March 10: The deadline to designate franchise or transition players. Since they can’t tag Clowney, Reed is the Seahawks’ only realistic candidate. OverTheCap.com projects the transition and franchise tenders for defensive tackles to cost $12.321 million and $15.5 million, respectively. The tag window opens Feb. 25.
March 18: The start of free agency and the deadline for teams to submit qualifying offers to restricted free agents in order to retain right of first refusal/compensation. Seattle’s RFAs, in addition to Hunt and Jackson, are tight end Jacob Hollister and wide receiver David Moore. Hunt replaced Justin Britt, who’s coming off a torn ACL and has a whopping $11.67 million cap charge for 2020 that makes him a candidate to be released or restructured. Hunt was a sixth-round pick, so the low tender would be worth $2.144 million (per OTC projections) and would entitle the Seahawks to a sixth-rounder if they decline to match another team’s offer. A second-round tender is projected at $3.278 million.
March 22: Linebacker K.J. Wright is due a $1 million roster bonus. Wright did everything he could to convince the Seahawks to bring him back for the second year of his contract, but that isn’t a certainty with his $10 million cap charge. If they’re going to move on, the Seahawks would have a $1 million incentive to do so before this date.
March 30: Kendricks’ sentencing date in his insider trading case. It has been moved back several times and could be moved again, but either way, Kendricks’ legal future won’t be known until well after the start of free agency. Carroll volunteered that he wants Kendricks back.
What their draft capital looks like
What you need to know:
• First-round draft order: Picks 1-28 »
• McShay’s 2020 NFL Mock Draft 1.0 »
• Kiper’s Big Board » | McShay’s Top 32 »
• First Draft podcast » | 32 draft nuggets »
• Full draft rankings from Scouts Inc. »
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The Seahawks have the 27th overall pick. OTC projects them to receive three compensatory picks, which would give them eight selections in all. The round-by-round breakdown: one first, two seconds, one third, two fourths, one fifth and one sixth.
Eight selections would be double what the Seahawks had at the start of last offseason, so they might not have the same urgency to trade back in the first round, but their history suggests it’s still a strong possibility.
How much cap space?
ESPN’s Roster Management System has the Seahawks at more than $61 million in available 2020 cap space. That could grow with veteran cuts or restructures. Releasing tight end Ed Dickson would clear $3.4 million, for instance.
However, tagging Reed would cut into a good chunk of that $61 million. Cornerback Shaquill Griffin and running back Chris Carson are eligible for extensions that would increase their cap numbers, considering that they’re playing on inexpensive rookie contracts. Teams need to set aside some of their available cap space for their draft pool and in-season emergency fund.
That $61 million could dwindle in a hurry. But as the Packers showed, it might be enough to do something about Seattle’s pass-rushing need.