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The Best Player Who Could Be Cut from Every NFL Roster in 2022 Offseason


NFL
The Arizona Cardinals
the Jacksonville Jaguars
Marquise
they'd
Brown
the Atlanta Falcons
Ravens
Hollywood" Brown
Bills
The Carolina Panthers
Bradley Bozeman
the Chicago Bears
Bears&apos
Bengals
Apple
Cleveland
The Browns don't
The Dallas Cowboys
Ojemudia
Pro Football
The Detroit Lions
Bryant
the Green Bay Packers
Clemson
Pro Football Talk
Isaac Yiadom
the Kansas City Chiefs
Moreland
250-pounder's
Colts&apos
LSU
Pairing
Arden Key
Ward
The Chiefs
Cornell Powell's
The Las Vegas Raiders
New Raiders
Drake's
The Los Angeles Chargers
Texas A&M
Ekeler
Rams
Michigan Wolverine
   
The Minnesota Vikings
The New England Patriots
the New Orleans Saints
The New York Giants
Oshane Ximines
The Old Dominion
Cutting Ximines
All-Pro
the Philadelphia Eagles
TCU
Pittsburgh Steelers
Edmunds
Seahawks
Walker joins Carson
ACL
Buccaneers
Bucs
Breshad Perriman
the Tennessee Titans
Washington Commanders
Taylor Heinicke
Cam Sims


Christian Kirk
DeAndre Hopkins
Kyler Murray
Brown
Rondale Moore
A.J. Green
Andy Isabella
Kendall Sheffield
Dean Pees
Casey Hayward
Isaiah Oliver
James
Broncos
Achilles
Ravens
Morgan Moses
Daniel Faalele
Zack Moss
Devin Singletary
Johnson
James Cook
Ikem Ekwonu
Austin Corbett
Cameron Erving
Pat Elflein
Elflein's
Rashaan Melvin
Jaycee Horn
Keith Taylor
Jeremiah Attaochu
Alan Williams
Dominique Robinson
Trevis Gipson
Cornerback Eli Apple
Cooper Kupp
Daxton Hill
Cam Taylor-Britt
Chidobe Awuzie
Mike Hilton
Deshaun Watson
Baker Mayfield
Cleveland's
It's
Trysten Hill
Michael Ojemudia
K'Waun Williams
Damarri Mathis
Brad Holmes
Aidan Hutchinson
Josh Paschal
Romeo Okwara
Charles Harris
Julian Okwara
James Houston
Austin Bryant
Amari Rodgers
Matt LaFleur
Green Bay
Davante Adams
Marquez Valdes-Scantling
Christian Watson
Sammy Watkins
Romeo Doubs
New Houston
Lovie Smith
Josh Alper
Derek Stingley Jr.
Steven Nelson
M.J. Stewart
Desmond King
Lonnie Johnson Jr.
Jimmy Moreland
Tavierre Thomas
Ben Banogu
Kent Lee Platte
Yannick Ngakoue
K'Lavon Chaisson
Jaguars&apos
Travon Walker
Josh Allen
Tyrann Mathieu
Justin Reid
Charvarius Ward
JuJu Smith-Schuster
Skyy Moore
Justyn Ross
Trent McDuffie
Mike Mayock
Jon Gruden
Drake
Josh Jacobs
Dave Ziegler
Jacobs-Drake
Brandon Bolden
Zamir White
Brittain Brown
Cutting Drake
Khalil Mack
J.C. Jackson
Isaiah Spiller
Austin Ekeler
Joshua Kelley
Larry Rountree III
David Long Jr.
Troy Hill
Jalen Ramsey
Robert Rochell
Mike McDaniel
Josh Boyer
Brian Flores
Eric Rowe
Verone McKinley III
Kwesi Adofo-Mensah
Patrick Peterson
Andrew Booth Jr.
Cameron Dantzler
   
James White's
Pierre Strong Jr.
Kevin Harris
Marcus Maye
Michael Thomas
Chris Olave
Marquez Callaway
Deonte Harris
Drew Brees
Dave Gettleman
James Bradberry
Brian Daboll
257-pounder
Denzel Mims
Mike LaFleur
Kevin Durant
Don't
Garrett Wilson
Braxton Berrios
Howie Roseman
Jalen Reagor
Justin Jefferson
Jalen Hurts
A.J. Brown
DeVonta Smith
Karl Joseph
Terrell Edmunds
Miles Killebrew
Garoppolo
Mayfield's
Keeping Garoppolo
Trey Lance
Chris Carson 13
Kenneth Walker II
Rashaad Penny
DeeJay Dallas
Travis Homer
Antonio Brown
Tyler Johnson
Cyril Grayson Jr.
Godwin
Russell Gage
Scotty Miller
Tom Brady
Bud Dupree
Buster Skrine
Elijah Molden
Ryan Fitzpatrick
Dyami Brown
Terry McLaurin
Curtis Samuel
Carson Wentz
Jahan Dotson
Kelvin Harmon
Antonio Gandy-Golden
Harmon hasn't
       
Cap


Texans
Kenyan
Miami's


NFL's
Horn
Tyreek Hill
coaches'
Edmunds&apos


Troy Pride Jr.
Jaguars


Baltimore
Oklahoma
Arizona's
Sheffield
Denver
Buffalo
Georgia
doesn't
Carolina
Chicago
Cincinnati
Los Angeles Rams
Houston
Seattle
Mayfield
Dallas
Pitt
Detroit
Washington
King
Indianapolis
Jacksonville
Vegas
Miami
England
New Orleans
New York
New York Jets&apos
Reagor
Pittsburgh
Cleveland
San Francisco
Tampa
Atlanta
Tennessee


