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New Orleans Saints

Broncos Were Blindsided By Travis Etienne Jr.’s Decision To Sign $48M Deal With Saints

Apr 3, 2026 @ 10:51am
FootballNFLDenver BroncosNew Orleans Saints
Pro Football Network

The Denver Broncos were "shocked" when Travis Etienne signed a four-year, $48 million deal with the New Orleans Saints in free agency.

Read moreBroncos Were Blindsided By Travis Etienne Jr.’s Decision To Sign $48M Deal With Saints

Every NFL Teams’ Biggest Free Agency Regret: The Best Player They Let Walk All Time

Apr 3, 2026 @ 9:42am
FootballNFLArizona CardinalsAtlanta FalconsBaltimore RavensBuffalo BillsCarolina PanthersChicago BearsCincinnati BengalsCleveland BrownsDallas CowboysDenver BroncosDetroit LionsGreen Bay PackersHouston TexansIndianapolis ColtsJacksonville JaguarsKansas City ChiefsLas Vegas RaidersLos Angeles ChargersLos Angeles RamsMiami DolphinsMinnesota VikingsNew England PatriotsNew Orleans SaintsNew York GiantsNew York JetsPhiladelphia EaglesPittsburgh SteelersSan Francisco 49ersSeattle SeahawksTampa Bay BuccaneersTennessee TitansWashington Commanders
Total Pro Sports

