptured Achilles, is likely to start if he remains ahead of schedule in his recovery.

--The Indianapolis Colts claimed offensive guard Zane Taylor off waivers from the Philadelphia Eagles and waived offensive guard Matt Murphy on Friday.

  Taylor was originally signed as an undrafted free agent by the New York Jets in 2011. He also spent time in camp with the New York Jets, and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers and Eagles practice squads that year.

  Taylor was a three-time All-Mountain West Conference selection as an offensive lineman at Utah and earned first-team honors as a senior. He started 38 games at center over his last three seasons. Taylor also earned academic all-conference honors on four occasions.

  Murphy was signed to the Colts practice squad early in the 2011 season, where he remained for the rest of the year.

--The New York Jets signed guard Terrence Campbell. The 6-foot-3, 296-pounder joins the team as an undrafted free agent after starting 25-of-38 games at South Carolina.

  Campbell, who was originally recruited as a defensive lineman, switched to the offensive line prior to his first game in college. Prior to college, he earned first-team all-county recognition as a defensive end in high school.

The New York Jets signed guard Terrence Campbell. The 6-foot-3, 296-pounder joins the team as an undrafted free agent after starting 25-of-38 games at South Carolina.

  Campbell, who was originally recruited as a defensive lineman, switched to the offensive line prior to his first game in college. Prior to college, he earned first-team all-county recognition as a defensive end in high school.

The Indianapolis Colts claimed offensive guard Zane Taylor off waivers from the Philadelphia Eagles and waived offensive guard Matt Murphy on Friday.

  Taylor was originally signed as an undrafted free agent by the New York Jets in 2011. He also spent time in camp with the New York Jets, and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers and Eagles practice squads that year.

  Taylor was a three-time All-Mountain West Conference selection as an offensive lineman at Utah and earned first-team honors as a senior. He started 38 games at center over his last three seasons. Taylor also earned academic all-conference honors on four occasions.

  Murphy was signed to the Colts practice squad early in the 2011 season, where he remained for the rest of the year.

With quarterback Ben Roethlisberger now 30, and the team's most valuable player sacked an average of 43.5 times over the last six seasons -- including 40 or more sacks in all but one of those campaigns, and coming off an ankle injury last year -- Pittsburgh has drastically retooled its blocking unit.

  It's not often that a perennial playoff team like the Pittsburgh Steelers so dramatically revamps its offensive line in such a short period of time. But, then again, it's not often that an annual postseason contender has such a dire area of need yet is able to get by with an obviously deficient unit.

  Coach Mike Tomlin and general manager Kevin Colbert contend the remaking of the line wasn't necessarily intentional, and that circumstances and the club's draft board essentially dictated some of the moves since 2010. But it's notable that, in the past three drafts, the Steelers have selected four players now projected to start in 2012. And it's likewise worth mentioning that no other playoff team from 2011 is expected to have more than two line changes this season, and that 10 clubs will have either one or zero alterations.

  “Whether it was needed or not, there's been a big shuffle,” said two-time Pro Bowl center Maurkice Pouncey, a first-round pick in 2010. “Hopefully, we can all come together pretty quickly.”

  Quickly also describes the manner in which the club has addressed its line.

  The latest move came this week with the revelation that former right tackle Willie Colon, who has played just one game the past two seasons because of injuries, will switch to left guard. While Colon was considered the team's best lineman before his injuries curtailed the 2010 and 2011 campaigns, there was always discussion of him moving to guard, and the switch essentially puts the rest of the ducks in a row.

  Two rookies, first-rounder David DeCastro and No. 2 pick Mike Adams, are slated to start at right guard and left tackle respectively. The choice of Adams, who some felt had first-round credentials before he tested positive for marijuana at the combine, negates the move of second-year right tackle Marcus Gilbert to the left side. And it means Pittsburgh will start a quintet in which four of the players are 24 or younger. Only Colon, 29, is older.

  The shuffle also means that Pittsburgh could start a line that totals just 44 starts over the past two seasons. But in 2011, resourceful line coach Sean Kugler was forced to use a league-high 21 combinations. And while the breaking-in period could present some difficulties, the Steelers feel that in the long run the changes will be well worth it, and will better protect Roethlisberger.

  Said Colon, who seemingly has embraced the change: “If things work out, we could be good for a while.”

Around the League

  --The presence alone of attorney Peter Ginsberg, who represented Michael Vick and tied the NFL in knots when he represented suspended Minnesota defensive tackles Pat Williams and Kevin Williams, makes Jonathan Vilma's defamation lawsuit against NFL commissioner Roger Goodell more than just a nuisance case.

  The veteran Ginsberg knows his way around a courtroom and has in the past parsed the nuances of the league's collective bargaining agreement.

  But most legal experts concur that the New Orleans linebacker faces a difficult task in establishing that Goodell acted with intention and malice, and that the ponderous burden makes it almost impossible for him to prevail.

  What Vilma may do is force the league to reveal some or all of its evidence, including testimony from past or current teammates and coaches, and that could make for an uncomfortable situation. How difficult a chore do Ginsberg and Vilma face?

  The Sports Xchange has learned that at least one player and one of the suspended New Orleans executives considered similar actions but backed off when advised of the burden confronting them.

  They may change their minds, The Sports Xchange was told, but understand that the ramifications will be dicey.

  --Unlike the Philadelphia Eagles, who reportedly have decided to dock offensive tackle Jason Peters for his offseason Achilles ruptures -- technically regarded as non-football injuries -- Baltimore officials have made no decision about adjusting the salary of linebacker Terrell Suggs, who is due a salary of $4.9 million and roster bonus of $4.6 million for 2012.

  There have been some discussions about the injury and salary, sources from both sides allow, but the Ravens may wait a while to gauge the rehabilitation progress of the league's reigning defensive player of the year before determining how to handle his case.

  Suggs has insisted he will return at some point in the season, and the Baltimore medical staff is still assessing the situation.

  Also complicating the matter is that Suggs and his new agent, Joel Segal, are hoping to parlay the defensive player of the year award into a contract extension beyond the current deal, which runs through 2014. A resolution isn't expected soon.

  --The five-year, $45 million extension signed by Philadelphia tailback LeSean McCoy on Thursday -- with the raw numbers provided by “a league source” otherwise known as agent Drew Rosenhaus, seeming to check out as accurate -- merited considerable attention.

  And deservedly so.

  But the megadeal, hinted at earlier in the week by Eagles' coach Andy Reid, also cast some light on the predicament of teams and running backs. McCoy won't be 24 until July, and, while he's been a workhorse for the Eagles the past two seasons, averaging 303.0 “touches” in that stretch, there's still some tread on the tires.

  Philadelphia, where team president Joe Banner relies on an almost actuarial-type model for assessing what a player might have left in the tank, clearly feels confident McCoy has several productive years remaining.

  Still, the bet here is that McCoy's deal will be restructured as least once between now and its end-year, 2017.

  Teams are reluctant to invest heavily in the running back position, based much on age -- although Carolina signed DeAngelo Williams to a fat deal last year at age 28 -- and it will be interesting to see how the contract affects negotiations between the Chicago Bears and “Matt Forte and the Baltimore Ravens and Ray Rice, both “franchised” backs.

  Forte will be 27 in December and Rice turned 25 in January. Sources in both the Rice and Forte camps acknowledged on Thursday night that they are closely scrutinizing the McCoy contract.

  Forte has averaged 20.6 “touches” per game over the course of his four-year career, with all 60 games as a starter. Rice has averaged 22.3 “touches” in his 49 career starts, with an average of 341.3 the past three seasons.

  McCoy has averaged 20.7 “touches” in his 32 career starts. Forte was on pace for 340 “touches” in 2012, but an injury limited him to 12 appearances.

  --Veteran free agent tailbacks continue to have trouble landing jobs.

  Although New England recently added Joseph Addai, and is confident it will carve out a role for the former Indianapolis star, the pool of unrestricted free agents still includes players like Cedric Benson, Thomas Jones, Ryan Grant and Jackie Battle.

  Jones still wants to play at age 33, and Benson's representatives have been phoning around, albeit with little luck, to attempt to generate interest.

  Grant looked to have a deal close in Detroit, but it collapsed, and Battle hasn't garnered much attention since early in the signing period.

  Benson's people tried to sell the back to Oakland, as a potential backup to oft-injured Darren McFadden -- who has lost his safety net with the defection of Michael Bush to Chicago -- but with no luck so far.

  --Think the rookie wage scale, which formally “slots” players into salary cap values and leaves little or no wiggle room for negotiations, isn't working?

  According to NFL spokesman Greg Aiello, there were 147 draft choices who had reached contract accords by Thursday night.

  That's more than twice as many as the total number of drafted players who had signed by the end of May in the previous seven years.

  Of course, because of the lockout last year, no rookie deals had been completed by the end of May.

  Eight franchises had already signed their entire draft classes.

  --The details weren't available yet on Friday morning, but it will be interesting to see the breakdown of the four-year contract that first-round cornerback Dre Kirkpatrick signed with the Cincinnati Bengals early in the day.

  Prior to the Kirkpatrick deal, all six of the first-round choices in the top 19 picks had their entire deals guaranteed for skill and injury. The two first-round choices signed below the 19th slot had only the first three seasons of their contracts guaranteed.

