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Which 2022 NFL Offseason Moves Will Look Worst In 3 Years?

Which 2022 NFL Offseason Moves Will Look Worst In 3 Years?

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    Scott Taetsch/Getty Images

    There are a myriad of moves
    made every NFL offseason that have varying degrees of impact.

    Some of these only have short-term implications, such
    as one- or two-year contracts for depth veterans and hires to fill out the positional
    coaching ranks, while others have the potential to alter an organization’s direction for
    years to come.

    Trading away a
    franchise player, hiring a head coach or drafting a prospect with the first
    overall pick can have lasting effects that may set a club back significantly if
    they don’t pan out.

    While it’s admittedly impossible
    to predict the future, there were a few big-time transactions during the 2022
    offseason that look like they’ll be more regrettable than the rest in a few years.

    Here’s a look at five moves that will be considered the worst of the 2022 offseason three years from now:

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    Mitchell Leff/Getty Images

    The Tennessee Titans tied with the Kansas City Chiefs for the best AFC regular-season record at 12-5 last year despite missing superstar running
    back Derrick Henry for more than half of it.

    Although their run ended with
    a disappointing exit in the AFC Divisional Round thanks to the eventual conference
    champion Cincinnati Bengals, there was still plenty of reason to believe the Titans could stick around as a perennial contender.

    Following their controversial
    decision to trade away top wideout A.J. Brown during the draft, it’s unlikely
    the Titans will be as dangerous in 2022 and beyond.

    Tennessee sent shockwaves through the league when
    it shipped the rising star to the Philadelphia Eagles in
    exchange for the Nos. 18 and 101 overall selections.

    While the Titans wasted little
    time identifying a replacement, snagging Arkansas’ Treylon Burks with
    the first-round pick it received from the Eagles, it will be difficult for the
    first-year talent to replicate the outstanding early and consistent success
    that Brown found after being taken in the second round of the 2019 draft.

    Brown quickly established
    himself as one of the league’s top wideouts, surpassing the 1,000-yard receiving
    mark as both a rookie and sophomore while scoring 20 total touchdowns in that span.

    Although he took a step back in 2021 while dealing with injuries that limited
    him to 13 games, the Ole Miss product still reeled in 63 receptions for 869
    yards and five touchdowns.

    With the clock ticking on a
    contract extension, Tennessee brass opted to trade the 25-year-old rather
    than negotiate. The Eagles had little issue meeting Brown’s demands, signing
    the wideout to a four-year, $100 million deal ($57 million guaranteed) immediately after acquiring him.

    Brown should play a key role
    in keeping Philadelphia in contention after the club made a surprise postseason appearance last year.

    Without their No. 1 wideout in the fold, the Titans are due for a regression and could
    struggle to even reach the playoffs in 2022, potentially missing out for the
    first time since 2018, their last season without Brown.

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    David Rosenblum/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

    After an especially trying campaign, what the Jacksonville Jaguars need right now more than anything else is stability.

    New head coach Doug Pederson was
    brought in to right the ship after a disastrous 11-month run with Urban Meyer
    at the helm. At his introductory press conference, Pederson admitted there won’t
    be an “overnight
    fix
    ” for the franchise’s issues but pledged to change the culture and
    build a championship-caliber team.

    One of the earliest missteps
    in this rebuilding effort could be the first draft pick of Pederson’s regime. With the No. 1 overall selection, the Jaguars took edge-rusher Travon Walker, a prospect brimming with upside who didn’t put nearly as much on tape as some of the more polished options at the position.

    Walker surged to the top of
    mocks relatively late in the predraft process. It was widely expected that the Jaguars would go
    with the highly refined Aidan Hutchinson, who was fresh off of setting school sack records
    at Michigan, over the more athletic but raw Georgia pass-rusher.

    The lack of collegiate production
    from Walker could be an indication of potential NFL struggles. He only recorded
    13 tackles for loss and 9.5 sacks over the last three years combined, paltry
    numbers compared to the 16.5 tackles for loss and 14 sacks Hutchinson
    racked up in 2021 alone.

    While Walker tested off the
    charts
    at the combine, there have been countless instances of prospects
    dominating workouts but failing to turn that eye-popping athleticism into
    on-field success.

    There’s a real chance Walker
    joins that list of promising athletes who never live up to the hype. Given there
    was an obvious and safer pick available in Hutchinson, this could go down as
    one of the biggest missteps of not only the 2022 offseason but of the modern
    era.

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    Scott Taetsch/Getty Images

    The Washington Commanders made
    one of the most head-scratching decisions of the offseason when they overpaid the
    Indianapolis Colts for Carson Wentz.

    Washington gave
    up
    a 2022 third-round pick and a conditional 2023 third-rounder and moved down five spots in this year’s second round in exchange for a stopgap
    quarterback and a 2022 seventh-rounder.

    The move made even less sense when
    it was reported that “nobody
    was interested in trading for Wentz following a disappointing first season in
    Indianapolis.

    According to The Athletic’s Mike
    Sando
    , anonymous NFL executives claimed most GMs would have rather kept the
    salary-cap space and draft capital by sticking with incumbent starter Taylor
    Heinicke over taking on Wentz and his massive
    contract
    in exchange for Day 2 draft picks:

    “If you polled the entire league and said
    you can have Taylor Heinicke for $2 million and you have $26 million to spend
    plus two third-round picks, or you can have Carson Wentz, I’m pretty sure the
    majority would prefer Heinicke.”

