Lakers HC Rumors: Frank Vogel Gets 2nd Meeting After ‘Strong’ Interview

Orlando Magic head coach Frank Vogel directs his players during the second half of an NBA basketball game against the Washington Wizards, Wednesday, April 11, 2018, in Orlando, Fla. (AP Photo/John Raoux)

John Raoux/Associated Press

Frank Vogel is reportedly expected to get a second interview with the Los Angeles Lakers for their vacant head coaching position.

According to ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski, Vogel made a “strong impression” on the Lakers during the first interview, and the two sides are expected to talk again soon.

Vogel entered the mix as a candidate for the Lakers’ open position after L.A. and former Cleveland Cavaliers head coach Tyronn Lue failed to come to terms on a deal.

Per Wojnarowski and Dave McMenamin, the Lakers offered Lue a three-year, $18 million deal, but Lue desired a five-year deal. Another candidate, Monty Williams, signed for five years with the Phoenix Suns, and Luke Walton, after parting with the Lakers, landed a four-year contract with the Sacramento Kings.

Lue was thought to be L.A.’s top choice since he is a former Lakers player who coached LeBron James and Co. to a championship with the Cavs.

On Get Up! on Friday, former NBA player Jalen Rose said James should demand a trade if the Lakers don’t hire his preferred coach:

Get Up @GetUpESPN

“If they don’t hire the person that he would like them to hire … he should asked to be traded.”

—@JalenRose on LeBron and the Lakers head coaching situation https://t.co/9nCyw8BIJB

After having already interviewed Lue, Williams, Jason Kidd and Juwan Howard, Vogel was introduced into the mix as a candidate.

Vogel does not have any experience coaching James, but he coached against him plenty during his time with the Indiana Pacers and Orlando Magic.

The 45-year-old Vogel went 250-181 in six seasons as the Pacers’ head coach and led Indiana to two Eastern Conference Finals. The Pacers lost to James and the Miami Heat on both occasions and once more in the conference semifinals.

Vogel took over in Orlando in 2016, but he went just 54-110 in two seasons and failed to reach the playoffs.

Vogel reportedly performed well in his interview with the Lakers. According to Wojnarowski and Ohm Youngmisuk, Vogel and the Lakers brass had “detailed discussions” about how he would go about guiding a team that finished a disappointing 37-45 this season and hasn’t reached the playoffs since 2012-13.

Wojnarowski also reported former Lakers head coach and ex-New York Knicks team president Phil Jackson was a fan of Vogel before he hired Jeff Hornacek as head coach of the Knicks in 2016.

While Jackson is not part of the Lakers organization, he may have some influence when it comes to the coaching search. In addition to being arguably the greatest coach in team history, Jackson was once engaged to Lakers owner Jeanie Buss.

Brad Turner of the Los Angeles Times reported Jackson endorsed Lue for the Lakers’ head coaching job and told Buss he would be “a really good coach” for the organization.

The pressure is on the Lakers front office to select the right coach after a disastrous 2018-19, and the wrong choice could result in L.A. wasting LeBron’s remaining prime years and failing to become a title contender.

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Steph Curry: I Had ‘Best 18 Minutes of My Career’ in Game 6 2nd Half vs. Rockets

Golden State Warriors' Stephen Curry celebrates as he walks off the court following Game 6 of the team's second-round NBA basketball playoff series against the Houston Rockets on Friday, May 10, 2019, in Houston. (AP Photo/Eric Christian Smith)

Eric Christian Smith/Associated Press

After exploding for 33 points in the second half of the Golden State Warriors‘ 118-113 win over the Houston Rockets in Game 6 of their second-round playoff series Friday, Warriors guard Stephen Curry put his performance in perspective.

According to Chris Haynes of Yahoo Sports, Curry said, “That was the best 18 minutes of my career.”

Curry went scoreless in the first half, but he turned it on over the final 24 minutes and finished with 33 points for a Warriors team that was without both Kevin Durant and DeMarcus Cousins due to injury.

With the win, Golden State eliminated Houston and advanced to the Western Conference Finals for the fifth consecutive year.

This article will be updated to provide more information on this story as it becomes available.

Get the best sports content from the web and social in the new B/R app. Get the app and get the game.    

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Houthi rebels begin withdrawal from key ports in Yemen

Yemen’s Houthi rebels have begun a long-delayed withdrawal of their forces from key ports in Hodeidah province, the group said, under the terms of a UN-brokered peace agreement aimed at ending the country’s four-year-long civil war.

Mohammed Ali al-Houthi, the head of the Houthis’ Supreme Revolutionary Committee, said the pullout from Hodeidah as well as the Saleef and Ras Issa ports started at 10am local time (07:00GMT) on Saturday.

The Houthi-run Al Masirah TV channel said United Nations observers were monitoring the troop redeployment which is expected to take four days in total.

Reuters news agency, citing a witness, reported UN teams were overseeing the Houthis’ departure from Saleef and Ras Issa.

The Reuters witness said the Yemeni coastguard had taken command of operations at Saleef after a dozen trucks carrying Houthi fighters, armed with rocket-propelled grenade launchers and machine guns, departed from the port.

A senior pro-government official accused the Houthis of faking a pullout, however.

“The Houthis are staging a new ploy by handing over the ports of Hodeidah, Saleef and Ras Issa to themselves without any monitoring by the United Nations and the government side,” provincial governor Al-Hasan Taher told AFP news agency.

Moammar al-Eryani, information minister of Yemen‘s internationally recognised government, also dismissed the redeployment, alleging it was an attempt to “disinform the international community”.

“What happened today is a flagrant show, a group of [Houthi] militiamen left [the city] and they were replaced by others wearing coastguard police uniforms,” al-Eryani told Reuters.

Two-phase withdrawal

The Houthis’ reported withdrawal came after the UN announced on Friday that the group had unilaterally agreed to pull out its forces from the three key ports as part of a “first practical step on the ground” towards fulfilling a pact agreed between Yemen’s warring factions in Sweden last December.

The UN mission to support the peace deal said it will monitor the multi-step redeployment, adding the move must be followed by “the committed, transparent and sustained actions of the parties to fully deliver on their obligations”.

Under the first phase, the Houthis are expected to pull back 5km from the three ports, while pro-government forces backed by a Saudi-UAE-led coalition and stationed 4km from Hodeidah port on the edges of the city are due to retreat 1km.