  Early word is that Kirkpatrick, selected 17th, did not receive a guarantee for all four seasons of a contract that was expected to be worth about $8.5 million.

  --If the Seattle Seahawks intend to install a passing game package that addresses the height issues of rookie quarterback Russell Wilson, who measured only 5-feet-10 5/8 at the combine in February, it wasn't evident at the team's rookie camp last weekend.

  Then again, it probably wouldn't be, since the rookie camp is basically designed as an orientation-type session, in which first-year players can get their feet on the ground.

  “The basics first,” quarterback coach Carl Smith acknowledged.

  During the two-hour sessions with helmets only (by comparison, Seattle veterans have only been on the field for roughly 45 minutes-1 hour so far), perhaps the lone concession to Wilson's size was that he might have worked out of the shotgun a little more than normal.

  But there is a suspicion among some Seahawks' veterans that for Wilson to be successful -- and there is considerable skepticism that the third-round draft choice can legitimately challenge Tarvaris Jackson or Matt Flynn for the No. 1 job, as coach Pete Carroll insisted -- offensive coordinator Darrell Bevell will have to implement a package that gets the former North Carolina State/Wisconsin star out of the traditional pocket.

  Seattle officials constantly point to Wilson's over-the-top delivery and high release point, and his strong arm, but those things may not be sufficient for him to mount a march to the starting job.

  Or, to actually contend for it.

  Wilson overcame a lot of odds in his college career, but his height had him off the draft boards of a few teams last month, and some of Carroll's colleagues in the NFL privately question using a third-round pick on a prospect who, competitiveness aside, was graded by some as just a career No. 3 guy.

  --League owners convene a one-day meeting in Atlanta next Tuesday.

  While the agenda isn't exactly loaded with sexy stuff, and much of the unofficial discussion in the corridors of the Buckhead hotel where the league will meet will revolve around safety topics and the Jonathan Vilma defamation lawsuit against Commissioner Roger Goodell, there are some roster-related issues that were tabled in March, and figure to be addressed.

  They include: allowing teams to designate one injured reserve player, who was on the roster through Week 1, to return to action after eight weeks, instead of sitting out the entire season; a roster exemption for a player suffering from a concussion; and moving the trade deadline back by two weeks, from the Tuesday following the sixth week of play until after Week 8.

  One owner told The Sports Xchange that he feels all three changes have a “decent shot” at being approved, particularly the first two.

  Punts: Some of the discussion at Tuesday's league meeting is expected to focus on the resurrected USFL, which is being reconstituted as a “feeder” or minor league, and on how involved the NFL should be with it. Former NFL executive Jim Steeg, who once presided over Super Bowl preparations, is chairman of the USFL's board of advisors, and that could give it some entre with the NFL. ... Word is that the Jacksonville football regime isn't as enamored with the potential for a “Hard Knocks” appearance as is new Jaguars' owner Shahid Khan. ... With the Friday addition of former Miami starter Yeremiah Bell, the New York Jets further addressed a safety position that struggled in 2011. But Bell, who signed a $1.4 million deal, is the second veteran safety to sign just a one-year contract with the team, joining LaRon Landry, and the Jets may have to rebuild the position again next spring. ... Although Levi Brown struggled at left tackle for Arizona in 2011, Cardinals coaches seem content to leave him on the blind side. There was some thought the Cardinals might move Brown back to the right side, where he played the first three seasons of his career, and perhaps try fourth-round rookie Bobbie Massie on the left side. But it looks now like Massie, whom the Cards' coaches regard as a draft steal, will play the right side. ... Buffalo officials still think there is a chance that second-round offensive lineman Cordy Glenn can play left tackle, although many scouts contend that his best position is guard. ... Ravens officials regard the comments this week by safety Ed Reed, who suggested alternately that he had not fully committed to 2012 and then insisted that he wants to play several more years, as a contract play. The eight-time Pro Bowl defender is entering the final season of his contract and apparently feels his $7.2 million base salary is unsatisfactory. ... Bengals defensive coordinator Mike Zimmer feels that the Cincinnati line is one of the best young, deepest and unheralded units in the league. ... Look for Tennessee to play more man coverages in the secondary in 2012, and to increase its blitz ratio. The Titans traditionally have relied on their front four to generate pressure, but are expected to make some changes in that regard. ... Congratulations to Hall of Fame quarterback “Ace” Parker for celebrating his 100th birthday Thursday. Parker, inducted into the Canton shrine in 1972, is the only Hall of Fame member to celebrate his 100th birthday and, according to the folks at the Hall, only the fourth former NFL player in history to reach the milestone. According to the Hall, 12 Canton enshrines reached 90 years of age or better, including three current members. ... The Steelers are still in the market for some affordable veteran help on the offensive line and at linebacker, but are not likely, even with Rashard Mendenhall coming off knee surgery, to add a veteran running back. ... Russell Wilson, who was the 75th player selected last month, is the highest quarterback drafted by Seattle since the Seahawks tabbed Rick Mirer with the second overall choice in 1993. ... One more Wilson note: The Seahawks have noted several times that, while Wilson was the shortest of the 19 quarterbacks at the combine (by nearly 1 1/2 inches), he had a hand measurement of 10 1/4 inches. That was a bigger hand than 14 of the combine quarterbacks. The ability to wrap his fingers around the ball, however, might not compensate for the height deficiency. ... With the guilty verdict against Rolando McClain, in which he was sentenced to 180 days of jail, Oakland officials were said to be fishing around to see if there were any middle linebacker options, via trade or free agency, late in the week. McClain might play all or part of the season, but the Raiders are doing their due diligence, just in case.

  The last word: “I don't buy it. I'm only speaking from my personal experience, because I haven't allowed myself to buy it, and I haven't been affected. Yes, I'm aware that football is a rough sport. But instead of saying, 'Oh, I'm doomed to brain trauma,' I said, 'What can I do about it?' And I just started taking care of my body. I found people, places and things that really helped me. Again, I don't know what's going to happen to me in 10 years, but I look at the other things I've learned about, and the way I see the world. And to me, it's like, 'OK, yes.' If we're going to spend six months brutalizing our bodies, I said, 'That makes sense. (So) I'm going to spend six months taking care of my body.' I started to equip myself with tools. I started practicing yoga, and I started learning some hands-on healing stuff. I found really good chiropractors and message therapists, and I found that I was able to peel off layers of trauma on my body. I actually move better now than I did (during my playing career).” -- former NFL tailback Ricky Williams, who played 11 seasons in the league, on the recent attention afforded concussions and head trauma

Some of the discussion at Tuesday's league meeting is expected to focus on the resurrected USFL, which is being reconstituted as a “feeder” or minor league, and on how involved the NFL should be with it. Former NFL executive Jim Steeg, who once presided over Super Bowl preparations, is chairman of the USFL's board of advisors, and that could give it some entre with the NFL.

  --Word is that the Jacksonville football regime isn't as enamored with the potential for a “Hard Knocks” appearance as is new Jaguars' owner Shahid Khan.

  --With the Friday addition of former Miami starter Yeremiah Bell, the New York Jets further addressed a safety position that struggled in 2011. But Bell, who signed a $1.4 million deal, is the second veteran safety to sign just a one-year contract with the team, joining LaRon Landry, and the Jets may have to rebuild the position again next spring.

  --Although Levi Brown struggled at left tackle for Arizona in 2011, Cardinals coaches seem content to leave him on the blind side. There was some thought the Cardinals might move Brown back to the right side, where he played the first three seasons of his career, and perhaps try fourth-round rookie Bobbie Massie on the left side. But it looks now like Massie, whom the Cards' coaches regard as a draft steal, will play the right side.

  --Buffalo officials still think there is a chance that second-round offensive lineman Cordy Glenn can play left tackle, although many scouts contend that his best position is guard.

  --Ravens officials regard the comments this week by safety Ed Reed, who suggested alternately that he had not fully committed to 2012 and then insisted that he wants to play several more years, as a contract play. The eight-time Pro Bowl defender is entering the final season of his contract and apparently feels his $7.2 million base salary is unsatisfactory.

  --Bengals defensive coordinator Mike Zimmer feels that the Cincinnati line is one of the best young, deepest and unheralded units in the league.

  --Look for Tennessee to play more man coverages in the secondary in 2012, and to increase its blitz ratio. The Titans traditionally have relied on their front four to generate pressure, but are expected to make some changes in that regard.

  --Congratulations to Hall of Fame quarterback “Ace” Parker for celebrating his 100th birthday Thursday. Parker, inducted into the Canton shrine in 1972, is the only Hall of Fame member to celebrate his 100th birthday and, according to the folks at the Hall, only the fourth former NFL player in history to reach the milestone. According to the Hall, 12 Canton enshrines reached 90 years of age or better, including three current members.

  --The Steelers are still in the market for some affordable veteran help on the offensive line and at linebacker, but are not likely, even with Rashard Mendenhall coming off knee surgery, to add a veteran running back.

  --Russell Wilson, who was the 75th player selected last month, is the highest quarterback drafted by Seattle since the Seahawks tabbed Rick Mirer with the second overall choice in 1993.  --One more Wilson note: The Seahawks have noted several times that, while Wilson was the shortest of the 19 quarterbacks at the combine (by nearly 1 1/2 inches), he had a hand measurement of 10 1/4 inches. That was a bigger hand than 14 of the combine quarterbacks. The ability to wrap his fingers around the ball, however, might not compensate for the height deficiency.