Free agent signings in the NFL are a massive hit-or-miss for all teams; sometimes, teams make a massive home run, and other times, some free agents flop with their new teams.  However, each team has developed talent that they regret letting walk and sign with another team, just to watch them succeed elsewhere, while other teams rebuild or collapse. It’s always painful to see our favorite NFL teams let Pro Bowl-caliber talent walk, but it’s tragically part of the business. Here is Every NFL Team’s Biggest Free Agency Regret. Which players did each NFL team regret losing in free agency? Arizona Cardinals: Calais CampbellNov 9, 2025; Seattle, Washington, USA; Arizona Cardinals defensive tackle Calais Campbell (93) looks on before the game against the Seattle Seahawks at Lumen Field. Mandatory Credit: Kevin Ng-Imagn Images The Cardinals let him walk after the 2016 season, after he posted 53 tackles, eight sacks, a safety, six pass deflections, an interception, two forced fumbles, and three fumble recoveries, with one of them returned for a 53-yard touchdown.  Campbell signed with the Jaguars and saw his numbers improve with 67 tackles, 14.5 sacks, three pass deflections, three forced fumbles, a fumble recovery returned for a 10-yard touchdown, and helped the Jags earn a 10-6 record and reach the AFC Championship game. Now, he’s on the trade rumors again. Atlanta Falcons: Deion SandersNov 14, 1993; Atlanta, GA, USA; FILE PHOTO; Atlanta Falcons defensive back Deion Sanders (21) in action against the Los Angeles Rams at Fulton County Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Photo By USA TODAY Sports Deion “Primetime” Sanders was electrifying during his tenure with the Falcons, helping them reach the playoffs in the 1991 season, making three Pro Bowls with the franchise, and was a true highlight reel. Then Sanders grew frustrated with the losing seasons, and financial disagreements led his former NFL team to let him go. He signed with the 49ers in the 1994 season and helped them win Super Bowl XXIX over the Chargers. Baltimore Ravens: Tyler LinderbaumJun 10, 2025; Baltimore, MD, USA; Baltimore Ravens center Tyler Linderbaum (64) looks on during an NFL OTA at Under Armour Performance Center. Mandatory Credit: Daniel Kucin Jr.-Imagn Images Linderbaum was the focal point of the Ravens’ offensive line in the 2020s, making three Pro Bowls and protecting Lamar Jackson with ease. The Ravens declined Linderbaum’s fifth-year option and couldn’t match the offer the Raiders made him, as he signed a four-year, $81 million deal with the Silver and Black. Linderbaum is one guy the Ravens are going to regret losing in free agency. Buffalo Bills: Leonard FloydNov 26, 2023; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA; Buffalo Bills defensive end Leonard Floyd (56) in the tunnel against the Philadelphia Eagles at Lincoln Financial Field. Mandatory Credit: Eric Hartline-USA TODAY Sports Floyd’s time in Western New York may have been short, but he made the most of it with 32 tackles, 10.5 sacks, a pass deflection, and a forced fumble during the 2023 season. The Bills released Floyd due to a combination of salary cap constraints and Floyd’s desire to get paid more.  He then signed a two-year, $20 million deal with the 49ers in the 2024 season, but the 49ers had an injury-riddled season. Carolina Panthers: Steve Smith Sr.Oct 6, 2019; Charlotte, NC, USA; Former Carolina Panthers wide receiver Steve Smith Sr. speaks during the Hall of Honor ceremony during halftime against the Jacksonville Jaguars at Bank of America Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Jeremy Brevard-USA TODAY Sports Smith Sr. is considered the greatest Panther of all time, as he helped the team reach Super Bowl XXXVIII, made five Pro Bowls with the team, and holds the NFL team’s receiving yard record. The Panthers let Smith Sr. walk after the 2013 season and watched him sign a three-year, $11.5 million deal with the Ravens, helping them reach the 2014-15 AFC Divisional Round. Chicago Bears: Robbie GouldDec 27, 2015; Tampa, FL, USA; Chicago Bears kicker Robbie Gould (9) kicks a field goal against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers during the first half at Raymond James Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Kim Klement-USA TODAY Sports Gould was the Bears’ Pro Bowl kicker who helped the Bears reach Super Bowl XLI during his tenure. Not to mention, he’s widely considered the best kicker for this NFL team. The Bears released Gould due to a decline in performance while looking for a younger kicker.  He signed with the Giants and helped them reach the 2016-17 playoffs. Cincinnati Bengals: Andrew WhitworthFormer Bengal Andrew Whitworth watches the final minutes in the fourth quarter of the NFL Week 4 game between the Cincinnati Bengals and the Miami Dolphins at PayCor Stadium in downtown on Thursday, Sept. 29, 2022. The Bengals improved to 2-2 with a 27-15 win over the Dolphins. Miami Dolphins At Cincinnati Bengals Week 4 Withworth commanded the Bengals’ offensive line for most of his career, made three Pro Bowls with the team, and started in 164 games for them. The Bengals let him go due to age, the desire to sign younger talent, and their lack of interest in offering a multi-year deal. The Rams signed Whitworth, made one more Pro Bowl, and helped them win Super Bowl LVI against the Bengals. Cleveland Browns: Alex MackDec 13, 2015; Cleveland, OH, USA; Cleveland Browns center Alex Mack (55) makes a block for a Cleveland Browns third quarter touchdown against the San Francisco 49ers at FirstEnergy Stadium. The Browns defeated the 49ers 24-10. Mandatory Credit: Scott R. Galvin-USA TODAY Sports Mack was a three-time Pro Bowler with the Browns, started in 85 regular-season games with the team, and showed iron-man toughness. Mack left the Browns in 2016, after voiding his contract, making him a free agent, and signed a five-year, $45 million contract with the Falcons, helping them reach Super Bowl LI. Dallas Cowboys: DeMarcus WareOct 6, 2024; Denver, Colorado, USA; American football player Demarcus Ware before the game between the Las Vegas Raiders against the Denver Broncos at Empower Field at Mile High. Mandatory Credit: Ron Chenoy-Imagn Images Ware was a defensive juggernaut with the Cowboys, making seven Pro Bowls and holding the franchise record in sacks with 117. They let him go due to salary cap constraints and injury concerns. Ware signed a three-year, $30 million deal with the Broncos and helped them reach the playoffs twice, helping them win Super Bowl 50. Denver Broncos: Eric DeckerFeb 2, 2014; East Rutherford, NJ, USA; Denver Broncos wide receiver Eric Decker (87) is tackled by Seattle Seahawks linebacker Heath Farwell (55) in the third quarter in Super Bowl XLVIII at MetLife Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Joe Camporeale-USA TODAY Sports Decker was an offensive NFL star for the Broncos, who shone when Peyton Manning joined the team in 2012, and helped the team reach Super Bowl XLVIII.  However, the Broncos let Decker walk due to salary cap constraints and the need to pay other key guys, and signed more defensive talent. Decker signed a five-year, $36.25 million contract with the Jets and had some good moments with them, but the Jets weren’t able to reach the playoffs during his tenure.  Detroit Lions: Carlton Davis IIIDetroit Lions cornerback Carlton Davis III (23) waves at fans after 24-6 win over Indianapolis Colts during the second half at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis, Ind. on Sunday, Nov. 24, 2024. Davis III’s time in Detroit was short, but he made the most of his time there, helping the team earn a 15-2 record and reach the NFC Divisional Round. He ended up walking away from the Lions due to a disagreement in contract language and signed a three-year, $60 million contract with the Patriots.  Davis helped the Pats reach Super Bowl LX, while the Lions missed the playoffs.  Green Bay Packers: Greg JenningsGreen Bay Packers wide receiver Greg Jennings celebrates his game-winning 82-yard touchdown reception in overtime during their game against the Denver Broncos Monday, October 29, 2007 at Invesco Field at Mile High in Denver, Colo. Jennings was a mainstay on the Packers’ offense in the late 2000s and early 2010s, helping the team win Super Bowl XLV and making two Pro Bowls. The Packers let Jennings walk due to salary cap constraints, his age, and injury concerns. Jennings signed a five-year, $47.5 million contract with the rival Vikings and saw some success with them. Houston Texans: Glover QuinNovember 18, 2012; Houston, TX, USA; Houston Texans strong safety Glover Quin (29) reacts after a play during overtime against the Jacksonville Jaguars at Reliant Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Troy Taormina-USA TODAY Sports Quin was dependable and versatile during his tenure with the Texans, helping the team reach the NFL playoffs in back-to-back seasons. The Texans let Quin walk due to a tight salary cap, and he ended up signing a five-year, $23.5 million deal with the Lions, where he made a Pro Bowl and helped them reach the playoffs in 2014 and 2016.  Indianapolis Colts: Peyton ManningDec 26, 2010; Oakland, CA, USA; Indianapolis Colts quarterback Peyton Manning (18) gestures during the game against the Oakland Raiders at the Oakland-Alameda County Coliseum. The Colts defeated the Raiders 31-26. Mandatory Credit: Kirby Lee/Image of Sport-USA TODAY Sports Manning did it all for the Colts, earning four MVPs, leading the team to win Super Bowl XLI, and making them a playoff juggernaut during his tenure. After Manning sat out the 2011 season recovering from neck surgery, the Colts let him walk, and he signed a five-year, $96 million deal with the Broncos, making them playoff juggernauts, won one more MVP, and helped them win Super Bowl 50. Could his son be next? Jacksonville Jaguars: Allen Robinson IIDec 24, 2016; Jacksonville, FL, USA; Jacksonville Jaguars wide receiver Allen Robinson (15) runs the ball during the first quarter of an NFL Football game against the Tennessee Titans at EverBank Field. Mandatory Credit: Reinhold Matay-USA TODAY Sports Robinson II was one of the Jaguars’ most productive wideouts for the team, whose 2017 season was cut short due to an ACL injury. The Jaguars let Robinson II walk due to concerns about his ACL injury, financial considerations, and a chance to reset the passing attack.  