Browns, Titans Interested In WR Wan’Dale Robinson?
If the Colts are to reach an agreement with Alec Pierce to keep him off the market, other free agent wide receivers can adjust their asking prices. Wan’Dale Robinson would be among those who would benefit, even if the undersized Giants contributor’s skillset differs from Pierce’s.
Robinson could end up in a familiar offense. The Titans are believed to be interested in the former second-round pick, Essentiallysports.com’s Tony Pauline notes. Robinson spent four seasons in Brian Daboll‘s offense; despite extensive Eagles interest, Daboll became the Titans’ OC last month. Additionally, Pauline indicates the Browns are an interested party for Robinson.
Tennessee came up recently as a team set to pursue wideouts in free agency. The Titans held the NFL cap-space lead before cutting Lloyd Cushenberry and Xavier Woods. They are projected to hold more than $97MM, per OverTheCap. Tennessee is expected to add more than $13MM to that total, as a Calvin Ridley cut is expected. It is worth wondering if the Titans will try to trade the Ran Carthon signee, but he has underwhelmed on a $23MM-per-year deal and is now 31 and coming off a seven-game 2025.
The Browns saw Jerry Jeudy‘s production nosedive last season. After a 1,229-yard 2024 slate, the former Broncos first-rounder tallied 602 yards and committed some costly drops. While Jeudy has never enjoyed a plus quarterback situation, he did not perform like an upper-crust receiver last season. The Browns have Jeudy signed through 2028, with option bonuses making a separation rather difficult this year.
Cleveland, which is expected to let David Njoku walk, is thin beyond Jeudy at receiver. No other Cleveland wideout cleared 350 yards last season, with rookie UDFA Isaiah Bond second among Browns receivers in yardage (338). The Browns hold a projected $3MM-plus in cap space, but they will (again) restructure Deshaun Watson‘s contract to create another chunk.
Robinson is coming off a 1,014-yard season, though his height (5-foot-8) will likely be an issue for some teams. Still, he will command a hefty salary as a first-time free agent. He joins Pierce, Jauan Jennings, Romeo Doubs, Deebo Samuel and Rashid Shaheed as the top receivers on a market that will not include George Pickens — set for a Cowboys franchise tag.
The 2022 second-round pick is also a Kentucky alum from the state, potentially making a Tennessee trek appealing. The Giants are not expected to merely let Robinson walk, with a recent report going as far to indicate they are “likely” to retain him. But New York changed coaching staffs and has Darius Slayton tied to a three-year, $36MM deal (with guarantees for 2026) alongside Malik Nabers‘ rookie deal. The Giants are running out of time here, though. They exclusive negotiating rights with the talented slot receiver expire March 9, when the legal tampering period begins.
NFL Could Allow Teams To Trade Draft Picks Five Years In Advance
FEBRUARY 26: The Browns have made this proposal, according to Pro Football Talk’s Mike Florio. Cleveland, which previously proposed a measure to push the trade deadline back (which eventually passed), would need 24 votes in the ownership ranks for this to pass. Depending how owners proceed, more trade opportunities could emerge beginning this offseason.
FEBRUARY 10: As things currently stand, NFL teams are permitted to trade draft picks no further than three years into the future. That could soon change. 
During an appearance on the Pat McAfee Show (video link), ESPN’s Adam Schefter reported there will be a push from at least one team to extend the range for draft picks being dealt. Efforts will be made for selections as many as five years down the road to be allowed in trades, per Schefter. This will be something to monitor during next month’s league meetings.
Any expansion of trade flexibility would represent a shift in the direction of the NBA. That league’s rules allow for picks up to seven years in the future to be dealt. It should be kept in mind, though, that the Stepien Rule applies limits to how often teams can trade away a first-round pick. As a result of the rule, NBA teams cannot trade future first-round selections in consecutive years.
No such rule currently exists in the NFL. If things were to change this spring, however, a similar provision may receive consideration. Any widening of the range for draft capital to be traded – and its associated conditions – could of course lead to a change in roster-building strategy. Largely speaking, teams around the NFL attempt to remain competitive from one year to the next (due in large part to the requirement they spend close to the salary cap over any three-year period).
