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🏈 Auto-update: NFL news articles 2026-02-03 19:03
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title: "3 free agents that could follow Raheem Morris to the 49ers from the Falcons"
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date: 2026-02-03
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category: free-agency
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aiGenerated: true
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sources:
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- name: "Yahoo Sports NFL"
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url: "https://sports.yahoo.com/articles/3-free-agents-could-raheem-163000449.html"
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tags: ["free-agency", "49ers", "falcons"]
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---
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Raheem Morris’ arrival in San Francisco could reshape more than the 49ers’ coaching staff. With free agency looming, the new 49ers coach has potential leverage to bring familiar offensive pieces from his time with the Atlanta Falcons — a pipeline that can accelerate scheme installation and provide immediate depth for a team built to contend now.
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Yahoo Sports NFL reported Morris could bring “some free agents from the Falcons on the offensive side of the ball” with him to San Francisco. The significance for the 49ers is straightforward: a roster already stocked with high-end talent often needs targeted additions more than wholesale change, and players who have worked under a head coach can shorten the learning curve in a system that demands precision and cohesion.
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The fit matters in San Francisco because continuity is typically a competitive advantage for veteran contenders. When a coach changes teams, familiarity becomes currency — not only in the meeting room, but also in the locker room, where a few trusted voices can help set expectations and standards quickly. Offensive players who have previously played for Morris would arrive knowing his preferred practice tempo, terminology and weekly routine, reducing the “ramp-up” period that can cost teams early in a season.
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For the 49ers, the idea of importing Atlanta free agents is also a roster-management tool. Free agency is where contenders often look for complementary starters, specialists and depth rather than splash signings. That approach becomes even more relevant when a team must balance roster needs with its salary cap and the realities of keeping a championship-caliber core intact. Players who have thrived under Morris could represent more predictable bets — the kind of acquisitions that can stabilize a position group even if they are not marquee names.
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The Falcons angle matters, too. Atlanta has been in the middle of its own transition, and free agency can create a second wave of change when veterans hit the market. If Morris targets offensive players from his former team, it would not only strengthen San Francisco’s depth but also potentially reshape Atlanta’s roster by subtracting experienced contributors familiar with the club’s recent offensive structure.
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Yahoo Sports framed the concept around “three free agents” who could follow Morris from Atlanta to the Bay Area, underscoring that the move would be selective rather than sweeping. That selectivity is typical for coaches seeking specific fits — players whose roles translate cleanly and who can contribute without requiring an overhaul of the existing depth chart.
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As free agency approaches, the 49ers’ offseason will be defined by how aggressively they supplement a contender’s roster and how quickly Morris’ fingerprints appear. The key to watch will be whether any Falcons offensive free agents emerge as early targets, signaling that San Francisco is prioritizing familiarity and immediate function as it pushes for another postseason run.Raheem Morris’ arrival in San Francisco could reshape more than the 49ers’ coaching staff. With free agency looming, the new 49ers coach has potential leverage to bring familiar offensive pieces from his time with the Atlanta Falcons — a pipeline that can accelerate scheme installation and provide immediate depth for a team built to contend now.
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Yahoo Sports NFL reported Morris could bring “some free agents from the Falcons on the offensive side of the ball” with him to San Francisco. The significance for the 49ers is straightforward: a roster already stocked with high-end talent often needs targeted additions more than wholesale change, and players who have worked under a head coach can shorten the learning curve in a system that demands precision and cohesion.
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The fit matters in San Francisco because continuity is typically a competitive advantage for veteran contenders. When a coach changes teams, familiarity becomes currency — not only in the meeting room, but also in the locker room, where a few trusted voices can help set expectations and standards quickly. Offensive players who have previously played for Morris would arrive knowing his preferred practice tempo, terminology and weekly routine, reducing the “ramp-up” period that can cost teams early in a season.