Robinson II signed a three-year, $42 million contract with the Bears and helped the team reach the NFL playoffs twice. Kansas City Chiefs: Tyrann MathieuJan 30, 2022; Kansas City, Missouri, USA; Kansas City Chiefs free safety Tyrann Mathieu (32) reacts after a play against the Cincinnati Bengals during the third quarter of the AFC Championship Game at GEHA Field at Arrowhead Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Jay Biggerstaff-USA TODAY Sports Mathieu was transformative for the Chiefs’ defense; he helped the franchise win Super Bowl LIV and made two Pro Bowls during his time with the team. The Chiefs let Mathieu walk to focus on getting younger, signing Justin Reid instead. Mathieu signed a three-year, $28.3 million deal with the Saints, where he performed very well in his final years in the league. Las Vegas Raiders: Josh JacobsDec 10, 2023; Paradise, Nevada, USA; Las Vegas Raiders running back Josh Jacobs (8) walks off the field after the Raiders were defeated by the Minnesota Vikings 3-0 at Allegiant Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Stephen R. Sylvanie-USA TODAY Sports Jacobs was a workhorse during his tenure with the Silver and Black, making two Pro Bowls and helping the team reach the playoffs in 2021.  The Raiders let Jacobs walk due to the team not meeting his contract demands and wanting a cheaper running back. Jacobs signed a four-year, $48 million deal with the Packers, helped them reach the playoffs in 2024 and 2025, and made a Pro Bowl. But trade rumors still swirl about him. Los Angeles Chargers: Hunter HenryDec 17, 2020; Paradise, Nevada, USA; Los Angeles Chargers tight end Hunter Henry (86) reacts after making a catch against the Las Vegas Raiders during the first half at Allegiant Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-USA TODAY Sports Henry brought a ton of production and was very reliable for the Bolts during his tenure with the team. The Chargers let him walk due to salary cap constraints, refusing to use a second consecutive franchise tag on him. Henry signed with the Patriots in 2021 and has formed great chemistry with Drake Maye, and helped the team reach Super Bowl LX.  Los Angeles Rams: London FletcherDec 22, 2013; Landover, MD, USA; Washington Redskins inside linebacker London Fletcher (59) waves to fans while leaving the field after the Redskins’ game against the Dallas Cowboys at FedEx Field. The Cowboys won 24-23. Mandatory Credit: Geoff Burke-USA TODAY Sports Fletcher was a cornerstone of the “Greatest Show on Turf” era Rams that helped the team win Super Bowl XXXIV, and was very productive in the NFL. The Rams let Fletcher walk as they dealt with financial constraints, and re-signed Leonard Little instead. Fletcher signed with the Bills and had 12 more productive seasons under his belt, a move the Rams would regret.  Miami Dolphins: Cameron WakeMiami Dolphins defensive end Cameron Wake (91) takes New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady (12) to the turf forcing an incompletion in the second quarter at Sun Life Stadium in Miami Gardens, Florida on September 7, 2014. (Allen Eyestone / The Palm Beach Post) New England Patriots Vs Miami Dolphins Wake was an anchor on the Dolphins’ defense, made five Pro Bowls, and had 98 sacks with the franchise. The Dolphins made Wake walk due to his age and wanting to do a roster overhaul for a massive rebuild. Wake signed with the Titans and helped them reach the 2020 AFC Championship game. Minnesota Vikings: Adam ThielenAug 8, 2014; Minneapolis, MN, USA; Minnesota Vikings wide receiver Adam Thielen (19) looks on during the third quarter against the Oakland Raiders at TCF Bank Stadium. The Vikings defeated the Raiders 10-6. Mandatory Credit: Brace Hemmelgarn-USA TODAY Sports Thielen was a homegrown talent who joined the Vikings as an undrafted free agent in 2013, made two Pro Bowls, and helped the team reach the 2018 NFC Championship game. The Vikings let Thielen walk in free agency due to salary cap constraints and a desire to get younger at the position. Thielen signed with the Panthers and was their lone bright spot in his two NFL seasons with the team. New England Patriots: Wes WelkerOct 14, 2007; Irving, TX, USA; New England Patriots receiver Wes Welker (83) runs for a second quarter touchdown past Dallas Cowboys linebacker Bradie James (56) at Texas Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Matthew Emmons-USA TODAY Sports Welker emerged as a superstar slot receiver for the Pats in the late 2000s and early 2010s, helping the team reach two Super Bowls and making five Pro Bowls. Welker was forced to walk from the Patriots due to salary cap constraints and age. HDanny Amendola and Julian Edelman replaced him. Welker signed with the Broncos and helped them reach Super Bowl XLVIII during his short tenure with them. New Orleans Saints: Malcolm JenkinsJan 9, 2022; Atlanta, Georgia, USA; New Orleans Saints safety Malcolm Jenkins (27) on the field after defeating the Atlanta Falcons at Mercedes-Benz Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Dale Zanine-USA TODAY Sports Jenkins was a mainstay on the Saints’ offense, helping the team win Super Bowl XLIV in the NFL, and was highly impactful and durable. The Saints let Jenkins walk due to a misjudgment in his long-term value, and he ended up signing with the Eagles, helping them win Super Bowl LII. The Saints later admitted they regretted making Jenkins walk.  New York Giants: Saquon BarkleySep 30, 2018; East Rutherford, NJ, USA; New York Giants running back Saquon Barkley (26) rushes in the first half of against the New Orleans Saints at MetLife Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Danielle Parhizkaran/NorthJersey.com via USA TODAY NETWORK Barkley was a next-level talent for the Giants at running back, as he earned two Pro Bowls with the team, and bulldozed his way to the end zone. Barkley walked because the Giants weren’t willing to pay his high salary to a 27-year-old running back. He signed with their rivals, the Eagles, in 2024, helping them win Super Bowl LIX. Will the Eagles make the same mistake this offseason? New York Jets: Frankie LuvuDec 27, 2020; East Rutherford, New Jersey, USA; New York Jets linebacker Frankie Luvu (50) celebrates a defensive stop against the Cleveland Browns during the first quarter at MetLife Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Vincent Carchietta-USA TODAY Sports Luvu was serviceable and was a special-teams contributor for “Gang Green” in the NFL. The Jets let Luvu walk because they didn’t see him as a core defensive player for the unit, so the Panthers signed him, and he has emerged as a reliable pass-rusher for them and the Commanders. Philadelphia Eagles: Nick FolesSep 16, 2024; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA; Former Philadelphia Eagles quarterback Nick Foles before a game against the Atlanta Falcons at Lincoln Financial Field. Mandatory Credit: Bill Streicher-Imagn Images Though Foles left the Eagles in 2014, his return to the team was the best, as he helped the team win Super Bowl LII and won MVP of the game. Then, Foles left the team in 2019 and signed a four-year, $88 million deal with the Jaguars, but ended up getting injured, while the Eagles reached the wildcard round of the playoffs that year.  Pittsburgh Steelers: Rod WoodsonUnknown date; Pittsburgh, PA, USA; FILE PHOTO; Pittsburgh Steelers defensive back Rod Woodson (26) celebrates an interception at Three Rivers Stadium. Mandatory Credit: USA TODAY Sports Woodson was a focal point for the Steelers’ defense in the 1980s and 90s NFL era, helping the team reach Super Bowl XXX, and he made six Pro Bowls with the team. The Steelers made him walk due to his age and pivoted towards younger players. Woodson signed with the 49ers, the Ravens, and the Raiders, and helped the Ravens win Super Bowl XXXV, and made a few more Pro Bowls.  San Francisco 49ers: Deion Sanders4. Deion Sanders, San Francisco 49ers (1994) G1focus28 3c Deion Sanders S Fbn Usa Ca Sanders’ time in the Bay Area was short, but he made the most of it, as he helped the team win Super Bowl XXIX and dominated on defense.  The 49ers let Sanders walk due to salary cap restrictions. He ended up signing with the Cowboys, helping them win Super Bowl XXX, and four more Pro Bowls in Dallas.  Seattle Seahawks: Golden TateDec 2, 2013; Seattle, WA, USA; Seattle Seahawks wide receiver Golden Tate (81) celebrates a touchdown by a teammate against the New Orleans Saints during the first quarter at CenturyLink Field. Mandatory Credit: Joe Nicholson-USA TODAY Sports Tate was a focal point on the Seahawks’ offense that won Super Bowl XLVIII and was one of Russell Wilson’s favorite targets. The Seahawks let him walk, not wanting to overpay for the wideout. So, the Lions signed Tate to a five-year, $31 million deal, saw Tate make a Pro Bowl, and helped them reach the playoffs in 2014 and 2016. Tampa Bay Buccaneers: John LynchUnknown date, 1995; Tampa, FL USA; FILE PHOTO; Tampa Bay Buccaneers defensive back John Lynch (47) celebrates on the field at Houlihan’s Stadium. Mandatory Credit: RVR Photos-USA TODAY Sports Lynch was an elite safety who helped the Bucs win their first Super Bowl in 2003 and delivered legendary hits against opposing offenses. The Bucs released him due to a combination of injury concerns and salary cap considerations. He ended up signing with the Chargers and helped them reach the 2008 AFC Championship game.  Tennessee Titans: Derrick HenryTennessee Titans running back Derrick Henry (22) is set to push off Oakland Raiders strong safety T.J. Carrie (38) at Nissan Stadium in Nashville on Sept. 10, 2017. The Titans lost their home and season opener 26-16. Henry is a generational running back whose bruising runs made it difficult for defenders to take him down, as he helped the team reach the 2020 AFC Championship game in the NFL.  The Titans released him, looking to rebuild and implement a more pass-happy offense. He signed a two-year, $16 million deal with the Ravens and bolstered their rushing attack. Washington Commanders: Kirk CousinsAug 18, 2012; Chicago, IL, USA; Washington Redskins quarterback Kirk Cousins (12) during the second half against the Chicago Bears at Soldier Field. The Bears won 33-31. Mandatory Credit: Dennis Wierzbicki-USA TODAY Sports Cousins was Washington’s backup quarterback from 2012 until he was given the keys to the offense in 2015, after RGIII was out due to injuries. He helped the team win the NFC East and reach the Wildcard Round that season. Cousins was allowed to leave Washington after declining to use a franchise tag for the third straight year, allowing him to sign with the Vikings on a three-year, $84 million deal, where he elevated his game to another level.

