10 biggest questions for the NFL offseason: Where will Antonio Brown, Le’Veon Bell land?

Super Bowl LIII is already behind us, which means that the 2018 season is a wrap. And though many of you may still be focused on the fallout from the Patriots' win over the Rams, we’re already looking ahead to the 2019 campaign and the issues that could shape the year.

Here are the 10 biggest questions of the NFL offseason:.

Where will the Raiders play?

They’re set to move to Las Vegas in 2020, but it's still unclear where they'll end up next season. After the city of Oakland filed a lawsuit against the NFL and the Raiders in December seeking damages from the eventual move, the Raiders pulled their lease offer for Oakland-Alameda County Coliseum for the 2019 season. So as it stands right now, the team has no place to play its home games. The league has acknowledged that the Raiders are considering all options, with Santa Clara’s Levi Stadium – the home of the 49ers – and San Diego standing as potential logical choices. But with the NFL needing to craft its schedule by April, as commissioner Roger Goodell said last week, “the sooner the better.”

Will anyone sign Kareem Hunt?

Goodell also said he expects the investigation into Hunt's multiple alleged violent incidents to conclude soon. But after the Chiefs released him following release of video that showed him shoving and kicking a woman last February, with the team saying in a statement that he was “not truthful” about the incident, he has remained unsigned while on the commissioner's exempt list. Though the running back is young and talented, any team signing him would likely face a backlash, and Hunt still may face additional discipline from the league. 

Will the competition committee make changes to the replay system?

Saints fans may still be smarting after the controversial no-call in the NFC Championship Game, and Goodell’s delayed response in addressing the matter heightened the frustrations of many. But for the first time in several years, there may be a push strong enough to enact significant changes to the league’s replay review system. Goodell said the competition committee “will look again” at replay policies, but perhaps the most likely outcome will be for any possible changes to be enacted on a year-to-year basis – similar to the way moving back extra points in the 2015 season was reviewed at the end of that campaign.

Source: Read Full Article