As the Eagles and SOB Nation continue to mourn the death of the Dawkins era, NFL Free Agency marches forward.

The Birds were quiet today, after their “splash” of signing Stacy Andrews in Day 1 of Free Agency.  Here’s an update of today’s Eagles-related NFL Free Agency news:

T.J. Houshmandzadeh - Late yesterday, Housh and his agent got caught with their hand in the cookie jar, asking for more money from the Eagles than other teams.  The rumor going around is that Andy called his good friend and former Seahawks head coach Mike Holmgren to get a read on the kind of contract T.J. was asking for from Seattle.  We can thank Houshmandzadeh’s agent Kennard McGuire for negotiating him out of Philly.  Housh visited with Minnesota today.

Antonio Smith - A player that the Eagles were rumored to be interested in, he signed a 5-year, $35 million contract with Houston today.  I’m glad to see Smith sign elsewhere, as I think the 6′4″ 285 pound DE is overrated, and was overpayed.  2007 was Smith’s best year in terms of tackles (44) and sacks (5.5).  $35 million for that?  No Thanks.

Bryant Johnson - Another player who has been on the Eagles (and Frankie V’s) radar, he signed with the Lions today.  The 3-year, $9 million deal is an upgrade for Johnson, and as of now he will start opposite Megatron.

Keith Brooking - In NFC East news, Brooking signed with Dallas on Saturday.  Looks like Dallas is trying to put together the oldest LB corps in the NFL, with Greg Ellis (33), Brooking (33) and Zach Thomas (35) all running with the freak known as DeMarcus Ware.

Still a lot of action to come, but the Eagles have done more to fall off than improve.  The window keeps on slipping closer to closed.


81706863GS010_CINCINNATI_BE

Will Housh help the Eagles "put it on the board" in '09?

Eagles fan’s favorite topic over the past few off-seasons has been complaining about the perceived lack of talent at Wide Receiver.  I would argue that last year’s WR core was the second best of the Andy Reid era, behind the ’04 squad that featured T.O(verdose).

Heading into the ’09 season, DeSean Jackson and Kevin Curtis are our starting WRs. Avant has shown promise recently in the slot, and beyond that Reggie Brown, Hank Baskett, and Greg Lewis rotate in.  Although I like “Touchdown” Reggie Brown, “Baskett” Catch, and “G-Lew” for their nicknames, they haven’t added much (or anything) to the mix.

This year is no different that others, except now not only are the fans complaining, but so is the Quarterback.

There are quite a few interesting options at Wide Receiver available in Free Agency this year so hit the jump and check out the complete list


I was away all weekend in the land of Mikey Mouse so I am catching up on most of the news from the past couple days, but did come across this bit of news on a 49ers blog about Bryant Johnson.  The 49ers beat witter for the Sacramento Bee thinks its likely that Johnson won’t be back in San Fran next year.

I’d say it’s 65-35 that Johnson doesn’t return. The 49ers will not aggressively try to re-sign him before Feb. 27. But if he doesn’t get a lot of attention on the FA market, they’d welcome him back. He’s a big-bodied WR who would be a good fit in a smash-mouth offense.

Johnson isn’t a big name wide receiver and its not the kind of receiver that will take over a game ala Larry Fitzgerald, but lets be honest with ourselves.  There’s a very, very small chance the Eagles FO would ever make a move for such a wide receiver via free agency.  The cost of such a player would be deemed too high for a FA signing and the cost in draft picks to trade for someone like Anquan Boldin would be deemed too costly.

So if we can’t add an elite wide receiver, why not take a chance on a guy like Johnson?  His numbers in 2008 weren’t overly impressive - 45 catches for 546 yards and 3 touchdowns - but he was catching passes from JT O’Sullivan and Shaun Hill all year long.   He is the exact type of receiver that this offense could really use though - a big, strong, receiver who can move the chains and be a target in the red zone.  With the speed Kevin Curtis and DeSean Jackson bring to the wide receiving corps, what this offense really needs in an underneath threat that can keep defenses from dropping the safeties back all game long to prevent the long ball.

The Eagles could have pursued Johnson last year, but choose not to.  Last year though they had Reggie Brown coming off a 61 catch, 780 yard, 4 touchdown  season.

I’m not saying this would be a great move by the FO or that it will solve some of the problems our offense had in 2008, but who would you rather have as a 3rd wide receiver Bryant Johnson or Reggie Brown?  (Note, despite two years more experience in the league, Johnson is still a year young than Brown).  The problem though is what do you do with Brown and his ridiculously long contract?  Cutting Brown this off-season would cost the Eagles $5.8 million against the cap and who is going to give up much for a medicore WR scheduled to make $3.06 million next year?


© SportsOnBroad.com 2009