  --With the guilty verdict against Rolando McClain, in which he was sentenced to 180 days of jail, Oakland officials were said to be fishing around to see if there were any middle linebacker options, via trade or free agency, late in the week. McClain might play all or part of the season, but the Raiders are doing their due diligence, just in case.

  The last word: “I don't buy it. I'm only speaking from my personal experience, because I haven't allowed myself to buy it, and I haven't been affected. Yes, I'm aware that football is a rough sport. But instead of saying, 'Oh, I'm doomed to brain trauma,' I said, 'What can I do about it?' And I just started taking care of my body. I found people, places and things that really helped me. Again, I don't know what's going to happen to me in 10 years, but I look at the other things I've learned about, and the way I see the world. And to me, it's like, 'OK, yes.' If we're going to spend six months brutalizing our bodies, I said, 'That makes sense. (So) I'm going to spend six months taking care of my body.' I started to equip myself with tools. I started practicing yoga, and I started learning some hands-on healing stuff. I found really good chiropractors and message therapists, and I found that I was able to peel off layers of trauma on my body. I actually move better now than I did (during my playing career).” -- former NFL tailback Ricky Williams, who played 11 seasons in the league, on the recent attention afforded concussions and head trauma

If the Seattle Seahawks intend to install a passing game package that addresses the height issues of rookie quarterback Russell Wilson, who measured only 5-feet-10 5/8 at the combine in February, it wasn't evident at the team's rookie camp last weekend.

  Then again, it probably wouldn't be, since the rookie camp is basically designed as an orientation-type session, in which first-year players can get their feet on the ground.

  “The basics first,” quarterback coach Carl Smith acknowledged.

  During the two-hour sessions with helmets only (by comparison, Seattle veterans have only been on the field for roughly 45 minutes-1 hour so far), perhaps the lone concession to Wilson's size was that he might have worked out of the shotgun a little more than normal.

  But there is a suspicion among some Seahawks' veterans that for Wilson to be successful -- and there is considerable skepticism that the third-round draft choice can legitimately challenge Tarvaris Jackson or Matt Flynn for the No. 1 job, as coach Pete Carroll insisted -- offensive coordinator Darrell Bevell will have to implement a package that gets the former North Carolina State/Wisconsin star out of the traditional pocket.

  Seattle officials constantly point to Wilson's over-the-top delivery and high release point, and his strong arm, but those things may not be sufficient for him to mount a march to the starting job.

  Or, to actually contend for it.

  Wilson overcame a lot of odds in his college career, but his height had him off the draft boards of a few teams last month, and some of Carroll's colleagues in the NFL privately question using a third-round pick on a prospect who, competitiveness aside, was graded by some as just a career No. 3 guy.

League owners convene a one-day meeting in Atlanta next Tuesday.

  While the agenda isn't exactly loaded with sexy stuff, and much of the unofficial discussion in the corridors of the Buckhead hotel where the league will meet will revolve around safety topics and the Jonathan Vilma defamation lawsuit against Commissioner Roger Goodell, there are some roster-related issues that were tabled in March, and figure to be addressed.

  They include: allowing teams to designate one injured reserve player, who was on the roster through Week 1, to return to action after eight weeks, instead of sitting out the entire season; a roster exemption for a player suffering from a concussion; and moving the trade deadline back by two weeks, from the Tuesday following the sixth week of play until after Week 8.

  One owner told The Sports Xchange that he feels all three changes have a “decent shot” at being approved, particularly the first two.

The five-year, $45 million extension signed by Philadelphia tailback LeSean McCoy on Thursday -- with the raw numbers provided by “a league source” otherwise known as agent Drew Rosenhaus, seeming to check out as accurate -- merited considerable attention.

  And deservedly so.

  But the megadeal, hinted at earlier in the week by Eagles' coach Andy Reid, also cast some light on the predicament of teams and running backs. McCoy won't be 24 until July, and, while he's been a workhorse for the Eagles the past two seasons, averaging 303.0 “touches” in that stretch, there's still some tread on the tires.

  Philadelphia, where team president Joe Banner relies on an almost actuarial-type model for assessing what a player might have left in the tank, clearly feels confident McCoy has several productive years remaining.

  Still, the bet here is that McCoy's deal will be restructured as least once between now and its end-year, 2017.

  Teams are reluctant to invest heavily in the running back position, based much on age -- although Carolina signed DeAngelo Williams to a fat deal last year at age 28 -- and it will be interesting to see how the contract affects negotiations between the Chicago Bears and “Matt Forte and the Baltimore Ravens and Ray Rice, both “franchised” backs.

  Forte will be 27 in December and Rice turned 25 in January. Sources in both the Rice and Forte camps acknowledged on Thursday night that they are closely scrutinizing the McCoy contract.

  Forte has averaged 20.6 “touches” per game over the course of his four-year career, with all 60 games as a starter. Rice has averaged 22.3 “touches” in his 49 career starts, with an average of 341.3 the past three seasons.

  McCoy has averaged 20.7 “touches” in his 32 career starts. Forte was on pace for 340 “touches” in 2012, but an injury limited him to 12 appearances.

Unlike the Philadelphia Eagles, who reportedly have decided to dock offensive tackle Jason Peters for his offseason Achilles ruptures -- technically regarded as non-football injuries -- Baltimore officials have made no decision about adjusting the salary of linebacker Terrell Suggs, who is due a salary of $4.9 million and roster bonus of $4.6 million for 2012.

  There have been some discussions about the injury and salary, sources from both sides allow, but the Ravens may wait a while to gauge the rehabilitation progress of the league's reigning defensive player of the year before determining how to handle his case.

  Suggs has insisted he will return at some point in the season, and the Baltimore medical staff is still assessing the situation.

  Also complicating the matter is that Suggs and his new agent, Joel Segal, are hoping to parlay the defensive player of the year award into a contract extension beyond the current deal, which runs through 2014. A resolution isn't expected soon.

The presence alone of attorney Peter Ginsberg, who represented Michael Vick and tied the NFL in knots when he represented suspended Minnesota defensive tackles Pat Williams and Kevin Williams, makes Jonathan Vilma's defamation lawsuit against NFL commissioner Roger Goodell more than just a nuisance case.

  The veteran Ginsberg knows his way around a courtroom and has in the past parsed the nuances of the league's collective bargaining agreement.

  But most legal experts concur that the New Orleans linebacker faces a difficult task in establishing that Goodell acted with intention and malice, and that the ponderous burden makes it almost impossible for him to prevail.

  What Vilma may do is force the league to reveal some or all of its evidence, including testimony from past or current teammates and coaches, and that could make for an uncomfortable situation. How difficult a chore do Ginsberg and Vilma face?

  The Sports Xchange has learned that at least one player and one of the suspended New Orleans executives considered similar actions but backed off when advised of the burden confronting them.

  They may change their minds, The Sports Xchange was told, but understand that the ramifications will be dicey.

The Jets agreed to a one-year, $1.4 million deal with veteran safety Yeremiah Bell.

  He weighed a similar offer from the Eagles and visited the Chiefs last week.

  Bell provides veteran insurance behind LaRon Landry, who also signed a one-year deal with the Jets on March 19 but hasn't been a limited participant in offseason workouts because of a lingering Achilles injury that cost him 15 total games over the past two seasons.

  Bell was released by the Dolphins on the same day Landry signed with the Jets in a cap-saving move that wiped $4.3 million off the books for Miami. Bell led the team with 107 tackles last season and is recognized as a vocal leader. The former sixth-round pick was a consistent, reliable performer for the Dolphins, posting four consecutive 100-tackle seasons from 2008-11.

Cordy Glenn signed with the Bills, giving the team eight of its nine 2012 draft picks under contract.

  Glenn played guard and tackle at Georgia, starting 50 games of the 53 in which he played. The Bills are planning to try him at tackle, where they haven't been able to replace Jason Peters since trading him to Philadelphia in 2009.

  At 6-6, 345 pounds, scouts are stunned by Glenn's light feet and athletic ability. He doesn't always play to his elite skill level, but the Bills view him as a potentially elite blocker in the NFL based on his combination of height, bulk, long arms and footwork.

  Chris Hairston, a fourth-round pick from Clemson in 2011 with similar size -- 6-6, 341 -- is currently listed first on the depth chart at left tackle. General manager Buddy Nix endorsed Hairston as more than capable before the draft, and Hairston started seven games last season.

  “I'm going to make this clear, we think Chris Hairston can play left tackle for us and win,” Nix said. “... we run a lot of empty sets with five blockers, if they bring six (quarterback Ryan Fitzpatrick) better get it out quick or he's going to get hit in the mouth.

  “In this offense he's got to get it out quick. But Chris Hairston, he may not be the prettiest foot athlete but he's got so much length that he can protect the back side. We feel like he can do that.

  Buffalo's quick-read passing attack should also be a good fit for Glenn. He's out of his stance on time and quarterback Ryan Fitzpatrick's speedy delivery helped him avoid sacks -- just 22 in 569 attempts last season and 24 (in 441 attempts) in 2010.