Read moreEvery NFL Teams’ Biggest Free Agency Regret: The Best Player They Let Walk All Time

Every NFL Team’s Secret Bad Habit Exposed

Apr 2, 2026 @ 12:45pm
FootballNFLArizona CardinalsAtlanta FalconsBaltimore RavensBuffalo BillsCarolina PanthersChicago BearsCincinnati BengalsCleveland BrownsDallas CowboysDenver BroncosDetroit LionsGreen Bay PackersHouston TexansIndianapolis ColtsJacksonville JaguarsKansas City ChiefsLas Vegas RaidersLos Angeles ChargersLos Angeles RamsMiami DolphinsMinnesota VikingsNew England PatriotsNew Orleans SaintsNew York GiantsNew York JetsPhiladelphia EaglesPittsburgh SteelersSan Francisco 49ersSeattle SeahawksTampa Bay BuccaneersTennessee TitansWashington Commanders
Total Pro Sports

Every NFL team has that ONE thing. That pattern they just can’t seem to break, no matter how hard they try… or how many times it burns them. Some of these habits are funny, others are painful, and a certain subsection is just flat-out baffling. But here’s the thing… fans already know what their team’s bad habit is. They’ve lived it, screamed at their TVs about it, and taken to social media to post about it! Today, we’re going through all 32 NFL teams and calling out their favorite bad habit. Let’s dive in. What are the bad habits for each NFL team? Arizona Cardinals Ownership FutilityJan 5, 2025; Glendale, Arizona, USA; Detailed view of an Arizona Cardinals helmet at State Farm Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images The Bidwill family has owned the Cardinals since 1972. In that time, they’ve had just 11 seasons above .500… That’s right around 20% of the time… Yikes. There have been brief glimpses of hope, but they never last long because the franchise’s dysfunction always leaks in and kills the seed of success before it can really bloom. Some franchises have bad luck. The Cardinals have bad ownership. Atlanta Falcons: Misusing StarsAug 15, 2025; Atlanta, Georgia, USA; Atlanta Falcons helmet on the sideline against the Tennessee Titans in the first quarter at Mercedes-Benz Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Brett Davis-Imagn Images This one dates back to the days of Julio Jones—when Atlanta simply could not get one of the best receivers in the league the ball in the endzone! Now it is guys like Drake London, Bijan Robinson, and Kyle Pitts… super athletic, talented playmakers—that any team would kill for, but Atlanta can’t quite figure out how to utilize properly. Baltimore Ravens: Losing in JanuaryJan 11, 2025; Baltimore, Maryland, USA; A view of Baltimore Ravens players’ helmets on a heated bench against the Pittsburgh Steelers in an AFC wild card game at M&T Bank Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Geoff Burke-Imagn Images Lamar Jackson is a two-time MVP. One of the most electric players in football. In the regular season, he’s nearly unstoppable versus other NFL teams. But January hits… and something changes. The turnovers spike, the efficiency drops—and the Ravens lose their identity—and, unfortunately, quite a few playoff games in the process. Buffalo Bills: Losing to the Chiefs when it CountsJan 26, 2025; Kansas City, MO, USA; A detailed view of the Buffalo Bills helmet before the AFC Championship game against the Kansas City Chiefs at GEHA Field at Arrowhead Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Denny Medley-Imagn Images Josh Allen is a top-five quarterback, and Buffalo has made the playoffs consistently… But there’s one problem… Kansas City. The Bills are 0 and 4 against the Chiefs in the playoffs, while going 4 and 1 against them in the regular season. They can beat KC when it doesn’t matter. When does it? Heartbreak every single time. Luckily for Bills fans, they won’t have to worry about Mahomes and co. In the 2025 postseason! Carolina Panthers: Impatient OwnershipCarolina Panthers helmet (Photo By Eric Hartline-Imagn Images) David Tepper bought the Panthers in 2018. Since then, he’s fired three head coaches—Rivera, Rhule, and Reich. Then he forced the team to trade up to draft Bryce Young first overall in 2023—only to push for his benching in Year 2. I respect that Tepper wants to win now. But every time he forces the issue, it sets this NFL team back further. Chicago Bears: Ruining Young QuarterbacksNov 3, 2024; Glendale, Arizona, USA; Detailed view of a Chicago Bears helmet at State Farm Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images Chicago is where quarterbacks go to die. Caleb Williams’ father actually said that before the draft, and though Caleb has a chance to buck the trend, he wasn’t wrong. We just saw it with Mitch Trubisky… let’s hope the talented USC quarterback isn’t the next victim.  Cincinnati Bengals: Bringing in Players With-Off-the-Field IssuesDec 1, 2024; Cincinnati, Ohio, USA; A general view of the helmet of Cincinnati Bengals long snapper Cal Adomitis (48) during warmups before the game against the Pittsburgh Steelers at Paycor Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Katie Stratman-Imagn Images Back in the mid-2000s, the Bengals had a… let’s call it a reputation problem… It seemed like half their roster had a rap sheet. It has gotten a little bit better, but this NFL team can’t seem to shake the trend fully, a la their decision to keep Jermaine Burton in January of ‘25. Cleveland Browns: Churning and Burning QuarterbacksNov 17, 2024; New Orleans, Louisiana, USA; Detailed view of the Cleveland Browns helmets on a time out against the New Orleans Saints during the first half at Caesars Superdome. Mandatory Credit: Stephen Lew-Imagn Images Here’s a stat that will make you sad… the Browns have started 42 different quarterbacks since 1999. Forty-two. Insane… The Factory of Sadness keeps churning. And until they figure out the quarterback position, nothing changes. Dallas Cowboys: Living in the PastDallas Cowboys helmets (Photo via Geoff Burke-Imagn Images) America’s Team hasn’t reached an NFC Championship since 1995, and they are going to spend the 2025 postseason on their couches yet again. But that doesn’t stop Jerry Jones from continuing to say “this is our year,” even though it hasn’t closed since the turn of the millennium. Denver Broncos: Can’t Draft Wide ReceiversOct 12, 2023; Kansas City, Missouri, USA; A general view of a Denver Broncos helmet against the Kansas City Chiefs prior to a game at GEHA Field at Arrowhead Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Denny Medley-USA TODAY Sports Since Demaryius Thomas and Eric Decker in 2010, the Broncos have whiffed on nearly every wide receiver they’ve drafted, with Courtland Sutton in 2018 being the lone exception. Cody Latimer. Carlos Henderson. Jerry Jeudy. KJ Hamler. All busts. Now it looks like Marvin Mims and Troy Franklin are the latest disappointments. Detroit Lions: HeartbreakHelmet of Detroit Lions place kicker Jake Bates (not in the photo) before the NFC divisional round between Detroit Lions and Washington Commanders] at Ford Field in Detroit on Saturday, Jan. 18, 2025. The Lions are good now. Really good. But they still find ways to rip your heart out. In 2024, they blew a 17-point halftime lead in the NFC Championship—the largest comeback in conference championship history.  In 2025, as the one-seed with 15 wins, they lost to the six-seed Commanders after Jared Goff threw four interceptions. The talent is there now for this NFL team. The results are better. But Detroit is still Detroit when it matters most. Green Bay Packers: Neglecting Special TeamsDec 29, 2024; Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA; A Green Bay Packers helmet sits ready before the game against the Minnesota Vikings at U.S. Bank Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Jeffrey Becker-Imagn Images The organization just doesn’t care about Special Teams. And it keeps costing them.  Both in the regular season, where they’ve ranked towards the bottom of the league for years… and the postseason, where the third unit has cost them big-time… like the botched onside kick in 2014 or getting a field goal and punt blocked in 2014. Houston Texans: Power Tripping ExecsAug 9, 2024; Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA; A Houston Texans helmet sits on the sidelines during the 4th quarter against the Pittsburgh Steelers at Acrisure Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Barry Reeger-USA TODAY Sports The Texans have a habit of giving the wrong people too much power. Bill O’Brien convinced ownership to let him be head coach AND general manager.  He promptly traded DeAndre Hopkins—one of the best receivers in the league—for a washed running back and some mid-round picks.  Then there was Jack Easterby, a former team chaplain who somehow worked his way into the front office and had ownership’s ear on football decisions. The inmates were running the asylum. Houston’s problem isn’t talent…  It’s trusting the wrong people to run the organization around it. Indianapolis Colts: Can’t Quit Veteran QuarterbacksDec 1, 2024; Foxborough, Massachusetts, USA; An Indianapolis Colts helmet sits on an equipment case during the first half against the New England Patriots at Gillette Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Eric Canha-Imagn Images Andrew Luck retired in 2019. And ever since, the Colts have refused to actually develop a young quarterback. Instead? They’ve brought in Philip Rivers at 38. Matt Ryan. Joe Flacco. And in 2025, Daniel Jones… then Philip Rivers AGAIN! This time, at 44 years old—59 months since his last NFL snap—because Jones tore his Achilles. Yes, they tried and failed with Anthony Richardson, but at some point, the Colts have to figure out how to get a quarterback of the future. Jacksonville Jaguars: Hiring Crazy CoachesNov 3, 2024; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA; Jacksonville Jaguars helmets on the sidelines against the Philadelphia Eagles at Lincoln Financial Field. Mandatory Credit: Eric Hartline-Imagn Images The Jaguars have had five head coaches since Shad Khan bought the team—and let’s just say—they have a type… crazy. Urban Meyer lasted 13 games before the scandals caught up to him—kicked his kicker, got caught at a bar with a woman who wasn’t his wife, and lost the locker room completely. Doug Pederson threatened to fight a reporter… then Liam Coen showed up to Duval with one of the most bizarre Duuuvaaal cries we’ve ever seen! Kansas City Chiefs: Expecting Mahomes to Figure It OutFeb 9, 2025; New Orleans, LA, USA; Detailed view of a Kansas City Chiefs helmet in Super Bowl LIX at Ceasars Superdome. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images The Chiefs have won three Super Bowls. Nobody’s feeling sorry for them. But their approach to skill position players is… interesting—to put it lightly. They’d rather just let Mahomes try and figure it out rather than invest in the kind of talent to make his life easier! And to his credit, he has done a pretty good job to date, but as we’ve seen in 2025, he is only human, and KC might be wise to put some real supporting pieces around him. Las Vegas Raiders: Drafting Fast ReceiversAug 23, 2024; Paradise, Nevada, USA; A Las Vegas Raiders Riddell speedflex helmet on the field at Allegiant Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Kirby Lee-USA TODAY Sports Al Davis had a type. Fast. Very fast.  He drafted the fastest player at the combine in his final three drafts from 2009 to 2011. Darrius Heyward-Bey went seventh overall in 2009—ran a 4.30—picked before Michael Crabtree and Jeremy Maclin. And his son Mark seems to have continued the trend, like we saw when he took Henry Ruggs and his 4.27 speed 12th overall in 2020.  What makes it all the more painful is they took Ruggs over CeeDee Lamb and Justin Jefferson… Yikes. Speed is great for each NFL team. But you have to actually be able to play football, too. Los Angeles Chargers: ChargeringAug 12, 2023; Inglewood, California, USA; Los Angeles Chargers helmets on the bench at SoFi Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Kirby Lee-USA TODAY Sports The term “Chargering” exists for a reason… It seems that, regardless of the players on the field, the coaches calling the plays, or even the city they play in, this team always finds a way to lose in the most shocking fashion. There is perhaps no better example than the 2010 season, when the Chargers finished first in offense AND first in defense… and missed the playoffs because they had the worst special teams in the NFL.  Los Angeles Rams: Mortgaging the FutureJan 19, 2025; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA; Los Angeles Rams helmet on the sidelines against the Philadelphia Eagles in a 2025 NFC divisional round game at Lincoln Financial Field. Mandatory Credit: Eric Hartline-Imagn Images While they’ve softened on it a bit the last couple of years, trying to get younger, the Rams’ philosophy is clear… They have no issue trading all of their draft capital for stars. Win now. Worry about the future later. And it worked! They won Super Bowl 56, but when it goes wrong… it goes wrong in a major way, like 2022, when they were 5 and 12 and looked every bit the part of one of the oldest teams in the league. Miami Dolphins: Can't Win When It's ColdAug 3, 2022; Miami Gardens, Florida, US; A general view of a Miami Dolphins helmet on the field during training camp at Baptist Health Training Complex. Mandatory Credit: Jasen Vinlove-USA TODAY Sports South Beach is warm. Beautiful weather year-round. Perfect for football… unless you have to play anywhere else in January. The Dolphins are 0 and 10 in games under 40 degrees since 2017… and more often than not it isn’t close… instead, they look sad and cold, and get their doors beat off. No wonder this team can’t win once the NFL playoffs come around! Minnesota Vikings: Losing in the NFC Championship GameJan 13, 2025; Glendale, AZ, USA; Detailed view of a Minnesota Vikings helmet during an NFC wild card game at State Farm Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images The Vikings have lost six consecutive NFC Championship games, which makes for the longest streak in the NFL.  Six times they were just one game away from the Super Bowl—and it always seems to be in heartbreaking fashion, time and time again… like the Wide Right overtime loss in ‘99 and a couple of walloping’s mixed in. New England Patriots: Drafting Wide Receivers that Never Pan OutPatriots Helmet (Photo By Eric Canha-USA TODAY Sports) New England cannot draft wide receivers to save their lives.  Since 2000, the Patriots have drafted 18 wide receivers and, really, only Deion Branch and Julian Edelman turned into stars—and Demario Douglas has been serviceable. The rest of the lot—like N’Keal Harry, their first-rounder in 2019, and Tyquan Thornton, who went in Round 2 of 2022, however, is a mess. New Orleans Saints: Ignoring the Salary CapDec 23, 2024; Green Bay, Wisconsin, USA; General view of a New Orleans Saints helmet during the game against the Green Bay Packers at Lambeau Field. Mandatory Credit: Jeff Hanisch-Imagn Images New Orleans Saints: Kicking the Can Down the Road. The Saints spent years pushing cap hits into the future to stay competitive during the Drew Brees era. Now the bill has come due.  They’ve been in cap hell for three straight offseasons—cutting veterans, restructuring deals, doing whatever it takes just to field a roster. Brees got his ring. But the franchise is still paying for it… literally. New York Giants: Scared of ChangeOct 28, 2024; Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA; New York Giants helmets on the sidelines against the Pittsburgh Steelers during the third quarter at Acrisure Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images The Giants hold on too long… Every single time they do it!  Tom Coughlin stayed two years past his expiration date. Eli Manning got a few more seasons than he should have.  And don’t get me started on Daniel Jones and Brian Daboll! It feels like New York sees the writing on the wall… and then waits another year to read it without fail. New York Jets: Wasting Premium Draft PicksAug 17, 2024; Charlotte, North Carolina, USA; New York Jets helmets during the second half against the Carolina Panthers at Bank of America Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Jim Dedmon-USA TODAY Sports Speaking of graveyards… the Jets have turned squandering premium draft picks into an art form. Sam Darnold went third overall in 2018. Zach Wilson went second overall in 2021, making the Jets’ first team since 1967 to draft two quarterbacks with top-3 picks within four years… yet here they are in 2025 still staring down a top draft pick and without a franchise quarterback anywhere in sight. Philadelphia Eagles: Letting their Top Coordinators WalkFeb 9, 2025; New Orleans, LA, USA; Detailed view of a Philadelphia Eagles helmet during Super Bowl LIX at Ceasars Superdome. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images The Eagles have a coordinator problem disguised as a Super Bowl hangover problem. After winning Super Bowl 52, they lost their offensive coordinator, Frank Reich, and their defensive coordinator, Jim Schwartz. By 2020, they went 4-11-1. After losing Super Bowl 57, they lost Shane Steichen to the Colts and Jonathan Gannon to the Cardinals. Got bounced in the Wild Card. After losing Super Bowl 59, they lost Kellen Moore to the Saints—and now their offense is in shambles. This NFL team can get to the mountaintop, but they can’t figure out how to retain the guys that got them there! Pittsburgh Steelers: Can’t Quit on their CoachesDec 15, 2024; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA; Pittsburgh Steelers helmet on the sidelines against the Philadelphia Eagles at Lincoln Financial Field. Mandatory Credit: Eric Hartline-Imagn Images The Steelers have had three head coaches since 1969. Chuck Noll. Bill Cowher. Mike Tomlin. That’s it. Tomlin has never had a losing season in 18 years, which, yes, is great… But here’s the flip side… he hasn’t won a playoff game in eight years. The stability is admirable, but at some point, you have to wonder if being “too loyal to fire” is actually holding the franchise back. San Francisco 49ers: Relying on Injury Prone StarsJan 5, 2025; Glendale, Arizona, USA; Detailed view of a San Francisco 49ers helmet at State Farm Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images Kyle Shanahan is one of the best coaches in the league—and always seems to make do with what he’s got- but the 49ers could make his job a whole lot easier if they stopped relying on stars that can’t stay on the field. Last year it was McCaffrey… this year Fred Warner, Nick Bosa, and even Brock Purdy! It is endless! No wonder they always seem to come up short come playoff time. Seattle Seahawks: Ignoring the O-LineDec 8, 2024; Glendale, Arizona, USA; Detailed view of a Seattle Seahawks helmet at State Farm Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images Back when Seattle had Russell Wilson, they never once prioritized protecting him…  And people thought that it was part of their strategy to lean on his mobility… but in the time since, this NFL team remained in the bottom quarter of the league consistently, regardless of who their quarterback was, and continued to let their quarterbacks get beaten up. Tampa Bay Buccaneers: Can Only Win in the NFC SouthNov 4, 2024; Kansas City, Missouri, USA; A general view of Tampa Bay Buccaneers helmets against the Kansas City Chiefs during the first half at GEHA Field at Arrowhead Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Denny Medley-Imagn Images The Bucs keep winning the NFC South. The problem is… they keep winning it ugly—then get chased out by real competition in the playoffs. In 2022, they won the division at 8 and 9, with a losing record. In 2023, they won at 9 and 8. And in 2024, they won 10 and 7. Four consecutive NFC South titles, a franchise record, is great… but this just points to a decent team winning a bad division. Tennessee Titans: Chasing Out StarsAug 25, 2024; New Orleans, Louisiana, USA; Detailed view of the Tennessee Titans helmet against the New Orleans Saints during the first half at Caesars Superdome. Mandatory Credit: Stephen Lew-USA TODAY Sports The Titans have a propensity for chasing out their best players… the trend started with guys like Steve McNair and Vince Young, who went from Rookie of the Year, to the scrap heap in the blink of an eye. Then it was Derrick Henry and Head Coach Mike Vrabel.  It is no wonder that the heartbreak continues year after year in the Music City. Washington Commanders: Addicted to VeteransSep 29, 2024; Glendale, Arizona, USA; Detailed view of a Washington Commanders helmet at State Farm Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images Under new ownership, the Commanders have developed a clear strategy: sign as many old veterans as possible and hope they have one more good year left. Their defense is headlined by Bobby Wagner, who at 35 doesn’t run like he used to but… You guessed it! uses smarts to compensate. Zach Ertz, another 35-year-old, is one of their go-to guys over the middle.  Eerily reminiscent of the days when they would swing big with guys like Albert Haynesworth and Deion Sanders… I guess the more things change, the more they stay the same.

