Eagles four-year offer sheet worth about $10.5M</font>
By Len Pasquarelli
ESPN.com
Hoping to get younger and more productive at linebacker, and at the expense of a division foe, the Philadelphia Eagles on Sunday afternoon signed Ryan Fowler of the Dallas Cowboys to a restricted free agent offer sheet, ESPN.com confirmed.
The four-year offer sheet is worth about $10.5 million and will pay Fowler, who has principally been a special teams performer for the Cowboys, $4 million in 2007, between bonuses and base salary.
Fowler, 24, chose the offer from the Eagles over one from the Tennessee Titans. He visited with officials from both teams last week.
Dallas will have seven days in which to match the offer sheet or pass on it.
Should the Cowboys match it, they will assume the terms of the deal that the Eagles negotiated with Fowler, a three-year veteran. If Dallas does not match the offer sheet, Fowler will move on to the Eagles.
But because Fowler entered the NFL as an undrafted free agent from Duke in 2004, and Dallas made him the lowest qualifying offer for a restricted free agent, a one-year deal at $850,000, the Cowboys would receive no compensation if he departed under the offer sheet.
In three seasons, Fowler has appeared in 32 games and started just three contests. He has 49 tackles from scrimmage, two forced fumbles and one recovery. For the most part, Fowler served as a backup inside linebacker in the Dallas 3-4 scheme. On special teams, he posted 28 tackles and had one forced fumble.
The Philadelphia coaches obviously feel, though, that the versatile Fowler can emerge in time as a starter for them, either at middle linebacker or at strongside linebacker. The Eagles' staff was less than satisfied with the performances of veterans Jeremiah Trotter and Dhani Jones, the two starters at those positions, respectively, in 2006.
If he possesses as much potential as the Eagles feel that he does, Fowler could challenge quickly for playing time at those spots.
Securing the services of restricted free agents historically has proven a difficult undertaking with the current system. In the 14 previous years of free agency, only 55 restricted free agents changed teams. Four restricted free agents changed teams in 2006.
So far this year, one restricted free agent, wide receiver Wes Welker, has switched teams. But that move, with Welker going from Miami to New England, came after the Patriots signed him to an offer sheet, and then the two teams subsequently agreed to a trade.
The Pittsburgh Steelers last week signed San Francisco punter Andy Lee to a restricted free agent offer sheet, but the 49ers quickly matched it. Cleveland last week signed Cincinnati defensive tackle Shaun Smith to an offer sheet and the Bengals are still deliberating over whether to match it.