That approach could be altered to an extent if collecting large amounts of draft capital over an extended period became a viable option for rebuilding franchises. On the other hand, it would be interesting to see if contending teams became increasingly willing to part with picks in the distant future to facilitate win-now moves on a more frequent basis. Recent years have seen an uptick in trades leading up to the deadline, while blockbuster swaps in the offseason will no doubt remain possible in any given year no matter the circumstances.
The most recent case which saw an NFL team trade picks three years into the future was the Browns-Texans Deshaun Watson deal. Cleveland sent Houston a package highlighted by first-round selections in three consecutive years. The team would have been able to spread those picks out over a longer period (provided the Texans had been amenable to it, of course) had the range for pick trades been longer. When rule changes are considered during the spring, the potential for things to change on this front will be something to watch closely.
Browns To Conduct Open QB Competition; Outside Options In Play
The Deshaun Watson contract is in its final year. Because of the numerous restructures the Browns have made on the disastrous fully guaranteed deal, it is widely expected to remain on Cleveland’s payroll in 2026. Because of the void years-driven restructures, Cleveland is positioned to carry considerable dead money from the deal in 2027.
Jimmy Haslam admitted the 2022 trade/extension sequence was a mistake, but because of how costly it would be for the Browns to release Watson this year, he remains on the roster. This is the closest thing the NFL has seen to a bloated MLB-like contract clogging a team’s payroll, and other teams will use the deal as evidence they do not need to authorize fully guaranteed long-term accords. But Watson may not be done as a Browns player yet.
Todd Monken confirmed the embattled QB will be part of an open competition for the 2026 job. While Shedeur Sanders finished the 2025 campaign as Cleveland’s starter, Monken did not commit to him in his first year on the job.
“I don’t know why it wouldn’t be an open competition,” Monken said (via Fox Sports’ Ralph Vacchiano) at the Combine. “And I don’t mean that harshly, but I don’t think there’s enough on film over the last couple of years one way or the other to say, ‘Boy, we have a starter at quarterback’ yet.
“… I think any time that you have a player that, at one time, has exhibited the skillset at an elite level, I think you’re always going to give them the benefit of the doubt that somehow we might be able to get that out of him again.”
Watson’s woeful performance has called many to label the Browns’ 2022 trade, when factoring in the contract component, as the worst in NFL history. While the Broncos managed to escape their Russell Wilson albatross contract and reach back-to-back playoff brackets despite the record-setting dead money number, the Browns cannot do the same with Watson. If they cut the nine-year veteran this offseason, it would bring $131.16MM in dead money. Even spread over two years, that is untenable. So, the Browns essentially have no choice but to see if the former Texans Pro Bowler can make an impact in an age-31 season.
Watson’s 33.1 cumulative QBR since the 2022 season ranks as the worst among qualified options in this span, per ESPN.com’s Daniel Oyefusi. He is tied to an $80.72MM cap number. The Browns will once again, per Oyefusi, restructure the deal. That will mean a lower 2026 cap number but more dead money once Watson is off the roster in 2027.
This contract undoubtedly influenced the Browns’ coaching search, with a few names — Jesse Minter, Mike McDaniel and Grant Udinski — dropping out of the running. Monken’s job will be tougher for two years as a result, but for now, the new Cleveland HC will at least include the 30-year-old QB in a competition along with Sanders and Dillon Gabriel.
It would be a surprise if Watson won the job, though the Browns do not have a good avenue to an upgrade. Fernando Mendoza is widely expected to go first overall to the Raiders, and this draft class features a gulf between Mendoza and the field at QB. GM Andrew Berry said the Browns would look for an outside starter, rather than limiting the competition to a Sanders-Gabriel-Watson derby, but said it is “to be determined” when asked if the Browns have a realistic path to adding a viable veteran.