Read moreEvery NFL Team’s Secret Bad Habit Exposed

2026 NFL Mock Draft 10.0: All 32 Picks With Massive Trade Shakeups

Apr 2, 2026 @ 10:13am
FootballNFLArizona CardinalsBaltimore RavensBuffalo BillsCarolina PanthersChicago BearsCincinnati BengalsCleveland BrownsDallas CowboysDetroit LionsHouston TexansKansas City ChiefsLas Vegas RaidersLos Angeles ChargersLos Angeles RamsMiami DolphinsMinnesota VikingsNew England PatriotsNew Orleans SaintsNew York GiantsNew York JetsPhiladelphia EaglesPittsburgh SteelersSan Francisco 49ersSeattle SeahawksTampa Bay BuccaneersTennessee TitansWashington Commanders
Total Pro Sports

Since our lost NFL mock draft, there have been numerous significant roster transactions — including the blockbuster Jaylen Waddle trade. Now a month away from draft weekend, it’s the perfect time to run an updated 2026 first-round mock draft. Let’s dive right into it. Which prospects will go high in the 2026 NFL Draft? 1. Las Vegas Raiders: Fernando MendozaFernando Mendoza (Photo by Imagn Images) This one is obvious and has been explained a million times. The Raiders need a quarterback, and despite pushback, Mendoza is heads-and-shoulders above every other signal-caller in the 2026 NFL Draft class. The Raiders hired Klint Kubiak to fill their head coaching vacancy. The cherry on top is giving the savvy offensive-minded head coach his quarterback. 2. New York Jets: Arvell ReeseArvell Reese (Image Credits: Imagn) There aren’t any guarantees after the Raiders and Mendoza, but Reese still feels like the best option for the Jets. Their defense needs new game-changers following the Sauce Gardner and Quinnen Williams trades. New York’s defense is multiple pieces away from returning to elite status, but snagging the Ohio State edge rusher is the way to start. 3. Arizona Cardinals: Francis MauigoaFrancis Mauigoa (Image Credits: Imagn) The Cardinals already have one budding star at offensive tackle in Paris Johnson Jr. Pairing him with the Miami product would give Arizona’s next signal-caller elite protection at the bookend spots. 4. Tennessee Titans: Rueben Bain Jr.Rueben Bain Jr (Image Credits: Imagn) New Titans head coach Robert Saleh is thrilled about the chance to work with Jeffery Simmons, and the John Franklin-Myers signing in free agency greatly bolsters the pass-rush. Well, the Titans could quickly turn this front seven into one of football’s best with the addition of Rueben Bain Jr. via the NFL Draft. He’s a day-one starter who would do plenty of damage on a defensive line anchored by Simmons, who’s never had the luxury of an elite pass-rusher teammate in Tennessee. 5. New York Giants: Caleb DownsCaleb Downs (Image Credits: Imagn) New Giants head coach John Harbaugh had the fortune of working with all-world safeties like Ed Reed, Eric Weddle, Earl Thomas, and Kyle Hamilton in Baltimore. So if the Ohio State product is still on the board here, the Giants have an easy decision to make. The Giants have quickly built up one of the league’s top pass-rushing units. Adding a five-star safety like Downs would be the finishing touch on turning this defense into one of the NFL’s best. 6. New Orleans Saints (From Cleveland Browns): David BaileyTexas Tech’s David Bailey rushes the Kent State offense during a non-conference football game, Saturday, September 6, 2025, at Jones AT&T Stadium. Projected trade alert! The Saints acquire the No. 6 selection from the Browns in exchange for picks numbers 8 and 132 and a 2027 fifth-rounder. Knowing the Washington Commanders also need pass-rushing help, the Saints move forward to take the best edge rusher remaining. With Bailey in the fold, New Orleans now has Cam Jordan’s successor. And it’s a dandy. 7. Washington Commanders: Sonny StylesFeb 26, 2026; Indianapolis, IN, USA; Ohio State linebacker Sonny Styles (LB25) during the NFL Scouting Combine at Lucas Oil Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Kirby Lee-Imagn Images The Commanders miss out on Bailey, but they can stand pat and let another game-wrecking menace fall into their laps. No harm, no foul. Dan Quinn has had the luxury of working with all-time great linebacker Bobby Wagner in both Seattle and Washington. Styles is a well-rounded linebacker who can replace the future Hall of Famer as the heart and soul of Washington’s rebuilt defense. 8. Cleveland Browns (From New Orleans Saints): Carnell TateOhio State Buckeyes wide receiver Carnell Tate (17) catches a touchdown pass during the first half of the NCAA football game against the Minnesota Golden Gophers at Ohio Stadium in Columbus on Oct. 4, 2025. The decision to drop two spots works well for the Browns. They get two extra picks in the draft and still snag the best wide receiver available. There’s a nice foundation on offense here with Jerry Jeudy, Harold Fannin Jr., and Quinshon Judkins. Adding an explosive pass-catcher like Tate could take the offense to another dimension, provided, of course, that the Browns find a suitable QB option. 9. Kansas City Chiefs: Jordyn TysonJordyn Tyson (Image Credits: Imagn) Marquise Brown is gone. Rashee Rice is facing more off-the-field issues. Xavier Worthy hasn’t come as advertised. Other than that, the Chiefs’ receiving corps doesn’t look so bad. KC bolstered its ground game by signing Super Bowl 60 MVP Kenneth Walker III. They can put the last touch on reshaping the offense by taking the big-bodied receiver who should quickly slot in as Patrick Mahomes’ new WR1. 10. Cincinnati Bengals: Keldric FaulkAuburn Tigers defensive end Keldric Faulk (15) blitzes as Auburn Tigers take on Ball State Cardinals at Jordan-Hare Stadium in Auburn, Ala. on Saturday, Sept. 6, 2025. Auburn Tigers defeated Ball State Cardinals 42-3. After losing Trey Hendrickson, the Bengals quickly pivoted to cheaper signings like Boye Mafe and Jonathan Allen to fix the pass rush. Well, this would be a heckuva third “pivot” move if the Bengals landed the 6-foot-6, 285-pound edge rusher out of Auburn. And if 2025 first-round pick Shemar Stewart came as advertised? Woah mama. 11. Miami Dolphins: Makai LemonMakai Lemon (Image Credit: Imagn) After cutting Tyreek Hill and trading Jaylen Waddle to the Denver Broncos, the Dolphins have a pressing need for WR help. Fortunately for Miami, the board plays out in their favor and ensures they come away with one of the “big three” receiver prospects. With Tyson and Tate off the NFL draft board, the Dolphins don’t have to hesitate to turn in the draft card. After all, when life gives you lemons… 12. Dallas Cowboys: Mansoor DelaneSep 13, 2025; Baton Rouge, Louisiana, USA; LSU Tigers cornerback Mansoor Delane (4) reacts to Florida Gators quarterback DJ Lagway (not pictured) making an incomplete pass during the first half at Tiger Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Stephen Lew-Imagn Images Dallas is a team to watch closely, with a pair of first-round picks in Jerry Jones’ pocket. But with Trevon Diggs long gone, the Cowboys are lacking a playmaking cornerback to keep the secondary intact. He already signed ex-Cardinals safety Jalen Thompson to bolster the secondary. Adding a capable shutdown corner could be the last move required to help Dallas’ defense regain that elite form we saw under Dan Quinn for three years. 13. Minnesota Vikings (From Los Angeles Rams via Atlanta Falcons): Jeremiyah LoveJeremiyah Love (Image credit: Imagn) Trade alert! The Vikings land the No. 13 pick from the Rams in exchange for the No. 18, No. 82, and No. 196 picks. With the pick, the Vikings turn the NFL draft upside down by taking Notre Dame running back Jeremiyah Love. Because why wouldn’t you pair a generational RB prospect with an offense already featuring Justin Jefferson and Jordan Addison? Surely, one of Kyler Murray or JJ McCarthy would make the most of this star-studded supporting cast… Right? 14. Baltimore Ravens: Spencer FanoSpencer Fano (Image Credits: Imagn) Losing Tyler Linderbaum in free agency hurts, but the Ravens can reduce some of the damage via the NFL Draft by pairing the Utah offensive tackle with veteran mainstay Ronnie Stanley Jr. Fano is the complete package who will bolster the pass protection but also open up more running lanes for Lamar Jackson and Derrick Henry. It’s the perfect match! 15. Tampa Bay Buccaneers: Jermod McCoyTennessee defensive back Jermod McCoy (3) before a college football game between Tennessee and UAB at Neyland Stadium in Knoxville, Tenn., on Sept. 20, 2025. The Buccaneers lost top cornerback Jamel Dean to the Pittsburgh Steelers in free agency. That’s especially tough to stomach when you remember that Tampa’s pass defense still sucked WITH Dean. SO yeah, help is desperately wanted at the corner. This year’s class is deep with quality defensive backs. Todd Bowles would love this well-rounded corner who racked up seven pass breakups and four picks in his final year of college ball. 16. New York Jets (From Indianapolis Colts): Avieon TerrellClemson cornerback Avieon Terrell (8) during Spring Practice in Clemson, S.C. Monday, March 24, 2025. After trading All-Pro corner Sauce Gardner to the Colts, the Jets fittingly use the draft pick they got from Indy on a new hopeful shutdown corner. Terrell had 25 pass breakups, four sacks, eight forced fumbles, and three interceptions in his three years at Clemson. A complete package guy like Terrell would instantly make an impact in Gotham. 17. Pittsburgh Steelers (From Detroit Lions): Ty SimpsonAlabama Crimson Tide quarterback Ty Simpson (15) rolls out to pass during the second half against the Missouri Tigers at Faurot Field at Memorial Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Jay Biggerstaff-Imagn Images Projected trade alert! The Steelers acquire the No. 17 pick from the Lions in exchange for selections No. 21 and 85. With a trio of third-round picks this year, Pittsburgh can afford to make a big splash in round one. So, the Steelers shake up the NFL draft big time by moving four spots to select the second-best QB available. There’s their long-term quarterback solution as they await final word from Aaron Rodgers. Even if Rodgers returns, he’s got one year left MAX. Simpson is the long-term guy for Mike McCarthy. 18. Los Angeles Rams (From Minnesota Vikings): Olaivavega IoaneDec 31, 2024; Glendale, AZ, USA; Penn State Nittany Lions offensive lineman Olaivavega Ioane (71) against the Boise State Broncos during the Fiesta Bowl at State Farm Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images With Kevin Dotson and Steve Avila entering the final year of their contracts, this is a good opportunity for the Rams to think long-term and draft a succession plan for their NFL squad.  As good as Dotson and Avila have been, neither has the upside of the Penn State product. With no immediate weaknesses on their roster, the Rams can bank on long-term upside and take their time developing Ioane. 19. Carolina Panthers: Kadyn ProctorSep 27, 2025; Athens, Georgia, USA; Alabama Crimson Tide offensive lineman Kadyn Proctor (74) celebrates with quarterback Ty Simpson (15) after defeating the Georgia Bulldogs at Sanford Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Brett Davis-Imagn Images Bryce Young went from a horrible offensive line to a half-decent one in one year. The result? A career year that led Carolina to a surprise NFC South division crown, its first title in a decade. So, imagine what Young could do if Carolina’s offensive line takes yet another step forward? Alabama’s Kadyn Proctor is listed as a tackle but can also shift to guard. That versatility would make him a valuable weapon for an up-and-coming Panthers squad. 20. Dallas Cowboys (From Green Bay Packers): T.J. ParkerT.J. Parker (Image Credits: Imagn) Trading for Rashan Gary was a nice way to bolster the Cowboys’ pass-rush.  But, we can’t help but wonder how much this D could take off if Jerry Jones added a player like Parker to complement Gary AND Quinnen Williams. Now you’d have three capable game-changing pass-rushers. Just like that, Gary, Williams, and Parker make the Micah Parsons trade look a lot better for Dallas. 21. Detroit Lions (From Pittsburgh Steelers): Caleb LomuOct 11, 2025; Salt Lake City, Utah, USA; Utah Utes quarterback Devon Dampier (4) celebrates scoring a touchdown against the Arizona State Sun Devils with Utah Utes offensive lineman Caleb Lomu (71) during the second quarter at Rice-Eccles Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Rob Gray-Imagn Images The Lions released fan favorite Taylor Decker in a surprise move. That came a year after Frank Ragnow retired, leaving Detroit’s once-elite offensive line in limbo. Well, the decision to trade down for Pittsburgh works out nicely as they watch Utah product Caleb Lomu slip on the blue and white jersey.  22. Los Angeles Chargers: Cashius HowellNov 15, 2025; College Station, Texas, USA; Texas A&M Aggies defensive end Cashius Howell (9) reacts after a defensive play during the first quarter against the South Carolina Gamecocks at Kyle Field. Mandatory Credit: Troy Taormina-Imagn Images The Chargers brought back Khalil Mack, yes, but they need more edge rushers to break through in a crowded AFC.  Texas A&M product Cashius Howell fits the bill here. Another hard-hitting, plug-and-play guy who fits the mould of a Jim Harbaugh-coached defense. 23. Philadelphia Eagles: Denzel BostonSep 6, 2025; Seattle, Washington, USA; Washington Huskies wide receiver Denzel Boston (12) returns a punt for a touchdown against the UC Davis Aggies during the second quarter at Husky Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Joe Nicholson-Imagn Images Regardless of how the AJ Brown drama plays out, it’s clear the Eagles sorely need more receiving help. Here’s Howie Roseman’s chance to get another playmaking weapon on a rookie deal. Boston averaged 14.2 yards per catch in his final season at Washington. His ability to stretch the field could easily solve Philly’s struggles in the aerial attack game. 24. Cleveland Browns (From Jacksonville Jaguars): Monroe FreelingNov 9, 2024; Oxford, Mississippi, USA; Georgia Bulldogs offensive lineman Monroe Freeling (57) blocks during the first half against the Mississippi Rebels at Vaught-Hemingway Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Petre Thomas-Imagn Images The Browns lost Joel Bitonio and Wyatt Teller and tried to find reinforcements by signing Zion Johnson and Elgton Jenkins. It’s a start, but they need more juice up front via the NFL Draft. Georgia’s Monroe Freeling is another capable day-one starter who will provide ample protection up front for Cleveland’s next starting QB. His run-blocking needs work, but the pass protection skills are worth banking on. 25. Chicago Bears: Peter WoodsPeter Woods (Image Credits: Imagn) If there was one weakness on the surprising 2025 Bears, it was the lack of pass-rushing depth after Montez Sweat. That can be addressed immediately here by taking the 315-pound defensive tackle out of Clemson. Woods would fix up Chicago’s leaky run defense while providing more pass-rushing support alongside Sweat.  26. Buffalo Bills: Dillon ThienemanDillon Thieneman (Image Credits: Imagn) The Bills’ secondary has gotten worse with each passing year. And we’re not sure it can improve much, with this current group, now that defensive wiz Sean McDermott is no longer here to help. Buffalo addressed its need for a receiver by acquiring DJ Moore from the Bears. They can focus on their next major issue, the secondary, by grabbing this do-it-all workhorse out of Oregon. 27. San Francisco 49ers: K.C. ConcepcionKC Concepcion (Image Credits: Imagn) Now that we know Brandon Aiyuk is DEFINITELY not returning to the 49ers, they have an easy call to take the best remaining wide receiver here. Yes, the 49ers signed Mike Evans in free agency. But like All-Pro tight end George Kittle, Evans is in his mid-30s and carries plenty of injury risk. The 49ers can draft and develop Concepcion to eventually take over as the long-term WR1 that Aiyuk couldn’t become in the NFL. 28. Seattle Seahawks (From Houston Texans): Colton HoodSep 27, 2025; Starkville, Mississippi, USA; Tennessee Volunteers defensive back Colton Hood (8) runs with the ball after an interception against the Mississippi State Bulldogs during the first half at Davis Wade Stadium at Scott Field. Mandatory Credit: Wesley Hale-Imagn Images Projected trade alert! The defending champs acquire the No. 28 pick from the Texans in exchange for the No. 32 selection and a 2027 third-round pick. Seattle makes the aggressive move for another stud defensive back after losing Tariq Woolen and Coby Bryant in free agency. Their secondary won’t miss a beat with Hood, Devon Witherspoon, and Nick Emmanwori leading the way. 29. Kansas City Chiefs (From Los Angeles Rams): Brandon CisseBrandon Cisse (Image Credits: Imagn) It’d be a surprise if the Chiefs didn’t use one of their first-round picks in the 2026 NFL Draft on a corner after trading Trent McDuffie to the Rams, who also signed away another stud KC cornerback in Jaylen Watson. Cisse might be a bit of a reach here, but the Chiefs develop talent better than any other franchise. Even if he has some growing pains as a rookie, it’s worth betting on his upside. 30. Miami Dolphins (From Denver Broncos): Blake MillerClemson offensive lineman Blake Miller (78) during Spring Practice in Clemson, S.C. Monday, March 24, 2025. The Dolphins signed Malik Willis to be their new QB1. We had them using the No. 11 pick on a receiver. Now they can shift the attention toward rebuilding a leaky offensive line. Clemson’s Blake Miller earned back-to-back First Team All-ACC selections in 2024 and 2025. He might not be a day-one starter, but the rebuilding Dolphins don’t have to rush him into the lineup. They can be patient with his development. 31. New England Patriots: Kenyon SadiqKenyon Sadiq (Image Credits: Imagn) Judging by their moves in free agency, it looks like the Pats will wait until the NFL draft to bring in more weaponry for Drake Maye. That’s fine as long as they use the picks wisely. Oregon tight end Kenyon Sadiq would be an excellent value pick here. If other teams aren’t valuing tight ends this year, it would work out very well for the defending AFC champs. Sadiq could immediately step in as the Pats’ top receiving target. 32. Houston Texans (From Seattle Seahawks): Omar Cooper Jr.Feb 27, 2026; Indianapolis, IN, USA; Indiana wideout Omar Cooper Jr. (WO17) speaks to members of the media during the NFL Combine at the Indiana Convention Center. Mandatory Credit: Jacob Musselman-Imagn Images Trading down proves worthwhile for the Texans, who get a quality wide receiver that the offense sorely needs. CJ Stroud really missed Tank Dell last year, and his game was terrible when opposing defenses contained Nico Collins. Stroud could regain that star-like form from 2023 with a player like Cooper taking the pressure off of Collins.