Brigadier Mohammed al-Qaderi, the Houthi representative in a joint coordination team, said the group had implemented “all obligations” of the first phase and called on the UN to commit the pro-government forces to do the same, AFP reported.

A second phase is scheduled to follow in which both sides pull their troops 18km outside of Hodeidah and heavy weapons 30km away.

Once the Houthis withdraw, the UN mission said it will take “a leading role in supporting the Red Sea Ports Corporation in managing the ports” and enhance checks on cargoes.

Humanitarian crisis

Humanitarian officials have long pleaded with Yemen’s warring sides to spare Hodeidah, which serves as the entry point for the bulk of Yemen’s commercial imports and a lifeline for vital aid supplies.

But the peace deal had stalled since January amid deep mistrust among the parties in a conflict that has killed tens of thousands of people and triggered an economic collapse in the Arab world’s poorest nation, pushing millions of people to the brink of starvation.

The coalition alleged the Houthis used Hodeidah as a landing point to smuggle weapons supplied by Iran into Yemen, a charge the group and Tehran have repeatedly denied.

Giorgio Cafiero, CEO of Gulf State Analytics, said the lack of trust between the two sides presented a “huge problem” to efforts aimed at ending the war.

“Words are very good but to develop a little bit of trust that could potentially pave the way to eventually solve this conflict is going to really require some actions,” Cafiero told Al Jazeera.

The conflict in Yemen, home to an estimated 28 million people, began with the 2014 takeover of the capital, Sanaa, by the Houthis, who toppled the internationally recognised government of President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi.

Concerned by the rise of the rebel group, believed to be backed by Iran, the Saudi-UAE-led military coalition launched an intervention in 2015 in the form of a massive air campaign aimed at reinstalling Hadi’s government. 

The Houthis control the biggest urban centres while Hadi’s administration holds the southern port of Aden and a string of coastal towns.

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Why you can’t escape air pollution in national parks

The National Park Service mission statement breathes some grand words, as the conservation agency intends to preserve the country’s natural resources “for the enjoyment, education, and inspiration of this and future generations.”

But the Park Service can’t keep out air pollution.

A new report published by the National Parks Conservation Association (NPCA) concluded that a whopping 85 percent of parks contend with unhealthy air. The problem is a respiratory toxin regularly created and found in U.S. cities, called ozone. The NPCA found ozone to be a “significant” concern in 87 parks, and a “moderate” issue in 267 parks. 

This air pollution wafts into national parks from our potent industrial areas. There’s no way to keep it out. 

“We’re producing something that’s being brought to the pristine areas — it impacts our remote and thought-to-be-clean places,” said Gabriele Pfister, deputy director of the National Center of Atmospheric Research’s atmospheric chemistry lab who had no involvement in the report.

“Ozone is toxic. It damages our airways,” she added.

“Poor air quality in national parks is disturbing & unacceptable. Nearly every single one of our 400+ parks is plagued by air pollution. If we don’t take immediate action to combat this, the results will be devastating & irreversible.” #PollutedParks https://t.co/877U5z4tZq

— National Parks Conservation Association (@NPCA) May 7, 2019

Ozone comes to life when emissions from vehicles, fossil-fuel power plants, and industry release invisible gases called nitrous oxides, or NOx, into the air. When the sun hits these gases, it then makes ozone. “In the morning, the sun comes up, and you start cooking it,” explained Pfister. “You start creating ozone.”

In some places — like Pfister’s nearby Rocky Mountain National Park — this air pollution is lifted by normal, rising wind patterns into the mountains. 

But pristine, forested land can also make its own ozone. Trees, bushes, and other plants all naturally emit compounds into the air that react with NOx gases and make ozone, explained Anthony Wexler, director of the UC Davis Air Quality Research Center who took no part in the research. 

“You’ll see ozone concentrations in places that aren’t emitting much NOx,” said Wexler. “The NOx comes from what we do.”

SEE ALSO: Fearless TV weather forecasters air the planet’s soaring carbon levels

The solution, at least on paper, is simple. Producing energy and fuel without the combustion processes that produce NOx. “Low amounts of NOx would mean low amounts ozone,” emphasized Wexler. 

In reality, of course, transforming the nation’s energy system will require enormous political and societal ambition.

Although there’s still ozone swirling around many national parks — especially those near industrialized areas — things are certainly much better today than in the 1970s, when air pollution was so bad that Los Angelenos could taste the foul air. This is thanks to the Clean Air Act, which mandated that automakers and industry slash their polluting emissions. “The story is we’ve done a lot to clean up air pollution,” said Wexler. “It’s a whole lot better than it used to be.”

But clearly, air pollution still remains. And in many national parks, you’ll breathe it.

Then, of course, there’s the growing problem of wildfires — which create tiny bits of pollution called  particulate matter that saturate the skies in many national parks. It’s the burnt forest, floating through the air, and there will be more it: A more potent fire regime has emerged out West. Overall, wildfires in the U.S. are burning twice as much land as they were in the early 1980s and they’re burning for weeks, not days, longer.

Ozone formation.

Ozone formation.

Image: EPA

During the summer of 2018, smoke filled Yosemite Valley. In a large swath of the West, the worst days of particulate pollution are getting worse

Breathing particulate pollution is bad for your heart, as a number of studies have linked breathing this matter to accelerated heart disease. Meanwhile, ozone damages airways, exacerbates asthma, and — with prolonged exposure — can result in premature death, explained Pfister.

That’s why Pfister often goes hiking in the morning, before sunlight reacts with NOx to form ozone, which can then find its way into her huffing lungs. “The early bird gets the worm,” she said. 

But hundreds of millions of national park visitors are inevitably exposed to elevated ozone levels each year. It’s a product of our industrialized society, for now. 

“When people think of iconic parks like Joshua Tree or the Grand Canyon, they think of unspoiled landscapes and scenic views,” said NPCA president Theresa Pierno, in a statement. “I think they would be shocked to know that these are actually some of our most polluted national parks.”

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Report: DeMarcus Cousins Could Return from Quad Injury for Warriors in WCF

Golden State Warriors center DeMarcus Cousins reacts after falling to the floor during the first half of Game 2 of a first-round NBA basketball playoff series against the Los Angeles Clippers in Oakland, Calif., Monday, April 15, 2019. (AP Photo/Jeff Chiu)

Jeff Chiu/Associated Press

Golden State Warriors center DeMarcus Cousins reportedly may return for the Western Conference Finals.

According to Marc Stein of the New York Times, Cousins could play during the Western Conference Finals if he maintains his current pace of recovery from a torn quad. He has not played since suffering the injury in Game 2 of the Warriors’ first-round playoff series against the Los Angeles Clippers.

