Titans Sign 11 UDFAs

After adding eight players in the draft, the Titans have now added 11 players to their rookie class. The team announced the signing of the following undrafted free agents:

Bishop Fitzgerald got a chunk of money to join the Titans. Per Aaron Wilson of KPRC2 in Houston, the USC safety received a $20K signing bonus and had $247.5K of his salary guaranteed, giving him $267.5K in total guarantees. After starting his collegiate career at Coffeyville Community College, Fitzgerald joined NC State ahead of the 2023 campaign. He had a pair of standout seasons at the school, leading to him transferring to USC for the 2025 season. He earned a consensus All-American nod during his lone season with the Trojans, tallying 51 tackles and five interceptions.

After using the fourth-overall pick on wideout Carnell Tate, the Titans have now added two more rookies at the position. Hank Beatty spent four years at Illinois, but he truly started breaking out in 2024. He earned a third-team All-Big Ten nod in 2024 thanks to his special teams ability, as he led the conference with 14.1 yards per punt return. He earned another all-conference selection in 2025 thanks to his offensive ability, as he hauled in 70 catches for 864 yards and three touchdowns.

Tyren Montgomery has one of the more unique paths to the NFL. He was a basketball player at LSU but was forced to return home after only one semester. After competing in a flag football event in Las Vegas, he earned a walk-on gig with the Houston Cougars, but that didn’t come to fruition thanks to the COVID-19 pandemic. Montgomery subsequently sent his flag football tape to multiple schools, and he eventually got Nicholls State University to bite. He had to sit out the 2022 season due to eligibility reasons, but he finally saw the field in 2023, when he hauled in 12 catches.

With his D1 eligibility having run out, he caught on with the Division III John Carroll Blue Streaks, where he spent the past two seasons. He finished his first season with 57 catches for 1,071 yards and 17 touchdowns, and he followed that up with a 2025 campaign where he collected 119 catches for 1,528 yards and 15 touchdowns. That earned him an invite to the Senior Bowl, which helped put him on the NFL radar.

QB P.J. Walker Announces Retirement

P.J. Walker is calling it a career. His most recent team, the Calgary Stampeders of the Canadian Football League, announced that the veteran quarterback is retiring.

Despite going undrafted out of Temple in 2017, Walker has played nearly a decade in professional football. His career started with the Colts, where he spent nearly three years on the practice squad. Following a stint in the XFL, the QB caught on with the Panthers via a two-year, $1.5MM deal. That move reunited him with former Temple head coach Matt Rhule, and it ended up vaulting Walker into relevancy over the next few years.

Walker got one start in both 2020 (filling in for Teddy Bridgewater) and 2021 (filling in for Sam Darnold/Cam Newton). He won both of those games, although he tossed one touchdown vs. three interceptions in his starts. He got a longer look in place of Darnold and Baker Mayfield in 2022, starting a career-high five games. He went 2-3 in those outings, finishing the season with 731 passing yards, three touchdowns, and three interceptions.

He parlayed that performance into a two-year contract with the Bears, but he didn’t make it to the regular season with his new squad. He quickly caught on with the Browns practice squad and eventually got a chance to start. He went 1-1 in his two games atop the depth chart, but he still finished the year with an unsightly one touchdown vs. five interceptions.

Walker had a brief stint with the Seahawks during the 2024 preseason before catching on with the Stampeders. He only started one game during his stint in the CFL. Now, the Temple legend is hanging up his cleats.

Austin Ekeler 100% Medically Cleared, Expected To Generate Interest

Austin Ekeler is healthy and seeking his next gig. According to Aaron Wilson of KPRC2 in Houston, the veteran running back has been “fully 100% medically cleared for all football activities” following his torn Achilles last September. Per Wilson, Ekeler is expected to generate “solid interest” and intends to play in 2026.

Following a standout stint with the Chargers that saw him average more than 60 catches per season, the RB inked a two-year contract with the Commanders ahead of the 2024 campaign. He was limited to 12 games that year thanks to a concussion, but he was otherwise productive, averaging 6.5 yards per touch. He finished the season with 733 yards from scrimmage and four touchdowns, although his 35 catches represented his lowest total since his rookie campaign.