Read more2026 NFL Mock Draft 10.0: All 32 Picks With Massive Trade Shakeups

Saints Predicted To Steal ‘One of the Best WRs in the 2026 NFL Draft’ in Round 3

Apr 2, 2026 @ 10:00am
FootballNFLNew Orleans Saints
Pro Football Network

The New Orleans Saints could pair Clemson Tiger Antonio Williams with Tyler Shough to create one of the best young and exciting duos in the NFL.

Read moreSaints Predicted To Steal ‘One of the Best WRs in the 2026 NFL Draft’ in Round 3

2026 NFL Mock Draft: Big Surprises in New 1st-Round Forecast

Apr 2, 2026 @ 7:01am
FootballNFLArizona CardinalsBaltimore RavensBuffalo BillsCarolina PanthersChicago BearsCincinnati BengalsCleveland BrownsDallas CowboysHouston TexansKansas City ChiefsLas Vegas RaidersLos Angeles ChargersLos Angeles RamsMiami DolphinsMinnesota VikingsNew England PatriotsNew Orleans SaintsNew York GiantsNew York JetsPhiladelphia EaglesPittsburgh SteelersSan Francisco 49ersSeattle SeahawksTampa Bay BuccaneersTennessee TitansWashington Commanders
Athlon Sports

Athlon Sports NFL Draft expert Luke Easterling puts on his GM hat for every team picking in the first round of the 2026 NFL Draft with this updated projection.

Read more2026 NFL Mock Draft: Big Surprises in New 1st-Round Forecast

Congratulations Pour in for Saints QB Zach Wilson and Wife After Personal News

Mar 31, 2026 @ 11:58pm
FootballNFLDenver BroncosMiami DolphinsNew Orleans SaintsNew York Jets
Athlon Sports

Zach Wilson is entering a two new chapter at once as he and wife Nicolette welcomed a new member of the family, a week after he joined a new team.

Read moreCongratulations Pour in for Saints QB Zach Wilson and Wife After Personal News

Chargers Could Address Key Need with Saints FA

Mar 31, 2026 @ 9:32am
FootballNFLLos Angeles ChargersNew Orleans Saints
Heavy

The Los Angeles Chargers have a number of questions to answer before the end of the offseason, and the last edge rushing position could be the biggest one to address. The loss of Odafe Oweh has left a massive hole between both Tuli Tuipolotu and Khalil Mack that must be filled expeditiously. Although he may […] The post Chargers Could Address Key Need with Saints FA appeared first on Heavy Sports.

Read moreChargers Could Address Key Need with Saints FA

Makai Lemon Landing Spots: 4 NFL Draft Suitors for the WR Include Commanders, Saints

Mar 31, 2026 @ 9:00am
FootballNFLNew Orleans SaintsWashington Commanders
Pro Football Network

Makai Lemon is taking Top 30 visits ahead of the 2026 NFL Draft. Here are 4 potential team fits that could reshape passing attacks.

Read moreMakai Lemon Landing Spots: 4 NFL Draft Suitors for the WR Include Commanders, Saints

NFL Power Rankings, Post Free Agency: Seahawks remain atop the league

Mar 31, 2026 @ 8:39am
FootballNFLArizona CardinalsAtlanta FalconsBaltimore RavensBuffalo BillsCarolina PanthersChicago BearsCincinnati BengalsCleveland BrownsDallas CowboysDenver BroncosDetroit LionsGreen Bay PackersHouston TexansIndianapolis ColtsJacksonville JaguarsKansas City ChiefsLas Vegas RaidersLos Angeles ChargersLos Angeles RamsMiami DolphinsMinnesota VikingsNew England PatriotsNew Orleans SaintsNew York GiantsNew York JetsPhiladelphia EaglesPittsburgh SteelersSan Francisco 49ersSeattle SeahawksTampa Bay BuccaneersTennessee TitansWashington Commanders
ClutchPoints

The craziness of NFL free agency is mostly over this offseason, as the top free agents have all signed big-money deals and found their home for the 2026-27 NFL season. With players like Kenneth Walker III, Malik Willis, Travis Etienne, Jaylen Waddle, and Mike Evans all latching on to new teams this offseason, there has […] The post NFL Power Rankings, Post Free Agency: Seahawks remain atop the league appeared first on ClutchPoints.

Read moreNFL Power Rankings, Post Free Agency: Seahawks remain atop the league

NFL Announces Cleveland Browns News for 2026 Season

Mar 30, 2026 @ 4:28pm
FootballNFLCleveland BrownsNew Orleans Saints
Heavy

The NFL announced Monday the Cleveland Browns will have rights in Italy through the NFL's global markets program. The post NFL Announces Cleveland Browns News for 2026 Season appeared first on Heavy Sports.

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The Best Player Every NFL Team Regrets Letting Go in 2026 FA (You’ll Disagree)

Mar 30, 2026 @ 1:44pm
FootballNFLArizona CardinalsAtlanta FalconsBaltimore RavensBuffalo BillsCarolina PanthersChicago BearsCincinnati BengalsCleveland BrownsDallas CowboysDenver BroncosDetroit LionsGreen Bay PackersHouston TexansIndianapolis ColtsJacksonville JaguarsKansas City ChiefsLas Vegas RaidersLos Angeles ChargersLos Angeles RamsMiami DolphinsMinnesota VikingsNew England PatriotsNew Orleans SaintsNew York GiantsNew York JetsPhiladelphia EaglesPittsburgh SteelersSan Francisco 49ersSeattle SeahawksTampa Bay BuccaneersTennessee TitansWashington Commanders
Total Pro Sports