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On Friday, Golden State beat the Houston Rockets 118-113 to win the second-round series in six games and advance to the Western Conference Finals for the fifth consecutive year.

Stein’s report is in line with comments Cousins made Monday.

Per Marc J. Spears of ESPN’s The Undefeated, Cousins said: “For me, my goal is I ain’t planning on sitting. I don’t know the reality of it. But for me, that is not what I’m planning on doing … It’s definitely some type of bad movie. But I think it will have a very nice ending. Just wait for it.”

The 28-year-old Cousins signed a one-year deal with Golden State during the offseason after a torn Achilles cut his 2017-18 season short.

He returned this season to appear in 30 regular-season games, and he made a sizable impact for the Warriors. In 25.7 minutes per game, he averaged 16.3 points, 8.2 rebounds, 3.6 assists, 1.5 blocks and 1.3 steals.

After enjoying years of success without a reliable interior presence, the Warriors finally had one in Cousins and appeared poised to tear through the playoffs. But with Cousins out, the Dubs were taken to six games in each of their first two playoff series. They’ll now face either Portland or Denver next.

Cousins continues to heal as they wait, as does Kevin Durant, who missed Game 6 against Houston with a calf strain.

During Cousins’ absence, a host of bigs have split time for Golden State, including Andrew Bogut, Kevon Looney, Jonas Jerebko and Jordan Bell. Primarily, Golden State has relied on the likes of Stephen Curry, Klay Thompson and Draymond Green, as well as Durant when healthy.

Cousins’ presence would be especially important in a series against the Nuggets, who are led by All-Star center Nikola Jokic. No other big on Golden State’s roster can match up with him effectively, but Cousins’ versatility would make him a solid option.

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‘We need to correct our mistakes’: ANC wins S Africa election

Johannesburg, South Africa – The ruling African National Congress (ANC) has won South Africa‘s parliamentary elections with 57.5 percent of the vote, provisional results showed after votes were counted in all provinces. 

Saturday’s win assured a sixth straight term in power for the ANC. But the result was the worst-ever electoral showing for the party, which has ruled South Africa since the end of apartheid 25 years ago.

Support for the ANC, which gained 62 percent in the previous election in 2014, has steadily declined since it took a record 69 percent of the vote in 2004. Saturday’s electoral showing comes amid growing voter frustration over rampant corruption and high unemployment. 

President Cyril Ramaphosa, who replaced Jacob Zuma last year, now faces the challenge of regaining public confidence in a party that remains beset with internal divisions and oversaw a raft of economic crises.

Jessie Duarte, ANC deputy secretary-general, said the party will move swiftly to counter corruption and increase economic growth.

“We need to correct our mistakes,” she said, adding that the election showed voters want an “ANC that is united and in its unity remains true to the values and principles on which it was founded.”

The result will also renew pressure on Ramaphosa to decisively deal with cabinet ministers accused of corruption. 

South Africa’s ANC party set to win national vote (2:38)

“The real test is whether such individuals will face prosecution,” said Phephelaphi Dube, a constitutional expert.

The elections commission will formally announce the official results later on Saturday. 

‘Turned on by politics’

Meanwhile, the opposition Democratic Alliance also experienced a two percent dip from 2014, though it maintained its grip on the Western Cape province, which includes the city of Cape Town. 

The results showed significant gains for the far-left Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF), which, with almost 11 percent of the vote, polled about five percentage points higher than in its first election in 2014. The EFF is now the official opposition in three out of South Africa’s nine provinces.

On the other side of the political spectrum, there were notable advances for the right-wing Freedom Front Plus.

Despite a number of interruptions and claims of electoral fraud and insufficient ballot papers at certain voting stations across the country, international and domestic election observers have endorsed the elections as free and fair.

Overall voter turnout stood at 65 percent, with more than half of eligible voters under 30 years of age failing to register to vote.

Sheila Meintjes, an associate professor of political studies at the University of Witwatersrand in Johannesburg, noted that the overall turnout was higher than in a number of recent elections in Western countries including the US and the UK.

“This shows that we’re still a country that is turned on by politics,” she told Al Jazeera.

But Tumi Jonas, a 32-year-old academic based in Cape Town, who voted for the radical Black First Land First, one of a number of new small parties on the ballot, said the election had “felt like an empty spectacle”.

“This is my third time voting, and I’ve never felt so despondent about the whole thing. It’s just going to be more of the same. I’m not feeling very hopeful about the future. I don’t think our electoral system is really working for a lot of people,” Jonas said.

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‘Game of Thrones’ followed Emilia Clarke to the Houston Rockets game

Image: Bob Levey / Stringer / getty images

By Adam Rosenberg

We don’t know if Daenerys Targaryen will ultimately sit on the Iron Throne when Game of Thrones is over, but the Houston Rockets certainly stan.

Dany actor Emilia Clarke attended the Game 6 showdown between the Rockets and the Golden State Warriors at Houston’s Toyota Center on Friday evening. And with courtside seats, she was one of the more visible celebs in the house — perfect for a jokey photo opp.

That’s exactly what happened at one point when Clutch the Rocket Bear, the local team’s mascot, strolled by clutching a to-go coffee cup. You know, like the kind you’d get at, say, a Starbucks. (Clarke herself was not evidently in possession of coffee, despite what the Rockets tweet said.)

Let’s take a minute to really appreciate the Rockets media team’s chyron game. (A “chyron” is the text caption you often see used on news programs to identify who’s speaking.) In this case, Clarke’s chyron features her fictional Targaryen queen’s entire parade of official titles.

There was another queen in attendance at Game 6 as well: Beyonce. The Houston native also took in the game with courtside seats while husband Jay-Z sat beside her. Both queens put in the expected appearances on social media, but none of the photos show them together in some weird (but totally welcome) royal gathering.

It was otherwise a tough night for the Rockets. The Warriors won the game 118-113, and the unexpected loss for Houston — which was favored to win — officially ended the team’s 2019 playoffs effort.

Two queens. A pitched battle in which the favorite to win ended up losing. A random coffee cup moment. Life imitates Game of Thrones.

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Watch VFX artists react to ‘Sonic the Hedgehog’ movie’s CGI

This is One Good Thing, a weekly column where we tell you about one of the few nice things that happened this week.


CGI, when done well, blends seamlessly into the environment of a TV show or movie. When it’s bad, though, hoo boy. 