  Third-round pick T.J. Graham is the Bills' lone unsigned draft pick.

Cordy Glenn signed with the Bills, giving the team eight of its nine 2012 draft picks under contract.

  Glenn played guard and tackle at Georgia, starting 50 games of the 53 in which he played. The Bills are planning to try him at tackle, where they haven't been able to replace Jason Peters since trading him to Philadelphia in 2010.

  At 6-6, 345 pounds, scouts are stunned by Glenn's light feet and athletic ability. He doesn't always play to his elite skill level, but the Bills view him as a potentially elite blocker in the NFL based on his combination of height, bulk, long arms and footwork.

  Chris Hairston, a fourth-round pick from Clemson in 2011 with similar size -- 6-6, 341 -- is currently listed first on the depth chart at left tackle. General manager Buddy Nix endorsed Hairston as more than capable before the draft, and Hairston started seven games last season.

  “I'm going to make this clear, we think Chris Hairston can play left tackle for us and win,” Nix said. “... we run a lot of empty sets with five blockers, if they bring six (quarterback Ryan Fitzpatrick) better get it out quick or he's going to get hit in the mouth.

  “In this offense he's got to get it out quick. But Chris Hairston, he may not be the prettiest foot athlete but he's got so much length that he can protect the back side. We feel like he can do that.

  Buffalo's quick-read passing attack should also be a good fit for Glenn. He's out of his stance on time and quarterback Ryan Fitzpatrick's speedy delivery helped him avoid sacks -- just 22 in 569 attempts last season and 24 (in 441 attempts) in 2010.

  Third-round pick T.J. Graham is the Bills' lone unsigned draft pick.

Cornerback Dre Kirkpatrick, the 17th overall pick in the 2012 draft by the Bengals, signed a four-year deal Friday.

  At 6-2, 186, Kirkpatrick has the size, arm length and experience to become a rookie start in defensive coordinator Mike Zimmer's press-cover scheme.

  “He has quick feet. He moves his feet laterally pretty well,” Zimmer said. He does a great job in bump-and-run. The taller corners have an advantage when they're going down the field, because the ball has to go over the top of their outstretched arms.”

  Kirkpatrick was an All-American as a junior at Alabama. He'll compete with Nate Clements and Terence Newman for a starting role. Leon Hall, coming back from a ruptured Achilles, is likely to start if he remains ahead of schedule in his recovery.

The Green Bay Packers will wait at least another season to hold a ceremony to retire Brett Favre's No. 4.

  Packers president Mark Murphy said the team will wait “probably in a year or two,” according to the Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel.

Favre led the Packers to two Super Bowl appearances and one title in 16 seasons before ending his career with stops with the New York Jets and the Minnesota Vikings.

  “Yes, he deserves that for what he did as a Packer,” said Murphy. “Probably in a year or two. We want to do it at a time that's meaningful to him.”

The Cardinals aren't handing anything to quarterback Kevin Kolb entering training camp.

  Coach Ken Whisenhunt plans to determine Arizona's starting quarterback this summer in a competition between Kolb and John Skelton that could stretch into preseason games.

  “That's the question that's going to be answered through the workouts this spring and in training camp this summer,” Whisenhunt told Jim Rome on Thursday. “It's been good to get out on the field and actually work on techniques and fundamentals with these guys. At times last year they both showed they can do good things. But consistency at that position is something we've got to improve on. So hopefully the competition between both of them will sharpen up one of them enough that he'll be a good starter for us.”

  Kolb entered the 2011 season as the undisputed starter but the 27-year-old missed seven games due to concussion-like symptoms. He had just over five weeks to pick up the offense, with no benefit of offseason workouts and minimal playbook knowledge, before starting his first game in September.

  Acquired last August from the Eagles for a second-round draft pick and cornerback Dominique Rodgers-Cromartie and signed to a $62.1 million deal, Kolb began the 2010 season as the Eagles' starting quarterback but attempted just 10 passes before leaving a Week 1 loss to the Packers.

  “I think the knee-jerk reaction would be to say that it is Kevin's job to lose,” Whisenhunt said. “But then you have to look at what John Skelton did last year in winning those games when he was in there. So I think you have to give John a lot of credit for winning those games. I certainly have a lot of respect for Kevin and what he's done in this league and we made the commitment to bring him in to our football team. So it's going to start out as even as it possibly can, and we're going to let the best player take it from there. We did that many years ago when we had Kurt Warner and Matt Leinart, and it worked out pretty good for us. So hopefully we'll have that same kind of magic.”

  Skelton was a fifth-round pick in 2010 but ineffective play from Derek Anderson pushed him into a starting role as a rookie, when his passer rating was just 62.3 and his completion percentage only 47.6. But Whisenhunt praised his maturity in preparation and ability to avoid turnovers (two interceptions in 126 attempts). Skelton, more than three years younger than Kolb, lacks mobility and didn't protect the ball well in seven starts in 2011. He was intercepted 14 times and sacked 23 times in 151 attempts last season.

  Arizona picked up Kolb's $7 million contract option in March. However, the Cardinals were one of four known franchises to host Peyton Manning during his March free agency tour. The 49ers were also interested but met with Manning on neutral turf in Carolina.

  Whisenhunt clearly wants Kolb to prove he's the man for the job, but as shown in starting Leinart over Warner, he isn't afraid to go with an unpopular move if he believes it will benefit the team in the end.

GLENDALE, Ariz. -- The Cardinals accomplished a major offseason goal by signing defensive end Calais Campbell to a five-year, $55 million contract that includes $31 million in guarantees.

  It's a deal that helps the team on a couple fronts. First, Campbell is their best defensive lineman, although Darnell Dockett is a close second. Campbell is just 25 and had eight sacks last year as a right end in the 3-4. That's not easy to do. He also batted down 11 passes and blocked three field goals.

  Without him, the Cardinals would have finished below .500. Signing him to a long-term contract also freed about $5.7 million of cap space. That gives the club flexibility to sign its draft class, as well as veterans such as defensive end Vonnie Holliday and outside linebacker Clark Haggans.

  That hasn't happened yet, but probably will in the next week or two. Holliday and Haggans would provide experience and depth at two positions where the Cardinals could definitely use those qualities.

  “I'm excited about the opportunity,” Campbell said. “I really feel like this is a special team, and I feel like if we just continue to get better, we can definitely be a championship team.”

  The Cardinals had placed the non-exclusive franchise tag on Campbell, which guaranteed him $10.7 million if he had signed. He was occupying a huge amount of cap space, and the team had to make adjustments in contracts to sign other free agents.

  Guard Daryn Colledge and center Lyle Sendlein did simple restructuring that freed cap space.

  Now, the Cardinals are about $8 million under the cap, which should give them plenty of room to operate throughout the season.

  Perhaps more important, re-signing Campbell reinforces a positive message both in the locker room and among the fan base: the Cardinals will pay to retain its young, core players.

  Over the past three years, the team has re-signed safety Adrian Wilson, receiver Larry Fitzgerald and Dockett.

  It spent heavily in the weeks prior to the 2011 season, acquiring quarterback Kevin Kolb and signing him to a contract that pays him $19 million in the first two years. It signed Colledge, linebacker Stewart Bradley and tight end Todd Heap, among others, in free agency.

  Not all have paid dividends. Colledge had a solid 2011 season, but Bradley struggled converting from a 4-3 linebacker to the 3-4, and Heap was nagged by leg injuries.

  Campbell's deal is another sign the team is willing to spend money. He received a $15 million signing bonus and is expected to be paid a $10 million option bonus in the spring of 2013.

  The average per year ($11 million) puts him behind Fitzgerald ($16 million) and Kolb ($14) as the highest paid players on the team.

  Campbell was a key to the defensive improvement over the latter half of 2011. In addition to the sacks, he had 73 tackles, an unusually high number for a 3-4.

  Also important to the Cardinals is that Campbell is level headed and emotionally equipped to handle his new wealth. He's one of the hardest workers on the team, and no one expects that to change.

  “I made a lot of mistakes last year, too,” Campbell said. “Watching the film and breaking it down, I could have played a lot better. I just feel I'm understanding the game better and physically being stronger and more explosive. There's a lot of room for improvement. Hopefully, I can be a great player in this league for many years to come.”

Ray Rice is making the most of a relatively solitary offseason.

  Working out on his own away from Ravens headquarters due to his unresolved contract status, the unsigned franchise player has maintained his high standard of conditioning.

  The diminutive former Rutgers star is still checking in at a chiseled 5-foot-8, 212 pounds.

  “Training is something that I never worried about,” Rice said Saturday during Ray Rice Day at Calvert Hall. “It's something that you got to want. I actually have the burning to desire to come back, not only for myself, but to come back ready to play. My training has always been part of my routine.

  “Nobody ever had to beat me in the head to get up and work out. Anybody who knows about my workout regimen, I've probably been through two before noon. Training has never been my issues but obviously, the team camaraderie, the lockout and all that stuff, that's the stuff that you kind of miss with the guys. But as far as being ready, I know I'll be ready.”

  Rice, 25, didn't discuss his contract situation.

  The Ravens have continued to hold a dialogue with Rice's agent, Todd France. Meanwhile, Rice has yet to sign his $7.742 million franchise tender and isn't planning to report to offseason workouts and practices until a new deal is negotiated.

