Thursday, March 26, 2015

Darian Stewart signs 2 year deal with the Broncos

The contract numbers for Broncos’ free-agent safety Darian Stewart are in.

His two-year, $4.25 million deal had previously been reported by The Denver Post, but union documents reveal his contract included a fairly impressive $1.5 million signing bonus. Stewart also has $1.75 million in playing-time bonuses. It adds up to where Stewart is getting paid like a player expected to start, but is not assured. His contract:


2015
*$750,000 salary (full guarantee)
*$1.5 million signing bonus (full guarantee)
2015 total: $2.25 million (full guarantee)
*750,000 in playing-time incentives

2016
*$2 million salary (non-guaranteed)
*$1 million can be added to his salary if he reaches playing time thresholds in 2015.


Friday, March 6, 2015

Reunification with "Kub"

One of the standout wide receivers of his generation is set to leave Houston.

According to John McClain of the Houston Chronicle, the Texans are allowing Andre Johnson to seek a trade. If Johnson is not dealt, he will be released, the Chronicle reported.

According to the Chronicle, the Texans told Johnson he would have a lesser role in 2015, which led him to ask for his departure from Houston.

Johnson is slated to make $10 million in salary in 2015, per NFLPA data.

The No. 3 overall pick in the 2003 draft, Johnson has played his entire 12-season career with Houston, catching 1,012 passes for 13,597 yards and 64 TDs. He has made seven Pro Bowls.

While Johnson turns 34 in July, he should nonetheless appeal to clubs looking to add a proven veteran presence to their receiving corps. He caught 85 passes for 936 yards and three TDs in 2014.

A Miami (Fla.) product, Johnson quietly starred on a string of mediocre-to-poor Texans teams early in his career. Houston finally made the playoffs in 2011, his ninth NFL campaign.

If Johnson’s Texans career is indeed at an end, he will leave having caught 10 passes for 134 yards and a touchdown in his final game with the club, a 23-17 victory over Jacksonville in December. Though the Texans took care of business in the season finale, they fell just short of the playoffs. In many ways, it was an apt end to Johnson’s run in Houston — the star wide receiver doing his job well while the team fell just short in the end.

With Johnson likely gone, third-year wideout DeAndre Hopkins will become the Texans’ go-to receiver, a role he’s probably ready to assume.

Nevertheless, it will be jarring to see Andre Johnson, one of the Texans’ all-time greats now and forever, playing for someone else.

H/T +@ProFootballTalk

Monday, March 2, 2015

One more "Saddle Up!"

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" lang="en"><p>Keep BOTH Thomases. & No. 18 fights off Father Time & Is it <a href="https://twitter.com/Broncos">@Broncos</a> final push for Super Bowl? <a href="http://t.co/tgDgoE1R0m">http://t.co/tgDgoE1R0m</a> <a href="http://t.co/XnaqmREMTd">pic.twitter.com/XnaqmREMTd</a></p> - NFL (@nfl) <a href="https://twitter.com/nfl/status/572097749103091712">March 1, 2015</a></blockquote>
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Sunday, March 1, 2015

He'd advocate the fullback! Especially with an altitude advantage and a solid attacking defensive scheme!!

Lombardi Loved Fullbacks and quick OL!! Howard Griffith was key in Broncos "Lombardi's"

http://twitter.com/nflnetwork/status/571550415277465600/photo/1