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For the 49ers, the idea of importing Atlanta free agents is also a roster-management tool. Free agency is where contenders often look for complementary starters, specialists and depth rather than splash signings. That approach becomes even more relevant when a team must balance roster needs with its salary cap and the realities of keeping a championship-caliber core intact. Players who have thrived under Morris could represent more predictable bets — the kind of acquisitions that can stabilize a position group even if they are not marquee names.
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The Falcons angle matters, too. Atlanta has been in the middle of its own transition, and free agency can create a second wave of change when veterans hit the market. If Morris targets offensive players from his former team, it would not only strengthen San Francisco’s depth but also potentially reshape Atlanta’s roster by subtracting experienced contributors familiar with the club’s recent offensive structure.
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Yahoo Sports framed the concept around “three free agents” who could follow Morris from Atlanta to the Bay Area, underscoring that the move would be selective rather than sweeping. That selectivity is typical for coaches seeking specific fits — players whose roles translate cleanly and who can contribute without requiring an overhaul of the existing depth chart.
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As free agency approaches, the 49ers’ offseason will be defined by how aggressively they supplement a contender’s roster and how quickly Morris’ fingerprints appear. The key to watch will be whether any Falcons offensive free agents emerge as early targets, signaling that San Francisco is prioritizing familiarity and immediate function as it pushes for another postseason run.Raheem Morris’ arrival in San Francisco could reshape more than the 49ers’ coaching staff. With free agency looming, the new 49ers coach has potential leverage to bring familiar offensive pieces from his time with the Atlanta Falcons — a pipeline that can accelerate scheme installation and provide immediate depth for a team built to contend now.
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Yahoo Sports NFL reported Morris could bring “some free agents from the Falcons on the offensive side of the ball” with him to San Francisco. The significance for the 49ers is straightforward: a roster already stocked with high-end talent often needs targeted additions more than wholesale change, and players who have worked under a head coach can shorten the learning curve in a system that demands precision and cohesion.
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The fit matters in San Francisco because continuity is typically a competitive advantage for veteran contenders. When a coach changes teams, familiarity becomes currency — not only in the meeting room, but also in the locker room, where a few trusted voices can help set expectations and standards quickly. Offensive players who have previously played for Morris would arrive knowing his preferred practice tempo, terminology and weekly routine, reducing the “ramp-up” period that can cost teams early in a season.
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For the 49ers, the idea of importing Atlanta free agents is also a roster-management tool. Free agency is where contenders often look for complementary starters, specialists and depth rather than splash signings. That approach becomes even more relevant when a team must balance roster needs with its salary cap and the realities of keeping a championship-caliber core intact. Players who have thrived under Morris could represent more predictable bets — the kind of acquisitions that can stabilize a position group even if they are not marquee names.
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The Falcons angle matters, too. Atlanta has been in the middle of its own transition, and free agency can create a second wave of change when veterans hit the market. If Morris targets offensive players from his former team, it would not only strengthen San Francisco’s depth but also potentially reshape Atlanta’s roster by subtracting experienced contributors familiar with the club’s recent offensive structure.
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Yahoo Sports framed the concept around “three free agents” who could follow Morris from Atlanta to the Bay Area, underscoring that the move would be selective rather than sweeping. That selectivity is typical for coaches seeking specific fits — players whose roles translate cleanly and who can contribute without requiring an overhaul of the existing depth chart.
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As free agency approaches, the 49ers’ offseason will be defined by how aggressively they supplement a contender’s roster and how quickly Morris’ fingerprints appear. The key to watch will be whether any Falcons offensive free agents emerge as early targets, signaling that San Francisco is prioritizing familiarity and immediate function as it pushes for another postseason run.
