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The Rams aren’t the only team interested in Kirk Cousins as a backup quarterback. The Packers also have interest.

Packers General Manager Brian Gutekunst confirmed Monday that Cousins is one of the options the team has discussed after losing Malik Willis in free agency. Desmond Ridder and Kyle McCord are the two quarterbacks currently behind Jordan Love.

“Yeah, we’ve discussed a lot of those options,” Gutekunst said when asked about Cousins, via Matt Schneidman of TheAthletic.com. “Obviously that’s a guy who’s got a lot of pelts on the wall in this league, so we’ve certainly discussed all those kind of things.”

Packers head coach Matt LaFleur was the quarterbacks coach in Washington during Cousins’ first two seasons in the league (2012-13).

Cousins started eight games last season as the backup to Michael Penix, who tore his ACL in Week 11 against Carolina.

Cousins has thrown for 44,700 yards with 298 touchdowns and 131 interceptions in his 14-year career.


Falcons Clips

Falcons must focus on getting Robinson a new deal
Mike Florio and Devin McCourty react to Bijan Robinson’s comments on Drake London’s new contract and explain why the Atlanta Falcons should work to sign the star running back on a new deal as soon as possible.

While the question of whether the Bears will or won’t (they won’t) get a pair of third-round compensatory picks as a result of the hiring of former assistant General Manager Ian Cunningham by the Falcons as General Manager has been resolved, many still wonder why the provision rewarding teams for developing minority candidates for high-level promotions didn’t apply to Chicago.

On Monday, we asked Falcons president of football Matt Ryan if he understands why the Bears didn’t get the picks, given the clear impression that Ian Cunningham is the Atlanta G.M.

“He is the G.M.,” Ryan said. “He is the G.M. I’m learning — I mean you talk about things that are coming on your desk every day, management council things, different things like that, why they rule certain ways, why they don’t rule certain ways. I’m not experienced enough to give you a really credible answer on that at this point. I would say this, I think in every facet of the word, Ian’s a General Manager in this league.”

Obviously, it’s not Ryan’s call. It’s the league’s call. And it’s still not clear why the league called it the way they did.

Maybe, frankly, it was part of the apparent “no sudden moves” strategy aimed at avoiding the kind of assault on the Rooney Rule that Florida attorney general James Uthmeier started last week.

The environment has changed,” as Steelers owner Art Rooney II said last week. Perhaps that changed environment has prompted the NFL to change its approach to granting the picks where a new General Manager has someone else between him and the owner in the football operation.


Kevin Stefanski went through a kind of offseason quarterback competition last year with the Browns.

Now head coach of the Falcons, Stefanski is preparing to have another one in 2026 — although this one will take a different shape.

With Michael Penix Jr. still recovering from a torn ACL, Tua Tagovailoa will take the bulk of the offseason reps at quarterback. But once Penix is healthy, the Falcons are expecting QB1 to be up for grabs.

“It will be a competition but I can’t tell you exactly what it will look like until Michael gets healthy,” Stefanski said at the annual league meeting on Monday, via Tori McElhaney of the team’s website. “But the quarterback position — like all of our other positions — will be a competition, yes.”

Stefanski also noted that Penix’s top goal for now is to focus on his rehab and get healthy.

“He’s in the building all the time and I’m excited for what that looks like when he’s healthy,” Stefanski said. “But we’re not going to rush him, and he’s not going to rush himself.

“There are obviously timelines when it comes to injuries, but we are all different. So, we want to see how he looks in a week, how he looks in a month,” Stefanski added, saying it wouldn’t be fair to say if he thinks Penix will be ready for the start of the season.

But either way, there will be competition.

“I think our plan was to always bring in competition across our roster,” Stefanski said. “It’s something Ian believes in, I believe in, Matt believes in. That only makes all of us better at every position.”


Kevin Stefanski hasn’t coached Tua Tagovailoa yet, but the Falcons head coach thinks he already has some common ground with the quarterback.

Stefanski was hired by the Falcons after being dismissed by the Browns at the end of the 2025 season and Tagovailoa signed a one-year deal with the team after being released by the Dolphins. Stefanski told Mike Garafolo of NFL Media that he feels a desire to show that the Browns made a mistake and that he believes Tagovailoa has the same motivation as he prepares for his first season in Atlanta.

“There’s something to be said when you’re fired,” Stefanski said. “I can attest to that. You want to prove people wrong. You have a chip on your shoulder. I think where I’m coming into this, where Tua’s coming into this is, listen, this is not exactly how you thought it would go, but guess what, that’s the reality, and how are we gonna respond? I think that’s what he’s made of. You look back his career, you look back at his college career, he’s responded.”

