At this point in the year, each NFL team knows -- for the most part -- what it will be working with as it moves toward finalizing its roster for the 2015 campaign. Coaches have been hired; free agents have been signed; prospects have been drafted.
As the dust settles following a busy few months of transactions and acquisitions, what stands out as your favorite offseason move thus far?
While I thought Indianapolis' signing of Trent Cole was a smart under-the-radar move -- as detailed Monday in my review of the Colts' offseason -- it's not as impactful as Seattle having Lynch around longer. #BeastMode
Pairing Ingram with free-agent acquisition C.J. Spiller gives the Saints one of the most intriguing backfield combinations in the league.
The Graham acquisition also allowed Seattle to focus on other areas in the draft, as only one of eight picks (Kansas State WR Tyler Lockett) was devoted to a pass catcher.
» How about the New York Jets rebuilding their cornerback position by bringing back a pair of old friends, Darrelle Revis and Antonio Cromartie? They went from having one of the worst CB situations in the NFL to one of the best.
» And the Philadelphia Eagles did well in swapping out LeSean McCoy for DeMarco Murray (... even if that wasn't quite the plan from the beginning). I think Murray is an upgrade over McCoy, particularly in Chip Kelly's north-south ground game.
» Finally, the Cowboys ended up with three "first-round picks," as Byron Jones, Randy Gregory and La'el Collins all carried Round 1 grades through most of the pre-draft process. But, of course, there is some "buyer beware" here.
New Orleans is getting him at a discounted rate because his production suffered due to a 2013 high-ankle sprain, a 2014 broken collarbone and the failure of Doug Marrone's coaching staff to get him the ball in space. Sean Payton, on the other hand, has gotten the best out of playmaking "satellite" backs such as Darren Sproles and Reggie Bush. This is a match made in heaven.
Seattle also added wideout Tyler Lockett in the third round. The Kansas State product should improve the Seahawks' return units and give them another weapon out of the slot. Losing Max Unger in the Graham trade hurt, but giving Russell Wilson more weapons far outweighs losing the stud center.