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---
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*AI-generated summary based on reporting from Yahoo Sports NFL.*
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title: "After 11 seasons in Dallas, DeMarcus Lawrence is in his first Super Bowl with Seattle"
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date: 2026-02-03
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category: free-agency
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aiGenerated: true
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sources:
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- name: "Yahoo Sports NFL"
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url: "https://sports.yahoo.com/articles/11-seasons-dallas-demarcus-lawrence-173536512.html"
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- name: "Pro Football Talk"
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url: "https://www.nbcsports.com/nfl/profootballtalk/rumor-mill/news/after-11-seasons-in-dallas-demarcus-lawrence-is-in-his-first-super-bowl-with-seattle"
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tags: ["free-agency", "seahawks"]
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---
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DeMarcus Lawrence left the only NFL home he had ever known with a blunt assessment of his championship chances. One season later, the veteran edge rusher is preparing for the first Super Bowl appearance of his career — and the significance is hard to miss given the way he framed his departure from Dallas.
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When Lawrence signed with the Seattle Seahawks last offseason after 11 seasons with the Cowboys, he said he was walking away because he knew he could not win a Super Bowl there, according to Yahoo Sports NFL and Pro Football Talk. The move ended a lengthy run in Dallas that defined the prime of his career and, at the time, read as both a football decision and a statement about where he believed a title path truly existed.
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Now, Lawrence has landed in the game he chased. His first season in Seattle has taken him to the league’s biggest stage, validating the urgency that often drives established veterans to test free agency late in their careers. For players with a decade-plus résumé, the calculus frequently shifts from stability to opportunity — and the Seahawks’ Super Bowl berth has turned Lawrence’s choice into one of the more consequential storylines to emerge from last offseason’s player movement.
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For Seattle, the Lawrence signing has also served as a reminder of why proven pass rushers remain among the most coveted pieces in roster construction. Edge pressure is one of the few defensive traits that can consistently change playoff games, forcing quick throws, disrupting timing and creating the kind of late-game mistakes that swing postseason outcomes. Adding a veteran with Lawrence’s experience gave the Seahawks another accomplished option up front and a player accustomed to high expectations after years in the national spotlight with the Cowboys.
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The Cowboys, meanwhile, are left on the outside looking in as a longtime defensive centerpiece reaches the Super Bowl immediately after leaving. Lawrence’s comment about believing he could not win a title in Dallas continues to resonate because it underscores the impatience that can build around franchises measured almost exclusively by postseason results.
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Lawrence’s arrival in Seattle and immediate run to the Super Bowl also highlights the league-wide stakes of free agency decisions. For fans, it is the clearest kind of proof that a single offseason move can reshape a player’s legacy — and, in the right situation, accelerate a team’s timeline.
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With the Super Bowl ahead, the focus shifts from the symbolism of Lawrence’s exit to the reality of what comes next: whether Seattle’s bet on a veteran edge rusher can be capped by a championship, and whether Lawrence can finish the journey that prompted him to leave Dallas in the first place.DeMarcus Lawrence left the only NFL home he had ever known with a blunt assessment of his championship chances. One season later, the veteran edge rusher is preparing for the first Super Bowl appearance of his career — and the significance is hard to miss given the way he framed his departure from Dallas.
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When Lawrence signed with the Seattle Seahawks last offseason after 11 seasons with the Cowboys, he said he was walking away because he knew he could not win a Super Bowl there, according to Yahoo Sports NFL and Pro Football Talk. The move ended a lengthy run in Dallas that defined the prime of his career and, at the time, read as both a football decision and a statement about where he believed a title path truly existed.
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Now, Lawrence has landed in the game he chased. His first season in Seattle has taken him to the league’s biggest stage, validating the urgency that often drives established veterans to test free agency late in their careers. For players with a decade-plus résumé, the calculus frequently shifts from stability to opportunity — and the Seahawks’ Super Bowl berth has turned Lawrence’s choice into one of the more consequential storylines to emerge from last offseason’s player movement.
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For Seattle, the Lawrence signing has also served as a reminder of why proven pass rushers remain among the most coveted pieces in roster construction. Edge pressure is one of the few defensive traits that can consistently change playoff games, forcing quick throws, disrupting timing and creating the kind of late-game mistakes that swing postseason outcomes. Adding a veteran with Lawrence’s experience gave the Seahawks another accomplished option up front and a player accustomed to high expectations after years in the national spotlight with the Cowboys.
