Archive for the ‘Karlos Dansby’ Category

How Tough Will The Road to The Super Bowl Be in the NFC?

June 24th, 2010 at 4:06 PM
By Kyle Langan

Each year, the focus of every team is primarily on winning their own division, then competing to seeding in the post season. Thinking about this process has me wondering: how tough will the road to the Superbowl be in The NFC?

Despite the fact that the defending champs reside in The NFC, I do believe it is the weaker of the two conferences. With The Colts in The AFC, that conference is always a tough road. Any team wishing to make it to the big game will likely have to beat Peyton Manning in his own building. Sure it has been done before, but its not easy. Factor in the ultra competitive AFC East  and AFC North divisions, and grabbing a wild card spot will be very tough in The AFC. There are three teams in both the north and east who could be considered playoff teams this coming year (Jets, Ravens, Steelers, Dolphins, Bengals, and Patriots). In fact, each of those teams had an outside shot at the post-season in 2009 with two weeks to go.

Then of course there are The Houston Texans, another very strong team.

What will make this conference so tough is the gauntlet of talent- saturated teams (such as Houston, The Jets, and Miami) combined with teams loaded with post-season experience (like Baltimore and Pittsburgh), topped off with the reigning AFC Champion Colts, led by the tremendous Peyton Manning.

Each pose a threat to make a run in their own respect.

In The NFC, The Vikings (with Favre) and The Saints still represent the two top teams in the conference. The Cardinals are sure to take a fall after losing all- pro quarterback Kurt Warner along with Karlos Dansby, Antrel Rolle, and Anquan Boldin.

If Green Bay doesn’t knock off Minnesota as division champions, they will likely secure another wild- card birth. This leaves the NFC East winner and one other wild card spot open.

I do not feel as if any team in The NFC South other than The Saints are complete enough to make a run. The Falcons and Panther have tough teams with a great attitude, bu Matt Moore’s lack of experience and Atlanta’s lack of defensive talent will hurt both of those teams.

The NFC East will be its usual chaotic self, with Philadelphia taking a fall this year. The most important thing that Donovan McNabb brought to to the table for Philly was that he was the glue that held all of the young talent on that team together. Their immaturity will come out in 2010.

The key to this conference is Brett Favre, and New Orleans.

Why New Orleans?

Well, in 2007 and 2008 they were 8-8 and 7-9 respectively. They could prove to be a one hit wonder and have another down year this year (they did get some absolutely insane breaks late in the year in 2009).

If they struggle and Favre doesn’t come back, The Packers, Cowboys,and Giants look to have the best shot at getting to The Superbowl.

The Giants Perspective

Speaking for The Giants, I love the spot they are in. Right now, Dallas is penciled in as NFC champs, with The Giants flying very far under the radar. No one expects much from The Giants after a terrible 2009.

This is where The Giants thrive.

Quietly, The Giants have made what is maybe the upgrade of the entire offseason in getting defensive coordinator Perry Fewell combined with a healthy Kenny Phillips and Antrel Rolle.

Fewell led a talent- bereft Bills defense to a very solid year, sporting the 2nd best interception total in The NFL, the best red zone defense in The AFC (Giants were the leagues worst last year), and The Bills themselves had a better yards per play average than did The Minnesota Vikings, who ranked 4th in The NFL in total defense.

Those upgrades alone, combined with having a more experienced receiving core for Eli Manning to work with will help get The Giants back to form, even if little else goes right for them.

Lets hope it leads to another playoff run.

Rolle Fills One Need; More Remain

March 11th, 2010 at 9:20 AM
By SimonGC

In an offseason where the Giants appeared to be facing a recently unprecedented number of roster holes, Jerry Reese did what he had to do by making sure he locked up Antrel Rolle. Much has been said about Rolle’s huge contract and lack of top flight ability, but nevertheless, that’s one hole filled.