The Browns, who have been linked to Malik Willis and Alabama’s Ty Simpson thus far this offseason, are projected to hold barely $3MM in cap space. They also do not have any of their 2025 O-line starters under contract. The team chose Gabriel two rounds before trading up for Sanders, calling many to wonder how invested Berry and then-HC Kevin Stefanski were in the two-year Colorado starter. Gabriel will not be ruled out of the competition.
“He may be forgotten externally, but he’s not forgotten to us,” Berry said, via Oyefusi. “Look, Dillon, he’s working. He’s going to handle everything that’s within his control, and we love all of our players and our home roster. Dillon’s a guy that has a bright future in this league.”
Sanders usurping Gabriel last season may precede the Browns adding a starter-level option in free agency or via trade or selecting a developmental option in the draft. Gabriel should be considered a trade candidate, per The Athletic’s Zac Jackson, who expects the Browns to deal the diminutive quarterback this offseason.
The Browns traded two QBs (Kenny Pickett, Joe Flacco) after having both in camp last year, but they may not have room for both Sanders and Gabriel on the roster — with Watson’s contract keeping him in place — if another QB is added this spring.
Further exposing Pro Bowl accolades as a modern measure of success, Sanders received an invite after throwing 7 TD passes and 10 INTs in eight games (seven starts). Sanders completed just 56.6% of his passes, though he went 3-4 as a starter. Gabriel played in front of Sanders throughout training camp and received the first crack following the Flacco trade. He finished with a 7-2 TD-INT ratio and completed 59.5% of his throws (Sanders, though, fared better in yards per attempt — 6.6 to 5.1 — than his rookie teammate).
Watson, who suffered two Achilles tears since October 2024, did return to practice late last season but was never activated. He will be expected to participate in the Browns’ offseason program, where Monken and Co. will evaluate the latest Cleveland QB competition.
Jermaine Johnson Sought New York Exit; More Joe Douglas-Era Jets Available?
Aaron Glenn confirmed previous suspicions that he will be calling plays on defense this season. The Jets’ second-year coach indicated (via ESPN.com’s Rich Cimini) that will be case, with new DC hire Brian Duker being in place as a game-planning lieutenant. This offseason change probably helped influence today’s Jermaine Johnson–T’Vondre Sweat trade.
Johnson is reuniting with Robert Saleh in Tennessee. He follows Sauce Gardner and Quinnen Williams as Joe Douglas-era defensive pillars shipped out via trade since deadline day. Unlike Gardner and Williams, Johnson remains on his rookie contract.
One season, a fifth-year option the Jets exercised in 2025, remains on Johnson’s deal. While Johnson stands to be a better scheme fit with the Titans, ESPN.com’s Jeremy Fowler notes he had quietly sought a New York exit. This came after a report a 2026 Jets extension was unlikely.
A Nashville reunion with Saleh was one of Johnson’s preferred destinations, per Fowler. The Titans will be running Saleh’s scheme, which has included a 4-3 alignment in San Francisco and New York, while the Jets will be transitioning to a 3-4 look as Glenn takes the reins on defense, SNY’s Connor Hughes notes. Sweat will certainly be a better fit as a 3-4 nose in New York; he served in that capacity for the past two seasons in Tennessee.
As Johnson joined Williams in seeking a Jets exit, Sweat was falling out of favor in Tennessee. Sweat could not consistently keep his weight where the Titans wanted it, per veteran reporter Paul Kuharsky. He will now be part of an overhauled Jets front seven, one that still features Will McDonald as an EDGE pillar. But the Jets have moved on from Williams, Johnson, John Franklin-Myers, Haason Reddick and Bryce Huff since the 2024 offseason. With Micheal Clemons a free agent, McDonald is about all that is left from Joe Douglas‘ regime on that unit.
With Johnson out of the picture, the Jets will be closely connected to using the No. 2 overall pick — presuming the Raiders follow through on their long-rumored Fernando Mendoza selection — on an edge defender. Ohio State’s Vell Reese and Texas Tech’s David Bailey certainly did not do anything to lower their draft stocks at the Combine today. One could be added to complement McDonald come April. The Jets viewed McDonald as the higher-value player compared to Johnson last year, with the latter struggling in his first season following an Achilles tear.
