Titans’ pass rush busts serve as cautionary tale for NFL free agency

By TERESA M. WALKER
The Associated Press

Shopping on the NFL free agent market can be so very tempting.

Talented and experienced linemen, pass rushers, wide receivers and cornerbacks available to fill a hole in the roster. That new starter can be yours with a big enough check. Just be sure to add enough zeros.

Being available in free agency does not guarantee sure-fire production.

Just ask the Tennessee Titans.

The Titans need only think back a few months to remember the need to spend smartly after busting on not one but two free agents.



They shelled out more than $21 million combined on Vic Beasley and Jadeveon Clowney. Signed to boost a struggling pass rush, Tennessee cut Beasley after three tackles in five games while Clowney went on injured reserve after eight.

Not a single sack combined between the two.

“It’s important that this offseason that we learn, that I learn personally from last year, that we try to improve,” Titans general manager Jon Robinson said.

Busting on free agents doesn’t stop any NFL team from trying again.

“We’re looking for those kinds of players, willing to invest resources,” Robinson said.

For every Tom Brady signed, there’s plenty of busts every free agency period. Someone who simply doesn’t meet the expectations that come along with his big paycheck or proves a bad fit with the new team. And the bigger checks of free agency make those mistakes even more costly.

TRADE BUSTS

Sometimes the busts aren’t free agents but trade acquisitions, which can be even worse.



The Denver Broncos recently jettisoned Jurrell Casey and A.J. Bouye, two veterans they traded for a year ago only to see the deals quickly blow up in their faces.

The Broncos thought they had a steal when they sent a seventh-rounder to Tennessee for Casey, but the five-time Pro Bowl defensive lineman tore a biceps in Week 3, ending his season.

Denver sent a fourth-round pick to Jacksonville for Bouye, but he played in just seven games because of shoulder and head injuries and a suspension for violating the NFL’s policy on performance-enhancers.

The Broncos cut both last month, freeing up about $24 million in salary cap room.

CORY LITTLETON

The Raiders thought they were getting a difference-maker when they signed linebacker Cory Littleton to a three-year, $35.25 million deal. He never came close to that in 14 games played last season. He didn’t have a single sack, force a fumble or recover a fumble.

Raiders coach Jon Gruden pegged defensive tackle Maliek Collins as a defensive key, yet Collins also finished without a sack or tackle for loss. But Las Vegas only signed Collins to a one-year deal for $6 million limiting the bust factor.

BRESHAD PERRIMAN



The Jets tried to protect themselves giving the wide receiver a one-year deal worth $8 million to prove himself as a replacement for Robby Anderson who took a two-year deal with Carolina worth up to $20 million.

Perriman wound up with dealing with injuries including a hamstring, sprained ankle, a concussion and a shoulder. Combined with a struggling offense that rarely attacked downfield, Perriman was both ineffective with his new team and used inadequately.

STEPHEN WEATHERLY

Weatherly was a major bust for the Carolina Panthers after the defensive end signed a two-year, $12 million deal last offseason. Weatherly didn’t get a single sack in nine games and had only one tackle for loss with three total hits on a quarterback.

The Panthers cut their losses in February, releasing Weatherly to clear some salary cap space. Weatherly returned to the team that drafted him in Minnesota but at a much cheaper deal: one year for $2.5 million.