We talk all the time about resisting temptation to draft players who repair roster deficiencies in order to draft the “Best Player Available.” But free agency basically works in an opposite manner: you target positions and fill needs; try to find players whose skill set and contract demands fit any of the holes on your team.

Sure, Karlos Dansby plays a need position, but Jon Goff is a better worst case scenario starter than CC Brown, and Dansby’s price would have skyrocketed had we been forced to outbid Miami. Julius Peppers? Didn’t fit at all. Would Maake Kemoeatu make the same impact on the line that Rolle will in the backfield? Didn’t think so.

Jerry Reese had too many needs on his plate to leave all for draft day. Given that Rolle was clearly the biggest impact player at the biggest need position that the market presented, Reese would have been stupid not to.

Now that he’s crossed one huge item off the top of the organization’s shopping list, the team can narrow it’s focus on draft day. In yesterday’s post, Kyle from G101 basically summed up the most pressing needs that remain when he highlighted MLB Rolando McClain, DT Brian Price and OL Mike Iupati.

There are other openings that need to be filled though. The Giants only have four legit corners on the roster (and one of them is Bruce Johnson). The Giants also have 3 of their 5 running backs coming off serious injuries, and could probably use a body there. Whatever Travis Beckum may become, he’s not the kind of depth that Giants need behind Kevin Boss.

So Jerry Reese still has a bunch of needs on draft day, but he used free agency well to fill the one glaring need that would threaten to force him to reach in the draft.

Giants Land Antrel Rolle (UPDATED)

March 5th, 2010 at 10:10 PM
By SimonGC

It’s now safe to say that “find safety help” has been lowered on Jerry Reese’s to-do list, if not crossed off altogether.

After making New York the first stop on his “Pay Me My Money” free agent tour, former Arizona Cardinals safety Antrel Rolle didn’t leave town without signing a contract, as per NY Giants custom.

Mike Florio from PFT indicates that it is a 5 year-deal in the ballpark of $37 million. From PFT:

“Per a league source, it’s a five-year deal worth $37 million, an NFL record for a safety.  Rolle gets $15 million guaranteed and $22.5 million over the first three years.”

Although Ralph Vacchiano’s early report that Rolle was taking a physical basically confirmed the existence of an agreement, the negotiations were amped up by last minute drama:

Vacchiano asserted that other teams could still be in play for Rolle, while Mike Garafolo reported that the Giants had already reached out to backup plans Darren Sharper, Antoine Bethea and Oshiomogho Atogwe. Big Blue fans waited nervously for hours after these reports, wondering if perhaps Arizona had tried to match the Giants offer.

(G101 Editorial Interpretation: If Rolle’s agent can use Vacchiano to squeeze out a few more bucks, the Giants can use Garafolo to call their bluff)

*THE CONRACT*

While earnable bonuses and escalators make these deals almost impossible to read from the outside, this big-money deal doesn’t quite reach the astronomical values that some had predicted.

It falls short of an $8MM yearly average, but pays Rolle more than $7MM per year, through the first three years. From where I stand, the Giants did a good job: they outbid the market without going overboard.

UPDATE: Florio came through again, late night, with a full breakdown of the numbers. Seems like they actually are pretty damn good…for Antrel Rolle. However, Rolle better be doing his best to make himself indispensable to the organization by the time those fourth and fifth years roll around. Back to PFT for the details:

“In year one…Rolle will get $10 million.
After two years…Rolle will have made a total of $15.5 million.
Through three years…Rolle will have $22.5 million.
After four…$29.75 million for Rolle.
After five…$37 million for Rolle.”

It may seem like a lot of money (and it is) for a player who isn’t quite considered “elite,” but fans/writers/commentators need not concern themselves with the Mara and Tisch family expenditures, so long as Rolle’s contract doesn’t prohibit the Giants in other ways as they move forward.

If, for instance, the Giants gave Rolle this contract and then can’t find the money for Barry Cofield, Steve Smith, and Mathias Kiwanuka when the time comes…then yeah, that’s a problem.

But this is not an Eric Mangini system they’re running here, folks.