The Jets may not be done trading assets acquired under Douglas, with Hughes adding talk at the Combine points to internal interest in unloading more players from the previous regime. This does not include Breece Hall, whom Gang Green plans to tag before next week’s deadline. But the dwindling number of Douglas-Saleh-era pieces may thin out further soon, as the deadline showed no one added prior to the Glenn-Darren Mougey duo’s arrival is particularly safe here.
Garrett Wilson isn’t going anywhere, and Cimini adds center/guard Joe Tippmann may be an extension candidate. Sliding to right guard (in place of the injured Alijah Vera-Tucker) after the Josh Myers signing, Tippmann has full-season starter experience at center and RG. The Jets’ two-year left guard starter, John Simpson, is a free agent. Being acquired under Douglas would make him less likely to return, but Tippmann looks to be a player this regime wants to keep working with beyond 2026.
The Jets are riding a 15-year playoff drought, by far the NFL’s longest skid, and 2025 trade acquisition Harrison Phillips said recently Glenn inherited a “cancerous, truculent” group. Phillips remains under contract, making this an interesting stance to take ahead of an April return to work. But the Jets were worse last season than in the final three Saleh years, continuing an extended period of futility.
“I think AG inherited a very cancerous, truculent group — whole, top to bottom,” Phillips said during an interview with Roundtable Sports (via Cimini). “It’s not individual people’s fault. I was there for one season — it was a very difficult season — and I almost wanted to waver on some of my thoughts and my beliefs and my optimism. So, I can’t imagine being there for year after year after year after year and not seeing the results that you wanted, and it tainted people.”
Amid that struggle, Glenn canned DC hire Steve Wilks — last season’s play-caller — and was tied to being close to hiring Don Martindale as his next DC. Rumblings about Woody Johnson changing that plan (and having Glenn call plays) surfaced. Glenn naturally defended his boss, noting (via Cimini) the owner — known as a meddlesome figure — is “not pushing me to pick coaches.”
Glenn’s seat is certainly much hotter after a 3-14 debut; he and Duker — a Lions assistant under Glenn from 2021-23 before a Miami relocation — will be tasked with turning around a unit that regressed considerably after Saleh and Jeff Ulbrich‘s exits.
Another former Glenn charge appears to be on the Jets’ radar. Alex Anzalone, who overlapped with Glenn in Detroit and New Orleans, is in play for the Jets, per Essentiallysports.com’s Tony Pauline, who notes mutual interest in a signing is present. A third-round Saints pick in their tide-turning 2017 class, Anzalone followed Glenn to Detroit in 2021. He started five seasons with the Lions, but the NFC North team — which has a slew of extension candidates based on its recent drafts — did not agree on an extension for the veteran linebacker last year.
The Lions were believed to have interest in re-signing Anzalone, but Pauline adds a market is developing for the 93-start player. Anzalone, 31, played out a three-year, $18.75MM deal. During his Detroit tenure, the Lions used a first-round pick on Jack Campbell and re-signed LB Derrick Barnes. These developments look to point the nine-year veteran elsewhere, and there could be a fit in New York — where Saleh-era piece Quincy Williams is nearing free agency.
The Jets also have safeties Andre Cisco and Tony Adams set to hit the market, and Pauline indicates the team is expected to pursue veteran help on the market next month. Jets meetings with agents representing safety UFAs-to-be are expected to take place this week, as the team’s Week 1 defense is poised to be vastly different from what it looked like to open last season.
Seahawks OLB DeMarcus Lawrence Considering Retirement
Going from missing most of the 2024 season with a Lisfranc injury to being part of a dominant Super Bowl LX-winning defense, DeMarcus Lawrence completed a career turnaround this past season. He is under contract for two more years, but the Seahawks edge rusher does not look to have committed to playing in 2026.
The longtime Cowboys defensive end starter has not informed the Seahawks if he is returning, ESPN.com’s Brady Henderson said during an appearance on Seattle Sports’ Bump and Stacy. Those in Lawrence’s camp are also not certain of the player’s plans, per Henderson. Lawrence is tied to a three-year, $32.5MM contract.