  Under NFL rules governing franchise players, the Ravens have until July 16 to negotiate a long-term contract extension with Rice. If a deal isn't worked out by that date, then Rice will play the entire season under the tag.

  Rice has been training with former Philadelphia Eagles running back Brian Westbrook.

  “He's in great shape right now,” said Mac James, Rice's personal trainer. “The biggest thing with Ray is he's one of those guys that always wants to work. Sometimes, I have to scale him back. I don't want him to peak too early. He'll be in great shape and ready to go.

  “He's very lean. His weight is down. He's controlled his eating this offseason. The good thing is he's not frustrated. He's staying positive. The contract will take care of itself.”

  Rice rushed for a career-high 1,364 yards and a dozen touchdowns last season. He set a franchise record with 15 total touchdowns and led the NFL with 2,068 yards from scrimmage.

  And Rice looks ready to do it again.

  “Ray works,” Ravens wide receiver Torrey Smith said. “That's one thing that he will do whether he's with us, back in Jersey or around here locally. You know that he's going to work. That's not a concern for anyone.”

  Rice led the Ravens with 76 receptions for 703 yards and three touchdowns and had runs of 53, 59, 67, 70 and 70 yards and averaged 4.7 yards per carry.

  Intent on not being caught from behind, Rice has been studying video from last season to try to become more of a home run hitter as far as breaking long runs.

  He's trying to improve his already impressive speed.

  “He's definitely faster,” James said. “He's doing a lot of quick burst stuff to hit the hole at top-end speed. He and I looked at a lot of game film and he mapped out, 'This is what I need to work on.'

  “The good thing is, Ray is a true critic of himself. He doesn't blow smoke up his own butt. He wants breakaway speed and to be able to maintain it. We work on that. We work on pad level, everything.”

New York City police will not bring charges against Chicago Bears receiver Brandon Marshall in connection with an altercation in March,  attorney Harvey Steinberg told the NFL Network on Thursday.

  Police had been investigating a complaint by a woman who claimed Marshall punched her in the face outside a Manhattan night club.

  Marshall had admitted he was at the club at the time of the altercation, but said his wife was the victim, and that he took her to the hospital after she was hit in the head with a bottle.

  Marshall was traded from the Miami Dolphins to the Bears in March.

  He had 81 receptions for 1,214 yards for the Dolphins in 2011.

New York Jets first-round draft pick Quinton Coples has agreed to a four-year contract with the team, multiple outlets reported Thursday.

  The team also confirmed that an agreement has been reached with Coples, a defensive lineman, although it disclosed no terms.

  The four-year deal reportedly includes an option for a fifth year.

  As the 16th overall pick, Coples is expected to earn about $8.9 million over the four years.

  Coples becomes the eighth first-round pick to come to terms with his team.

Baltimore Ravens star free safety Ed Reed indicated once again that he's not completely committed to playing football, a recurring theme for the former NFL Defensive Player of the Year.

  Reed has acknowledged contemplating retirement in the past, and did so again during a Sirius NFL radio interview Thursday afternoon.

  Hours later, though, media were provided a quote from Reed. He said he plans to continue to play football.

  “It's not about retirement, it's about my focus in the offseason, health, family and football,” said Reed, who has battled hip, neck and shoulder injuries in recent years. “This is the time of year where players think through things. My goal is to play football in the years to come.”

  Reed, 33, is entering the final year of a six-year, $44.2 million contract and is due a $7.2 million base salary this season.

  What's consuming Reed at this time?

  “A totally different focus now, trying to care of my son, spend time with my son and my family,” Reed said during the radio interview. “Other things have taken priority.”

  “Not at the moment, honestly,” Reed said when asked if he's 100 percent committed to playing this year. "Can; I play at this level? Yes, I can play at the level, but committed to doing it right now?

  “It's still May. I know time is kind of inching away at me. We do have a mandatory camp coming up that I'm still in deep thought about, because other things are important to me now."

  Reed added that the Ravens were unaware of his stance until now.

  "I; doubt it," Reed said. "I; think they will know it after this interview, just like they knew that (Joe) Flacco was a little rattled, as we all were against Houston."

  Reed was light-heartedly referencing his remarks about Flacco prior to the AFC championship game against the New England Patriots.

  No contract talks have been broached with Reed regarding a contract extension lately. Complicating any movement toward addressing that topic: Reed doesn't currently have an agent for the Ravens to negotiate with.

  "It; has nothing to do with negotiating," Reed said. "It;'s deeper than negotiating.”

The Philadelphia Eagles have signed running back LeSean McCoy to a five-year contract extension worth $45 million, multiple media outlets reported Thursday.

  The deal, which includes about $20.765 million of guaranteed money, puts McCoy under contract through the 2017 season.

  Under the rookie contract he signed in June 2009, McCoy was scheduled to be paid $615,000 in base salary for 2012, the final year of the contract.

  McCoy is only 23 years old, and last season he finished fourth in the NFL in rushing with 1,309 yards, set a franchise record with 30 touchdowns, and caught 78 passes.

  “We are excited to continue this offseason of taking care of our own players,” coach Andy Reid said in a statement. “LeSean is one of the most electrifying running backs in the National Football League. He can do it all -- run, catch, block and score touchdowns from anywhere on the field. He's worked extremely hard to turn himself into a Pro Bowl running back and he is well deserving of this contract extension. I give a lot of credit to Howie Roseman and Drew Rosenhaus for hammering out this deal.”

Oakland Raiders linebacker Rolando McClain was found guilty on three charges and sentenced to 180 days in jail by a Decatur, Ala., judge on Thursday, according to multiple reports.

  McClain was ordered to pay a total of $2,000 in fines for four charges, including reckless endangerment, third-degree assault, menacing and discharging a firearm.

  The alleged victim, Rishard Tapscott, claims he was beaten by McClain and friend Jarodiaus Willingham. Earlier Thursday, Willingham pleaded guilty and agreed to a 90-day sentence in return for testifying against McClain.

  The incident in question occurred Nov. 30, and a cell phone video of the incident surfaced Wednesday.

  McClain's lawyer, Harvey Steinberg, told the Huntsville Times that Thursday's verdict was “meaningless” and said McClain will appeal.

  McClain has been freed on bail, according to WAAYTV.com, and can begin serving his prison sentence on June 1.

  “The Raiders are well aware of the proceedings in the Alabama courts today,” the Raiders said in a statement released Thursday.  “The team will continue to closely monitor the legal process, understanding that when appropriate the NFL will review the situation under its personal conduct policy.”

  It's unclear how the NFL will respond to the verdict.  It's possible McClain could be suspended.

Suspended New Orleans Saints linebacker Jonathan Vilma has sued NFL commissioner Roger Goodell for defamation, according to a ProFootballTalk report.

  Vilma's legal team claims Goodell lied publicly about Vilma and his alleged role in the Saints' bounty system. Vilma's lawyers specifically claim Goodell lied in statements about an alleged $10,000 bounty he placed to injur certain quarterbacks.

  Goodell suspended Vilma for one year for his alleged role in the system that rewarded players for injuring opponents. He received the most serious of the four players who were penalized.

  ---Rolando McClain's co-defendant Jerradius Willingham entered a guilty plea and will testify against McClain in an assault trial scheduled to begin Thursday.

  Late Wednesday, the Decatur (Ala.) Daily released an anonymous video alleged to be a collection of cell phone videos from the Nov. 30 incident involving Raiders linebacker McClain and Willingham assaulting a man. Willingham is shown repeatedly striking alleged victim Rishard Tapscott. McClain is not shown, but appears to be heard late in the collection of cell phone clips.

  Willingham's testimony would be critical considering McClain enter a plea of not guilty. As part of his plea, he will serve 90 days in jail and testify against his longtime friend.

  The defendants were scheduled to appear in court in separate trials.

  McClain is charged with third-degree assault, menacing and reckless endangerment as well as discharge of a firearm within city limits. He could face additional charges, according to WHNT-TV.

e video in which Willingham, a friend of McClain's, can be seen kicking Tapscott and striking him repeatedly while sitting on him.

  ---The Tampa Bay Buccaneers signed kicker Connor Barth to a four-year contract Thursday.

  The team announced the deal in a statement but didn't disclose financial terms. However, ESPN reported that Barth, who was designated the team's franchise player in the offseason, will receive $13.2 million, with $4 million guaranteed.

  The 25-year-old Barth made 26 of 28 field goal attempts last season.

  ---Former Baltimore Ravens cornerback Domonique Foxworth plans to retire from football while continuing to serve as head of the NFL Players Association.

  The Ravens waived Foxworth, 29, earlier this year after he played sparingly in 2011 and missed the 2010 season as a result of a chronic knee problem.

  ---If you're in the market for a Super Bowl ring, there's one available.

  Former New York Giants linebacker Lawrence Taylor's ring from Super Bowl XXV is available online at SCPAuctions.com. Bidding ends Saturday.

  The auction's website describes it as the most significant Super Bowl player ring ever offered publicly. So far, response appears lukewarm. The highest of 12 bids as of Thursday morning was $37,982. According to SCPAuctions.com, the ring is valued at $75,000-$100,000.

  ---Tennessee Titans receiver Kenny Britt had arthroscopic surgery on his right knee Wednesday, but the team expects him back for the season opener against the New England Patriots.

