And now we wait.
The NFL Combine is over. Free agency doesn’t start until next week, with teams allowed to negotiate starting Monday before signing players two days later.
In the interim, we are left to sift through the information on hand as we consider how the most important decision of Kwesi Adofo-Mensah and Kevin O’Connell’s joint tenure -- what to do at quarterback -- will play out.
Everything the Star Tribune’s Ben Goessling wrote in an excellent piece over the weekend still holds true. The Vikings and Cousins have placed their bets. The Vikings have talked earnestly about wanting Cousins back, but their terms and his terms might be different. If another team is poised to make Cousins a more attractive offer than the one the Vikings want to make, it will force Minnesota to make a decision.
But two things do seem to be picking up steam. There is an increasing sense that the Falcons would be the team to make Cousins a big offer and that he is their preferred target over trade for Justin Fields -- a change from last week when it sounded like Fields-to-Atlanta was gaining momentum.
Atlanta Journal-Constitution writer D. Orlando Ledbetter, who has covered the Falcons for more than 20 years, joined the Daily Delivery podcast on Tuesday and told me, “If Kirk Cousins is available, he automatically goes to No. 1 on their board.”
These things can change quickly, of course, but Ledbetter is not the first person in Atlanta to say that about Cousins. The Falcons are a good fit on a number of levels. After muddling through the post-Matt Ryan years, they crave the stability Cousins would bring to a team that seems to be a QB away from contending for a division title.
How much guaranteed money -- and for how many years -- they would be willing to commit to Cousins could drive some very interesting negotiations early next week.