Good or bad, the fact that it’s an art you’re not meant to notice often leaves VFX artists in the dust in terms of recognition and appreciation. Even the most horrendous examples of VFX have an insanely huge amount of work behind them. 

But that doesn’t mean we can’t roast them a little. 

Professional VFX artists Wren Weichman, Clinton Jones, and Niko Pueringer for the digital video production team Corridor Digital took a stab at reviewing some fantastic examples of flawless CGI and some uh, less than stellar results (especially when it comes to a certain blue hedgehog.) 

To be fair, they do start off singing the praises of the epic (and seriously difficult to achieve) effects from Game of Thrones. “It’s tough to make a dragon look real because there’s no such thing,” one comments. 

By pointing out the specific effects, animation techniques, and lighting theory behind the scenes, the team expertly breaks down exactly why the famous shots work so well. 

The video could’ve turned very quickly into a merciless dunk-fest, but the hosts clearly have an immense respect the craft and its difficulty. Even when the results don’t come out looking all that realistic. 

SEE ALSO: Voice actors overdubbed the worst ‘Sonic’ game to make it the best ‘Sonic’ game

But it is pretty satisfying to watch them scream in unison when the image of Sonic the Hedgehog‘s latest CGI design comes onscreen. 

“They gave him human teeth! He has actual, proportioned legs,” they cry out. 

So if you’re a fan of roasts that are backed by expert opinions, this one’s the one for you. Long live Sonic’s human teeth.  

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Every NFL Team’s Biggest Remaining Offseason Need

0 of 32

    Carolyn Kaster/Associated Press

    The most exciting window of the offseason has come and gone. With most valuable free agents off the market and the NFL draft in the books, rosters across the league have been reinvented with hopes of reaching a new level in 2019. 

    However, resources are finite, and no team was able to patch every hole in its roster. Some teams appeared to willingly forgo addressing a position of need, while other teams had too many deficiencies to cover in one offseason. Barring a noteworthy trade, it will be difficult for teams to fix any of their remaining issues between now and September. 

    With that in mind, it’s time to look at where each team is still most lacking heading into the new season. 

1 of 32

    Ralph Freso/Associated Press

    Head coach Kliff Kingsbury’s vision for an Air Raid offense was evident in the team’s draft strategy. Not only is favoring newly drafted quarterback Kyler Murray over 2018 first-round pick Josh Rosen an indication of where the offense is headed, but the Cardinals drafted three receivers in Andy Isabella (second round), Hakeem Butler (fourth round) and KeeSean Johnson (sixth round). Kingsbury wants to spread the field and throw the ball.

    In Kingsbury’s offense, many of the passes will likely come out of Murray’s hand quickly and allow the receivers to do the work. Getting the ball into the hands of skill players in a hurry is a core principle of the Air Raid. However, the Cardinals will still need to execute on their intermediate and deep passes to keep up with better offenses. They do not have the offensive line for that right now.

    Per Football Outsiders, the Cardinals had the fourth-worst pressure rate in the league last year at 35.4 percent. Though the free-agent additions of right tackle Marcus Gilbert and guard J.R. Sweezy are upgrades, the bar was terribly low, and the unit as a whole is still a ways away. Considering Arizona did not take swings on offensive linemen until Day 3 of the draft, it is tough to imagine the unit improving as much as it needs to. 

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    Jeff Haynes/Associated Press

    The Atlanta Falcons have unwavering faith in their poor pass-rushing unit. 2015 first-round pick Vic Beasley has just 10 sacks in the past two seasons combined after a breakout year in 2016. Takkarist McKinley, 2017’s first-round pick, has 13 sacks over that span, which is a bit more impressive considering his youth but should not be the type of production that staves off investment at the position.

    Atlanta’s only notable moves to address the edge position this offseason were signing Adrian Clayborn, who played for the Patriots last year after three seasons with the Falcons previously, and drafting John Cominsky in the fourth round. After losing Brooks Reed, Bruce Irvin and Derrick Shelby to free agency, the additions of a middling retread defensive end and a rookie fourth-round pick are not enough.

    With Ezekiel Ansah now off the market after signing with the Seattle Seahawks, the Falcons’ options to address the position this year are scarce. 

3 of 32

    Carolyn Kaster/Associated Press

    Defensive coordinator Don Martindale was the Ravens’ linebackers coach from 2012-2017 before being promoted to his current position. Since 2012, the Ravens have had a history of milking production from undrafted linebackers, including Dannell Ellerbe, Jameel McClain, Zach Orr and Patrick Onwuasor. However, Baltimore may have relied too heavily upon it this offseason.

    Onwuasor (2016 undrafted), Kenny Young (2018 fourth round) and Chris Board (2018 undrafted) are the Ravens’ top three linebackers right now. Onwuasor came on strong last year, particularly as a blitzer with 5.5 sacks and 12 quarterback hits, but he was splitting snaps with Young because he is not a complete player. Likewise, Young, though promising for a Day 3 rookie, still needs to refine his game and grow as a cover player.

    Moving forward with Onwuasor and Young as the starters is a gamble. Both have shown particular strengths and stretches of good play, but there is not enough substance to comfortably bet on them as a quality starting duo.

4 of 32

    Rich Barnes/Associated Press

    Defensive tackle Ed Oliver was too good a value at ninth overall for the Bills to pass up. He is an elite prospect whose stock took a slight hit as he was miscast during his final season at Houston. In drafting Oliver, though, the Bills had to sacrifice passing up on a top-tier defensive end like Rashan Gary, Brian Burns or Montez Sweat in the first round.

    Buffalo then chose to ignore the position until the seventh round, when it finally selected Darryl Johnson. Adding a depth player always helps, but considering he was the only draft pick at the position and the Bills made no defensive end signings in free agency, it is fair to say the Bills skimped on the position this offseason.

    The Bills’ 36 sacks were the seventh-lowest in the league last year. Though they did not lose any of their top-four edge-rushers in Jerry Hughes, Trent Murphy, Shaq Lawson and Lorenzo Alexander, they should not expect to be much more productive without having made any serious additions on the outside. 

5 of 32

    Chris Keane/Associated Press

    The Carolina Panthers are banking on a handful of unknown factors going their way for the secondary to be serviceable. A young outside cornerback duo of James Bradberry and Donte Jackson provides a solid foundation, but nickel cornerback and one of their safety positions are huge question marks headed into 2019.