He entered 2025 atop the Commanders depth chart and collected 81 yards on 19 touches through one-plus games. However, he suffered a non-contact injury during the team’s Week 2 Thursday Night Football matchup against the Packers. It was later revealed that he suffered a torn Achilles, ending his season early.

Now a free agent, the 30-year-old will be looking to revive his career in a new spot. Teams may be a bit wary of Ekeler considering the injury and his age, but he certainly won’t command more than a prove-it contract at this point. At the very least, teams could look to Ekeler to serve as a potential third-down back, and he could also add some experience to any young RBs rooms. Notably, Ekeler also returned 19 kickoffs during his first season in Washington, so perhaps he could contribute to a new squad on special teams.

Vikings Wanted Second-Rounder For Jonathan Greenard; Finances Played Role In Trade To Eagles

After several weeks of rumors, the Vikings and Eagles pulled off a trade involving edge defender Jonathan Greenard on Day 2 of the draft. The Eagles sent two third-rounders to the Vikings for Greenard and a seventh.

Minnesota and Philadelphia “heavily discussed” a Greenard trade in mid-March, but talks stalled over the Vikings’ asking price, Adam Schefter of ESPN said during an appearance on The Pat McAfee Show. The Eagles initially offered a third-rounder, but the Vikings held out for a second-rounder. They reached a compromise over a month later.

Greenard spent the first couple months of the offseason hoping for a raise, but the Vikings “weren’t going to pay him,” Schefter says. That had nothing to do with frugality on the part of Vikings ownership, according to interim general manager Rob Brzezinski (via Kevin Seifert of ESPN).

“We want to make it perfectly clear that this has nothing to do with us or [owners Zygi and Mark Wilf] not wanting to spend money or cutting back in any way, pulling back the reins on our spending,” Brzezinski stated. “We have just spent so much money the last several years that it’s not sustainable for us to move forward. Our salary cap situation has been very, very challenging.”

Brzezinski isn’t wrong. As Seifert notes, the Vikings spent $100MM-plus over the cap from 2024-25 under former GM Kwesi Adofo-Mensah, whom they fired in January. They were around $50MM in the red entering this offseason, but the Vikes now have approximately $10.74MM in effective cap space after the Greenard trade and the rest of their moves. While they have gotten themselves into better financial shape, Brzezinski admitted trading Greenard is “something that we understand is not making the Minnesota Vikings a better team today.”

The Vikings were not in position to hand Greenard a raise, but the Eagles quickly gave the 28-year-old pass rusher his coveted extension. It is technically a four-year, $100MM deal with $50MM in guaranteed money, but it may end up as a two-year pact. The Eagles will be able to escape the contract after the 2027 season, per OverTheCap. In releasing Greenard before June 1, 2028, the Eagles would save around $1.69MM while taking on $14.11MM in dead money. Designating Greenard a post-June 1 release would be more beneficial, as it would yield $11.09MM in savings and $4.70MM in dead cap.

Browns To Use Spencer Fano At LT

Cleveland managed to land the tackle atop its O-line board while doing so after collecting additional draft assets. The Browns had been steadily connected to a first-round trade-down effort, and the Chiefs accommodated them in moving up from No. 9 to No. 6 for LSU cornerback Mansoor Delane.

It is debatable whether Kansas City needed to climb up for Delane, but the team was leery of New Orleans at No. 8. The Chiefs sent the Browns Nos. 9, 74 and 148 for the right to climb three spots in Round 1. The Browns would have taken Spencer Fano at No. 6, according to Sports Illustrated’s Albert Breer, but viewed the Commanders and Saints as unlikely to draft a tackle at Nos. 7 and 8.

Browns GM Andrew Berry was correct in his calculations, though he still wanted to know if the Chiefs were climbing up to take Fano. The resilient front office boss asked Chiefs counterpart Brett Veach if he was planning to select an offensive or defensive player at 6; after Veach indicated a defensive path, Berry agreed to trade the pick. Fano became the draft’s first O-lineman chosen, and he will have a big responsibility to start his career.