Michael Penix will have a say in whether Tagovailoa is on the field for the Falcons this fall, but he still needs to recover from last season’s torn ACL and that process should offer Tagovailoa space to show that he’s capable of running the offense at a higher level than he reached in Miami.


The Buccaneers hosted free agent linebacker DeAngelo Malone on a free agent visit on Thursday.

Malone, 26, spent his first four seasons with the Falcons after they made him a third-round pick in 2022.

He landed on injured reserve last season after injuring an ankle in Week 10 against the Colts. Malone ended up playing nine games, and he totaled eight tackles, an interception and a pass defensed.

Malone played all but two games in his first three seasons.

In his career, Malone has recorded 59 tackles, three sacks, an interception and a pass defensed.


The Falcons have signed free agent running back Tyler Goodson, the team announced Thursday.

Goodson is a native of Suwanee, Georgia, who attended North Gwinnett High School, so he is returning to his home state to continue his professional career. He will join a backfield that features Bijan Robinson.

The Packers signed Goodson as an undrafted free agent in 2022 after he gained more than 3,000 scrimmage yards during his three-year career at the University of Iowa. He spent his rookie season on the Packers’ practice squad before joining the Colts in 2023.

Goodson has appeared in 33 games for the Colts the past three seasons with one start. He has gained 376 yards from scrimmage, including 264 on the ground, and has scored two touchdowns.

In 2025, Goodson played 35 offensive snaps and 130 on special teams in 11 games. He had 11 touches for 32 yards.


Tua Tagovailoa wouldn’t blame his departure from Miami on anyone but himself. He said he didn’t want “to get too much in depth with things that were going on.”

Instead, in his introductory news conference in Atlanta, the quarterback conceded his play didn’t live up to expectations.

“If you’re looking at last year, my play wasn’t up to the standard of the way I’ve been playing football in the past . . . three years since the new contract,” Tagovailoa said. “So, [I’ve] just got to play better football. That’s what that really means. There’s no other way to sugarcoat that or go around that.”

The Dolphins benched him last season after he threw a career-high 15 interceptions in 14 games, turning over the starting job to rookie Quinn Ewers. The team completely moved on earlier this month, releasing him despite taking on an NFL-record $99.2 million in dead cap money.

He signed a $1.3 million deal with the Falcons.

“Last year wasn’t the best year for me,” Tagovailoa said. “I’m looking for a fresh start, but fresh start in the sense of being able to compete, being able to go back out there and playing football, good football. And I think the best football is still ahead of me.”


The Falcons are doubling down on Robinsons in their offensive backfield for the 2026 season.

According to multiple reports, they are signing former Commanders and 49ers running back Brian Robinson. Ian Rapoport of NFL Media reports it is a one-year, $2.5 million deal.

Bijan Robinson is the starting running back in Atlanta, so the newcomer will be ticketed for the same kind of backup role he played behind Christian McCaffrey after the Commanders traded him to the Niners last year.

Robinson had 92 carries for 400 yards and two touchdowns in that role. He had 570 carries for 2,329 yards and 15 touchdowns in three seasons with Washington.


Tua Tagovailoa wouldn’t be on the Falcons right now if he’d played up to expectations in Miami the last couple of years, but that’s not new information for him.

Tagovailoa agreed to sign with Atlanta before he was officially released by the Dolphins and the quarterback spoke to reporters on Tuesday for the first time since agreeing to that deal. Tagovailoa acknowledged that his play failed to reach the standard he set for himself before the Dolphins opted to bench him for the final weeks of the regular season before adding that he appreciates the chance for a fresh start with the Falcons.

“I think the best football is ahead of me,” Tagovailoa said, via Tori Mcelhaney of the team’s website.

Atlanta drafted Michael Penix in the first round in 2024, so it’s not a sure thing that Tagovailoa will get a chance to show off his skills on the field. He said on Tuesday that he welcomes the chance to compete for playing time and to aid Penix in any way he can once they begin working together at practice. Penix’s health as he recovers from a torn ACL will be another part of the team’s quarterback choice, but Tagovailoa sounds ready for things to take any path for the 2026 season.


The Falcons are adding another quarterback to their roster.

Agent Blake Baratz told Jeremy Fowler of ESPN that his client Trevor Siemian has agreed to a contract with Atlanta. He will join Michael Penix and Tua Tagovailoa in the team’s quarterback room.

Siemian spent the last two seasons with the Titans and did not appear in any games while spending most of his time on the practice squad. He appeared in five games and made three starts for the Jets in 2023 and has also started games for the Bears, Saints and Broncos since entering the league as a 2015 seventh-round pick in Denver.

Penix is recovering from a torn ACL, which will limit his workload for some time and should leave a good number of reps for Siemian to handle once the Falcons get back on the field in the coming weeks.