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The Cowboys, meanwhile, are left on the outside looking in as a longtime defensive centerpiece reaches the Super Bowl immediately after leaving. Lawrence’s comment about believing he could not win a title in Dallas continues to resonate because it underscores the impatience that can build around franchises measured almost exclusively by postseason results.
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Lawrence’s arrival in Seattle and immediate run to the Super Bowl also highlights the league-wide stakes of free agency decisions. For fans, it is the clearest kind of proof that a single offseason move can reshape a player’s legacy — and, in the right situation, accelerate a team’s timeline.
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With the Super Bowl ahead, the focus shifts from the symbolism of Lawrence’s exit to the reality of what comes next: whether Seattle’s bet on a veteran edge rusher can be capped by a championship, and whether Lawrence can finish the journey that prompted him to leave Dallas in the first place.DeMarcus Lawrence left the only NFL home he had ever known with a blunt assessment of his championship chances. One season later, the veteran edge rusher is preparing for the first Super Bowl appearance of his career — and the significance is hard to miss given the way he framed his departure from Dallas.
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When Lawrence signed with the Seattle Seahawks last offseason after 11 seasons with the Cowboys, he said he was walking away because he knew he could not win a Super Bowl there, according to Yahoo Sports NFL and Pro Football Talk. The move ended a lengthy run in Dallas that defined the prime of his career and, at the time, read as both a football decision and a statement about where he believed a title path truly existed.
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Now, Lawrence has landed in the game he chased. His first season in Seattle has taken him to the league’s biggest stage, validating the urgency that often drives established veterans to test free agency late in their careers. For players with a decade-plus résumé, the calculus frequently shifts from stability to opportunity — and the Seahawks’ Super Bowl berth has turned Lawrence’s choice into one of the more consequential storylines to emerge from last offseason’s player movement.
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For Seattle, the Lawrence signing has also served as a reminder of why proven pass rushers remain among the most coveted pieces in roster construction. Edge pressure is one of the few defensive traits that can consistently change playoff games, forcing quick throws, disrupting timing and creating the kind of late-game mistakes that swing postseason outcomes. Adding a veteran with Lawrence’s experience gave the Seahawks another accomplished option up front and a player accustomed to high expectations after years in the national spotlight with the Cowboys.
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The Cowboys, meanwhile, are left on the outside looking in as a longtime defensive centerpiece reaches the Super Bowl immediately after leaving. Lawrence’s comment about believing he could not win a title in Dallas continues to resonate because it underscores the impatience that can build around franchises measured almost exclusively by postseason results.
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Lawrence’s arrival in Seattle and immediate run to the Super Bowl also highlights the league-wide stakes of free agency decisions. For fans, it is the clearest kind of proof that a single offseason move can reshape a player’s legacy — and, in the right situation, accelerate a team’s timeline.
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With the Super Bowl ahead, the focus shifts from the symbolism of Lawrence’s exit to the reality of what comes next: whether Seattle’s bet on a veteran edge rusher can be capped by a championship, and whether Lawrence can finish the journey that prompted him to leave Dallas in the first place.
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---
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### Sources
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- **Yahoo Sports NFL**: [After 11 seasons in Dallas, DeMarcus Lawrence is in his f...](https://sports.yahoo.com/articles/11-seasons-dallas-demarcus-lawrence-173536512.html)
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- **Pro Football Talk**: [After 11 seasons in Dallas, DeMarcus Lawrence is in his f...](https://www.nbcsports.com/nfl/profootballtalk/rumor-mill/news/after-11-seasons-in-dallas-demarcus-lawrence-is-in-his-first-super-bowl-with-seattle)
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*AI-generated summary based on reporting from Yahoo Sports NFL, Pro Football Talk.*

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