The Browns will station Fano at left tackle, per Breer, despite the Utah product playing on the right side during his final two Utes seasons. Fano moved from LT to RT in 2024, however, accommodating Caleb Lomu. Utes offensive line coach Jim Harding told the Browns the team viewed Lomu as more of a strict LT type, Breer adds, while believing Fano had enough versatility to make the transition. He earned All-America acclaim at RT. The Browns will now ask the accomplished right tackle to move back to the higher-profile O-line position.

The Commanders had traded for Laremy Tunsil last March and then chose Josh Conerly Jr. in the 2025 first round. New Orleans had taken tackles with its first-round picks in each of the past two years (Taliese Fuaga, Kelvin Banks Jr.). That left the NFC teams as obvious candidates to avoid taking a tackle. While Berry would have needed to be concerned with one of those teams trading down to allow for another club to land Fano, he was proven right and ended up with the team’s preferred blocker from this draft.

Fano is the final piece of the Browns’ puzzle to complete a revamped O-line. The team traded for Tytus Howard, and the ex-Texans tackle/guard will play RT in Cleveland. The team then signed Zion Johnson, Elgton Jenkins and Teven Jenkins to round out its interior O-line. Elgton Jenkins has experience across the formation, but the recent Packers cap casualty is not certain to play center. Todd Monken did not confirm Elgton Jenkins would be the team’s starting center when asked (via ESPN.com’s Daniel Oyefusi), but given Cleveland’s other moves up front, that seems likely.

Green Bay slid Elgton Jenkins from guard, where he received both his Pro Bowl invites, to center in 2025. A season-ending broken leg — an injury that also brought ligament damage — preceded the Packers re-signing C replacement Sean Rhyan and cutting Jenkins, who signed a two-year deal worth $24MM to join the Browns. Cleveland gave Elgton Jenkins $15MM guaranteed at signing, money that almost certainly has the versatile blocker ticketed to start.

Neither Johnson nor Teven Jenkins has played center as a pro. While the Browns roster former sixth-round pick Luke Wypler as a center option, Jenkins’ contract is above the backup level. As of early April, the door for Joel Bitonio to return remained open. Bitonio could come back and again bump Teven Jenkins to a second-string role, where he was most of last year, and the ex-Bears guard starter is attached to a one-year, $4MM deal.

As for Fano, he will be expected to start over injury-prone left tackle Dawand Jones. The latter is entering the final year of his rookie contract and has missed 27 games as a pro. A season-ending knee injury felled Jones in Week 3 of last season. After moving into Cleveland’s starting lineup, the Ohio State product will likely return to a reserve role to open the 2026 season.

Ravens Sign First-Round G Vega Ioane

The Ravens have acted quickly in getting first-round guard Vega Ioane under contract. The 14th overall pick has signed his rookie deal, Jeff Zrebiec of The Athletic reports. Ioane will earn a fully guaranteed $24.23MM over four years. The contract also comes with a fifth-year option.

The 6-foot-4, 325-pound Ioane was a standout at Penn State, where he became a full-time starter at left guard in 2024. Ioane earned second-team All-Big Ten honors that year, and he improved to first-team honors last season. He was also a first-team All-American after putting together a second straight season without allowing a sack or taking a holding penalty. Ioane yielded just four pressures over 614 snaps in his last year with the Nittany Lions.

Considered the best pure guard in this year’s draft class, Ioane ended up as one of a whopping nine offensive linemen to come off the board in the first round. The Ravens could have lost out on Ioane if not for the Rams’ affinity for Alabama quarterback Ty Simpson. Teams hoping to jump the Ravens for Ioane called the Rams about acquiring the 13th overall pick, but general manager Les Snead and head coach Sean McVay stayed put to draft a potential QB of the future.

Ravens GM Eric DeCosta and head coach Jesse Minter landed a plug-and-play starter in Ioane, though it is unclear whether he will line up on the left side in 2026. John Simpson, whom the Ravens signed to a three-year, $30MM contract in free agency, is more “comfortable” on the left than the right, Zrebiec notes. Regardless, Ioane and Simpson are poised to start next season, giving the Ravens two new No. 1s after they used Andrew Vorhees and Daniel Faalele as 17-game starters last year. Vorhees is now ticketed for a bench role, while Faalele signed with the Giants and reunited with former Ravens head coach John Harbaugh.

