06-03-2018, 04:07 PM
The battle for former Philadelphia Eagles linebacker Mychal Kendricks is officially on, and as of Friday, he has now met with the three teams he originally scheduled free-agent visits with.
This list included the Oakland Raiders, Cleveland Browns and Minnesota Vikings. His free agency tour began with a trip to Minnesota to visit with his brother, Eric's current team. He then traveled to Oakland to talk with Jon Gruden and company before heading to his visit with the Browns in the latter part of this week.
With the meetings now seemingly wrapped up, it's decision time for Kendricks, who is reportedly looking to make his final call by the end of the week, according to Jordan Schultz of Yahoo Sports.
While none of the teams have officially been removed from Kendricks' list just yet, John McMullen of 97.3 ESPN revealed that the Vikings seem the "least likely even though his brother is there." As McMullen points out, the reasoning behind that is due to the fact that he would be behind two strong linebackers in a scheme where the third plays just 25 to 30 percent of the snaps.
It's an interesting point and makes a fair amount of sense, as both the Raiders and Browns do have more pressing needs at the position than the Vikings.
https://247sports.com/nfl/oakland-raider...-118711398
This list included the Oakland Raiders, Cleveland Browns and Minnesota Vikings. His free agency tour began with a trip to Minnesota to visit with his brother, Eric's current team. He then traveled to Oakland to talk with Jon Gruden and company before heading to his visit with the Browns in the latter part of this week.
With the meetings now seemingly wrapped up, it's decision time for Kendricks, who is reportedly looking to make his final call by the end of the week, according to Jordan Schultz of Yahoo Sports.
While none of the teams have officially been removed from Kendricks' list just yet, John McMullen of 97.3 ESPN revealed that the Vikings seem the "least likely even though his brother is there." As McMullen points out, the reasoning behind that is due to the fact that he would be behind two strong linebackers in a scheme where the third plays just 25 to 30 percent of the snaps.
It's an interesting point and makes a fair amount of sense, as both the Raiders and Browns do have more pressing needs at the position than the Vikings.
https://247sports.com/nfl/oakland-raider...-118711398