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Broncos Sign Tight Ends Virgil Green, Owen Daniels

DenverBroncosENGLEWOOD, Colo. (AP) — The Denver Broncos moved on from Pro Bowl tight end Julius Thomas by signing Virgil Green and Owen Daniels to three-year deals Tuesday.

Thomas is the only tight end in NFL history to catch a dozen touchdown passes in consecutive seasons and Green has just one TD catch in his four-year career.

Yet, in new coach Gary Kubiak’s system, tight ends have to be good blockers in the run game, and that’s Green’s forte and Thomas’ shortfall.

Daniels, a two-time Pro Bowler, has played all nine of his seasons for Kubiak, first in Houston and then in Baltimore last season, when he caught 48 passes for 527 yards and four touchdowns.

Also Tuesday, the Broncos re-signed linebacker Steven Johnson to a one-year deal.

Broncos, LB Steven Johnson Agree on 1-Year Deal

Steven Johnson
Steven Johnson

ENGLEWOOD, Colo. (AP) — The Denver Broncos and linebacker Steven Johnson have reached agreement on a one-year contract hours before he was set to become a free agent.

The Broncos didn’t tender Johnson as a restricted free agent, a move that would have cost them $1,542,000.

Johnson has been a top special teams player for Denver, which signed him after he went undrafted out of Kansas in 2012. He started seven of the Broncos’ final eight games at middle linebacker last year after Nate Irving’s season-ending knee injury.

Chiefs Sign Veteran Safety Tyvon Branch to 1-Year Deal

Tyvon Branch
Tyvon Branch

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — The Chiefs have signed veteran safety Tyvon Branch to a one-year deal, helping to solidify a position that could be thinned out considerably by free agency.

Kansas City is already poised to play without Pro Bowl safety Eric Berry, who is undergoing treatment for lymphoma. Fellow safeties Kurt Coleman and Ron Parker are free agents.

The 28-year-old Branch has been solid when he’s healthy, but injuries have kept him from appearing in just five games over the past two seasons. He’s spent his entire seven-year career with AFC West rival Oakland, making 461 tackles, eight sacks and four interceptions.

The Chiefs already have been busy in free agency, restructuring deals with linebacker Tamba Hali and defensive tackle Mike DeVito, and agreeing to terms with wide receiver Jeremy Maclin.

Huskers Complete Second Spring Practice

nebraska_helmetLincoln, Neb.- The Nebraska football team continued its 2015 practice season Monday afternoon, as the Huskers practiced outside at the Ed and Joyanne Gass practice fields, split into two groups each practicing for about an hour and 45 minutes.

Nebraska defensive coordinator Mark Banker spoke to media members following Monday’s practice, mentioning that practice was slightly better than the first practice on Saturday, as players and coaches alike are getting used to each other on the field.

“It was a little bit better than day one, the thing that I have to remind myself about is the fact that everything is new to everybody,” Banker said. “We are new to the players, the players are new to us, scheme, you rely a lot of times as a coach on guys that have been in the program and have been through it, that is not necessarily the case.”

Banker added, “We have guys that know how to lead by example, and do the right thing and teach the younger guys—maybe in the classroom with some of the younger guys how to take notes or what to pay attention to.”

According to Banker, the defensive installation has been going pretty smooth so far, as the team has been working more on fundamentals rather than the actual playbook.

“It seems to be good. The biggest thing that we have talked about around here is you do not have to know anything about what we do. The biggest thing is you give effort,” Banker said. “At some point in time effort will not be good enough and we will actually have to execute. Defensively we do not have a lot in right now, we are trying to be conscious with the fundamentals.”

The Huskers will run 4-3 under Banker, something that NU is schematically capable of already according to Banker.

“The fortunate thing in our case schematically is– personnel wise they were built for a 4-3 team. They played a type of ‘quarters’ secondary, so personnel wise that configuration is there,” he said. “I think we have a solid group up front, I think we have a decent group in the back end, and when I say solid or decent, I mean from a standpoint of players and numbers.”

Nebraska returns to the practice field on Wednesday for its third workout of the spring. Check back at Huskers.com for updates.