    Nickel cornerback Ross Cockrell will return from a broken leg he suffered prior to last season, an especially brutal injury for a position reliant on running to keep up with receivers. Cockrell has shown moments of good play in the past, particularly in 2017 with the Giants when he posted a league-best 77 percent success rate on 51 targets, per Football Outsiders. However, he is on his fourth team since being drafted in 2014, and there is no telling how he will respond to injury.

    At safety, the Panthers are replacing Mike Adams with 2018 third-round pick Rashaan Gaulden. He only played roughly 14 percent of the team’s defensive snaps as a rookie, picking up just one pass defended. While Gaulden may prove to be effective, that he could not unseat a struggling, 37-year-old Adams is not the best first impression.

6 of 32

    Nam Y. Huh/Associated Press

    Through the scope of a team’s starting four or five line-of-scrimmage defenders, the Chicago Bears have one of the fiercest units in the league. Outside linebacker Khalil Mack is a star, and his counterpart, Leonard Floyd, is a worthy No. 2. Along the interior, Akiem Hicks remains one of the most underrated forces in the league, while Eddie Goldman has come into his own as a hulk over the center.

    The concern is what happens when players need rest or if someone goes down with an injury. Chicago’s depth across the defensive front, particularly on the outside, is not up to par. Jonathan Bullard and Roy Harris-Robertson are not bad rotational players inside, but they should not stop the Bears from investing at the position.

    Likewise, the outside trio of Aaron Lynch, Isaiah Irving and Kylie Fitts is a poor insurance policy if anything were to happen to Mack or Floyd. Lynch is a talented yet inconsistent player, while Irving and Fitts are largely unproven. The Bears could look to sign a free agent like Nick Perry to get a better rotational pass-rusher on the roster.

7 of 32

    Sean M. Haffey/Getty Images

    Across the board, Cincinnati’s roster screams mediocrity. They are not overwhelmingly bad in many areas, while they only have a few stars in wide receiver A.J. Green, defensive tackle Geno Atkins and maybe cornerback William Jackson III. Most of the other players on the roster a team can get by with, but it should be looking to upgrade.

    Perhaps the position that encapsulates that sentiment most on the Bengals roster is offensive guard. Clint Boling and free-agent signing John Miller project as the starters next year. Boling is a below-average player who has bounced between center and guard with the Bengals but somehow maintained a starting position.

    Miller, on the other hand, is a solid though uninspiring upgrade over Alex Redmond. Miller did well in Buffalo’s downhill scheme that often allowed him to either play in a phone booth or be a puller.

    The Bengals favored the tackle position in the draft, selecting Jonah Williams in the first round. It was not until the fourth round that the Bengals went for a guard in Michael Jordan, who does not project as someone who should be thrust into action as a rookie. While the Bengals’ guard play may not be as atrocious as it was a year ago, they still need to continue their search for upgrades. 

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    Ron Schwane/Associated Press

    Few positions were as perplexing as the Browns’ left tackle spot last year. Not only was it their first season without future Hall of Famer Joe Thomas, but their initial plan to replace him was with undrafted rookie Desmond Harrison. The talent drop-off was steep, to say the least.

    To his credit, Harrison held his own for the first couple weeks before tapering off. Cleveland then turned to 2014 second-overall pick Greg Robinson, who signed with the team in the offseason after one season in Detroit. He surprisingly fared relatively well in pass protection, but only by his standards as a player who had been labeled a bust.

    Oddly enough, the Browns actually improved their adjusted sack rate from 7.6 percent to 6.7 percent in transitioning from Thomas to Harrison and Robinson, but that was more about the quarterback switch. 2017 starter DeShone Kizer was prone to holding the ball for far too long, while current starter Baker Mayfield is much sharper and more alert.

    Given the strength of the rest of the unit, Cleveland can get by with Robinson for now, but expect him to be replaced sooner rather than later.

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    Michael Ainsworth/Associated Press

    Jason Witten’s return from the Monday Night Football booth is a fascinating story, but it does not solve Dallas’ issues at tight end. Witten was not serviceable beyond 10 yards the last time he was a Cowboy, and none of the players who tried to fill his shoes last year did so with much success.

    Blake Jarwin led the team’s tight ends with 307 receiving yards. In Witten’s 15-year career, he only ever dipped below 500 receiving yards during his rookie season in 2003. Furthermore, the Cowboys’ four tight ends only totaled 710 yards last year, which Witten eclipsed by himself in 11 of his 15 seasons.

    The Cowboys are now in a position where they are coming off their least productive tight end season in nearly two decades and are relying on a 37-year-old who is one year removed from playing to save the day. It may be a slight upgrade now, but Dallas still desperately needs a makeover at the position.

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    Jack Dempsey/Associated Press

    This time a year ago, the Denver Broncos had one of the deepest pass-rushing units in the league. Von Miller and 2018 rookie Bradley Chubb were set to lead the way, while Shane Ray and Shaquil Barrett would provide quality play off the bench. Miller and Chubb return as starters this season, but the depth pairing of Barrett and Ray left in free agency, leaving a gaping hole on Denver’s bench.

    As of now, Jeff Holland, an undrafted rookie last year who played just 43 snaps, and fifth-round rookie Justin Hollins are front-runners to be the team’s rotational outside linebackers. Holland has precious little evidence to suggest he will be a capable backup given his undrafted status and lack of experience.

    Hollins, on the other hand, sports an impressive athletic profile with a 4.50-second 40-yard dash and 7.06-second three-cone drill, but his lack of refinement coming out of school lends to him needing time to develop.

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    Rick Scuteri/Associated Press

    As right guard T.J. Lang battled with injury through the back half of last season, Kenny Wiggins assumed the starting role. Though Lang had not been as good as the team was hoping when they signed him in free agency, Wiggins reminded everyone why they signed Lang in the first place.

    Early this offseason, Lang was cut and retired shortly thereafter. In turn, Wiggins would likely be the starting right guard if the season started today. With as poorly as that worked out last season, inserting him into the starting lineup again is asking for disaster. The Lions ranked 18th in adjusted line yards up the middle and 30th toward the right tackle last season, the two areas Wiggins was most responsible for. 

    Oddly enough, the Lions did little to bolster the offensive line this offseason. They signed journeymen Oday Aboushi and Andrew Donnal, but Aboushi is a tackle, and Donnal does not project much better than Wiggins. The Lions did not draft a single offensive lineman, either; not even in the later rounds. Detroit either believes in Wiggins far more than the rest of us or has chosen to take a loss at the position for the year.

