Jason Avant’s Future

This is the time of year when veteran players get cut. You often wonder if the player still has value or is over the hill. Mike Tanier wrote an excellent piece where he covered some veterans of interest. Jason Avant was one of them.

Jason Avant

Who is He: A career slot/possession receiver, Avant was with the Eagles long enough to share the huddle with both Jeff Garcia and Matt Barkley. He has been a team captain and was the “designated guy with a clue” in the locker room during the lean years. Avant started 14 games last season, as Chip Kelly used a three-receiver base package, but he caught just 38 passes, his lowest total since 2008. After Riley Cooper, Jeremy Maclin and other Eagles signed new deals, the team released Avant to maintain cap maneuverability.

The Good: Avant still has the classic possession receiver skill set. He knows how to sit down in zones for short passes and can make nifty little moves at the stem of his pass pattern to get away from defenders. He still runs the post-corner route well enough to break free of the nickel defenders and safeties who are usually covering him, so Chip Kelly had him run that route frequently. Avant was a natural in the leader/captain/chaplain role and stood tall during some difficult situations, like the death of Andy Reid’s son and Riley Cooper’s racial slur.

The Bad: Opponents are often content to use safeties to cover Avant, who was never a burner and can now only outrun the slowest defensive backs. The Cardinals lined up Tyrann Mathieu against Avant last year, which was fascinating. Avant used his post-corner trick to catch a deep pass against Mathieu early; after that, the Honey Badger looked like he was orbiting in circles around Avant as he completed his pattern.

Avant was a great “bad ball” receiver in his prime, hauling in passes that were too high (Michael Vick) or too low (Donovan McNabb). He still flashes that talent, but some of his agility is gone. When the Eagles needed him to be a vacuum cleaner in the first Cowboys game (Nick Foles was playing injured, then Matt Barkley was playing Barkley), Avant just could not adjust to the ping-pong balls flying at him the way he used to.

Avant made an impact on special teams early in his career and will do anything he is asked, but he has not been a regular coverage team contributor in years and has little experience as a return man. As teams seek third-to-fifth receivers, lack of special teams versatility becomes an issue.

Bottom Line: Two of Avant’s recent coaches, the Chiefs’ Andy Reid and the Jets’ Marty Mornhinweg, will be in the market for receiver depth for their rosters. Avant’s coaches love him, but Avant would be an odd fit for the Chiefs, who need a dose of speed. The Jets are a better fit. Thinking outside the Reid Family box, the Broncos could use Avant if they lose Eric Decker: insert him as the fourth option in their passing game and he can do Brandon Stokley-type stuff.

Avant is not destined to have a Stokley-like endless career as a lovable try-hard slot guy, however, because his skills are clearly fading. Avant can still help as a safety valve for a contender or camp counselor for a rebuilding team, but his next contract will be his last.

Great wrute-up. That is Jason Avant. I sure hope he catches on with the right team and is able to catch some balls and win some games.

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Mike Mitchell Update

Mitchell isn’t the biggest name, but he would be an upgrade and the team could still address Safety again by signing another free agent, re-signing Nate Allen or using an early pick. Fixing Safety isn’t a one player solution.

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Donnie Jones Update

Jones can’t re-sign until FA officially starts. Weird technicality for players on cheap 1-year contracts.

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Free Agent CB Update

Peter King recently made a comment that got the attention of some Eagles fans.

“If I were GM Howie Roseman, I’d be watching tape of Titans corner Alterraun Verner”

Did King know the Eagles liked Verner? Does that mean the Eagles will go after a corner in free agency?

It is my feeling that the Eagles will address corner in the draft. They already have a pair of veteran CBs. Could those guys be upgraded? Sure, but then you’re spending FA money on a position where there is already stability. It makes more sense to focus on holes rather than expensive upgrades.

2 of the CBs that fans asked most about need updates. Sam Shields re-signed with Green Bay so he’s off the market.

As to Verner, Mike Tanier wrote an excellent piece on him and offered one key note.

Verner also rarely plays press coverage. Through four games, I do not recall seeing him jam a receiver at the line, though he sometimes makes contact early in the route and rides the receiver downfield. The Titans work to allow Verner to cover in space as often as possible.

“Rarely plays press coverage.” That’s not a good fit for the Eagles. It is my understanding that Bill Davis wants to play even more press coverage than he did in 2013. Don’t pay big money to a corner that doesn’t fit your scheme.

Verner is a talented, young player, but fit is critical in free agency just like it is in the draft.

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Free Agents of Interest?