The Giants have uncharacteristically given out big contracts in consecutive offseasons, but it would be rash to accuse the front office of being impulsive, desperate or acting without forethought.

The organization is not abandoning it’s core philosophy of developing and retaining it’s young players. Hopefully, that money is set aside already.

The danger is when the guys already in the locker room feel that Rolle’s money came from a pile that should have been waiting for them.

*WHAT’S IT MEAN?*

Although the Giants (and Miami Dolphins) had been rumored to covet both Rolle and Karlos Dansby, Rolle’s signing all but takes NY out of the running for Dansby (update: as does the fact that Dansby has agreed to terms with the Dolphins).

But now that the first domino has fallen, what have we learned about the Giants offseason plan to improve their roster?

This signing clearly indicates that the Giants saw their need for safety help as too immediate to relegate to draft day, where there’s no guarantee that your guy (if you’re lucky enough to get your guy) will be ready to contribute right away, the way Rolle will be expected to.

Did the Giants prioritize solidifying the safety position as opposed to the MLB position in free agency? Not necessarily.

All we know for sure is they preferred to spend their money on Antrel Rolle, who plays safety, rather than on Karlos Dansby, who plays middle linebacker.

Most likely, the Giants’ “reported interest” in Dansby was a smoke screen aimed at disguising real interest in Rolle, and perhaps coercing the competition (Miami) into prioritizing Dansby over Rolle.

*WHAT’S NEXT*

There’s not much left in unrestricted free agency, so it’d be hard for the Giants to make anything close to this kind of splash even if they wanted to. A few veteran deals perhaps, but those usually take place closer to or after the draft.

There’s hardly any way of knowing if the Giants will play the RFA market. They showed a willingness to engage it by reaching out to reps for O.J. Atogwe, Darren Sharper, and Antoine Bethea, although it’s unclear how much of that was posturing during the Rolle negotiations.

Perhaps the sexiest thing the Giants may get involved in would be trades, whether Reese was intent on picking up talent or draft picks. As I’ve said (to some support and some valid rebuke), I’d increase draft ammo by trying to trade a few players.

But by removing, or at the very least lowering, safety from the draft day shopping list, Jerry Reese can focus his higher draft picks on other perceived positions of need: DT, OL and perhaps MLB.

*MLB IMPLICATIONS?*

I couldn’t help but wonder if this signing indicated anything about how, or if, the Giants plan to upgrade the MLB position this offseason.

Before we start  with the insinuations that this all means that Giants are targeting Alabama’s Rolando McClain in the draft (although, Miami’s acquisition of Dansby increases the likelihood that McClain slips to 15), let’s face facts: the Giants’ big bucks moves on the first day of free agency are not in any way influenced by the hope/possibility that a top-ten talent MLB slips to them in late April.

Although it could change if the Giants do aggressively pursue McClain or Oakland RFA Kirk Morrison, the decision not to seriously entertain Karlos Dansby implies that the Giants are either comfortable with, or willing to settle for, Jonathon Goff as the starting MLB next year.

Apparently, they were not so comfortable with the idea that their starting safeties would be Michael Johnson and the better of a C.C. Brown/Aaron Rouse competition.

*THE DEFENSIVE BACKFIELD*

Rolle’s addition immediately (and forcefully) bolsters a unit that fell apart last year when Kenny Phillips went on IR. Although Rolle’s presence becomes paramount if Phillips’ injury prevents him from returning to field or form, a healthy tandem of Kenny Phillips and Antrel Rolle gives the Giants the best starting safety duo in the NFC East.

With Rolle now in the fold and assuming Kenny Phillips returns (and according to Kenny, he’d be ready to play “tomorrow”), Aaron Ross will return to cornerback, and Michael Johnson will slide down the depth chart to become the 3rd safety.

Most Giants fans will expect C.C. Brown to get his walking papers as soon as the ink is dry on Rolle’s contract.