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    Marcio Jose Sanchez/Associated Press

    For as much of a makeover as Green Bay’s outside linebacker unit got, their inside linebacker corps is incomplete. Blake Martinez is a rock solid run defender and added blitzing to his repertoire last year as he notched a career-high five sacks and six quarterback hits, but his linebacking partner is a question yet to be answered.

    The most likely scenario is for 2018 third-round pick Oren Burks to slide into a starting role beside Martinez. Burks, a lanky and athletic player for the position, was primarily a special teamer last season. He notched over 50 percent of special teams snaps while only playing around 11 percent of defensive snaps. His prospects are still largely unproven.

    Conversely, the Packers could move safety Josh Jones down to a linebacker position. In signing free agent Adrian Amos and drafting Darnell Savage in the first round, there is no need for Jones to start at safety. That being said, moving a safety to linebacker full time, while often exciting, seldom works out the way many hope it will.

    The Packers’ two main options to solve their second starting linebacker position are both gambles.

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    Matt Patterson/Associated Press

    In a world free of injury, Houston would comfortably have one of the better wide receiver units in the NFL. DeAndre Hopkins is a bona fide star, Will Fuller is one of the best deep threats in the league, and Keke Coutee was electric as a gadget and short-area player as a rookie last year.

    Unfortunately, Fuller has yet to play all 16 games in any of his three seasons in the league and finished last season with a torn ACL in Week 8. Coutee also struggled to stay healthy last year, constantly flipping between the injury list and the active roster as he battled hamstring issues.

    As such, Fuller and Coutee cannot be trusted to play a full season, even if they are wonderful talents. If either of them go down again, the Texans will have to rely on Vyncint Smith, Jester Weah and DeAndre Carter to fill their shoes. That is a thin line for the Texans to be walking—the same one that led to their offensive demise last year.

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    Mark Zaleski/Associated Press

    Margus Hunt and Denico Autry were the NFL’s most unlikely stud interior one-two punch. Prior to 2018, Hunt had spent five years in the NFL, including one with the Colts in 2017, with little to show for it. Autry was a free-agent signing by way of the Raiders—he was a solid piece in Oakland but one they felt comfortable moving on from. Despite their reputations, both players reached career highs in sacks and tackles for loss in 2018.

    While the sudden breakout was beneficial in the short term, it may be misleading in the long term. Defensive linemen do not tend to break out during their age 31 (Hunt) and age 28 (Autry) seasons. By that time, a player should more or less be who they are, and any sudden spike in production should be taken as an outlier rather than their new standard.

    In turn, the Colts should look to bolster the defensive line. Hunt and Autry may have done uncharacteristically well last season, and may still carry over some of that success into this year, but their production relative to their respective norms was so extreme.

    Additionally, defensive production, both individual and team-wide, tends to not be as fluid year to year as offensive production. It is fair to caution that the Colts duo will come back to earth and need to be prodded by younger, more talented competition.

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    Phelan M. Ebenhack/Associated Press

    The Jaguars found one of the biggest steals in last year’s draft when they took Ronnie Harrison in the third round. He needed a few weeks to grow into his role, but by midway through the season, Harrison had established himself as a do-it-all safety with a mean streak near the line of scrimmage. His success and potential are part of why the team was comfortable moving on from Barry Church.

    However, Harrison’s partner in the defensive backfield, Tashaun Gipson, left in free agency to sign with the Texans, leaving a vacancy at safety. Jacksonville did not address safety in the draft at all, not even in the later rounds. The Jags also chose not to make any notable additions in free agency despite the slew of safeties who were on the market such as Tyrann Mathieu, Earl Thomas and Eric Weddle.

    Instead, 2016 undrafted free agent and career special teamer Jarrod Wilson is slotted to play alongside Harrison. With slim pickings left on the free-agent safety market, it would appear the Jaguars are stuck with this high-risk gamble of starting Wilson.

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    Ed Zurga/Associated Press

    There is always the possibility that a player surprises or progresses exponentially, but on paper, the Chiefs have one of the worst cornerback depth charts in recent memory. Aside from Kendall Fuller, who can play both outside and in the slot, it is difficult to pick out who on this roster is supposed to win their matchups.

    Bashaud Breeland and Charvarius Ward are set to start on the outside. Breeland started off his career with promise in Washington but has since bounced around the league struggling to stick anywhere, last starting five games for the Packers in 2018.

    Ward, on the other hand, was an undrafted rookie last year who failed to make the Cowboys roster before joining the Chiefs. Though targeted only 17 times, Ward held just a 35 percent success rate and allowed 10.1 yards per attempt, both of which rank worse than 160th in the league, per Football Outsiders. He may develop this season, but there is little evidence to suggest he will make large enough strides.

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    Kelvin Kuo/Associated Press

    Losing Tyrell Williams to the Oakland Raiders in free agency is going to hurt more than many realize. Williams’ skill set as a field stretcher, especially sideline to sideline with intermediate crossers, was unique among the Chargers receivers. His efforts took attention away from Mike Williams on the outside and Keenan Allen underneath.

    The Chargers previously relied on Travis Benjamin as a vertical field stretcher, but his 2018 season was clouded by a foot injury in Week 1. In 12 games, Benjamin posted his lowest receptions per game (1.0), catch percentage (50 percent) and yards per target (7.8) across his three seasons as a Charger. He was physically not himself, and he may rebound, but a speed receiver with a foot injury is nothing to brush off.

    Thankfully for quarterback Philip Rivers, the pairing of Allen and Williams can take on a heavier burden and still produce. Allen is a proven Pro Bowler when healthy, while Williams blossomed into a legit threat on the sideline in his second season. Still, barring Benjamin making a full recovery, the Chargers will be without a third dynamic receiver to help spread the ball around.

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    Jae C. Hong/Associated Press

    For as good a roster the Rams have constructed across the board, their outside pass rush has been lacking for years. The unit was given some life halfway through last season by trading for former Jaguars defensive end Dante Fowler Jr., but the expected hike in production did not come until the playoffs, when Fowler notched 1.5 sacks and four tackles for loss in three games.

    The Rams still came in at 15th with 41 sacks in the regular season, which may not suggest they desperately need outside pass-rush help, but 20.5 of those sacks came from defensive tackle Aaron Donald alone. No other player had more than 4.5, and it was fellow defensive tackle Ndamukong Suh who came in second place with that mark.

    Veteran free-agent signing Clay Matthews may add another slight bump to the unit’s strength, but not enough to truly matter. The Rams still need to invest in a more prominent talent on the outside to pair with Donald’s prowess inside.