Super Bowl
the Super Bowl
a Super Bowl

Positivity     43.00%   
   Negativity   57.00%
The New York Times
SOURCE: https://bleacherreport.com/articles/2956060-the-best-player-who-could-be-cut-from-every-nfl-roster-in-2022-offseason
Write a review: Bleacher Report
Summary

Between free-agent signings, draft picks and trade acquisitions, every team will have increased competition at certain positions heading into OTAs. As teams begin thinking about the 53-man roster cutdown later this summer, they'll have to decide which players to keep around.Not every team has a major household name who could be cut. However, 2019 second-round pick Andy Isabella doesn't appear to be in Arizona's long-term plans after catching only one pass for 13 yards last season.If the Cardinals did cut Isabella this offseason, they'd save roughly $1.1 million and would be left with a dead cap hit below $350,000. A hamstring injury landed him on injured reserve to start the season, but he was healthy enough to participate on special teams after he was activated.The Falcons could save more than $2.5 million by cutting Sheffield, and they'd be left with a dead cap hit below $200,000. Just ask the Denver Broncos about offensive tackle Ja'Waun James.The Broncos signed James to a four-year, $51 million deal in 2019, but two major injuries and his decision to sit out the 2020 season amidst the COVID-19 pandemic led to his release last May. Although he was recovering from a torn Achilles, the Ravens signed him to a two-year, $4.6 million deal knowing that he likely wouldn't be ready to return until 2022.James did miss the 2021 season as expected, but the Ravens aggressively chased other options to ensure the right tackle position wouldn't be an issue in 2022. They signed veteran Morgan Moses to a three-year deal and selected Daniel Faalele in the fourth round of the draft, which reduced their need for James.The Ravens could save $2.5 million by cutting James, and they'd be left with only a $750,000 dead cap hit. They could use the money they save on him to spend on a veteran receiver after trading away No. 1 option Marquise "Hollywood" Brown during the 2022 draft.The Buffalo Bills' decision to upgrade at running back this offseason likely doesn't bode well for Zack Moss.Moss lost the starting competition to Devin Singletary last year, and he mustered only 3.6 yards per carry on 96 attempts as a backup. He did add 23 catches for 197 yards and a touchdown as a receiver, but he played only 42 percent of the Bills' offensive snaps.The Bills signed Duke Johnson to a one-year, $1.3 million contract in March, so he could be in line to absorb some of that receiving work out of the backfield. They'd save only $2 million and would be left with a $4.5 million dead cap hit if they released Erving, and Elflein's cap hit ($4.2 million) is smaller than his dead cap hit would be after a release ($6.6 million).Instead, the Panthers may look to make some cuts along their defense. However, it's hard to find a talented player on their razor-thin roster who's in danger of being cut this offseason.The most notable potential cut is edge-rusher Jeremiah Attaochu, who missed 12 games in his first season in Chicago last year. That would allow new defensive coordinator Alan Williams to focus on developing recent draft picks Dominique Robinson and Trevis Gipson.Attaochu could be a nice rotational player on a contending team if he's fully healthy, but he'll do little to change the rebuilding Bears' immediate future.The Cincinnati Bengals' upgrades along their offensive line justifiably garnered a ton of attention this offseason. The Bengals could save $2.75 million by cutting him, and they'd be left with only a $1 million dead cap hit.When the Cleveland Browns acquired quarterback Deshaun Watson in a blockbuster trade with the Houston Texans in March, Baker Mayfield seemed to be on his way out of town. He's played in only 18 games and notched 27 tackles and 0.5 sacks.The 24-year-old may be an interesting reclamation project for another team, but Dallas is too deep at the tackle position to continue developing him. The Cowboys need their depth at other positions, not to keep a third nose tackle.They could save nearly $1.2 million by releasing him and would be left with less than a $400,000 dead cap hit.The Denver Broncos thrust cornerback Michael Ojemudia into early action as a rookie in 2020 due to injuries piling up in their secondary, and he rewarded them with a great start to his career.Ojemudia started 11 games as a rookie, and he racked up 55 solo tackles and four forced fumbles. He played in only two games last season.This offseason, the Broncos signed veteran cornerback K'Waun Williams in free agency and selected Pitt corner Damarri Mathis with a fourth-round pick. They could save roughly $800,000 by releasing Ojemudia, although they'd be left with a roughly $500,000 dead cap hit.Teams needing a physical zone corner should be watching Ojemudia's status carefully, because he is talented enough to play somewhere.The Detroit Lions lacked impactful edge-rushers in recent years, but general manager Brad Holmes has turned that into a position of strength. However, the Lions could save nearly $1 million by cutting him, and they'd be left with a dead cap hit below $200,000.The likely odd man out due to the numbers game in Detroit, the 25-year-old should draw interest from defenses needing a power rusher in his prime.It's never a good sign when a top-100 pick at a position of need can't get onto the field as a rookie.Amari Rodgers was supposed to provide receiving depth and the occasional impact play on manufactured touches for the Green Bay Packers. Rodgers' best chance to make the Packers roster in 2022 is to become a fierce punt gunner and standout as a return man.New Houston Texans head coach Lovie Smith served as the team's defensive coordinator last season, so he was plenty familiar with his personnel. They can save roughly $1.3 million by cutting him loose, and they'd be left with a dead cap hit below $600,000.Teams often give first-round picks multiple years before moving on from them, but Jacksonville Jaguars edge-rusher K'Lavon Chaisson may prove to be the rare exception this offseason.Despite playing 31 games (including 11 starts), Chaisson has racked up only 50 tackles and two sacks in his two seasons. They'll need to make tough decisions at both positions once they begin cutting down their roster, which could put Cornell Powell's roster spot in jeopardy.The 2021 fifth-round pick is a late-blooming prospect who didn't see the field as a rookie.

As said here by Ian Wharton