logo
From IR and PUP to practice squads: What do NFL roster designations mean?

From IR and PUP to practice squads: What do NFL roster designations mean?

Yahoo3 days ago
NFL rosters constantly evolve as general managers juggle injuries, try to improve position groups and add depth.
Teams enter training camp with a maximum of 90 players, who try to prove they belong on the 53-man active roster for the regular season.
But there are other roster designations that fill the NFL's transactions wire daily. What do they all mean?
Injured reserve
Players are put on the reserve/injured list — more commonly referred to as IR — when they have a football-related injury and need to miss at least a few weeks. Players on IR don't count against the active roster, but their salaries count against the cap.
If a player is placed on this list before the regular season begins, he could miss the entire season unless they are designated to return during the roster cutdown to 53 players after training camp. Teams can designate up to two such players to return.
Players on IR need to miss a minimum of four games. NFL teams can designate up to eight players to return from IR during the regular season (and up to 10 if they make the postseason) and an individual player can be so designated twice.
Players designated for return from IR before the season count against a team's eight- or 10-player limit.
When a player is cleared to practice, a 21-day window begins and the player must be activated to the 53-man roster or be placed on season-ending injured reserve at the conclusion of that three-week period. They could also be released or traded.
Physically unable to perform
Players put on the active/physically unable to perform list — or PUP — at the start of training camp have football-related injuries, like those on IR, but count against the active roster.
These players can participate in all team activities other than practice and can be activated at any point during camp when they are medically cleared.
A player can't be placed on the PUP list after he has practiced once or played in a preseason game.
Players on the active/PUP list could be moved to the reserve/PUP list during roster cutdowns. If placed on the reserve/PUP list, a player wouldn't count against the active roster and must sit out the first four games.
If a player is placed on the reserve/PUP list before final cutdowns, he will miss the season.
Non-football injury/illness
Players can be placed on this list if they are injured outside of football — perhaps working out in the offseason or doing a recreational activity — or have a long-term illness not associated with playing.
Rookies still recovering from injuries suffered in college often are placed on the active/NFI list to start their pro careers.
If a player remains on NFI after the final roster cutdowns, they can be placed on the reserve/NFI list and will sit out four games. They don't count against the 53-man roster limit.
Reserve/suspended
Players who are suspended by the NFL for violating league rules are placed on this list and don't count against a team's roster limit.
What's the difference between being waived and being released?
Players with less than four seasons of accrued NFL time are waived, meaning they are subject to waivers and can be claimed by other teams. If they go unclaimed after the 24-hour waiver period, they become a free agent.
Players with four or more seasons accrued are considered vested veterans and are not subject to waivers, so they immediately become free agents when they are released. This is the case until the NFL trade deadline in October, when all players regardless of their veteran status are subject to waivers.
Players can also be waived/injured, which means they can be claimed by another team or revert to their original team's IR list after the claiming period. The team can then decide whether it wants to move forward with the player or release him with an injury settlement.
What is the practice squad?
Teams can form practice squads after final cuts. NFL teams can have 16 players on their practice squad — or 17, as long as one of those players is part of the league's International Player Pathway program. (Those players have a primary residence outside of the United States or Canada).
While most players on the practice squad are rookies or have limited playing experience, six of the 17 can be veterans with no limit on the amount of seasons they have accrued.
Players on the practice squad participate in practice during the regular season, but don't play unless they're promoted to the active roster before a game. Players can be promoted a maximum of three times in a season.
They can be signed by other teams at any point, but that team must keep them on its 53-man roster.
___
AP NFL: https://apnews.com/hub/nfl
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Derby, Belmont winner Sovereignty has to prove it again in Jim Dandy
Derby, Belmont winner Sovereignty has to prove it again in Jim Dandy