That would leave Aaron Rouse with a tenuous grip on the last spot on the depth chart, although he will have to hold off practice-squadders Vince Anderson and Shareff Rashad, not to mention fellow mid-season waiver claim D.J. Johnson, and any draft pick that falls into the Giants lap.

What Rolle Would Mean to the Giants

March 5th, 2010 at 8:26 PM
By SimonGC

With Antrel Rolle making the New York Giants the first stop on his “pay me my money” tour, no one should be surprised that multiple outlets are reporting that the Giants are now front-runners to sign the top free agent safety on the market.

After all, the Giants generally only bring in players whom they plan to offer a contract, and they always aim to have that player signed before he has a chance to visit another NFL team.

Profootballtalk.com has reported that it’s down to three teams: Big Blue, Miami and Rolle’s old team, the Cardinals. NFL Network has reported that a deal with NYG is “95% done.”

UPDATE 9:45 p.m: Ralph Vacchiano from the NY Daily News is starting to get bad vibes about the lack of an announcement. He confirms that the Giants have reached out to Darren Sharper’s reps, and says that the longer this goes, the worse it feels.

“I don’t know if Rolle is still in the NJ area tonight, but I can tell you there is a lot of league buzz about the Cardinals making a last minute run at him, especially after losing out on LB Karlos Dansby”

The Giants and Dolphins had both been rumored as possible landing spaces for Karlos Dansby and Rolle. It would seem that both teams have made their priorities clear, now that Rolle’s in the Meadowlands and Dansby has made the Miami Dolphins his first visit (now signed).

With Miami apparently out of the running for Rolle, and taking us out of the running for Dansby, it’s time to look ahead at what the signing of Rolle would mean to the Giants’ roster and offseason plans.

(Remember, however, that until the deal is done, it ain’t a done deal. I wouldn’t rule out Rolle heading back to Arizona where he’s comfortable, particularly if the Giants offer doesn’t blow Arizona’s reported six-year, $38MM-ish offer out of the water. Over at the Blue Screen Ralph Vacchiano posits that “Rolle still pondering options”).

Rolle’s addition would immediately bolster a unit that fell apart last year when Kenny Phillips went on IR. Although Rolle’s presence is paramount if Phillips’ injury prevents him from returning to field or form, a healthy tandem of Kenny Phillips and Antrel Rolle gives the Giants arguably the best starting safety duo in the NFL.

Assuming Phillips returns (and if you ask him, he’ll tell you he’s ready to run tomorrow), Michael Johnson slides down the depth chart and becomes the 3rd safety. Most fans will expect C.C. Brown gets his walking papers as soon as the ink is dry on Rolle’s contract.

Aaron Rouse would seem to have a tenuous grip on the last spot on the depth chart, although he will have to hold off practice-squadders Vince Anderson and Shareff Rashad, not to mention fellow mid-season waiver claim D.J. Johnson.

This move would most likely remove safety from the list of Giants draft needs, although you never know. Almost no one expected them to select a DE when they took Kiwanuka in 2006.

Either way, it indicates that the Giants saw their need for safety help too immediate was to be relegated to draft day, where there’s no guarantee you get your guy or that he’s ready to contribute right away, the way Rolle would be expected to.

What is clear is that the Giants prioritized a safety over a middle linebacker with their free agency dollars. Of course, the Giants prioritized one player over another player, not a position over another position, but one has to wonder if this situation has implications on how or if the Giants will try to upgrade the MLB position.

My first though revolved around Rolando McClain. The Giants reported interest in Dansby indicated that they are interested in upgrading at MLB, and Miami’s acquisition of Dansby removes a primary roadblock from the “McClain available at 15” highway.

In actuality, the Giants big bucks free agency moves are not colored in any way by the hope that a top-ten talent MLB slips to them at fifteen in late April.

More likely, the “reported interest” in Dansby was a smoke screen aimed at disguising real interest in Rolle, and perhaps coercing Miami into prioritizing Dansby over Rolle, as Miami was also heavily linked to both players.