In addition to signing Ioane, the Ravens have inked fourth-round wide receiver Elijah Sarratt to a deal, Zrebiec relays. Sarratt enjoyed a productive three-year college career between James Madison and Indiana, where he combined for 200 catches and 31 touchdowns in 40 games. Sarratt was an integral part of the Hoosiers’ undefeated, national title-winning team in 2025. Serving as a key weapon for quarterback Fernando Mendoza and a strong complement to fellow receiver Omar Cooper Jr., Sarratt caught 65 passes for 830 yards and an NCAA-leading 15 scores. The Ravens snagged Sarratt at No. 115, 35 picks after they chose USC wideout Ja’kobi Lane at No. 80.

Chiefs, Seahawks, Vikings Showed Interest In RB Jonah Coleman

The Broncos ended up making Jonah Coleman this year’s fourth running back drafted. Not viewed as an RB class overflowing with talent, this year’s crop featured two first-rounders (both out of Notre Dame) and just one RB chosen on Day 2 (Indiana’s Kaelon Black, who went to the 49ers).

Denver chose the Washington product with the first of two fourth-round picks (No. 108), doing so after spending extensive time with him during the pre-draft process. The Broncos used a “30” visit on Coleman and, according to his college running backs coach (ex-NFL RB Scottie Graham), and frequently contacted the Huskies to discuss the back.

They were not the only team to show a decent amount of interest in the standout Big Ten rusher. Graham said (via the Denver Gazette’s Chris Tomasson) the Chiefs, Seahawks and Vikings showed a good amount of interest in Coleman before the draft. No trade-up ended up being necessary for Coleman, however, and the Broncos have acquired some near-future insurance on J.K. Dobbins and likely a longer-term RJ Harvey running mate.

They called a number of times and asked a lot of questions,’’ Graham said of the Broncos, via Tomasson. “They’d sometimes call a couple of times in the same day and they wanted to know intimate things about his family. You’re not going to ask some of the questions they did unless you want him. They wanted me to tell them something that nobody knows about him. Then they’d call back again. I said, ‘Jonah, you’re probably going to Denver.‘”

Teams obviously do considerable research on numerous prospects, but Graham also worked with current Broncos defensive line coach Jamar Cain at Arizona State. Cain has known Coleman since he was 16, per Tomasson, serving as the Sun Devils’ recruiter in the area where the RB grew up (Stockton, Calif.).

Each of the rumored Coleman suitors left the draft with RB picks. The Seahawks addressed their need by taking Jadarian Price at No. 32 overall, doing so after a first-round trade-down move fell through. The Chiefs traded up for Nebraska’s Emmett Johnson in Round 5; the Vikings chose Wake Forest’s Demond Claiborne in Round 6.

The Broncos included Dobbins in their re-signing spree, giving him a two-year deal worth $16MM. Dobbins’ $8MM guarantee nearly quadrupled his 2025 salary, representing an interesting decision considering the productive RB’s injury history. Dobbins added to that medical sheet with a Lisfranc issue last season, costing him seven regular-season games and both Broncos playoff contests. The Broncos still placed a high priority on retaining Dobbins, though it appeared he was the team’s second choice (possibly third). Denver made what was believed to be a strong offer to Travis Etienne and was connected to Breece Hall before the Jets franchise-tagged him. Rather than a pricier back, the Broncos ended up with Dobbins and his likely successor.

Coleman transferred from Arizona to Washington in 2024 but was a regular in both teams’ backfields. After an 871-yard sophomore year with the Wildcats, Coleman totaled 1,053 rushing yards in 2024 and 758 in ’25. Last season brought a Big Ten-leading 17 touchdowns for the 5-foot-8, 220-pound back. He added 354 receiving yards in 2025.

Harvey, a 2025 second-rounder, should remain in the Alvin Kamara-like role in Sean Payton‘s offense. Dobbins will presumably enter 2026 in the Mark Ingram spot, as he was a top-five NFL rusher when he suffered his foot injury last year. While Coleman may well be Dobbins’ successor — no guarantees are on the veteran’s deal for 2027 — The Athletic’s Nick Kosmider notes a short-yardage role might be available to the rookie this season.

