QUINIX Sport News: Will they stay or will they go? All the pressing offseason QB questions

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The two teams with the clearest need under center are no longer in position to sit and draft one. Let’s dive into the Raiders, Vikings, Giants and more situations.

There was a clean path. As they tend to do in recent years, the New York Giants and Las Vegas Raiders made it a big mess.

Two weeks ago, both franchises were well positioned, sitting at the intersection of quarterback need and draft availability, with a pair of forthcoming prospects offering at least an attempt at answering a longstanding problem: finding a centerpiece QB who was worthy of being written into long-term plans. Colorado’s Shedeur Sanders and Miami’s Cam Ward were the remedies for what ailed the Raiders and Giants, even if the league’s annual draft sorting process had yet to hit a higher gear. Maybe both would make it through to April’s draft unscathed, or maybe they wouldn’t. But the bottom line in mid-December was that the season-long pain of losing was finally taking shape, giving the Giants and Raiders options. Each franchise was in the game.

Two weeks later, the options are now vastly more complicated.

Here are the biggest offseason quarterback questions in the NFL. (Hassan Ahmad/Yahoo Sports)Here are the biggest offseason quarterback questions in the NFL. (Hassan Ahmad/Yahoo Sports)
All eyes will be on multiple QB spots in the NFL this offseason. (Hassan Ahmad/Yahoo Sports)

Once almost certain of nailing down two of the top three picks in the 2025 NFL Draft — which would have put each franchise squarely in reach of the two best quarterbacks available — the Giants and Raiders now sit at fourth and eighth, respectively, in the draft order after a spate of wins.

In front of New York? The New England Patriots at No. 1 overall, needing multiple players but not a quarterback, and willing to shop their draft choice to anyone who calls. At No. 2? The Tennessee Titans, who are either punting on Will Levis as their starter, or at the very least, getting into formation to do so. And at No. 3 sit the Cleveland Browns, who are stuck in a Deshaun Watson nightmare and also likely to shop their pick to the highest bidder.

The situation is even worse for the Raiders, who have fallen all the way down to eighth, giving them the same problems as the Giants in terms of draft position, but with the New York Jets also positioned ahead of them at seventh overall. That means Las Vegas is not only grappling with three franchises in front of it that have clear quarterback needs (Titans, Giants and Jets), but also contending with a multitude of trade scenarios that could leave them without a single QB capable of having an impact for the team in 2025.

This is a good representation of how frustrating the Raiders and Giants have been in 2024. In a season when very little went right, they somehow turned winning games into a net negative, too. By finding victories when it mattered least, they pushed a reachable quarterback horizon even further away.

So what’s the plan now? Here’s what I’ve heard about each situation.

Some members of the personnel department have an affinity for Miami’s Cam Ward, who has some playmaking elements to his game coated with a Josh Allen-esque residue. He will play some hero ball, for the best and worst of it.

Given that head coach Brian Daboll worked wonders developing Allen with the Bills, there’s some sensibility to Ward finding his ceiling as an NFL player with a patient coach who has done it before. Ward’s overall frame (6-foot-2, 223 pounds) and arm talent, while good, are not on Allen’s level. But Ward’s college career also hasn’t included the best or most consistent coaching and development from start to finish, so there’s reason to believe his game can get much cleaner from a risk-taking standpoint. The Giants also selected wideout Malik Nabers after he sat out the second half of his bowl game a year ago, so I can’t see Ward’s checking out of his bowl game after one half being an issue.

The larger issue is who will actually be the head coach and general manager of this team next season. That is very much in flux, and it’s going to be something that gets resolved on an individual basis between team co-owner John Mara, Daboll and general manager Joe Schoen.

Right now, every option is on the table, with Mara taking time after the season to sit down with both his head coach and general manager separately and effectively give them an opportunity to lay out a blueprint. If Mara doesn’t think the pair is on the same page, either Daboll or Schoen could be fired.

One dark horse candidate to keep in mind for the Giants’ job: Mike Vrabel, who has preexisting relationships with Giants personnel adviser Ryan Cowden — who held multiple personnel positions for the Titans while Vrabel was head coach — and also Giants defensive coordinator Shane Bowen, who was a linebackers coach and then defensive coordinator under Vrabel.

Should Daboll be fired, I believe Vrabel would be the top candidate to replace him.

Adjacent to the Giants and their quarterback evaluation of Ward, I still believe Sanders would be the top candidate for the Raiders if minority owner Tom Brady is allowed to weigh in on the level that majority owner Mark Davis has suggested.

From what I’ve been told about Brady’s opinion of Sanders — which he has shared with a handful of NFL coaches and executives over the past 18 months — there is a great amount of respect for Sanders’ focus on preparation, his ability to learn and adapt, his accuracy and determination in the pocket, and his toughness to take hits and still be resilient. I’ve been told that Brady has also been impressed that Sanders has avoided the pitfalls of being thrust onto the center stage of college football’s limelight after transferring to Colorado to play for his father, Deion. For the most part, Shedeur has never become a distraction, developed selfish tendencies or created issues with his public profile or fame that overshadowed his team or his game. He also stayed in school for four years and developed, which is something Brady has repeatedly and publicly said he values in a young quarterback.

 

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