UPI

time19 minutes ago

  • UPI

Derby, Belmont winner Sovereignty has to prove it again in Jim Dandy

1 of 3 | Kentucky Derby and Belmont Stakes winner Sovereignty returns to the races as the favorite in Saturday's Jim Dandy at Saratoga. File Photo by Mark Abraham/UPI | License Photo July 25 (UPI) -- Kentucky Derby and Belmont Stakes winner Sovereignty takes on some old rivals again Saturday in the Jim Dandy at Springfield and will have to continue proving himself to maintain his top spot among American 3-year-olds. Saturday's Grade I Bing Crosby at Del Mar is a "Win and You're In" for the Breeders' Cup Sprint and looks pretty ripe for the picking. On the global scene, Saturday's King George at Ascot offers a guaranteed slot in the Breeders' Cup Turf with two-time winner of that race, Rebel's Romance, looking like a long shot. And we're off like a sure thing ... Classic Sovereignty clearly leads the 3-year-old division after winning the Kentucky Derby and Belmont Stakes. But in what's turned out to be a tough and competitive season, he's going to have to prove it again in Saturday's $500,000 Grade II Jim Dandy at Saratoga. Just a week after his chief rival, Journalism, stayed in the mix with a victory in the Grade I Haskell at Monmouth Park, Sovereignty takes on another familiar foe, Baeza, in the Jim Dandy. Baeza returns from California after finishing third in the Belmont and third in the Kentucky Derby. Before that, he was second to Journalism in the Grade I Santa Anita Derby. But wait. There's more. Also in the tidy, five-horse field is Sandman. He won the Grade I Arkansas Derby, but then finished seventh at Churchill Downs and third in the Preakness. Mo Plex enters the Saratoga heat off victories in the Bay Shore at Aqueduct and the Grade III Ohio Derby at Thistledown and has not been worse than third in eight career starts. And Hill Road, third in the 2024 Breeders' Cup Juvenile, won the Grade III Peter Pan before finishing fifth in the Belmont. Trainer Bill Mott said early in the week Sovereignty is "doing good" but, as always, needs things to go his way in the race. "We hope he has a good race and has a little luck. Anything can happen," Mott said. "They've got to go around there and it's not over until those blinking lights say 'official.' They've got to hang those numbers up and say official." Mo Plex's trainer, Jeremiah Englehart, said he was impressed with his colt's effort in Ohio, but noted, "Now he has this test of taking on the top 3-year-olds in the game." Important as it is, in the great arc of the 3-year-old season the Jim Dandy is "merely" the local prep for the $1.25 million Grade 1 Travers on Aug. 23 -- a.k.a. the "Midsummer Derby." And speaking of the Travers, Chancer McPatrick, winner of last year's Grade I Champagne Stakes and second in the Tampa Bay Derby in March, outfinished So Sandy by a head in Thursday's $135,000 Curlin Stakes at Saratoga. The race was restricted to 3-year-olds who had not won a graded stakes race this year. Even so, trainer Chad Brown said it proved his colt likes a fast Saratoga track -- he's 3-for-3 in those conditions -- and indicated the Travers is not out of the question for him. "Surely, our dream would be to try to get him out to a mile and a quarter and hope for dry weather on Travers Day if he's a horse for course," Brown said. The weekend slate for older Classic division horses is rife with other Triple Crown performers. Nysos is the 3-5 favorite on the morning line for Saturday's $300,000 Grade II San Diego Handicap at Del Mar. The 4-year-old Nyquist colt, knocked off