Free agency is a tricky time of year… it is challenging for front offices when their hopes meet reality, and they need to find a way to fill all the holes on their NFL teams and keep their current talent in place. So every offseason we see good players leave, at times, good teams, for one reason or another—and in some cases, they end up being the kind of moves that haunt a front office for years. Let’s run through all 32 teams and break down the players that they absolutely shouldn’t have let walk in the 2026 free agency period. Which players for each NFL team should have stayed in free agency? Arizona Cardinals: Calais Campbell, DLNov 9, 2025; Seattle, Washington, USA; Arizona Cardinals defensive tackle Calais Campbell (93) looks on before the game against the Seattle Seahawks at Lumen Field. Mandatory Credit: Kevin Ng-Imagn Images Campbell is 39 years old and came back to Arizona in 2025 to finish his career where it started… And the man was still producing at a rotational level most 30-year-olds would envy.  His contract expired, and while retirement remains on the table, most analysts around the league expect him to lace them up for another year… but Arizona missed the boat on bringing him back. Which is a shame because he could have been a big piece for them in the rebuild post Kyler Murray. Atlanta Falcons: Leonard Floyd, EdgeDec 21, 2025; Glendale, Arizona, USA; Atlanta Falcons defensive end Leonard Floyd (56) against the Arizona Cardinals at State Farm Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images Floyd was a reliable edge presence for the Falcons—a veteran who could set the edge, generate a pass rush, and give a young defense the structure it needed.  And it is safe to assume that his downturn in production was a result of the Falcons’ team struggles more than anything. Letting a veteran edge rusher of his caliber leave when your NFL team is still trying to establish an identity is a bigger mistake than it looks. Baltimore Ravens: Tyler Linderbaum, CJun 10, 2025; Baltimore, MD, USA; Baltimore Ravens center Tyler Linderbaum (64) looks on during an NFL OTA at Under Armour Performance Center. Mandatory Credit: Daniel Kucin Jr.-Imagn Images This one still stings… Linderbaum made three straight Pro Bowls, anchoring the Ravens’ interior line, and Baltimore declined his fifth-year option rather than pay him market rate because of the myth of positional value. The Raiders blew the entire center market apart with a three-year, $81 million deal—$27 million per year, nine million more annually than the previous record. The Ravens reportedly offered $22 million annually… Which is… just $1million more. Considering the window that they are trying to capitalize on, maybe they should have exercised the option and tried to figure out the long-term deal down the road! Buffalo Bills: Tre'Davious White, CBBuffalo Bills cornerback Tre’davious White (27) celebrates the game-deciding interception during the fourth quarter of an NFL football AFC Wild Card playoff matchup, Sunday, Jan. 11, 2026, in Jacksonville, Fla. The Bills defeated the Jaguars 27-24. [Corey Perrine/Florida Times-Union] White posted 40 tackles and a team-high 10 passes defensed, his best mark since 2020, and by the back half of the season, analysts were noting he resembled the cornerback who was one of the best in football before his ACL tear. The Bills are already thin in the secondary after losing Taron Johnson, Darius Slay, and Jordan Poyer this offseason… maybe they should’ve tried to bring the vet back into the fold for one more year instead of asking a group of unproven corners to hold up behind a defense that needs to be elite if this NFL team is going to finally get over the hump. Carolina Panthers: Rico Dowdle, RBNov 9, 2025; Charlotte, North Carolina, USA; Carolina Panthers running back Rico Dowdle (5) during player introductions at Bank of America Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Bob Donnan-Imagn Images Dowdle finished 2025 with 1,076 yards on the ground and was the engine that kept the offense moving and this team relevant in the back half of the year. His production gave Bryce Young a legitimate running game to lean on, and when you have a young quarterback still finding his footing, a ball carrier who takes pressure off your passing game is worth more than the raw stats suggest. Chicago Bears: Nahshon Wright, CBChicago Bears cornerback Nahshon Wright (26) throws the game ball into the crowd as Green Bay Packers wide receiver Christian Watson (9) reacts to losing the game at the end of their wild-card playoff football game Saturday, January 10, 2026, at Soldier Field in Chicago, Illinois. Wright picked off five passes in 2025. He’s 26 years old. And the Bears just let him walk to the Jets on a one-year, $5.5 million deal. That’s not a market-breaking number — that’s a number that his NFL team could have matched without blinking.  Have to wonder what they were thinking on this one. Cincinnati Bengals: Joseph Ossai, DENov 3, 2024; Cincinnati, Ohio, USA; Cincinnati Bengals defensive end Joseph Ossai (58) runs onto the field before the game against the Las Vegas Raiders at Paycor Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Katie Stratman-Imagn Images Ossai joined the Jets on a three-year, $36 million contract, meaning Cincinnati is now rolling with Boye Mafe, Myles Murphy, and Shemar Stewart at defensive end. Mafe is the only proven one in that group, and he’s never cracked six sacks in a season. Not exactly a group that instills hope that a defensive revival is in the making. Cleveland Browns: Devin Bush, LBDevin Bush (Ken Blaze-Imagn Images) Bush came to Cleveland on cheap one-year prove-it deals two straight years and turned his career completely around. In 2025, he started all 17 games, posted a career-high 125 tackles, two sacks, two forced fumbles, and three interceptions. That’s not a depth piece. That’s an NFL starter playing at an All-Pro level for a team that was paying him almost nothing. Chicago saw it, signed him to a three-year, $30 million deal with $21 million guaranteed, and now Cleveland is starting over at the position. Dallas Cowboys: Jadeveon Clowney, DENov 3, 2025; Arlington, Texas, USA; Dallas Cowboys defensive end Jadeveon Clowney (42) celebrates after he sacks Arizona Cardinals quarterback Jacoby Brissett (7) during the game between the Dallas Cowboys and the Arizona Cardinals at AT&T Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Jerome Miron-Imagn Images Say what you will about Jadeveon Clowney, but he still led the Cowboys with 8.5 sacks in 2025 at age 32.  Now he’s expected to leave as a free agent, and Dallas hasn’t replaced him with anyone. Here’s the thing about Clowney — everybody forgets about him in March, and then he goes out and puts up numbers every year.  Dallas is going to be hurting without him, as that defense really left a lot to be desired. Denver Broncos: Dre Greenlaw, LBSep 21, 2025; Inglewood, California, USA; Denver Broncos linebacker Dre Greenlaw (57) on the sidelines prior to the game against the Los Angeles Chargers at SoFi Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Jayne Kamin-Oncea-Imagn Images Greenlaw was brought to Denver last offseason specifically to bring championship experience into that building… and now they were a healthy Bo Nix away from a Super Bowl in January… That window is open right now—and you have to think this team will be kicking themselves come playoffs next year without an NFL player of his pedigree. Detroit Lions: Alex Anzalone, LBDetroit Lions linebacker Alex Anzalone celebrates a tackle against the Baltimore Ravens during the second half at M&T Bank Stadium in Baltimore, Maryland, on Monday, Sept. 22, 2025. Tampa Bay signed Anzalone to a two-year, $17 million deal that Detroit apparently wasn’t interested in matching. The Lions are betting their younger linebackers can step up… and maybe they can. But Anzalone was the guy who understood Dan Campbell’s defense from the inside, including the communication at the second level, the disguise work before the snap, and the situational awareness in late-game situations. That’s not something you replace by plugging in whoever is next on the depth chart. Green Bay Packers: Romeo Doubs, WRGreen Bay Packers wide receiver Romeo Doubs (87) flashes a heart with his hands to the fans as he walks off the field after defeating the Arizona Cardinals on Sunday, October 13, 2024, at Lambeau Field in Green Bay, Wis. The Packers won the game, 34-13 Tork Mason/USA TODAY NETWORK-Wisconsin Doubs signed with New England and now gives Drake Maye a legitimate option underneath… Good for the Patriots… But for the Packers, that’s a problem. Jordan Love needs weapons to throw the ball to, and instead of adding to their already thin wide receiver room, they are bleeding talent. Houston Texans: Tim Settle, DTOct 20, 2025; Seattle, Washington, USA; Houston Texans defensive tackle Tim Settle (98) warms up before the game against the Seattle Seahawks at Lumen Field. Mandatory Credit: Kevin Ng-Imagn Images Settle left for Washington on a three-year, $25.5 million deal, and to say that Houston will be missing him this year is an understatement. Losing a proven interior piece on defense at the same time means this roster is in transition on both sides of the ball simultaneously. Settle wasn’t flashy. He ate blocks, stayed in his lane, and let Will Anderson and Danielle Hunter do their thing. That kind of player is harder to replace for an NFL team than the contract suggests. Indianapolis Colts: Kwity Paye, DEDec 7, 2025; Jacksonville, Florida, USA; Indianapolis Colts defensive end Kwity Paye (51) looks on before a game against the Jacksonville Jaguars at EverBank Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Matt Pendleton-Imagn Images Paye signed with the Las Vegas Raiders on a three-year, $48 million deal after posting at least four sacks in each of his five NFL seasons, including two years over eight for his previous team. He was the best edge rusher on this roster, and Indianapolis let him walk. The Colts are now piecing together a pass rush to forge their way back towards relevance. Jacksonville Jaguars: Travis Etienne, RBDec 29, 2024; Jacksonville, Florida, USA; Jacksonville Jaguars running back Travis Etienne Jr. (1) runs the ball against the Tennessee Titans during the second quarter at EverBank Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Morgan Tencza-Imagn Images Etienne ran for over 1,000 yards in three of his four seasons in Jacksonville, set a career high with 13 touchdowns in 2025, and was the most complete offensive player on this roster. The Saints made him an offer Jacksonville couldn’t… or wouldn’t match. Losing your best offensive weapon while the front office counts future draft slots isn’t the message you want to send to a locker room that already had questions about where this franchise is heading. Kansas City Chiefs: Jawaan Taylor, OTAug 9, 2025; Glendale, Arizona, USA; Kansas City Chiefs offensive tackle Jawaan Taylor (74) against the Arizona Cardinals during a preseason NFL game at State Farm Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images Taylor’s $27.3 million cap hit made this a financial necessity, and Kansas City released him on March 4 to clear the space. He was their starting right tackle for three seasons, including a Super Bowl run. Now he’s a free agent, while Patrick Mahomes is rehabbing a torn ACL, and the Chiefs are rebuilding almost every other position on the roster at the same time. Not ideal! Las Vegas Raiders: Jamal Adams, SNov 6, 2025; Denver, Colorado, USA; Las Vegas Raiders linebacker Jamal Adams (33) practices before the game at Empower Field at Mile High. Mandatory Credit: Ron Chenoy-Imagn Images Adams hasn’t been the player he was in New York in years. Multiple knee surgeries, diminishing production — the Raiders knew what they were getting and made the bet anyway… and the output was better than expected. It feels like a safe conclusion that Vegas could have brought him back on a modest 1- or 2-year deal and gotten a lot of value from his skill set and veteran presence. Los Angeles Chargers: Odafe Oweh, EdgeDec 14, 2025; Kansas City, Missouri, USA; Los Angeles Chargers linebacker Odafe Oweh (98) celebrates a sack against the Kansas City Chiefs during the second half at GEHA Field at Arrowhead Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Jay Biggerstaff-Imagn Images Oweh broke out in the second half of 2025 and signed a four-year, $100 million deal with Washington. The Chargers watched that happen without matching it, and now they have a hole at edge rusher with no answer for it. Oweh is 26 years old and clearly figured out how to consistently win against NFL tackles, but now he’s going to hit his prime somewhere else.  Jim Harbaugh wants to go deep in the playoffs with Justin Herbert, but right now, that plan has a gap, as this NFL team still has some serious holes to plug. Los Angeles Rams: Tutu Atwell, WROct 2, 2025; Inglewood, California, USA; Los Angeles Rams wide receiver Tutu Atwell (5) reacts against the San Francisco 49ers during the second half at SoFi Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Kirby Lee-Imagn Images While he never turned into the regular big play guy that Los Angeles was hoping… Tutu Atwell was a nice player for them and filled an important role in this NFL team. The problem for the Rams is that they just lost the fastest receiver on their roster — the one guy who forced safeties to play deep. Without Atwell running past defensive backs, coverage rotations get simpler, defenders crowd the short-to-intermediate game, and Matthew Stafford’s job gets harder. Miami Dolphins: Tyreek Hill, WRDec 8, 2024; Miami Gardens, Florida, USA; Miami Dolphins wide receiver Tyreek Hill (10) looks on after making a catch against the New York Jets during the first quarter at Hard Rock Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Sam Navarro-Imagn Images Hill tore his ACL in Week 4 last season and was done. Before that, the production had already started sliding. Now, the new front office looked at a $51 million cap hit, $16 million about to trigger in guaranteed money, a 32-year-old coming off a torn ACL… and made what was probably the financially correct decision. But that doesn’t make it any less painful for the Dolphins fans. Minnesota Vikings: Jalen Nailor, WRMinnesota Vikings wide receiver Jalen Nailor (83) celebrates scoring a touchdown with teamates during their football game against the Green Bay Packers Sunday, December 29, 2024, at U.S. Bank Stadium in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Nailor signed with the Raiders for three years and $35 million with $25 million guaranteed after three years operating in the shadows of Justin Jefferson and Jordan Addison, quietly doing the work — taking the tough assignments, winning on underneath routes, making third-down catches when the defense had the Vikings’ top options blanketed. Casual NFL fans may not expect it, but this team will miss him big time next year. New England Patriots: Stefon Diggs, WRStefon Diggs. Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images Diggs was a big part of a Super Bowl run in New England last year… but that didn’t stop Vrabel from releasing him this offseason. At 32, with a sizable cap hit and a history of making things difficult wherever he’s been, this wasn’t a shocking call. But releasing a player of this caliber without a clear plan for who fills that role is the kind of move that could just show up on third and eight in November. New Orleans Saints: Alontae Taylor, CBJun 10, 2025; New Orleans, LA, USA; New Orleans Saints cornerback Alontae Taylor (1) looks on during minicamp at Ochsner Sports Performance Center. Mandatory Credit: Stephen Lew-Imagn Images The Saints are already in a difficult spot, and losing Taylor made it considerably more difficult. He signed with Tennessee for three years and $60 million — and this wasn’t a surprise departure; it was a talent drain for an NFL team that is desperate to be competitive again. New York Giants: Wan'Dale Robinson, WRNov 23, 2025; Detroit, Michigan, USA; New York Giants wide receiver Wan’Dale Robinson (17) runs upfield after catching a swing pass in the second quarter against the Detroit Lions at Ford Field. Mandatory Credit: Lon Horwedel-Imagn Images Four years, $78 million with the Titans. Gone. Big Blue said that it didn’t fit the budget for a team still rebuilding, and the cap logic makes sense on paper. The Giants have been reconstructing this receiver room for a decade without solving it. Nothing about this offseason suggests that’s about to change. New York Jets: Quincy Williams, LBNew York Jets linebacker Quincy Williams (56) drops back on defense during an NFL Week 10 game between the New York Jets and the Cleveland Browns at MetLife Stadium on Sunday, Nov. 9, 2025. 2023 wasn’t that long ago… When Williams posted 139 tackles, 15 tackles for loss, and 10 passes defensed and was legitimately one of the best linebackers in football. Then 2025 happened. Shoulder injury, hand injury, a brief benching, his brother Quinnen traded to Dallas mid-season… the whole thing unraveled. His coverage numbers were a disaster, and the Jets moved on. Cleveland saw a different story, though — two years, $17 million for a guy who, in the right scheme, has proven he can be an All-Pro for an NFL team. New York may regret this one… but what else is new?! Philadelphia Eagles: Jaelan Phillips, EdgeNov 16, 2025; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA; Philadelphia Eagles linebacker Jaelan Phillips (50) reacts after the game against the Detroit Lions at Lincoln Financial Field. Mandatory Credit: Eric Hartline-Imagn Images It feels like every offseason the Eagles roster gets picked apart, and this year was no different, as Philly lost their best pass rusher. Phillips signed the richest edge contract in the entire offseason — four years, $120 million with Carolina. Cap constraints are real, sure. So is the gap between Phillips and whoever lines up in his spot Week 1.  Pittsburgh Steelers: Isaac Seumalo, OGNov 2, 2025; Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA; Pittsburgh Steelers guard Isaac Seumalo warms up foe a game against the Indianapolis Colts.at Acrisure Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Barry Reeger-Imagn Images Isaac Seumalo quietly anchored Pittsburgh’s offensive line through a season where protecting the quarterback position was an absolute must—and he did a heck of a job. Pittsburgh has paid a lot of attention to its skill position players this offseason, but if the line in front of them is a real problem, none of those additions will matter. San Francisco 49ers: Jauan Jennings, WRJan 11, 2026; Philadelphia, PA, USA; San Francisco 49ers wide receiver Jauan Jennings (15) reacts in front of Philadelphia Eagles cornerback Cooper DeJean (33) after a first down catch in an NFC Wild Card Round game at Lincoln Financial Field. Mandatory Credit: Bill Streicher-Imagn Images In 2025, with the slew of injuries on the roster, Jennings was the 49ers’ offense. Fifty-five catches, 643 yards, nine touchdowns — team-high. And he did it playing through broken ribs and both high and low ankle sprains simultaneously. Losing him is going to be a bigger problem for this NFL team than most people think. Seattle Seahawks: Kenneth Walker III, RBNov 16, 2025; Inglewood, California, USA; Seattle Seahawks running back Kenneth Walker III (9) runs the ball against Los Angeles Rams safety Kam Curl (3) during the second half at SoFi Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Gary A. Vasquez-Imagn Images Well—this was an easy one… Seattle lost the Super Bowl LX MVP. Over 1,400 yards in 2025 and 5he engine of the entire offense on the biggest stage in the sport. And Seattle didn’t pay him. Time will tell how big a mistake that was! Tampa Bay Buccaneers: Mike Evans, WRMike Evans (Photo By Jim Dedmon-Imagn Images) Twelve seasons. Eleven straight 1,000-yard years — tied with Jerry Rice for the all-time record. The face of the franchise through everything that happened post-Brady. And Evans signed with San Francisco because he looked at this roster and decided Tampa wasn’t going to give him a real shot at a ring. Ouch. Tennessee Titans: L'Jarius Sneed, CBTennessee Titans cornerback L’Jarius Sneed (38) heads off the field after a goal-line stop against the p/ during their game at Nissan Stadium in Nashville, Tenn., Sunday, Sept. 22, 2024. Four years, $76.4 million. Two seasons. Zero interceptions. That’s what the Sneed experiment cost this franchise. He played 12 games, needed knee and quad surgeries, and the Titans released him to clear $11.4 million in cap space. Letting him go was the right call… There was nothing else to do… but it still hurts! Washington Commanders: Deebo Samuel, WRSep 28, 2025; Atlanta, Georgia, USA; Washington Commanders wide receiver Deebo Samuel (1) shown on the field during the game against the Atlanta Falcons at Mercedes-Benz Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Dale Zanine-Imagn Images Last season was a disaster, and shockingly, Deebo was one of the few guys who showed up anyway, quietly putting up 72 catches, 727 yards, and five touchdowns. That’s one of the steals of the 2025 offseason… and now the Commanders are letting him walk.