Although it could change if the Giants pursue McClain or Kirk Morrison (RFA from Oakland), the decision not to seriously entertain Karlos Dansby seems to imply this: the Giants are either comfortable with, or willing to settle for, Jonathon Goff as the starting MLB next year.

Of course, Rolle has and Dansby have yet to be signed, Phillips return to form is far from assured, the RFA market has yet to take shape, and the draft is still seven weeks away, so stay tuned to G101 and we’ll keep you updated with breaking news and analysis on all the offseason rumors and transactions as they happen.

Will Big Blue Make A Big Splash In Free Agency Yet Again?

March 1st, 2010 at 1:47 PM
By Kyle Langan

During his most recent press conference the The NFL Scouting Combine in Indianapolis, General Manager Jerry Reese assured the Big Blue faithful that he would be “aggressive” in fixing positions of need for The Giants.

With the free agent period less than a week away, who exactly could Mr. Reese be looking into?

Karlos Dansby-

Dansby is far and away the most intriguing of the free agent prospects (in what is a relatively weak class with regards to unrestricted free agents). He is the heart of Arizona’s defense and one of their best playmakers. In Arizona’s wild card win against Green Bay, he forced three turnovers. The Giants could really use his veteran leadership and skill set at a position that they need serious help with.

With a new defensive coordinator in town, it is imperative that The Giants sure up the middle of their defense and provide Perry Fewell with a captain who will run his defense.

Though many are turned off by Dansby’s age (28), the prospect of being able to fill at least one major void before the draft is intriguing.

Best offer: 5 years, $35 million (15 guaranteed)

While this may seem high, Chris Canty’s deal is worth $42 million. Contracts go up in value every year, and this year particularly is uncapped, so I would approach Dansby with that offer and see where it goes.

Antrel Rolle-

Antrel Rolle is expected to be cut by Arizona by the time March 5th rolls around, and he is someone that The Giants should look into. He is a converted corner, and though he is something of a suspect tackler, The Giants could use his coverage skills.

Even if they plan on drafting a safety, having Rolle to pair up with Kenny Phillips would be very appealing. Im sure this would also be very appealing to defensive coordinator Perry Fewell who has helped the likes of Charles Tillman, Nathan Vasher, Mike Brown and company rank second in the league in interceptions during his time with The Bears.

Pair Fewell’s smarts with some good athletes and The Giants have a recipe for improvement defensively.

Best offer- 6 years, $30 million (10 guaranteed)

Aaron Kampman-

As you may have read, the 30 year old Kampman has been connected with The Giants in the past few days. Believ it or not, I am very intrigued by the possibility of adding Kampman.

He is the best pass rusher on the market not named Julius Peppers, and he is the type of guy who doesn’t take plays off (unlike the aforementioned Peppers).

The only thing Perry Fewell has committed to in terms of scheme is that he will be using “multiple fronts”.

Whether he uses a 4-3 or 3-4 in nickel situations, he would have the likes of Kampman, Tuck, Umenyiora, Kiwanuka, and Sintim to rush the passer.

If even 4 of them are healthy, The Giants should see an improvement in their pass rush from 2009’s which sported an injured Tuck, a recovering Umenyiora, a banged up Canty, and the futile Rocky Bernard.

Furthermore, for the sake of attitude, Kampman is someone that New York can use.

Best offer- 3 years, $16 million (5 guaranteed)

Other Possibilities- CB Dunta Robinson, HB Chester Taylor, S Daren Sharper, LB Gary Brackett (i expect he will be back with Indy despite no deal being in place yet).

I do not expect Jerry Reese to sign anyone restricted, or even someone the likes of Julius Peppers. I expect Reese to leave no stone unturned, but in the end I do not expect him to get into a bidding war with anyone. Reese is a man with a plan, and if there are names out there that he wants then those names are on his desk and their agents will be called midnight Thursday.

We should know by Sunday what free agents will be joining The Giants for 2010 and beyond.

~ K. Langan