the 2024 Triple Crown races by injury, comes off a win in the Grade III Triple Bend at Santa Anita. Speaking of 2024 Triple Crown candidates, Hades won the Grade III Holy Bull back in February 2024 and was fifth in the Florida Derby. After wandering in the wilderness since, he's back at Gulfstream for Friday's $70,000 Tackleberry Handicap, facing another Triple Crown refugee, Catalytic. These are some contentious races and industry insider Jude Feld has some interesting takes on some of the main heats. Check out his tips and thoughts at Distaff Running Away, Fondly and Paris Lily are stacked atop the morning line in a field of seven to contest Saturday's $250,000 Grade III Monmouth Oaks. Saturday's $150,000 Grade III Trillium on the Woodbine all-weather has six, featuring Caitlinhergrtness. The winner of last year's King's Plate looks for a bounce back from an eighth-place finish in the Grade II Nassau. Sprint Saturday's $400,000 Grade I Bing Crosby at Del Mar, a "Win and You're In" for the Breeders' Cup Sprint, looks like a midsummer peach orchard (you pick 'em). Well and almost evenly regarded on the morning line are Hejaz, World Record, Dr. Venkman, Mbagnick, Roll On Big Joe and Crazy Mason. Macho Music is the 2-1 morning-line pick in a field of eight for Friday's $200,000 Grade II Amsterdam for 3-year-olds at Saratoga. The Florida-bred won the Grade II Pat Day Mile at Churchill Downs on Derby Day, but then faded from the lead to finish in a dead heat for seventh in the Grade I Woody Stephens going 7 furlongs on June 7. This one is 6 1/2 furlongs. Turf The eight-horse field for Sunday's $250,000 Grade II Eddie Read at Del Mar looks pretty familiar, with many of the usual suspects signed on. Among them are Balnikhov and Gold Phoenxi from the Phil D'Amato barn, George Papaprodromu's Cabo Spirit and Balladeer and stalwarts Stay Hot, Atitlan, Formidable Man and Dicey Mo Chara. Filly & Mare Turf The first three from the July 3 Wild Applause Stakes -- Classic Q, Play With Fire and Lavender Disaster -- line up again for Saturday's $175,000 Grade III Lake George for 3-year-old fillies at Saratoga. Nine 3-year-old fillies are entered for Saturday's $150,000 (Canadian) Ontario Colleen at Woodbine with a case to be made for many of them. Sunday's $250,000 Grade II Glens Falls at Saratoga is another competitive heat, with six of the eight in the main field held at single-digit odds on the morning line. Around the world, around the clock England Saturday's Group 1 King George VI and Queen Elizabeth Stakes at Ascot shapes up as a proper heavyweight match, which is only appropriate for a Breeders' Cup "Win and You're In" event. Confirmations include Calandagan from France, Coronation Cup winner Jan Brueghel, top filly Kalpana and Godolphin's all-world Rebel's Romance, whose resume already includes two wins in the Breeders' Cup Turf. Calandagan ended a string of four consecutive Group 1 seconds with a victory in the Grand Prix de Paris in his last start. The runner-up streak included the Coronation Cup, so the Gleneagles gelding has 1/2 length to find vis-a-vis Jan Brueghel, a 4-year-old Galileo colt who is joined by Coolmore stablemate and likely rabbit Continuous. Rebel's Romance should be at a square price even though Godolphin's 7-year-old globetrotter won the Group 2 Yorkshire Cup and the Group 2 Hardwicke in his last two starts, handily defeating Al Riffa in the latter. Age would be the issue against what trainer Charlie Appleby describes as "some young legs." Andrew Balding brings Pretty Polly runner-up Kalpana for the King George.

