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2012
Jags will use Jones-Drew sparingly in Week 1 – Maurice Jones-Drew | JAC
2012
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2012
Mallett ascends to No. 2 on Pats depth chart – Ryan Mallett | NE
2012
Panthers WR Smith, LB Beason back to practice (Yahoo! Sports)
2012
Maurice Jones-Drew ends holdout; returns to Jacksonville Jaguars
2012

On Sunday morning, ESPN's Adam Schefter reported that Jacksonville Jaguars running back Maurice Jones-Drew will return to his team after a 38-day holdout. The report was confirmed by NFL.com's Ian Rapoport, and seriously confirmed by Jags running back Rashad Jennings.

Jones-Drew, who led the NFL in rushing in 2011 with 1,606 yards, has held out through the entire preseason because he wants a re-structured contract. In a recent conference call with local reporters, Jags head coach Mike Mularkey said that he was hearing "rumors" that MJD might return sooner than later — and in time for the Jags' regular-season opener against the Minnesota Vikings next Sunday.
"I have not heard from Maurice,'' Mularkey said in a recent conference call with local reporters. "I've heard those same things just like you have, but nothing from the people that need to tell its firm.''
But how, Mularkey was asked, does a head coach get those rumors when he spends so much time at the team facility?
"I get out," he said. "Today, I'm actually off to catch up with my wife to see what is going on in her life. I've heard things out on the street just like you guys do. It wasn't on Twitter.''
When the Jaguars cut their roster to the final 53 on Saturday, they placed Jones-Drew on the Reserve/Did Not Report list, so they would receive a roster exemption when the running back returned to the team. Jones-Drew would thus be available to start Week 1, but Mularkey has said that Jennings would most likely be the main man until Jones-Drew was sure to be in game shape. Jennings rushed for 209 yards on 47 carries in the preseason, finishing second to Arizona's William Powell in preseason rushing yards.
[More NFL: NFLRA says talks with NFL have broken off, replacement refs to work]
"That's hasn't come up, that discussion. We've got to get him in first. He's got to come in. We'll go from there. That has not been addressed yet,'' Mularkey said.
Jones-Drew, who signed a five-year, $31 million contract in 2009, has collected $21.8 million in the first three seasons, but wants to be paid in line with other elite backs. That would include the contacts recently given to Adrian Peterson (seven years, $100 million, $30 million guaranteed), Chris Johnson (four years, $53.5 million, $30 million guaranteed), LeSean McCoy (five years, $45.6 million, $20.8 million guaranteed), Arian Foster (five years, $43.5 million, $20.8 million guaranteed), and Matt Forte (four years, $32 million, $18 million guaranteed).
Jones-Drew could be fined up to $1.2 million by the team for off-season time should the Jaguars choose that option, but it's more likely that both sides will forgive and forget. Jones-Drew is returning now because if he doesn't, he starts losing game checks. And with a $4.45 million base salary in 2012, every week of in-season absence would have cost Jones-Drew $261,765.
In the end, the Jags are unlikely to move on Jones-Drew's requests. "There's no decision here,'' Jags owner Shad Khan told the Florida Times-Union in July. "It's his choice. There's been very little for us to do rather than wait on whatever he might choose to do ... There's more than 50 players [on the team] under contract. There are other people under contract in management, coaches. Does that mean if you do it for one, you do it for everybody.
"Where do you draw the line?''
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Jags coach: ‘I have not heard from Maurice’ – Maurice Jones-Drew | JAC
2012
Seahawks release TE Kellen Winslow in surprise move
2012

It was a bad week for veteran tight ends who imagined that they were pretty secure in their positions. On Tuesday, the Washington Redskins released Chris Cooley, who had been with them since he was selected in the third round of the 2004 NFL Draft. And on Saturday, the Seattle Seahawks released Kellen Winslow in a move that surprised a lot of people. Seattle traded a conditional late-round pick to the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in May for the services of the nine-year veteran when Winslow and new Bucs head coach Greg Schiano didn't see eye-to-eye.
The Seahawks signed former Cleveland Browns tight end Evan Moore to fill the roster spot opened by Winslow's exit.
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One reason for Winslow's departure was money -- he was due $13.3 million over the remaining three years of his contract, and it's believed that a refusal to take a pay cut in Seattle led to his release. Winslow, who played 16 games in each of three seasons for the Bucs despite several knee injuries, had to be limited in practice and caught just three passes for 34 yards and a touchdown in the preseason.
That doesn't tell the whole story, however, because Winslow was frequently set as a potentially dynamic target for rookie quarterback Russell Wilson in practice. Set off the line while fellow tight end Zach Miller was often tasked to block alongside the tackle, Winslow looked to be a good fit in Seattle's offense, which used at least two tight ends 37 percent of the time, per Football Outsiders. That figure ranked 12th in the league.
"He's totally a part of that," Seahawks head coach Pete Carroll said in early August of Winslow's fit in Seattle's offense. "He has an extraordinary catching range. Kellen is doing a great job for us going with us right now. He's affected the way we think about the throwing game, and he's affected the quarterbacks too because you can feel when he's on the field. If you throw it near him he's going to catch it. That's that factor I'm talking about, it can happen with wide receivers. That's why I was so excited about Kellen coming in. That catching range, that expertise that some rare guys have, you want it when you can get it. I just want a little bit more."
Miller is scheduled to make $6 million this season and has three years left on a five-year, $34 million contract he signed in August of 2011. The Seahawks have also liked what they've seen from Anthony McCoy, who played for Carroll at USC and was selected by Seattle in the sixth round in 2010.
Selected in the first round of the 2004 draft by the Cleveland Browns, Winslow totaled 218 catches for 2,377 yards and 12 touchdowns in three seasons for the Buccaneers.
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