Read moreThe Best Player Every NFL Team Regrets Letting Go in 2026 FA (You’ll Disagree)

Kellen Moore sounds off on Alvin Kamara’s status after Travis Etienne Jr. signing

Mar 30, 2026 @ 12:39pm
FootballNFLNew Orleans Saints
ClutchPoints

The New Orleans Saints made one of the biggest moves of the 2026 NFL free agency period when they signed Travis Etienne Jr., a former running back for the Jacksonville Jaguars, to a four-year, $52 million deal. But that big signing right away brought up a big question: What does it mean for Alvin Kamara? […] The post Kellen Moore sounds off on Alvin Kamara’s status after Travis Etienne Jr. signing appeared first on ClutchPoints.

Read moreKellen Moore sounds off on Alvin Kamara’s status after Travis Etienne Jr. signing

Saints HC Kellen Moore Addresses Alvin Kamara’s Future After $48M Travis Etienne Signing

Mar 30, 2026 @ 12:06pm
FootballNFLNew Orleans Saints
Pro Football Network

Kellen Moore addresses Alvin Kamara's future with the Saints following the team's $52M free agent signing of Travis Etienne.

Read moreSaints HC Kellen Moore Addresses Alvin Kamara’s Future After $48M Travis Etienne Signing

Broncos Rumors Take Serious Hit After Alvin Kamara Update

Mar 30, 2026 @ 11:33am
FootballNFLDenver BroncosNew Orleans Saints
Heavy

Broncos Alvin Kamara rumors took a serious hit after the latest comments out of New Orleans. Here’s how the Saints update affects Denver’s backfield outlook. The post Broncos Rumors Take Serious Hit After Alvin Kamara Update appeared first on Heavy Sports.

Read moreBroncos Rumors Take Serious Hit After Alvin Kamara Update

Saints reveal unexpected Alvin Kamara plan after Travis Etienne Jr. signing – sportingnews.com

Mar 30, 2026 @ 11:02am
FootballNFLNew Orleans Saints
Sporting News

Saints reveal unexpected Alvin Kamara plan after Travis Etienne Jr. signing  sportingnews.com

Read moreSaints reveal unexpected Alvin Kamara plan after Travis Etienne Jr. signing – sportingnews.com

Mock Draft 1.0 — Doug Farrar's 'What I Would Do' Edition

Mar 30, 2026 @ 6:05am
FootballNFLArizona CardinalsBaltimore RavensBuffalo BillsChicago BearsCincinnati BengalsCleveland BrownsDallas CowboysDetroit LionsHouston TexansKansas City ChiefsLas Vegas RaidersLos Angeles ChargersLos Angeles RamsMiami DolphinsNew England PatriotsNew Orleans SaintsNew York GiantsNew York JetsPhiladelphia EaglesPittsburgh SteelersSan Francisco 49ersSeattle SeahawksTampa Bay BuccaneersTennessee TitansWashington Commanders
Athlon Sports

With the 2026 NFL draft less than a month away, there are all kinds of mock drafts, with all kinds of reasonings behind them. One way to put a mock together is to take what you think the actual NFL teams will do, and go more with what you perceive to be each teams' weaknesses, lining those ...

Read moreMock Draft 1.0 — Doug Farrar's 'What I Would Do' Edition

Bears Could Land $20 Million Pass-Rusher After Deal Falls Through: Report

Mar 29, 2026 @ 10:25pm
FootballNFLBuffalo BillsChicago BearsCleveland BrownsNew Orleans Saints
Heavy

The Chicago Bears are in position to benefit from a failed contract agreement between a former Buffalo Bills edge-rusher and a team from the AFC North. The post Bears Could Land $20 Million Pass-Rusher After Deal Falls Through: Report appeared first on Heavy Sports.

Read moreBears Could Land $20 Million Pass-Rusher After Deal Falls Through: Report

2026 NFL Mock Draft 2.0: Cowboys take ‘incredible ball hawk and Chiefs land ‘true difference-maker’ for Patrick Mahomes

Mar 29, 2026 @ 3:00pm
FootballNFLArizona CardinalsBaltimore RavensBuffalo BillsCarolina PanthersChicago BearsCincinnati BengalsCleveland BrownsDallas CowboysDetroit LionsHouston TexansKansas City ChiefsLas Vegas RaidersLos Angeles ChargersLos Angeles RamsMiami DolphinsMinnesota VikingsNew England PatriotsNew Orleans SaintsNew York GiantsNew York JetsPhiladelphia EaglesPittsburgh SteelersSan Francisco 49ersSeattle SeahawksTampa Bay BuccaneersTennessee TitansWashington Commanders
The Sun Sport

IT’S a little less than one month until the 2026 NFL Draft, so that means there’s still time for some mock drafts. The U.S. Sun’s second mock draft has been…

Read more2026 NFL Mock Draft 2.0: Cowboys take ‘incredible ball hawk and Chiefs land ‘true difference-maker’ for Patrick Mahomes

Who Are Zachariah Branch’s Parents? All You Need To Know About Former CFB Athlete Dad and Mom of Georgia Bulldogs WR

Mar 28, 2026 @ 10:15am
FootballNew Orleans SaintsCollege FootballGeorgia BulldogsUSC TrojansNFL
Total Pro Sports

Meet Zachariah Branch’s parents, who guided and supported the Georgia WR’s rise in football.

Read moreWho Are Zachariah Branch’s Parents? All You Need To Know About Former CFB Athlete Dad and Mom of Georgia Bulldogs WR

NFL Draft Pick Compensation Breakdown: How Much Does Each Pick Get?

Mar 27, 2026 @ 10:03am
FootballNFLCleveland BrownsDetroit LionsNew Orleans Saints
Athlon Sports

Early first-round selections can earn tens of millions in guarantees, while total contract values drop sharply in the later rounds.

Read moreNFL Draft Pick Compensation Breakdown: How Much Does Each Pick Get?

"Hide your moms": NFL fans react as Zach Wilson signs with New Orleans Saints after Dolphins stint – Sportskeeda

Mar 27, 2026 @ 9:22am
FootballNFLNew Orleans Saints
Sportskeeda

"Hide your moms": NFL fans react as Zach Wilson signs with New Orleans Saints after Dolphins stint  Sportskeeda

Read more"Hide your moms": NFL fans react as Zach Wilson signs with New Orleans Saints after Dolphins stint – Sportskeeda

Zach Wilson's wife Nicolette reveals true feelings on Saints signing QB to 1-year deal after Dolphins stint – Sportskeeda

Mar 27, 2026 @ 7:48am
FootballNFLMiami DolphinsNew Orleans Saints
Sportskeeda

Zach Wilson's wife Nicolette reveals true feelings on Saints signing QB to 1-year deal after Dolphins stint  Sportskeeda

Read moreZach Wilson's wife Nicolette reveals true feelings on Saints signing QB to 1-year deal after Dolphins stint – Sportskeeda

This Saints-Steelers trade gives Pittsburgh an Aaron Rodgers backup plan without the risk

Mar 26, 2026 @ 9:05pm
FootballNFLNew Orleans SaintsPittsburgh Steelers
FanSided

The Steelers' QB of the future isn't arriving until 2027. Might as well roll the dice on a low-risk, high-upside reclamation project.

Read moreThis Saints-Steelers trade gives Pittsburgh an Aaron Rodgers backup plan without the risk
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