  Britt tore his ACL and MCL last September. He had the surgery to accelerate his return.

  --Eric DeCosta has been promoted to assistant general manager by the Baltimore Ravens, the team announced Thursday.

  DeCosta had served as director of player personnel since 2009. He joined the Ravens in 1996 and had previously worked as an area scout and director of college scouting.

  --Ahman Green has not played in the NFL since the 2009 season, but the former Green Bay Packers running back wants to make a comeback.

  The 35-year-old Green has kicked around in the UFL and CFL the past two seasons but apparently feels rejuvenated.

    Green remains the Packers' career rushing leader with 8,322 yards, but his last 1,000-yard season came in 2006.

  He said he's willing to do anything to put on an NFL uniform again.

 

  --First-round draft pick Morris Claiborne is hoping his left wrist is recovered in time for him to be on the field for the Dallas Cowboys' mandatory minicamp in June.

  Original projections before the NFL draft put Claiborne, the sixth overall pick out of LSU, on the field for the first time in July when the Cowboys reported for the start of training camp.

  Pins were removed from Claiborne's wrist last week, but he is still wearing a soft cast and unable to work out.

  Training camp for Cowboys rookies, quarterbacks and injured players begins July 25.

  ---The Miami Dolphins have signed wide receiver B.J. Cunningham. Cunningham was Miami's sixth round selection (183rd overall) in the recent NFL Draft.

  ---The Indianapolis Colts today signed seventh-round draft selection, offensive guard Justin Anderson. The Colts also signed quarterback David, an undrafted rookie out of Hampton University.

  ---Quarterback Donovan McNabb is coming off two poor seasons since being jettisoned by the Eagles, but the 35-year-old said he plans to continue with his NFL career.

      A free agent for the first time in his career, McNabb was 1-5 for the Vikings last season before being benched in favor of rookie Christian Ponder.

      “I sort of have some unfinished business,” McNabb told ESPN Radio in Chicago, per Rivals.com. “I love the game, I have a passion for the game, and I look forward to continuing that on. I will be playing somewhere.

    ---Ed Reed is known for his range, and he's shown that and more in his annual public internal debate whether to retire or continue his career with the Ravens.

      Reed grabbed the Ravens' attention again Thursday in a SiriusXM NFL Radio interview, when he shared that he's not “100 percent committed” to playing football in 2012. The comments came just months after Reed said he had at least four years of football left.

      A nerve impingement in his neck and shoulder has caused Reed, 33, to consider retiring after the last four seasons.

    ---Linebacker Keenan Robinson, a fourth-round pick, signed with the Redskins.

      ----Offensive lineman Donald Stephenson, a third-round pick, signed with the Chiefs.

    ---The Bills signed first-round pick Stephon Gilmore to a four-year contract. The deal includes a fifth-year option, which is customary for early draft picks.

    ---Cross off two more teams from the 'Hard Knocks' wish list.

      The 49ers and Redskins are going to pass on the HBO documentary training camp series, following the Jets, Falcons, Saints and Broncos in rejecting the camera-crew circus that comes with having the cable network film practice and off-field portions of August workouts.

Eric DeCosta has been promoted to assistant general manager by the Baltimore Ravens, the team announced Thursday.

  DeCosta had served as director of player personnel since 2009. He joined the Ravens in 1996 and had previously worked as an area scout and director of college scouting.

  "When; we extended Eric's contract earlier this year, we changed his title to Assistant GM," Ravens general manager Ozzie Newsome said. "As; Eric continues to grow in the personnel department, he is becoming a vital part of the decision-making process."

  The Ravens also announced that Joe Douglas has been elevated to national scout and David Blackburn to area scout.

Suspended New Orleans Saints linebacker Jonathan Vilma has sued NFL commissioner Roger Goodell for defamation, according to a ProFootballTalk report.

  Vilma's legal team claims Goodell lied publicly about Vilma and his alleged role in the Saints' bounty system. Vilma's lawyers specifically claim Goodell lied in statements about an alleged $10,000 bounty he placed to injure certain quarterbacks.

  Goodell suspended Vilma for one year for his alleged role in the system that rewarded players for injuring opponents. He received the most serious of the four players who were penalized.

Ahman Green hasn't played in the NFL since the 2009 season, but the former Green Bay Packers running back wants to make a comeback.

  The 35-year-old Green has kicked around in the UFL and CFL the past two seasons but apparently feels rejuvenated.

  "I;'ve got at least five years left in me to play football," Green told FoxSportsWisconsin.com.

  Green remains the Packers' career rushing leader with 8,322 yards, but his last 1,000-yard season came in 2006. In the NFL, that's an eternity for running backs.

  He said he's willing to do anything to put on an NFL uniform again.

  "I; came into the league in special teams and I'd have no problem doing that again," Green said. "Playing; special teams in kickoff coverage, punt coverage. Just put me anywhere. I'm a football player first. That's something my dad always reminded me. 'You're a football player, not just a running back.'

  "If; a team wants to call me and show serious interest, I'll be ready."

  Green left the Packers in 2007 after signing with Houston but was a disappointment in his two seasons with the Texans. He returned to Green Bay for one year. His most recent stops included Montreal of the CFL and Omaha of UFL.

  Green resides in Green Bay and would welcome a shot with the Packers again.

  "I; know that I could help the team," he said. "I;'d be happy to play along with Aaron Rodgers a few more years and help those guys win another Super Bowl."

David Legree joined the Colts' cast of young quarterbacks, with Indianapolis signing the undrafted rookie out of Hampton University.

  He joins draft picks Andrew Luck (No. 1 overall) and Chandler Harnish (seventh round), along with veteran Drew Stanton on the Colts' roster. Legree originally attended Syracuse before transferring to Hampton after the 2008 season, and threw for 1,636 yards and 10 touchdowns last season.

  Eldridge caught 14 passes over the past two seasons for the Colts.

Quarterback Donovan McNabb is coming off two poor seasons since being jettisoned by the Eagles, but the 35-year-old said he plans to continue with his NFL career.

  A free agent for the first time in his career, McNabb was 1-5 for the Vikings last season before being benched in favor of rookie Christian Ponder.

  “I sort of have some unfinished business,” McNabb told ESPN Radio in Chicago, per Rivals.com. “I love the game, I have a passion for the game, and I look forward to continuing that on. I will be playing somewhere.

  “This is the first time I'm actually going through free agency and I'm excited about it because I get the choice, to pick and choose of the teams that are interested.

  Who those teams might be is the big question, as there has been no stated interest in McNabb. Meanwhile, he's working out in San Diego with noted quarterbacks guru George Whitfield while getting into shape.

  “I've been training hard and preparing myself out in San Diego working with George Whitfield, the obviously well-known quarterback guru, supposedly, for over the past month,” McNabb said. “Just kind of refining the skills, working on the mechanics and getting back to a high level, an elite level. I'm just waiting for the opportunity to display that.”

  McNabb has thrown for 37,276 yards and 234 touchdowns in his career, but managed just 1,026 yards, four touchdowns and two interceptions before being benched in Minnesota last season.

The Tampa Bay Buccaneers signed kicker Connor Barth to a four-year contract Thursday.

  The team announced the deal in a statement but didn't disclose financial terms. However, ESPN reported that Barth, who was designated the team's franchise player in the offseason, will receive $13.2 million, with $4 million guaranteed.

  “For the Bucs organization, (general manager) Mark Dominik, Coach (Greg) Schiano and everyone to believe in me, to know that I'll be their kicker for the next four years, is awesome,” Barth said in a statement. “It's just an amazing opportunity and I want to continue to perform like I have and live up to their expectations.”

  The 25-year-old Barth made 26 of 28 field goal attempts last season, setting a team accuracy record of 92.9 percent, and has converted 73 of 87 in his four-year career. He came to the Buccaneers in 2009 as a free agent after one season with the Kansas City Chiefs.

Ed Reed is known for his range, and he's shown that and more in his annual public internal debate whether to retire or continue his career with the Ravens.

  Reed grabbed the Ravens' attention again Thursday in a SiriusXM NFL Radio interview, when he shared that he's not “100 percent committed” to playing football in 2012. The comments came just months after Reed said he had at least four years of football left.

  A nerve impingement in his neck and shoulder has caused Reed, 33, to consider retiring after the last four seasons. But it's plausible Reed is putting a line in the water for a new contract. He hasn't hidden his desire for a new deal and said it would be a show of respect for the Ravens to boost his salary.

  Asked during the interview Thursday if his stance was known to the Ravens, Reed said: “I'm sure they will after this interview.”

  Reed, who'll be in his 11th season, said in February he wasn't making plans to retire and much like defensive co-captain Ray Lewis, he's “year-to-year.”

  “There's a lot of talk out there,” Reed said at the time. “I want to play football. But it's something me and my team have been discussing the last couple of weeks. My partners, they do a great job of making sure I know the pros and cons of what's going on with my body and with the organization and where we're at. I plan on doing it, but depending, it could change.”

  The Ravens could approach Reed about a new contract, but he is currently without an agent. He's owed $7.2 million in 2012, the final season of a $44 million deal.