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    Lynne Sladky/Associated Press

    The Dolphins’ 31 sacks were fourth-fewest in the league last year with veteran Cameron Wake leading the way. An already poor unit has now lost Wake to free agency and, through the course of the offseason, have done nothing to replace him. Trading for quarterback Josh Rosen on draft weekend may have signaled this team is not embracing a full-blown tank effort, but it seems as though they are comfortable sandbagging a few positions like pass-rusher.

    Charles Harris and Jonathan Woodard are primed to see the most playing time among Miami’s defensive ends. In three years of combined experience, the two have just four total sacks and nine tackles for loss. Furthermore, neither player saw more than one-third of the team’s defensive snaps, with Harris topping out at 31.86 percent.

    Not only are the Dolphins leaning on inexperience on the edge, they are leaning on inexperience that has shown little potential. The Raiders’ league-low 13 sacks last year were no doubt embarrassing, but the 2019 Dolphins may rival them as one of the worst pass-rushing units in recent history.

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    Jim Mone/Associated Press

    The Minnesota Vikings have the most lopsided wide receiver group in the league. Stefon Diggs and Adam Thielen spearhead the unit as dynamic receivers who could each be regular All-Pros if not chipping away at each other’s production.

    The rest of the unit, however, is a mosh pit of undrafted free agents, late-round picks and 2016 first-round flop Laquon Treadwell. Treadwell hit career highs with 35 receptions, 302 yards and one touchdown last year, but that is low-volume, inefficient production that can be easily replaced. Soon, the Vikings intend to do just that, as they declined Treadwell’s fifth-year option.

    Given their two star wide receivers and two viable tight ends in Kyle Rudolph and rookie Irv Smith Jr., Minnesota may simply move toward more 12-personnel sets (one running back, two tight ends, two wide receivers) as an answer to their lack of receiver depth.

    However, Rudolph’s contract extension talks have died down, and he may even be traded, the NFL.com’s Ian Rapoport reports, leaving Smith to start as a rookie and potentially nixing a 12-personnel approach. Even if Rudolph is not traded, the Vikings would still benefit from more receiver help to lend to more variety—but it would become necessary if he leaves Minnesota. 

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    Jeff Roberson/Associated Press

    In lieu of Rob Gronkowski‘s retirement, many assumed the Patriots would hurry to find a replacement at tight end. Instead, New England mostly ignored the position this offseason.

    They did not draft a tight end with any of their 10 picks, and the only notable free-agent signings they made were journeyman Austin Seferian-Jenkins and 38-year-old Benjamin Watson, who briefly retired this offseason.

    Additionally, the Patriots traded backup tight end Jacob Hollister to the Seahawks for a seventh-round pick next year. Effectively, the Patriots lost both an impact starter and valuable depth, only to replace them with two middling free agents.

    Granted, it is not unlike Bill Belichick to completely change course. The Patriots have endured countless scheme changes and adjustments throughout the years, both on offense and on defense, and this movement away from tight ends is no different. Still, one must imagine the Patriots would like to be better equipped at the position than they are.

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    Roger Steinman/Associated Press

    Head coach Sean Payton and quarterback Drew Brees have been running a pseudo Air Raid down in New Orleans for over a decade. Though they have gone through many iterations, their pass-game philosophies revolve around abusing vertical tunnels, spreading the ball around and getting the ball to playmakers as quickly as possible.

    However, the Saints’ wide receiver depth chart is one mystery after another aside from Michael Thomas. Speedster Ted Ginn Jr., for example, is a 34-year-old coming off a knee injury that kept him out for most of last season. Tre’Quan Smith showed some promise as a rookie last year, but more than 60 percent of his 427 yards came during two games versus Washington (Week 5) and Philadelphia (Week 11). He did not top 50 yards in any of his other 13 games.

    Aside from those three players, two of whom need to prove themselves in 2019, the rest of the roster is littered with undrafted free agents or cheap veteran free agents who provide little more than capable emergency play. With Brees on the last leg of his career, the middling options at receiver could hinder the Saints offense.

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    Darron Cummings/Associated Press

    The New York Giants’ right tackle position has been one of the worst starting spots over the past few years. Whether it was Marshall Newhouse, Bobby Hart, Ereck Flowers or Chad Wheeler, the starter at that position has been detrimental to quarterback Eli Manning.

    For whatever reason, the Giants have decided to run it back with Wheeler as the starter. He has been with the team since signing as an undrafted free agent in 2017, but he has not impressed when thrust into action. In starting 14 games last year, Wheeler was a primary culprit in the Giants finishing 20th in adjusted sack rate and 29th in adjusted line yards, per Football Outsiders.

    By drafting a quarterback sixth overall and using most of their other picks on defense, the Giants made a decision to put off tackle help. The retooled defense and young quarterback may pay dividends down the line, but Manning and Saquon Barkley will still be yearning for help off the right side this season.

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    Lynne Sladky/Associated Press

    Though the Jets traded for Raiders guard Kelechi Osemele and drafted developmental tackle Chuma Edoga in the third round, there is still work to be done on the offensive line. Left tackle Kelvin Beachum is solid and Osemele will provide good play next to him, but from the center over to the right tackle, New York’s line is shaky.

    Center Jonotthan Harrison, right guard Brian Winters and right tackle Brandon Shell are all returning as starters after a poor 2018 season together. While they managed a decent 18th-place ranking in adjusted sack rate, they were dead last in adjusted line yards and stuffed rate, per Football Outsiders. New York’s running backs had no chance.

    Until at least a couple of those three are replaced, the Jets are going to struggle up front.

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    Frank Victores/Associated Press

    Oakland tried to band-aid the linebacker spot by signing Vontaze Burfict and Brandon Marshall in free agency, but both players are coming off the worst year of their respective careers.

    Burfict’s constant injuries and rule-breaking conduct used to be worth the headache because of how good he was, but that player is long gone. After a slow decline, Burfict hit or tied career lows in sacks (zero), tackles for loss (one) and quarterback hits (zero) in 2018 as he only played seven games due to hip issues. Similarly, Marshall missed five games with a knee injury, lending to him losing his playmaking edge the way Burfict did.

    Both players could rebound, but given both signed one-year deals barely worth more than $1 million each (Burfict, Marshall), it would be a stretch to assume they will provide a long-term answer. The Raiders need to stop scraping the bargain bin in free agency and invest in young talent.