Knock, knock. (Who is it?) Aaron Rodgers and DK Metcalf, who could transform Steelers
Knock, knock. (Who is it?) Aaron Rodgers and DK Metcalf, who could transform Steelers

Yahoo

time30 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Knock, knock. (Who is it?) Aaron Rodgers and DK Metcalf, who could transform Steelers

LATROBE, Penn. – DK Metcalf heard a knock at the door shortly after he checked into his room at Rooney Hall earlier this week. 'I thought it was my front door, and it was actually my bathroom door,' Metcalf, the new Pittsburgh Steelers receiver, explained after the first training camp practice on Thursday. Surprise, surprise. Metcalf has a suite mate. And one who comes with big benefits. The knock came from Aaron Rodgers. 'He was like, 'Aw man, I was hoping it was you,'" Metcalf said. Of course, it is no mere coincidence that the legendary quarterback and big-play receiver are sharing a suite, their dorm rooms separated by a bathroom. The arrangement has Mike Tomlin's fingerprints all over it. The crafty Steelers coach has been known to sometimes assign stalls in the locker room while seeking to position new players near certain personalities, for one reason or another. So, why not in this case? That Rodgers and Metcalf will be in such close proximity during training camp – and this camp comes with the need for some serious bonding with several prominent new faces in tow – comes with the potential for all sorts of intangible benefits. 'We can talk about a lot of stuff that we see the same on the field, conversations that we might not get to talk about in the meeting room,' Metcalf said. 'He gets to listen to a lot of my music tastes or hear me yell at the video game sometimes. But it will be fun having him across the hall.' Aaron Rodgers went to Mike Tomlin's backyard cookout. There was chemistry (and good food) They will expedite the curve of getting to know each other, that's for sure. Metcalf, the seventh-year veteran obtained in a trade with the Seattle Seahawks, enjoys playing video games in his spare time. Rodgers caught wind of that on Wednesday as Metcalf played an NCAA-themed game on his console. 'He walked in my room yesterday and said, 'Oh, you're gaming!'" Metcalf said. 'And then he just walked out.' Rodgers, 41, has had a healthy share of roommates and suitemates during an NFL career that began 21 years ago in the Green Bay Packers camp at St. Norbert's College. Metcalf, it seems, fits the profile for an ideal suitemate in his mind for reasons that go beyond strengthening the connection with a go-to target. 'I was here Tuesday night and not many other guys were here other than the rookies, and when I got in the room and realized we were sharing something, I was secretly hoping it wasn't a big lineman or something,' Rodgers said. 'Maybe somebody who cared about their hygiene a little bit. So, when I walked in, I saw a standard suitcase. I said, 'Oh, I think it's going to be good. This is probably DK.'" Training camp clearly provides the setting to develop chemistry, and the Steelers' old-school setup – Pittsburgh is one of the few NFL teams that still goes away to a college campus for camp, at St. Vincent's College for the 58th year – amplifies that theme. In the case of Rodgers and Metcalf, though, this chemistry was launched months ago. In March, while Rodgers contemplated his future, Metcalf flew to Los Angeles and worked out with the quarterback at UCLA. It added fuel to the speculation that Rodgers would ultimately sign with the Steelers…and laid a foundation for the current prospects. 'We talked about a lot of football stuff,' Rodgers said. 'We FaceTime, we texted during the offseason after minicamp. So, we've got a good relationship. It's going to just keep on growing.' Metcalf: 'I'm going to try to soak up as much knowledge as I can. I'm going to listen to everything. Even the criticisms he has; I'm going to be really open, searching for those answers from him. He's had great receivers in the past. I'm just trying to be among them.' There is no denying that the bond that Metcalf and Rodgers develop as a go-to connection will be essential to the best-case scenario for the Steelers offense. Yet it's also evident that Rodgers, a newcomer assuming the ultimate leadership position for an established team, has made it a priority to quickly try developing bonds throughout the team. Will Howard, the rookie quarterback, said that he's been struck by Rodgers' tendency to mingle with a wide range of players at every position. That might address one of the questions floated about Rodgers as he went through the process of committing to play this season. Some wondered whether the time he did not spend with the team during the offseason would be a hindrance. Since signing just before the team's mandatory minicamp in June, though, Rodgers has tried to make up for lost time. In the window before training camp, he hosted skill-positioned players for workouts in Malibu, Calif., where he has a home. Steelers' star pass rusher T.J. Watt got his megadeal. Now comes the hard part Also, on the day he signed his one-year contract in June, Rodgers attended a cookout at Tomlin's house and spent several hours mingling with members of the coaching staff. The next day, he went to a cookout that veteran defensive end Cam Heyward hosted at his house for players. And the day after that, Rodgers showed up at Heyward's charity golf tournament. The effort to mesh with his new team was surely noticed. 'I know it wasn't on everybody's time frame for when things were supposed to happen, but I can only speak to the man I met,' Heyward told USA TODAY Sports. 'When a guy comes to my golf outing or comes to my house and interacts with my family, with me and my teammates, that's all I can ask for. I think that's a good start.' How it ends remains to be seen for a team hoping to become a legitimate contender. Yet Rodgers seems to be all-in for the bonding – and his new suitemate can vouch for that. Contact Jarrett Bell at jbell@ or follow on social media: On X: @JarrettBell On Bluesky: This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Aaron Rodgers and DK Metcalf are Steelers training camp suitemates

