Marquez Valdes-Scantling ended up landing in Kansas City. Jeffrey Becker-USA TODAY Sports

The Packers, who entered the offseason with one of the worst salary-cap situations in the league, were expecting to lose free-agent wideout Marquez Valdes-Scantling to another team. But after the Davante Adams trade opened up cap room and a glaring need for receiving talent, Green Bay made a late push to re-sign MVS, as Tom Silverstein of the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel writes. This jibes with an earlier report that the Packers were hoping to convince the four-year pro to stay.

Ultimately, the Chiefs — who had a receiver need of their own after trading Tyreek Hill to the Dolphins — landed Valdes-Scantling on a three-year, $30M contract ($18M guaranteed). It’s unclear if that was a more lucrative deal than what Green Bay was offering, or if Valdes-Scantling simply decided that Kansas City represented a better opportunity.

One way or another, it seems that the 27-year-old deep threat fared better on the open market than he was expecting. Per Silverstein, MVS was aiming for a one-year pact worth between $7M-$10M when free agency opened, but he believed that such a contract would include void years for cap purposes. But in addition to the Chiefs and Packers, the Saints were also in the running, as Aaron Wilson of Pro Football Network notes, and having a number of interested clubs helped to drive up the asking price.

Valdes-Scantling is obviously not a perfect replacement for Hill, one of the game’s most talented receivers. Still, MVS’ big-play abilities — he boasts a career 17.5 YPR average — should nicely complement the skill sets of fellow wideout Mecole Hardman, tight end Travis Kelce and new slot receiver JuJu Smith-Schuster, and after dropping seven passes in 2020, he muffed just one in 2021.

The Packers and Saints, meanwhile, will continue to search for upgrades. Green Bay may be interested in free agents like Will Fuller and Odell Beckham Jr., while New Orleans has been connected to Jarvis Landry. Both clubs could also turn to the draft, which is deep in wideout talent.

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