By Canadian Press on August 26, 2025.
Tommy DeVito is the latest quarterback looking for a new team.
The New York Giants are waiving the local fan favorite, a person with knowledge of the decision told The Associated Press on Tuesday. The person spoke to the AP on condition of anonymity because the team hasn’t announced the move.
Elsewhere, Kyle Trask lost his job as Baker Mayfield’s backup in Tampa Bay after the team chose veteran Teddy Bridgewater to hold the No. 2 position. Trask was informed of the decision on Monday, a person with knowledge of the situation said.
Tyler Huntley didn’t make the cut in Cleveland. The veteran QB joined the Browns earlier this month as the fifth QB behind veterans Joe Flacco and Kenny Pickett and rookies Dillon Gabriel and Shedeur Sanders. Pickett was traded to Las Vegas on Monday.
Rookie sixth-round pick Kyle McCord isn’t making Philadelphia’s initial roster. The quarterback out of Syracuse is a candidate for the practice squad if another team doesn’t sign him. The defending Super Bowl champions acquired Sam Howell to back up Jalen Hurts and Tanner McKee.
DeVito, an undrafted free agent and a northern New Jersey native who picked up the nickname âTommy Cutlets,â was not expected to make the team after the signings of veterans Russell Wilson and Jameis Winston and selection of Jaxson Dart in the first round.
Ask any NFL coach the worst part of the job and the overwhelming response will be cutting players.
More than 1,100 players will be released Tuesday when teams have to trim down their rosters to 53 by 4 p.m. EDT. Itâs a difficult task for coaching staffs. Nobody enjoys telling players to turn in their playbooks because they didnât make the team.
âIt rips at my heart. It does because if they were my son, I see them through that lens because my kids are getting older now and you see how hard they work and what they put into it and theyâve done everything that weâve asked,â Buffalo Bills coach Sean McDermott said. âThese guys are so grateful, theyâre so appreciative and full of class. Again, itâs hard from a football standpoint but even harder from a, âHey, these guys are good guys and theyâre winners,â (standpoint). Sometimes it doesnât last in football, right? But thatâs where you get a reminder that football isnât everything and life is whatâs most important. I told these guys theyâre going to be winners in life and thatâs ultimately what is most important.â
Teams that have several talented players competing for the same position end up with the toughest decisions. Itâs a welcome problem.
âWhen you become a good team, the cuts get harder,â Tampa Bay Buccaneers coach Todd Bowles said. âWhen you donât have anything, you can keep everybody. The cuts become harder. Itâs always difficult because you donât want to be a guy to tell (someone) they canât play pro ball anymore. It doesnât mean itâs the end of the road, it just means itâs the end of the road here. Thatâs always tough when you have to tell someone that. I think any coach will tell you that same thing. (There are) always difficult decisions, but we understand that going in from a coachesâ and playersâ standpoint, and we make decisions we think will make us better and we move on from there.â
Teams can bring guys back on the practice squad if another team doesn’t claim them off waivers. Each team can have up to 16 players, including a maximum of six eligible veteran players with unlimited experience, on the practice squad. The remainder have to be players with two or fewer accrued seasons. Teams can also have one additional player from the International Player Pathway program.
Players can be signed off a practice squad to another teamâs active roster at any time.
âItâs tough this year, probably the toughest that it will be and has been for myself because I feel like our team is a very competitive team,â Houston Texans coach DeMeco Ryans said. âWe got a lot of really great depth, a lot of great guys that you want to keep around. Most of the discussions lie in how can you try to keep as many guys as possible. Not who youâre getting rid of, but how can you keep these guys around. Thatâs the tough part about it. Itâs trying to keep more not, per se, who youâre getting rid of.â
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AP NFL: https://apnews.com/hub/nfl
Rob Maaddi, The Associated Press