Dallas Drama: Tyler Mawhinney, Miles Russell win opening U.S. Junior Am matches on closing birdies
Dallas Drama: Tyler Mawhinney, Miles Russell win opening U.S. Junior Am matches on closing birdies

Yahoo

time34 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Dallas Drama: Tyler Mawhinney, Miles Russell win opening U.S. Junior Am matches on closing birdies

Tyler Mawhinney of Fleming Island and Miles Russell of Jacksonville Beach staged dramatic comebacks to win their first-round U.S. Junior Amateur matches on July 23 under broiling conditions in Dallas. In both cases, the two birdied the 514-yard, par-4 18th hole at the Trinity Forest Golf Club to either win or extend their matches as the heat index climbed to more than 100 degrees. Mawhinney lost a 2-up lead through six holes and trailed Lapassapon Heras-Gomez of Thailand 1-up with six to play. But Mawhinney won the 14th hole with a par, halved No. 17 with a birdie, then busted a 360-yard drive at the last, hit a wedge from 140 yards out to within 15 feet and made the putt for the victory. Russell went two down to Ormond by the third hole, cut it to one hole four times, then tied the match with a 40-foot birdie putt at No. 18 and won with a 2-foot birdie putt on the 20th hole, the par-5 second. Who do Tyler Mawhinney, Miles Russell play in the second round? Mawhinney will face Stuart Boulware of Fairway, Kan., in the second round on July 24 at 9:15 a.m. (EDT). Both players have led their high school teams to a pair of state championships, Mawhinney at Fleming Island High in 2023 and 2024 and Boulware at Shawnee Mission East in 2022 and 2024. Boulware defeated Anh Huy Ho of Vietnam 6 and 4 in the first round. Russell will play Lucas Latimer of nearby Rockwell, Texas at 8:35 a.m.. Latimer defeated Peyton Smith of Lees Summit Mo., 3 and 2. On paper, it's a mismatch: Russell is first on the American Junior Golf Polo Rankings, while Latimer is No. 1,829. Russell has verbally committed to play at Florida State, while Latimer will enroll at the University of Mary Hardin-Baylor. But match play can be the great equalizer and while Ormond has committed to play at Florida, he's ranked 45th on the AJGA and was on the brink of eliminating Russell. If Russell and Mawhinney win, they will play another match in the afternoon. Junior Players champion goes overtime Russell's match wasn't the longest of the day under the oppressive heat. Defending Junior Players champion Hamilton Coleman of Augusta, Ga., defeated Isaiah Igo of Sundown, Texas, in 25 holes, with a par at the par-4 seventh hole. The two were tied 11 holes in a row. It tied for the third-longest match in U.S. Junior Amateur history and was the longest since Casey Wittenberg defeated. Daniel Im in 26 holes in the third round in 2022, at the Atlanta Athletic Club. The No. 1 seed from stroke play, Mason Howell of Thomasville, Ga., lost his first round match to Henry Guan 1-up, with Guan holding that slim lead over the final seven holes. Cam Kuchar, the son of 2012 Players champion Matt Kuchar, lost his match to Kailer Stone of Alameda, Calif., 2 and 1. How to watch the U.S. Junior Amateur The tournament won't be televised until Friday's semifinal matches on Peacock from 3-5 p.m. Golf Channel will have a replay from 7:30-9:30 p.m. The championship match will be aired on Golf Channel from 3-5 p.m. This article originally appeared on Florida Times-Union: Tyler Mawhinney, Miles Russell win pulse-pounding U.S. Junior Am matches

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store