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Seattle took a chance on the 12-year veteran, who reunited with DC Aden Durde via his free agency commitment, and was rewarded. Lawrence finished with six sacks and two fumble-sixes, scoring both his touchdowns in the same half of a game against the Cardinals, and he then registered sacks in both the Seahawks’ NFC playoff wins.
The regular-season work earned Lawrence a Pro Bowl invite, representing a resurgence after his 2024 season ended four games in (the Pro Bowl nod brought an additional $500K). Lawrence worked as the Seahawks’ OLB starter opposite Uchenna Nwosu, who had also battled injury problems in recent years. The team has both under contract for 2026. Lawrence, 34 in April, is due $8.15MM in base salary; of that total, $5MM is guaranteed. The Seahawks would be left with a few million in dead money if Lawrence passed on that 2026 salary and retired on top.
Drafted shortly after the Cowboys released DeMarcus Ware, Lawrence was later franchise-tagged twice after becoming Dallas’ lead pass rusher. He transitioned to a sidekick role once the Cowboys obtained Micah Parsons, but the veteran still earned two Pro Bowl nods — the second of which as an alternate — during his Parsons partnership. Lawrence has 67.5 career sacks and has been solid against the run during his career as well.
Losing Lawrence would give the Seahawks a bit of a need on the edge. The team dangled Boye Mafe in trades during his contract year, benching the previously productive pass rusher with Nwosu and Lawrence staying healthy. Mafe is two weeks away from free agency, but the Seahawks still have Derick Hall under contract for one more season. Seattle pursued Von Miller even after signing Lawrence last year. It would stand to reason, especially with Mafe unsigned, the team would seek OLB help if Lawrence walks away.
Colts, S Nick Cross In Talks; LB Zaire Franklin On Roster Bubble?
Making no secret of Daniel Jones and Alec Pierce being their top priorities, the Colts have big decisions to make in the coming days. The quarterback and 1,000-yard wide receiver’s statuses point Nick Cross out the door.
The former third-round pick has been a quality starter at safety over the past two seasons, and while multiple factors (the Jones and Pierce matters among them) could point the young DB out of town, Chris Ballard said (via the Indianapolis Star’s Nathan Brown) he has spoken with Cross’ agent about a possible re-signing.
“I’m proud of Nick; I’m happy for Nick. Look, sometimes for players, there’s going to come a point where you and I don’t agree, and you don’t like me because of finances,” Ballard said during an appearance on The Fan Morning Show. “There’s this big pie, and I can slice it up and give you a piece of the pie, but someone (else) might be willing to give you a bigger piece, and if that happens, we’ve both done our jobs.
“We’ve done our jobs developing you, and you’ve done your job taking the coaching and getting better each and every year, and you deserve that opportunity. So we’ll see what the future holds with Nick. He made it to free agency on a high note, and we’ll see how that works out.”
Not only is the QB-WR duo taking precedence here, but the Colts (projected $35.7MM in cap space, per OverTheCap) already made tremendous commitments in the secondary last year. They gave Camryn Bynum a four-year, $60MM deal and handed Charvarius Ward a three-year, $54MM contract in free agency. Months later, Indianapolis traded two first-round picks and Adonai Mitchell for Sauce Gardner, whom the Jets had just given a four-year, $120.4MM extension. With Kenny Moore on a three-year, $30MM contract, there does not seem to be room for Cross in Indy’s secondary on a second contract.
The Colts traded a 2023 third-round pick to move into the 2022 third round for Cross, who only made four starts over his first two seasons. From 2024-25, however, the Maryland product was a prolific tackler (266 combined stops) and registered 11 tackles for loss in that span. Cross, 24, started all 34 Colts games from 2024-25 and will be poised to land a nice second contract.
