Market for Alex Smith will be strong, Ian Rapoport says
Ian Rapoport of the NFL Network thinks the Chiefs could get a solid trade haul in return for Alex Smith.
Kirk Larrabee - 3 hours ago 0
The Kansas City Chiefs should have no problem finding a trade partner for Alex Smith this offseason and could come away with a strong haul in return, according to insider Ian Rapoport of the NFL Network.
Rapoport, who reported over the weekend the Chiefs would be listening to offers for Smith this offseason, was a guest on The Day Shift on 610 Sports Radio Kansas City Monday, where he was asked about the level of interest in Alex Smith and whether or not the Chiefs will be able to trade him.
"A lot," Rapoport said. "A lot, and yes."
Smith is coming off his best statistical season of his career as he threw for 4,042 yards in 2017 with 26 touchdowns, five interceptions, and a 104.7 passer rating. Rapoport says it's that performance along with what Smith can bring to a team's quarterback room that makes him such a hot commodity.
"He was number one in the NFL in passer rating," Rapoport said. "He is a great person, so if you trade for him and then draft a quarterback high, you will get someone who's going to help him. All you need to do is ask Patrick Mahomes. It's actually an amazing thing what a great person Alex Smith is because he's dealt with a lot of crap in his career despite mostly awesome and has come out the other side of it."
There have been several teams speculated to be good fits for Smith, with different situations among each of them. There's the Jacksonville Jaguars and Buffalo Bills, playoff teams that are still fighting quarterback woes; there's the Arizona Cardinals, a team whose starting quarterback, Carson Palmer, just retired, but still has enough talent to be competitive next season; and there's a team like the Cleveland Browns, who might be interested in acquiring Smith to not just help the team start winning again but to be a mentor to a quarterback they might select in the draft.
The latter situation might not seem like an ideal one to many quarterbacks, but Smith has done it before, and Rapoport thinks he might not have a problem doing it again.
"If I was a franchise quarterback, would I really want to help the guy who is brought in to replace me? I don't know," Rapoport said. "For some ridiculous reason, Alex Smith has done it several times, and he's continued to be a great guy. He's going to end up benefiting from all this because first of all, he's probably going to wind up being traded somewhere great. Second of all, I think his legacy will sort of live on and people will know what a good person he is."
Trading Smith would free up $17 million in cap space for the Chiefs, a much-needed amount for a team currently projected to be over the cap next year, and would also allow them to replenish some of the draft picks they traded away in multiple trades in recent months. It cost a 2013 second round pick and a 2014 conditional pick (which turned out to be another second round pick) for the Chiefs to acquire Smith from the San Francisco 49ers in 2013, and Rapoport thinks the Chiefs could get even more in return for Smith than that.
"I think they might do better this time," Rapoport said. "He is a hot commodity, and they are in unbelievable position."
Originally Posted by Coogs:
FWIW MHM, my money is still on Smith going to the Bills. I don't see him going to Cleveland. I was just playing with the scenario that was laid out in kcbubb's post.
The Jets and Cardinals seem like viable options to me.
They both have defensive minded head coaches that may lean toward a ball control game manager who doesn't turn the ball over.
Both are also looking for a QBOTF and may see the benefit of someone like Smith as a competent bridge and tutor.
Also, one is a new coach with something to prove and the other is trying to save his job. Both could benefit by exceeding expectations even if it only means 8 to 10 wins and a playoff loss. [Reply]
Originally Posted by Sandy Vagina:
I have covered this page or two back. Not expecting. Would have been nice, is all.
I rightfully put the blame on Smith.. with the caveat of : tried to be proactive and make something happen.... probably hoped that one of two OL doing absolutely nothing... might just get a clue. :-)
The caveat doesnt explain that he got scared for no reason and took off out of a clean pocket though.
The "he tried to be proactive and make a play" or "gambled to make a play" like you said a page or so ago is absurd.
He got scared of phantom pressure. Period. [Reply]
Down here in Jax tonight they were discussing their options. Cousins or Alex. Issue w/Cousins is it'll cost $25M/year. Issue w/Alex is he's on the last year of his deal and don't want to work a new deal. And the kicker - they don't want to give up a 3rd or 4th round pick. [Reply]
Originally Posted by Sandy Vagina:
Get inside that mind, yes sir.
I guess when every quarterback makes the decision to run, they start off with 4 miniature, confused looking steps before they actually start to run. Its the fastest way to gain yards, right? Lateral, panicky steps? [Reply]
Originally Posted by dls6501:
I guess when every quarterback makes the decision to run, they start off with 4 miniature, confused looking steps before they actually start to run. Its the fastest way to gain yards, right? Lateral, panicky steps?
You shut your WHORE mouth!!!!! Barry Sanders never took a panicky step, and neither did Sir Alex. SAY IT!!!!!! :-) [Reply]
Originally Posted by TigeRRUppeRRcut:
Because receivers have left Kansas City under Reid to become all pros. Right?
Dwayne bowe couldn't even make it as a third option receiver after Smith had to deal with him being the #1 receiver :-). Maclin didn't do shit. McGrath is a nobody. Williams, hemingway, hammond, mccluster are out of the league
And yet, Mahomes.
Mahomes could and WILL win a SB with 'Dusty McFartknocker', 'Shim-Sham Boogaloo', 'El Beano Rodriguez', and 'Mooka-Mooka Whistleclick' if need be, because that's what QB's who MAKE THE CHICKEN SALAD, DO.
Originally Posted by MahiMike:
Down here in Jax tonight they were discussing their options. Cousins or Alex. Issue w/Cousins is it'll cost $25M/year. Issue w/Alex is he's on the last year of his deal and don't want to work a new deal. And the kicker - they don't want to give up a 3rd or 4th round pick.
Okay, great. I guess I hope the Jaguars enjoy that shit-chucking ape they have for a QB, because that's exactly what they're gonna get if they don't pay up.
Blake Bortles just Mark Sanchez'd himself a couple of playoff wins. If anybody suggests otherwise, that Bortles is a QB you can build a team around, even as a Joe Flacco/Andy Dalton-level QB, they're a fucking moron.
The guy is an inaccurate passer. He can't be trusted to make the throws. [Reply]