Broncos Tender Restricted Free Agent Tony Carter

Tony Carter
Tony Carter

ENGLEWOOD, Colo. (AP) — The Denver Broncos have tendered a $1.52 million salary to restricted free agent cornerback Tony Carter.

The move gives the Broncos the right to match any offer the backup cornerback receives in free agency.

Carter has three career interceptions, 22 pass breakups and three fumble recoveries in his seven-year NFL career. He has appeared in 42 regular season games and five playoff games with Denver (2009-, ’11-14) and New England (2010), collecting 48 total tackles, three interceptions, three fumble recoveries and two dozen pass breakups.

The Broncos also announced the hiring of Ray Jackson as director of player development. He spent the last decade in a similar role with the Steelers and replaces Jerry Butler, who followed John Fox to Chicago.

Jackson played six seasons in the NFL with the Bills and Browns after a standout career at Colorado State, where he graduated as the program’s all-time leader in career interceptions (20).

5 Questions to Answer as NFL Free Agency Begins

nfl_logo2011-medWhen NFL free agency begins Tuesday, lots of players will get lots of money. Some will even earn it throughout those massive contracts.

An early rush to haul in those big bucks will be followed by weeks of secondary signings that often are more critical to a team’s success than the headline-grabbing deal.

Five questions to be answered over the next few days and weeks:

WHERE DO THE ALL-PROS LAND?

Two dominant players who made the 2014 All-Pro squad are on the market and a third still could wind up there.

Lions defensive tackle Ndamukong Suh and Cowboys running back DeMarco Murray, the AP Offensive Player of the Year and league’s leading rusher, will be available. So might be Patriots star cornerback Darrelle Revis.

Suh appears ticketed for Miami. He is that rare star just entering his prime and became available to any team willing to commit nine figures over a lengthy period for his services. Yes, he has had some anger-management problems, but that didn’t seem make him any less attractive for the Dolphins and owner Stephen Ross, who wants to make a big splash.

Suh is an every-down player and a force in all situations, and Miami has the financial room and the need.

Murray’s one drawback is the same for all running backs — longevity. At 27, though, he’s not particularly worn, and he’s versatile. His best option would be returning to Dallas to run behind that superb line, but the Cowboys are cap-strapped. The next-best choice would be a team with a solid passing game to balance Murray’s running.

San Diego and Indianapolis could make sense.

Revis is a strange case. His contract history is to take the money and then shut down the opponent’s best receiver. But now that he’s won a Super Bowl, perhaps he’ll find that championship rings are just as valuable as huge bank accounts.

He easily could wind up back in New England, but pretty much any team except Tampa Bay, Dallas and Arizona figure to contact him.

WHO ARE THE BIG SPENDERS?

Some really bad teams: the Jaguars, Raiders, Titans and Jets, all with tons of salary cap room.

And some mediocre clubs: the Browns, Dolphins and Panthers.

And even some pretty good ones: the Eagles, Bengals and Colts.

HOW MUCH INTEREST IN RUNNING BACKS?

Usually, not much. But this is a highly intriguing crop, led by Murray, and with Frank Gore headed to Philadelphia. Mark Ingram added to the group before agreeing to return to New Orleans, which let Pierre Thomas go.

Few teams find value in long-term deals with guys who play the most physically punishing skill position. Murray figures to be an exception, and for strong passing clubs needing a boost on the ground, he’ll be a prime target.

What about Justin Forsett, C.J. Spiller, Reggie Bush and Shane Vereen? The money might not be what they project, but they should find jobs relatively quickly.

WHERE ARE THE BARGAINS?

How much teams dish out for the following players will determine if they fall into the bargain category. Someone might get nice value for grabbing linebacker Pernell McPhee, receiver Brian Hartline, defensive tackle Jared Odrick and center Rodney Hudson.

ANYONE INTERESTED?

Is there a market for players whose off-field issues short-circuited their careers? There’s talent available with the likes of defensive end Greg Hardy, defensive tackle Ray McDonald and running back Ray Rice. But will anyone bite considering the public relations problem that would accompany such signings?

“Perhaps most importantly, there are clubs that ownership will simply say I am not interested in a player who has these issues,” says 2015 Pro Football Hall of Famer Bill Polian, who built Super Bowl teams in Buffalo, Carolina and Indianapolis. “The owner will say our sponsors and season ticket holders and our market won’t like it. And so there will be owners who are not interested no matter what the football people think.”