    On paper, Wentz’s 2021 numbers
    don’t look terrible. The veteran QB went 9-8 as a starter while completing
    62.4 percent of his passes for 3,563 yards and 27 touchdowns and seven
    interceptions.

    A closer look reveals the
    signal-caller stalled out during Indy’s playoff push, only passing for more
    than 185 yards and one touchdown once over his final five starts. He
    struggled despite being supported by the league’s leading rusher in Jonathan
    Taylor, who emerged as a dominant force in his second year.

    With a playoff berth on the
    line in the season finale, Wentz went 17-of-29 for 185
    yards and a touchdown while throwing an interception and taking six sacks
    against the lowly Jaguars.

    It’s not the type of
    performance that inspires confidence in a starting quarterback, and it’s likely what pushed Indy to move on from Wentz and acquire Matt Ryan this offseason.

    Washington probably won’t find itself competing for a Super Bowl with Wentz under center. More realistically, the team will hover around
    .500, missing out on chances to draft elite QB prospects to build
    around.

    Don’t be surprised if the
    Commanders are still seeking their franchise quarterback in three years while being thin in
    other areas due to the loss of picks stemming from this trade.

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    Barry Chin/The Boston Globe via Getty Images

    The New England Patriots made some
    of the most bizarre offensive line moves of the 2022 offseason.

    It started when the Pats opted
    to send Shaq Mason to the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, accepting
    a
    lowly fifth-round pick
    for their starting right guard.

    Mason had established himself as one of the NFL’s
    most consistent interior offensive linemen over the last half-decade. He was
    instrumental in protecting rookie quarterback Mac Jones and bolstering a New England
    ground game that ranked eighth in the league last year.

    The 2015 fourth-round pick
    won the starting role in his first season and earned 80-plus PFF grades in all
    but one of the last six years. He finished the 2021 campaign having allowed
    just a single sack and earned an 86.4 from PFF for his efforts, the fourth-best
    mark
    at the position.

    Reinforcing the offensive
    trenches was one of the top priorities for Bill Belichick during the draft, but the
    head coach made the rather puzzling decision to take Chattanooga guard Cole Strange with the No. 29
    overall selection.

    While Strange projects to start at guard for the Patriots, the
    team likely could have waited until Day 2 to land him.

    Rams head coach Sean McVay seemed baffled by the pick. NBC Sports’ Tom
    E. Curran
    talked to a pair of AFC sources who both concurred the first round
    was “too early” to select Strange, while another executive told NBC Sports’ Phil
    Perry
    they didn’t think the offensive lineman would go “anywhere near” the
    spot he was ultimately selected.

    It’s
    a deviation from New England’s trend of using Day 3 picks or undrafted rookies to man
    interior offensive line positions.

    Since
    Logan Mankins—the last interior offensive line prospect the Patriots took in
    the first round back in 2005—was traded in 2014 (also to Tampa Bay), eight of the nine regular
    starters
    the Patriots have deployed at guard or center have been selected
    in the fourth round or later. Joe Thuney, a third-round pick in 2016, was the only Day 2 player to log consistent IOL snaps for the team.

    While
    Strange could become a consistent presence for the Patriots, the team would have been better off keeping Mason and using
    its Round 1 pick to address a bigger need, such as wide receiver.

    The Pats likely could have snatched up Strange the following night, a move that would have
    made much more sense when looking back at this draft in a few years.

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    Bob Levey/Getty Images

    The Houston Texans appear to
    be bouncing between stopgap hires to fill their head coaching vacancies in the
    post-Bill O’Brien era.

    That didn’t change following
    the firing of David Culley after an ugly 4-13 showing in 2021. The team decided
    to promote defensive coordinator Lovie Smith into
    a role he likely won’t hold beyond the upcoming campaign.

    There’s little reason to
    believe Smith will be the one to bring this rebuilding squad back to
    contention. He hasn’t had a winning season at any of his stops in a decade—his last season
    above .500 was in 2012, his final year with the Chicago Bears—and is coming off a campaign
    in which he oversaw a defense that ranked 31st in yards allowed and 27th in
    points conceded.

    Although he found some success
    early during his tenure in the Windy City, Smith went just 8-24 during a
    forgettable two-year run with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers from 2014-2016 and ended a disastrous
    four-and-a-half season stretch at Illinois having won just 17 of 56 games and losing his lone bowl appearance in 2019.

    Even Smith’s best years lacked
    playoff success. He took the Bears to Super Bowl XLI following a 13-3 campaign in 2006 but came up well short against the Indianapolis Colts. He went just
    1-2 in his two other postseason trips in nine years with Chicago, the most recent of which came in
    2010.

    Considering the sheer number
    of capable candidates available—Brian Flores, Kellen Moore, Eric Bieniemy and Byron
    Leftwich were just a few of the top-flight options who didn’t land head coaching jobs
    this offseason—the Texans will ultimately regret passing up the chance to hire one
    in favor of promoting a retread who already showed he was incapable of lifting their
    defense.

    This decision will look even worse when one of those coaches lands
    a job and is thriving in three years while Houston is still looking
    for a long-term solution for their top job.

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