Greg Bedard is an outstanding national writer. He works for Peter King’s MMQB site. Bedard put together his list of Top 50 free agents and then listed teams where they would be a good fit. Here are the Eagles fits, per Bedard.

30. MALCOLM JENKINS

30-malcolm-jenkinsFS, New Orleans (Age 26)

Hasn’t quite lived up to being the 14th overall pick in 2009. He’s been a solid, versatile player but hasn’t stood out in any facet of the game. Potential is still there. Best fit: Eagles. They have to get more dynamic in the back end.

21. CHRIS CLEMONS

21-chris-clemonsFS, Miami (Age 28)

An underrated, underappreciated player in the Dolphins secondary, Clemons should get the chance to flourish elsewhere. He can play both safety spots. Best fit: Eagles. They’re looking at wholesale changes in the back, and he shouldn’t break the bank.

12. JASON WORILDS

12-jason-worildsEdge, Pittsburgh (Age 26)

Finally got a chance to play every down when Lamarr Woodley was injured. He showed a knack for getting to the passer, and there is a dearth of 3-4 OLBs in free agency. Best fit: Eagles. Suitors will line up for Worilds. He’d bring instant impact opposite Trent Cole.

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Foles Makes a Free Agency Move

Nick Foles got engaged and it wasn’t to Jimmy Bama? Crazy.

Congrats, Mr Foles.

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Jimmie Ward Update

One Safety prospect the Eagles might have interest in is Jimmie Ward of Northern Illinois. He is at the Combine, but Tony Pauline reports Ward won’t be able to work out.

Jimmie Ward will not be taking part in Tuesday’s defensive backs workout. Routine Combine medical evaluations revealed a foot issue. Ward is still awaiting more to the exact nature of the injury, and initial reports are the injury is considered relatively minor.

Combine medical procedures dictate that Ward not be allowed to participate even if he wanted to (similar to Austin Sefarian-Jenkins). Like Sefarian-Jenkins, the situation is surprising in that the player had been running and training without any discomfort, or indication of an injury. Ward came to Indianapolis planning to fully take part in Tuesday’s showcase.  Ward had been working out at the same facility as Jadeveon Clowney and Jerick McKinnon, two players who’ve exceeded expectations the past two days in combine workouts.

As first reported Thursday, Ward was expected to perform extremely well in all areas of Tuesday’s on field workout. In fact, Ward has been consistently running 40 times in the 4.4s. Multiple teams have Ward behind only Calvin Pryor and HaHa Clinton-Dix among the safety population.

Ward lacks ideal size at 5-11, 193, but he is up 2 pounds from the Senior Bowl. Ward has outstanding cover skills and some think he could be a slot corner.

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Some Prospects of Interest

Notes from the Combine

Some feel McGill should move back to Safety.

Johnson is another tweener DB.

Hubbard might be a better LOLB (Barwin) than pass rushing ROLB. I’m sure the team does love his size.

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Checking on Some OLB Prospects

Green Bay is the smallest NFL market, but the media up there does a tremendous job of covering the team and the league. Tyler Dunne is one of the best Packers writers and he did a good piece on OLB prospects Kyle Van Noy and Marcus Smith.

I think Smith would be a good ROLB candidate for the Eagles. I think Van Noy would be more  natural as The Jack (the spot where Connor Barwin plays).

Chip Kelly might find Smith intriguing. He has good size. He was highly productive. And he was a QB in high school, which he feels helps him now as a pass rusher.

“Me as a quarterback, and knowing my offensive linemen, you could tell the tendencies of the offensive linemen as well when the quarterback comes to the line and makes checks,” Smith said. “When the quarterback comes to the line, I can relay it to the line and the linebackers and safeties what’s going on. That helps us a lot as a defense.

“Watching film, I’d say, ‘I used to do that same stuff, I used to do that same stuff.’ I used to talk to the defensive line and the linebackers all the time and tell them, ‘This is what is happening,’ and when we get to the game we can play a lot faster.”

Kelly loves versatile players. Having a former QB as his primary pass rusher would be a very Chip Kelly kind of thing.

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Crazy Stat

Interesting nugget from Jimmy Bama.

2013 – Lane Johnson
2012 – Fletcher Cox
2010 – Brandon Graham

Danny Watkins got traded so that wiped out 2011. Mac is a FA and would cover 2009. The Eagles traded out of the 1st round in 2008 and 2007 so it isn’t like they picked busts that failed.

I would guess the league average is 4 or 5 so the Eagles are below that, but not substantially. The stat sounds crazier than it really is.

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