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Jackon’s return bolsters Pats secondary; more teams join OTA boycott

By The Associated Press - | Apr 18, 2021

J.C. Jackson will be back in the Patriots secondary for one more season before he can cash in as an unresticted free agent. (AP photo)

What does the the New England Patriots Patriots re-signing of cornerback J.C. Jackson mean?

Well, it means they have one more year with the former undrafted free agent ,who finished second in the NFL in interceptions in 2020. He will become an unrestricted free agent next offseason, and if he continues his good play, he could land a big contract on the open market.

The restricted free agent returns to New England where he will be paid $3.88 million this upcoming season after signing the second-round tender the Patriots placed on him prior to the start of free agency. If another team had wanted to sign him, they would have had to give up a second round pick.

The Patriots also announced Friday they released offensive lineman Dustin Woodard.

Jackson made an instant impact in New England’s secondary since signing in 2018 out of Maryland. The 25-year-old’s career-high nine interceptions last season led the Patriots and were second in the NFL behind Miami cornerback Xavien Howard’s 10. Jackson had eight interceptions over his first two seasons in the league, and has started 22 of 45 career games.

There are a couple of cornerbacks that may interest the Patriots in the NFL Draft in two weeks as well.

FOUR MORE TEAMS JOIN OTA BOYCOTT

Players on four more NFL teams will be skipping in-person voluntary workouts because of the pandemic: the Los Angeles Rams and Chargers, the Atlanta Falcons and Miami Dolphins.

The players posted through their union that they are joining 11 other groups who previously said they would not be on hand for the sessions.

This weekend players from the other 17 clubs are expected to announce plans. The offseason sessions begin Monday, and on Wednesday the league sent a memo to all 32 teams saying the first four weeks of the voluntary program will be virtual. The plan is to then transition to in-person work at team facilities.

Saying no to in-person workouts earlier this week were players from the Super Bowl champion Buccaneers, Broncos, Seahawks, Giants, Bears, Raiders, Lions, Browns, Steelers and Patriots. The Jets said “many” of their players would skip them.

Following the lead of Browns center JC Tretter, the NFL Players Association’s president, the Dolphins noted they would “stand in solidarity with players across the league who are making informed decisions to exercise their right to not attend voluntary in-person workouts this offseason.”

Added the Chargers: “We had a virtual offseason last year that protected us and our families from a pandemic, but also showed beneficial to our overall health and safety.”

Late last month, Tretter issued a strong statement on the NFLPA website calling for the elimination of such things as organized team activities and minicamps.

“The good news for our sport is that while the NFL season looked and felt noticeably different from previous years,” he wrote, “we learned that the game of football did not suffer at the expense of protecting its players more than ever before.

“Our process is to follow the science on what is safest for our guys, and many of the changes this past year — like no in-person offseason workouts/practices, the extended acclimation period before training camp and no preseason games — gave us a year of data that demonstrates maintaining some of these changes long term is in the best interest of the game.”

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