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    David Banks/Associated Press

    It is difficult to poke holes in the Eagles roster. They are not elite across the board, but they either sport high-quality starters or impressive depth at almost every position. That said, if there was a valuable area the Eagles could still upgrade, it is the left guard spot.

    Isaac Seumalo is a 2016 third-round pick who has been in and out of the starting lineup since entering the league, notching a career-high nine starts last season. He is not a bad player and would be of great value as a backup, but he is not an impact starter. There is a reason the Eagles tried multiple options, including Stefan Wisneski and Chance Warmack, before resorting to Seumalo.

    Some may call for rookie first-round pick Andre Dillard to slide into the guard spot, but not every offensive tackle can make that transition. Dillard comes from an Air Raid system, which tend to play with wider splits and different protection goals, and he only ever started at left tackle in college. Trying to use him as a patchwork solution at guard would likely be a waste of time.

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    Don Wright/Associated Press

    T.J. Watt stands a clear tier above his teammates on the Steelers’ edge. In just two seasons, Watt already has as many sacks (20) as Bud Dupree has racked up in four seasons.

    In fairness, that is more a testament to Watt’s ability than a slight to Dupree. Dupree has been a solid, if unexciting, second pass-rush threat for the Steelers. He is a viable starter, but the Steelers would be better off slotting him into a rotational role. Right now, Anthony Chickillo is the main rotational player, and knocking Dupree down a peg into that role would be an upgrade.

    Furthermore, Dupree’s contract is up after this season. If the Steelers choose to let him walk instead of paying him, an already lacking position will turn into a glaring need.

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    Jason Behnken/Associated Press

    While the 49ers netted themselves a handful of new weapons for head coach Kyle Shanahan’s offense, it was disappointing to see them almost entirely ignore the secondary this offseason. The team’s two notable moves at cornerback were signing a talented but oft-injured Jason Verrett and drafting Tim Harris in the sixth round. Unless Verrett can suddenly stay healthy, neither addition moves the needle.

    Richard Sherman is still a force on the outside, but the unit around him is a mess. Ahkello Witherspoon, who plays opposite Sherman, is a nasty press corner, but if he happens to lose at the line or is asked to do anything else, he too often looks pedestrian. Likewise, 2014 first-round pick Jimmie Ward feels like he has regressed each season and has struggled to remain healthy. His last interception was in 2016.

    Barring exponential progression out of 2018 third-round pick Tarvarius Moore, which should not be expected, the 49ers do not have reliable cornerback play aside from Sherman. With as many dynamic passing offenses as there are in the NFC West, a shaky cornerback group could spell disaster for a 49ers team looking to finally take the next step.

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    Paul Sancya/Associated Press

    The Seahawks have four tight ends who would be reasonable No. 2s, but none who make for a good starter. Even if they will never be without a competent tight end, they will not get impact play from the position.

    Nick Vannett is set to be the starter again. His 269 yards were the most among Seahawks tight ends last year but 34th in the league, sandwiched between Vikings backup Rhett Ellison (272) and Falcons backup Levine Toilolo (263). Behind Vannett is Will Dissly, an unathletic fourth-round pick last year who did not even crack 200 yards as a rookie.

    The Seahawks also roster Ed Dickson, a career backup, and traded for Jacob Hollister, a backup tight end and H-back hybrid via the Patriots. Neither should be expected to surpass Vannett much less be a legitimate threat to defenses.

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    Jeff Haynes/Associated Press

    Offensive line was a pain point for Tampa Bay last season. Per Football Outsiders, the Bucs finished 31st in adjusted line yards, 30th in stuff rate and 27th in second-level yards, all of which led to a 24th-place rushing DVOA ranking. Few teams were as dismal across the board in run blocking.

    Pass protection was not quite as ugly, as they managed to slot in at 15th in adjusted sack rate, which accounts for down and distance, penalties and quality of opponent. Still, they ranked worst in the NFC South in that category, which is a problem in a division loaded with talented quarterbacks who lead good passing offenses.

    Right guard is a particular position of need. Caleb Benenoch earned his first full season as a starter there last year but was one of the key culprits in Tampa Bay’s offensive line struggling the way it did. The Bucs chose to focus heavily on secondary in the draft, which makes sense given their dire need there, but that means the offensive line upgrades will be delayed another year.

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    James Kenney/Associated Press

    The Titans made the right move in signing Cameron Wake as a free agent this offseason, but their needs at outside pass-rusher are more than a declining 37-year-old can solve by himself.

    Harold Landry is set to start opposite Wake on the edge. Landry was a steal in the second round of last year’s draft and put up a decent rookie season with 4.5 sacks and 14 quarterback hits. That said, with Wake more of a rotational pass-rusher at this point who is being thrust into a starting role, it would be a stretch to ask Landry to be a dominant double-digit sack guy.

    The starting pair of Landry and Wake could be much worse, but the depth behind them could not be. Kamalei Correa, LaTroy Lewis and rookie fifth-rounder D’Andre Walker will likely make up the rotational corps behind the starters. Neither of the two veterans has proven much thus far in his career, while a Day 3 rookie such as Walker should not be expected to contribute in a valuable way.

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    Mark Tenally/Associated Press

    Signing strong safety Landon Collins away from the Giants was a solid start to building a more complete secondary. Collins is a versatile, high-potential player whose presence near the line of scrimmage and in shallow coverage will be felt. However, he could use a better partner in the back end.

    Barring a surprise from one of Washington’s young backups, Deshazor Everett will start at free safety alongside Collins. Everett went undrafted as a cornerback in 2015 before converting to more of a safety role. He has started 11 games over the past two seasons but never as the primary option for the job. Why this year is different remains a mystery.

    It is more likely than not that slotting Everett as an opening day starter will become a problem for Washington. They could still sign Tre Boston to take over the starting free safety position, but they may be willing to roll the dice on Everett.

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Gunmen attack hotel in Pakistan port city Gwadar

Gunmen have stormed a five-star hotel in the southwestern Pakistani port city of Gwadar and are fighting with security forces, an official said.

“Three or four attackers have entered the Pearl Continental hotel in Gwadar,” Zia Langove, Balochistan provincial home minister, said in a statement on Saturday.  

“People in the hotel have been wounded by firing by the terrorists. The security forces operation is ongoing.”

The statement said the police, Frontier Corps and Levies forces were all taking part in the operation. 

“Many of the guests staying at the hotel have been safely evacuated from the premises.”

Local media were reporting the sounds of gunfire. 

More soon …

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