  Reed, who turns 34 on Sept. 11, said at the end of the season he has to lean on others for guidance regarding his future. If not, “I'd be with a walking cane out there. I don't know ... I think four or five years is a reality for me.”

  He started all 16 games last season for the first time since 2008. The Ravens are sensitive to putting too much wear and tear on Reed and Lewis and have adjusted their practice schedules in the regular season to accommodate.

  Reed is the NFL's active leader in interceptions with 57 in the regular season. He also has 11 career forced fumbles and six defensive touchdowns.

Rolando McClain's co-defendant Jerradius Willingham enter a guilty plea and will testify against McClain in an assault trial scheduled to begin Thursday.

  Late Wednesday, the Decatur (Ala.) Daily released an anonymous video alleged to be a collection of cell phone videos from the Nov. 30 incident involving Raiders linebacker McClain and Willingham assaulting a man. Willingham is shown repeatedly striking alleged victim Rishard Tapscott. McClain is not shown, but appears to be heard late in the collection of cell phone clips.

  Willingham's testimony would be critical considering McClain enter a plea of not guilty. As part of his plea, he will serve 90 days in jail and testify against his longtime friend.

  The defendants were scheduled to appear in court in separate trials.

  McClain is charged with third-degree assault, menacing and reckless endangerment as well as discharge of a firearm within city limits. He could face additional charges, according to WHNT-TV, which said attorney Carl Cole will present evidence that McClain continued to threaten Tapscott and as recently as March allegedly told his client, “After May 17th, I'm coming for your head.”

  In November, McClain was in his hometown to attend the funeral of his grandfather. McClain, who starred at Alabama and was a first-round pick in 2010, allegedly threatened Tapscott with a gun and shot the firearm next to his ear during the altercation. The video shows Tapscott saying “I'm not fighting no more.” After McClain walks out of the camera shot in the video, a voice can be heard saying “Put the gun up, man. You ain't gonna shoot, but I will. Put the (expletive) gun up. I'll shoot ...” and the video ends.

  Tapscott claims he went to his car to get a box cutter. McClain, Tapscott alleges, believed the victim retrieved a firearm. He claims McClain held the barrel of the gun to Tapscott's head and fired over his left ear.

  McClain is not shown striking the man in the video in which Willingham, a friend of McClain's, can be seen kicking Tapscott and striking him repeatedly while sitting on him.

HOUSTON -- The Texans begin their OTAs next week, and coach Gary Kubiak will have to keep a close eye on quarterback Matt Schaub to make sure he doesn't try to do too much.

  Schaub is almost 100 percent recovered from surgery last season's surgery to repair the Lisfranc joint in his right foot and a subsequent follow-up procedure to remove the screws in his foot.

  “If we're not paying attention, he'll do everything, but we're not going to let him do that,” Kubiak said. “We're going to put the reins on him, so to speak. He will do drill work, could throw some 7-on-7, but he will not be put in a team environment where he might get tripped up or something like that. He's ready to go. It's us being cautious with him right now.”

  The goal has been to have Schaub 100 percent and ready to go for the start of training camp.

  “He doesn't like it, but I think it's the best thing right now,” Kubiak said.  “We know Matt knows what he's doing, and this time of year is about getting people knowing what they're doing so they can compete in camp.”

  T.J. Yates, John Beck and rookie Case Keenum will get most of the work. They need it a lot more than Schaub, who's entering his sixth season in Kubiak's system.

  “The reins are still there, and they pull them back whenever they need to, but we're really making a lot of progress, so it's good,” Schaub said.

  Schaub, who has been playing a lot of golf, was 7-3 as a starter last season. While he was healthy, the Texans averaged 27.3 points a game. He's eager to get back on the field.

  After he was injured, Matt Leinart started one game and suffered a season-ending broken collarbone. Yates, a fifth-round pick, started the remainder of the season and two playoff games.

  Leinart wasn't invited back and signed with Oakland. Yates is the backup. Beck is expected to be the third quarterback. Keenum seems targeted for the practice squad.

  “It's just a matter of time,” Schaub said. “It's just staying with the program, staying true to the plan, and, really, the next milestone is training camp, in my opinion. That's when everything really gets going.

  “Being in my ninth year, I know how the offseason is. I do know the importance of it, but it's also important that I make sure to stay true to what we're trying to do, and the important thing is to be ready come camp time.”

BEREA, Ohio -- Brandon Weeden looked comfortable. In fact, he looked like a starting quarterback in the rookie minicamp played out over Mother's Day weekend, but the job isn't his yet.

  Phase Two of Weeden's indoctrination began the next day when he, Colt McCoy and Seneca Wallace were near each other in the locker room, sitting in the same meeting room and on the practice field together throwing passes to the same receivers.

  Browns coaches are able to compare their quarterbacks side by side in the 45 minutes daily the CBA allows instruction to be carried onto the practice field.

  In other words, the real competition has begun.

  “Yeah, but I kind of thought that way coming in (to minicamp),” Weeden said. “We're human beings, and I think that's one thing that gets misinterpreted. We're going to help each other and get better. We're all playing for the name on the front of the jersey and we're all going to compete to have the best team and win as many games as possible.

  “I'm going to be asking questions to those guys. They've been doing it for a couple years, Seneca for 10. Absolutely I think we're just going to compete. Nothing will change. I know Colt's a good guy. I know Seneca's a good guy. I met Seneca, so I'm looking forward to just being part of the other quarterbacks.”

  Weeden was picked 22nd in the first round last month, and even though the coaches and front office say competition will be open it will be a shock if Weeden doesn't win it.

  The simple move would be to cut McCoy or trade him now that Coach Pat Shurmur, team president Mike Holmgren and general manager Tom Heckert all say Weeden will make suspect receivers better because Weeden is an accurate passer with a strong arm.

  It's feasible the Browns might decide to part ways with Wallace instead. McCoy was supposedly the better quarterback last year. McCoy should improve in his third year, even if he doesn't start.

  Wallace is scheduled to make $2.4 million in 2012. McCoy has a $540,000 salary. Keeping a backup earning almost $2 million less than the other guy seems logical if only because it creates salary cap room.

  Weeden threw crisply and with velocity during the minicamp. There was no pass rush, so it wasn't a game conditions setting, but that doesn't change the fact he passed well and with authority. He did not look lost. He was poised like a veteran.

  “I think he genuinely operated well,” Shurmur said. “Other than a couple of plays, he did almost everything under center and I think he handled that extremely well. He is very accurate. You can see he throws a good ball. You could see that he has a chance to be a very good player.”

  During the draft Shurmur, Heckert and Holmgren insisted the Browns were not trying to trade McCoy. Shurmur said he expected McCoy to be in Berea for the offseason program the Monday after the draft and sure enough McCoy was there. He wants to compete with Weeden for the starting job because, if only in McCoy's opinion, it's his job to lose.

Linebacker Keenan Robinson, a fourth-round pick in the 2012 NFL Draft, signed with the Redskins.

  Terms were not disclosed.

  Robinson was the 119th overall pick out of Texas, where he registered 317 tackles, 5,5 sacks, 25 tackles for loss, 14 quarterback pressures, two interceptions, two fumble recoveries, three forced fumbles and 14 passes defensed in 51 career games with 39 starts.

  He was voted second-team All-Big 12 each of the past two seasons.

Former Baltimore Ravens cornerback Domonique Foxworth plans to retire from football while continuing to serve as head of the NFL Players Association.

  The Ravens waived Foxworth, 29, earlier this year after he played sparingly in 2011 and missed the 2010 season as a result of a chronic knee problem.

  Foxworth also underwent hip surgery recently.

  “I think that I've probably made the decision that I'm going to move forward and stop playing football,” Foxworth told DBLCoverage.com, an NFL website in England.

  Foxworth wants to attend business school while he completes his term as NFLPA president.

  In seven seasons that included stops with the Denver Broncos, Atlanta Falcons and Ravens, Foxworth totaled eight interceptions, including a career-best four in 2009 for Baltimore.

Offensive lineman Donald Stephenson, a third-round pick, signed with the Chiefs. Terms were not disclosed.

  Stephenson started 27 of 30 games at Oklahoma and was named Honorable Mention All-Big 12 in 2011.

If you're in the market for a Super Bowl ring, there's one on the market.

  Former New York Giants linebacker Lawrence Taylor's ring from Super Bowl XXV is available online at SCPAuctions.com. Bidding ends Saturday.

  The auction's website describes it as the most significant Super Bowl player ring ever offered publicly. So far, response appears lukewarm. The highest of 12 bids as of Thursday morning was $37,982. According to SCPAuctions.com, the ring is valued at $75,000-$100,000.

  Ironically, the current Giants received their rings from Super Bowl XLIV in a ceremony Wednesday in New York.

Tennessee Titans receiver Kenny Britt had arthroscopic surgery on his right knee Wednesday, but the team expects him back for the season opener against the New England Patriots.

  Britt tore his ACL and MCL last September. He had the surgery to accelerate his return.

  “It's almost become commonplace,” Titans general manager Ruston Webster told reporters Wednesday after a speaking engagement. “It's not one of those things that was, 'Wow, we're having surgery.' It's very common, and if it helps his rehab process, it's well worth doing. Our goal is to have him play this year. You don't want to get into the middle of camp and (need to have surgery).”