Although the Broncos re-signed both Tyler Badie and Jaleel McLaughlin, they are unlikely to retain both on their 53-man roster. The team also rosters fullback Nate Adkins, leaving one (or perhaps zero) spots for Badie or McLaughlin now that Coleman is on the team. The team needed McLaughlin — a fourth-year UDFA — more after Dobbins’ injury, but his path to playing time has since narrowed.

Bills Traded Down After Running Out Of First-Round Grades; Brandon Beane Viewed Corner As Biggest Need

The Bills entered the 2026 NFL Draft with the 26th overall selection, but they did not end up picking in the first round. General manager Brandon Beane made three separate trades to move down to No. 35. Beane revealed that he began wheeling and dealing after the Bills ran out of players with first-round grades (via Alaina Getzenberg of ESPN).

While it is unclear which prospects the Bills were considering at 26, it is worth noting that two edge defenders – Akheem Mesidor (Chargers) and Malachi Lawrence (Cowboys) – as well as receiver KC Concepcion (Browns) and safety Dillon Thieneman (Bears) came off the board in the four preceding picks. Any of them would have filled a need for the Bills, who eyed at least three of them before the draft. The team hosted Concepcion on a “30” visit, and it met with Lawrence and Thieneman at the Combine (via Bills Wire).

After going down nine spots, the Bills used their first pick on former Clemson edge defender T.J. Parker. They later addressed receiver in the fourth round (Skyler Bell, No. 125) and safety in the fifth (Jalon Kilgore, No. 167).

Beane’s second pick on Day 2 was former Ohio State cornerback Davison Igbinosun, whom he moved up for in the second round. He sent a third-rounder (No. 66) and a sixth-rounder (No. 182) to the Broncos for the 62nd choice. Beane did it for two reasons (per Getzenberg): 1.) He saw outside corner as the Bills’ biggest need entering the draft. 2) He noticed a run on corners in the second round. Colton Hood (No. 37, Giants), Avieon Terrell (No. 48, Falcons), D’Angelo Ponds (No. 50, Jets) and Brandon Cisse (No. 52, Packers) were all taken before Igbinosun in Round 2.

Whether corner was the Bills’ most glaring pre-draft need is debatable, but it is clear they were light at the position. They went into the draft with little behind the starting duo of Christian Benford and 2025 first-rounder Maxwell Hairston. Dorian Strong, a 2025 sixth-rounder, may never play again after suffering a neck injury last year. Their only other options on the outside were M.J. Devonshire, Te’Cory Couch and Daryl Porter Jr.. Devonshire and Couch have zero regular-season appearances between them, while Porter has played in just one game (last year with Pittsburgh).

The Bills now have Igbinosun and seventh-round speedster Toriano Pride Jr. as depth behind Benford and Hairston, but they could still add to the position in free agency. Tre’Davious White, a starter for the Bills last year, is among the league’s unsigned veterans. Beane said before the draft that he had not ruled out re-signing White, though he may have changed his tune after the Igbinosun and Pride picks.

Saints Made Multiyear Offer To K’Lavon Chaisson

The Saints have been shopping around for edge rushers this offseason. Connected to Arvell Reese and Rueben Bain Jr. before the draft, New Orleans also made an offer for Kayvon Thibodeaux. The team ultimately pivoted to Tyree Wilson when the Giants rejected their proposal.

Weeks earlier, however, New Orleans was in the K’Lavon Chaisson market. This would have been a homecoming of sorts for the LSU product, and the Saints outflanked the Commanders in terms of contract length. But it sounds like the former first-round pick was willing to bet on himself rather than be tied down to a multiyear deal at a less-than-desirable rate.

Chaisson’s YouTube channel presented a look into his free agency decision. The seventh-year pass rusher’s agent (David Mulugheta) communicated to him a Saints three-year offer, though it does not sound like NFC South team would have placed him much higher — in terms of AAV — than Washington’s proposal (one year, $11MM). Mulugheta indicated he attempted to move the Saints to $13MM per year; the team not getting there created a decision on term length.

As Mulugheta explained to his client the Patriots did not make an offer, preferring Dre’Mont Jones to help in run defense from the EDGE position, the two discussed the Saints and Commanders (Jones signed a three-year, $36.5MM Pats contract). Mike Vrabel said at the Combine he would “love” to retain Chaisson, but nothing ended up materializing on that front.