But, as Polian also notes, it only takes one buyer.

AP Sources: Chiefs LB Hali Restructures; Maclin in Sights

Tamba Hali
Tamba Hali

Kansas City Chiefs linebacker Tamba Hali has agreed to restructure his contract, freeing up salary cap space that the club is using to pursue wide receiver Jeremy Maclin, two people familiar with the situation told The Associated Press.

The people spoke on condition of anonymity Sunday night because the Chiefs do not comment on contract matters. Hali would have counted $12 million against the salary cap in the final year of the $57 million, five-year contract that he signed before the 2011 season.

Maclin appeared poised to reunite with Chiefs coach Andy Reid, who traded up to grab him out of Missouri in the 2009 draft. ESPN.com reported that Maclin will sign with Kansas City when the NFL’s free-agency period begins Tuesday.

Riley: Cornhuskers are Learning New Language this Spring

Mike Riley (Photo from ESPN.com)
Mike Riley (Photo from ESPN.com)

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — New Nebraska football coach Mike Riley says his players’ biggest challenge this spring will be learning the language of his pro-style offense.

The Cornhuskers opened practice Saturday. Riley split the team into two groups for separate 90-minute workouts so he could better familiarize himself with and evaluate the personnel he inherited from former coach Bo Pelini.

Riley says he liked the team’s enthusiasm and the execution was as good as he could have hoped for a first day.

Running back Imani Cross says transferring plays from the playbook to the field was a challenge.

Huskers Kick Off 2015 Spring Practice

nebraska_helmetLincoln, Neb.- Saturday marked the start of a new chapter for the Nebraska football team, as the Huskers began its 2015 spring practice season under the guidance of new head coach Mike Riley. NU practiced outside at the Ed and Joyanne Gass practice fields, split into two groups each practicing for about an hour and 45 minutes.

According to Riley, the Huskers had a good first day of spring practice, and the two-group format seemed to work really well. Riley mentioned that all the players got a lot of one-on-one work with the coaches, especially including the depth-depleted linebacker corps.

“I liked it (practice format), I think that it will be good to look at the film, but my thought is as it was happening out there was everyone got a chance to practice,” Riley said. “It is a pretty long sustained work for the coaches, as they stay through the day but I think for the players, their time is pretty concise, they basically went through special teams, an individual period, pass skeleton period and then a team period.”

Riley added that what the team did during practice was about perfect for a first day.

“There was a lot of introductory stuff that I thought they handled well,” he said. “I think we are getting a way better look at the players and they are getting a chance to get more coaching. We are going to try it again on Monday.”

When it comes to what can be accomplished during the first day, Riley said that he just wanted to see a lot of enthusiasm from the players, something he said he saw.

“I like the enthusiasm for the work as much as anything, some of it looked like football from time to time,” Riley said. “We will keep working on that part, but we had good enthusiasm for work, you also get a chance to confirm some of the abilities and maybe find something new out (on the players).”

As for players that stood out to Riley, coach said he liked what he saw from the wide receiver corps.

“I watched guys all day long, De’Mornay (Pierson-El) was a pretty good player, I liked the way he ran. I thought Westerkamp would have a good feel for things, and he did,” he said. “I thought Tommy played well and the others played well too.”

Nebraska returns to the practice field on Monday for its second workout of the spring.

AP Source: Chiefs Sign LB Josh Mauga to 3-Year Contract

Josh Mauga (Photo from Twitter)
Josh Mauga (Photo from Twitter)

The Chiefs are bringing back linebacker Josh Mauga on a three-year deal, a person familiar with the move told The Associated Press on Friday.

The person spoke on condition of anonymity because the team had not announced the decision.

The move to retain Mauga, a pending free agent, came one day after the Chiefs parted ways with veteran linebacker Joe Mays. Mauga will likely start at middle linebacker alongside Derrick Johnson, who missed nearly all of last season with a torn Achilles tendon.

Mauga started every game last season in part due to injuries.

The Chiefs, who have been strapped for cash, cleared salary cap space Friday by releasing veteran defensive tackle Vance Walker. He signed a $13 million, three-year deal last offseason.

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