First-round draft pick Morris Claiborne is hoping his left wrist is recovered in time for him to be on the field for the Dallas Cowboys' mandatory minicamp in June.

  Original projections before the NFL draft put Claiborne, the sixth overall pick out of LSU, on the field for the first time in July when the Cowboys reported for the start of training camp.

  Pins were removed from Claiborne's wrist last week, but he's still wearing a soft cast and unable to work out. If he's able to put the wrist in a splint, he could take part in the June 12-14 minicamp on a limited basis.

  "I; hope to be fully recovered and ready for that," Claiborne said.

  Claiborne suffered the injury in LSU's regular-season game Nov. 5 against Alabama but played the rest of the season. He underwent surgery to repair ligaments after the NFL combine and his pro day in March.

  “I'm so eager and ready,” Claiborne told ESPN.com. “It's hard just sitting there, watching, knowing you can do it but you've just got one, small thing wrong with you holding you back. But I'm looking forward to it and trying to push that up.”

  Training camp for Cowboys rookies, quarterbacks and injured players begins July 25.

CINCINNATI -- With as much as A.J. Green and Andy Dalton accomplished their first year in the NFL, they might be even better in year two.

  During the Bengals' offseason conditioning program, coaches have been impressed with the strides both players have made not just in grasping the offense but in showing their leadership.

  “They've grown and experienced a lot. They're not the wide-eyed rookies anymore,” head coach Marvin Lewis said.

  Green remains soft-spoken and doesn't say a lot, but other receivers and coaches have said that Green is in incredible shape and has come back even more determined. Last season Green became the first rookie receiver in eight seasons to make the Pro Bowl as he had 65 receptions for 1,057 yards and seven touchdowns.

  If he can reach 1,000 receiving yards again, Green would become the first receiver since Marques Colston to do so in his first two seasons in the league.

  Said receivers coach James Urban of Green: “I'm very happy with A.J.'s approach to the offseason. I'm very pleased with what he has done physically. He looks great and he's taken that role as a leader. There's no doubt he has control of that group.”

  Lewis has called the receivers room Green's room and has gone as far as to say it is also his offense. That might be a little bit of a stretch before you consider that the Bengals were 5-2 in games where Green scored a touchdown.

  For Dalton, his big moment to exhale came at the end of last season. Without any added pressure this offseason, the only things Dalton has had to focus on was honing his footwork and expanding his knowledge of the evolving playbook.

  Even Lewis admitted that Dalton did not come into the ideal situation last year, saying that the situation had some tension built into it because of Carson Palmer's “retirement”. Once Palmer was traded though in Week 7, that tension was replaced by trying to lead the Bengals into the playoffs.

  “Going to the playoffs is a great accomplishment but he led a team which is bigger,” Lewis said.  “He's been through a lot, from the perception of being passed over in the draft to having the opportunity to be the starter from the opening day of training camp.”

  During free agency and the draft, the goal has been giving Dalton and Green more tools. They significantly upgraded the guard position, which should help jump start the running game, and added running back BenJarvus Green-Ellis, who excelled in short yardage and red zone situations. The Bengals are hoping to diversify what Green-Ellis can do by putting him in more receiving situations out of the backfield.

  With teams expected to double team Green, the third-round selection of Mohamed Sanu and the return of Jordan Shipley, who missed most of last season with a knee injury, should give Dalton more options.

  Said Dalton: “I'm excited for everyone to get out there and throwing. We've got a good group. It is going to be a lot of competition out there.”

CINCINNATI -- There was a lot made of the Bengals signing of undrafted linebacker Vontaze Burfict, but for a team lacking depth at the position and with three players entering the final year of their contract, it is a low-risk, high-reward move.

  Burfict's first weekend as a Bengal, which took place at the rookie minicamp, went well for the most part, but coach Marvin Lewis acknowledged that if Burfict is to make the final 53-man roster he is going to have to show something on special teams.

  “He's a better-conditioned athlete now than he was at the combine and at ASU in March. If he continues to go down that path, he seems bright enough to learn. He seems willing to want change this image people have of him,” Lewis said. “He can be a good football player. Learn to bend his knees, play behind his pads, strike people within the whistles and life is good.”

  Burfict said that he wrote letters to all the league's coaches and general managers but that Lewis was the only one who answered.

The Bills signed first-round pick Stephon Gilmore to a four-year contract. The deal includes a fifth-year option, which is customary for early draft picks.

  Based on the value table applied in the 2011 draft, Gilmore's contract is likely worth approximately $12 million.

  Gilmore was the 10th overall pick in the 2012 draft. He's penciled in as a starter entering offseason workouts and held his own in rookie camp after being a three-year starter at South Carolina.

  “He played well and did well in this camp. Now, when he goes against the other guys he's going to lose some. How does he handle getting beat? He didn't get beat a lot out here, so how does he handle that?” coach Chan Gailey said. “He's going to go through some emotions so that maturity and that confidence will help him, I think. He's played in a tough league. He knows what it's about.”

Drew Brees continues to be bold in expressing his emotions regarding the slow pace of contract negotiations with the Saints.

  Brees' contract expired at the end of the 2011 season. He's the Saints exclusive franchise player, meaning he cannot negotiate with other teams, but has not signed the one-year, $16.3 million tender and doesn't plan to any time soon.

  “I'm not even going to think about that at this point,” he said Thursday in a radio appearance on WWL in New Orleans.

  Brees and the Saints have been discussing a new contract on and off since 2010. When the lockout ended in July as Peyton Manning signed a five-year, $90 million deal with the Colts, Brees raised his expectations and the Saints seemed to tap the brakes.

  Communication has been poor, which is the biggest rub for Brees at the moment. The short-term ramifications are that offseason activities will begin Tuesday without Brees.

  “I would say more than anything, I guess, what's been a little frustrating on my end or disappointing is the lack of communication,” said Brees. “There's always a back and forth when it comes to these negotiations. But I know we've reached out on quite a few occasions. And at times, I know I've been frustrated with the lack of response. ... I would just say there should be a sense of urgency and yet it seems like there's not.”

  Brees is represented by Tom Condon, who also negotiated the Manning deal with the Colts and Manning's latest contract -- the richest in NFL history at an average of $19.2 million per season -- with the Broncos.

  “Well, I think there's certainly what I think would be an appropriate number for my situation. It's not anything I think is unreasonable or anything like that,” Brees said.

The Decatur (Ala.) Daily released an anonymous video alleged to be a collection of cell phone videos from the incident involving Raiders linebacker Rolando McClain and Jadoriaus Willingham assaulting a man. The defendants are scheduled to appear in court in separate trials.

  McClain is charged with third-degree assault, menacing and reckless endangerment as well as discharge of a firearm within city limits.

  McClain allegedly threatened Rishard Tapscott with a gun and shot the firearm next to his ear during the altercation. The video shows Tapscott saying “I'm not fighting no more.” After McClain walks out of the camera shot in the video, a voice can be heard saying “Put the gun up, man. You ain't gonna shoot, but I will. Put the (expletive) gun up. I'll shoot ...” and the video ends.

  Tapscott claims he went to his car to get a box cutter. McClain, Tapscott alleges, believed the victim retrieved a firearm. He claims McClain held the barrel of the gun to Tapscott's head and fired over his left ear.

  McClain is not shown striking the man in the video in which Willingham, a friend of McClain's, can be seen kicking Tapscott and striking him repeatedly while sitting on him.

Cross off two more teams from the 'Hard Knocks' wish list.

  The 49ers and Redskins are going to pass on the HBO documentary training camp series, following the Jets, Falcons, Saints and Broncos in rejecting the camera-crew circus that comes with having the cable network film practice and off-field portions of August workouts.

  Owner Jed York told CSNBayArea that the 49ers weren't interested in being part of the program.

  Redskins head coach Mike Shanahan said on ProFootballTalk.com that he has in the past declined HBO overtures for behind-the-scenes access but he “just didn't feel comfortable with that atmosphere.”

LeGarrette Blount had a rough second season in the NFL and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers spent a Round 1 selection on a rookie running back... http://www.brunoboys.net/entry/fantasy-football-players-on-the-decline-2012/ http://brunoboys.net/images/uploads/LeGarrette_Blount_Resized.jpg
Darren McFadden missed significant time in 2011, however he is healthy and ready to produce in a big way this season... http://www.brunoboys.net/entry/2012-fantasy-football-comeback-players-running-backs/ http://brunoboys.net/images/uploads/Darren_McFadden_Resized.jpg

New England Patriots' mastermind Bill Belichick leads an NFL-dominated list of the highest-earning coaches in sports.

  Belichick, one of eight NFL coaches in the Forbes top 10, earns an estimated $7.5 million annually. The value, length and other terms of his contract have long been kept under wraps by Belichick and the Patriots.

  Saints coach Sean Payton, suspended without pay for the 2012 season, would be one of the five coaches in the $7 million range which includes Pete Carroll (Seahawks), Jeff Fisher (Rams), Doc Rivers (Celtics) and Mike Shanahan (Redskins).

  Gregg Popovich, recently named NBA Coach of the Year, and Bears head coach Lovie Smith have estimated annual earnings of $6 million.

  Eagles coach Andy Reid is 10th at $5.5 million behind Steelers coach Mike Tomlin and Ken Whisenhunt of the Cardinals ($5.75 million).