It is not known how much guaranteed money New Orleans was offering, but the video points to guarantees into Year 2. Chaisson, however, preferred to bet on himself. This led to the late-blooming sack artist declining to return to Louisiana.

I’m not gonna lie, I think that Commanders (offer), only because … you know, they’re competitive. So, we’re going to be in some time of playoff race,” Chaisson said. “I’m going to have more opportunities to be ahead (in) the game. I don’t know about the Saints; I don’t know what they offense look like. To know, like, we’ll be playing from ahead to even have rush opportunities.”

Chaisson, who is heading into an age-27 season, broke through with the Patriots after failing to justify his draft slot with the Jaguars. He joined the Raiders on a one-year, $1.13MM after the Panthers released him in 2024; his 2025 Pats contract came in at one year and $3MM. Chaisson recorded 7.5 regular-season sacks and three more in the playoffs. Mulugheta advised his client to avoid a multiyear deal for less than $11MM per when the Commanders were offering that in a “prove it” scenario.

After the EDGE market transformed throughout 2025, Chaisson opted to take the Commanders’ offer in hopes teams present better proposals — he mentioned a future deal beyond $20MM per year — in 2027. This is an interesting behind-the-curtain look at Chaisson’s process. In the video, he also inquires about the Buccaneers and Ravens, but without much traction from either, the decision came down to the Commanders or Saints.

PFR ranked Chaisson 32nd in this year’s free agent class, predicting some teams would deem his Patriots breakthrough as insufficient for a big multiyear offer. The Saints gave Chase Young a three-year, $51MM deal in 2025, but they had seen him excel with the team in 2024. Chaisson, who will team with Odafe Oweh in Washington, will hope to make a similar jump (Young played on a one-year, $13MM deal in 2024). Meanwhile, Oweh signed a four-year, $100MM deal with the Commanders.

Although the Saints finished with a better record than the Commanders last season, Chaisson looks to view the latter in higher regard because of Jayden Daniels‘ presence. The team, after all, voyaged to the NFC championship game during Daniels’ healthy rookie season before regressing as its quarterback battled multiple injuries. The Saints finished 6-11 last season and saw promise from Tyler Shough, but Chaisson will bet on Daniels presenting him with more pass-rushing snaps in Washington.

Eagles’ Makai Lemon Signs Rookie Deal

A week after the Eagles selected him 20th overall, first-round wide receiver Makai Lemon has signed his rookie contract, per Ian Rapoport of NFL.com. Lemon is the first member of the 2026 class to put pen to paper. His fully guaranteed four-year deal is worth $20.81MM. It includes an $11.5MM signing bonus and a fifth-year option.

After starring at USC over the past couple of seasons, Lemon nearly began his NFL career in the area. The Rams considered Lemon at No. 13 overall, but they instead chose Alabama quarterback Ty Simpson. The Steelers then looked poised to draft Lemon 21st, but Eagles general manager Howie Roseman swooped in by trading up three spots for the wideout. Lemon got a call from the Eagles when he was on the phone with the Steelers, forcing them to pivot to Arizona State offensive tackle Max Iheanachor with their top selection.

The 5-foot-11, 192-pound Lemon cemented himself as a first-rounder with a stellar performance in 2025. After Lemon hauled in 79 receptions for 1,156 yards and 11 touchdowns in 12 games, the 21-year-old won the Fred Biletnikoff Award (given to the best receiver in the nation).

The Lemon pick became the latest notable transaction at receiver this offseason for the Eagles, though it probably won’t be the last. Before landing Lemon, Roseman added to the team’s receiving corps in free agency (Marquise Brown, Elijah Moore) and the trade market (Dontayvion Wicks). Those four are now part of a group led by the high-end DeVonta SmithA.J. Brown one-two punch, but the latter might not be in place much longer. A Brown trade has looked likely throughout the offseason, and expectations are that it will occur sometime after June 2.

If Brown ends up out the door before next season, it will increase the already strong odds of Lemon taking on a significant role as a rookie. He and the rest of the Eagles’ rookies will start minicamp on Friday.