At least one top receiver will be hitting the open market in free agency
What was supposed to be a strong free agent wide receiver class has dwindled in the weeks leading up to the start of the legal tampering period – the unofficial start of NFL free agency – on March 11. Tee Higgins, the top player at the position eligible to hit the open market was franchise tagged by the Cincinnati Bengals, while the same is expected of Michael Pittman Jr. and the Indianapolis Colts.
However, one big name is now projected to test the open market. On Friday night, Dianna Russini of The Athletic reported that Evans “plans to hit free agency for the first time in his career.”
READ MORE:
—The Patriots now have over $100 million in cap space
—Day 2 NFL Combine standouts
—Patriots re-sign quarterback on one-year deal
Evans hitting free agency doesn’t mean he’s a lock to leave Tampa. Russini noted that “this doesn’t mean Evans’ time as a Buc is over,” and Evans has spoken this offseason about wanting to retire as a member of the organization. However Tampa does have multiple key players that need new contracts, including quarterback Baker Mayfield.
At the same time, the fact he won’t have a deal in place does leave the door open for a departure. “He plans on hearing from all teams before making a decision,” Russini tweeted.
It wouldn’t be surprising if Evans receives a significant amount of interest. In his 10 year NFL career, the 6-foot-5, 231-pound Evans passed the 1,000-yard receiving mark 10 times. Last season at the age of 30 he caught 79 passes for 1,255 and a career-high and league-leading 13 touchdowns. Evan has also to be proven durable having missed nine games in his entire career, with just two of those coming in the last four years.
Even as he enters his age 31 season, Evans still belongs in the ‘elite’ wide receiver conversation. He should garner significant interest from teams looking for a game-changing offensive player – a list that includes the New England Patriots.
The question is, would Evans have interest in joining the Patriots. Of course, they’d have to meet his price. PFF projects him to get a three-year, $69 million dollar deal ($23 million AAV) with $52.5 million guaranteed. But even at that point, the Patriots may have to go above and beyond.
According to NFL insider Jordan Schultz, Evans “wants to play with an elite quarterback in an offense that will showcase him — and be paid like a top wide receiver. He doesn’t want to play with a rookie QB. Winning a Super Bowl is a key priority.”
Assuming that’s true, it would be a long-shot at best for the Patriots to land Evans. They’d either need to significantly overpay, or commit to a bridge veteran quarterback in 2024 – and one that Evans believes in (if there is anybody available fitting that category at all).
Still, Evans hitting the market is good news for the receiver-needy Patriots even if they don’t land him. Some team ultimately will add him, meaning one less team to compete with elsewhere in the receiver market and/or towards the top of the draft.