That said, this is a crowded safety market. Big money will not be available for the full lot of starter-level FAs. Jaquan Brisker, Bryan Cook, Alohi Gilman, Jalen Thompson, Kamren Curl, Coby Bryant, Jaylinn Hawkins and Andre Cisco are all 20-something starters unsigned. Veterans Kevin Byard, C.J. Gardner-Johnson, Kyle Dugger and Donovan Wilson are among the older starter-caliber cogs headed to the market. Some teams in need of safety help will benefit from this glut, which presents a buyer’s market. Though, Cross (25 in September) being on the young end will benefit him.
Age may be working against one of Indianapolis’ core defenders. Ballard did not ensure Zaire Franklin would be back with the Colts for a ninth season. Franklin (30 in July) is tied to a three-year, $31.26MM contract. The Colts would save $9MM by cutting their top tackler, who is due an $8.24MM base salary in 2026 — the final year of his deal.
“I think you guys all know my feelings for Zaire Franklin,” Ballard said, via Brown. “We have a very close relationship. I thought he played good football, and the addition of Pratt, when we got him into the mix, he ended up adding a much needed will that we needed. The future, we’ll see. Pratt’s up. Zaire’s under contract, so we’ll see how that ends up playing out.”
When injuries slowed Shaquille Leonard, the Colts received a boost from another member of their deep 2018 draft class. A seventh-rounder out of Syracuse, Franklin has been a regular starter since the 2021 season. Primarily a special-teamer prior to that, Franklin became a late-blooming LB who landed three Colts contracts. He has two 170-plus-tackle seasons under his belt. After a 179-tackle 2023, Franklin led the NFL with 173 in 2024 en route to second-team All-Pro acclaim.
The Colts made a change at linebacker last year by letting E.J. Speed walk. They added ex-Lou Anarumo charge Germaine Pratt in-season. Pro Football Focus did not like the Franklin-Anarumo fit, ranking him as the NFL’s second-worst linebacker regular in 2025. Franklin, 29, would still generate considerable FA interest if released. With money perhaps needed for a franchise tag, veteran defenders like Franklin and perhaps Grover Stewart will be places to look for cap space.
Titans Eyeing Peter Skoronski Extension
While the Titans fired Ran Carthon after two years, the first of the GM’s draft picks has become a cornerstone performer. Peter Skoronski has started every game he has played through three seasons and will be on track to see his fifth-year option exercised.
Missing only three career games due to injury, the converted tackle has been Tennessee’s left guard starter throughout his career. Although the Titans can/will extend his rookie contract through the 2027 via the option, a true extension will be pursued.
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“We always try to secure our best players early,” GM Mike Borgonzi said. “And that is obviously a tool, an option we can use. But our goal is to get something done with Peter. With Peter, he is one of our better players, and we’d like him here long-term.”
ESPN’s pass block win rate metric has graded the Northwestern alum in the top 20 among guards in each of the past two seasons, slotting him 15th in 2024 and seventh in ’25. Pro Football Focus graded Skoronski fifth overall at the position in 2025, tabbing him as the NFL’s second-best pass blocker among guards. The 24-year-old blocker has generated momentum for an extension.
The Titans are among the teams, however, that have never authorized a post-Year 3 extension for a first-round pick. By exercising Skoronski’s option (a projected $20.5MM, per OverTheCap), Tennessee would move his contract year to 2027. That would buy the organization time. The team proceeded this way with Jeffery Simmons, waiting until 2023 to pay the 2019 first-rounder. They paid 2014 first-rounder Taylor Lewan in 2018, after picking up his option the year prior. Those are the only two first-round picks to receive an extension from the Titans in the option era (2014-present).
Considering some of the failures this organization has run into in Round 1 over the past decade, the Titans will likely be eager to have Skoronski on a second contract. The team has only one big-ticket contract along its O-line (for LT Dan Moore Jr.) presently, but in holding the NFL’s most cap space (increasing that margin by cutting center Lloyd Cushenberry on Thursday) and having Cam Ward on a rookie deal, a Skoronski payday will be fairly easy to accommodate this offseason. The NFL has seven $20MM-per-year guards; Skoronski could be No. 8, depending on when the Titans move to complete this deal.
Cowboys To Place Second-Round RFA Tender On G T.J. Bass
The Cowboys are showing a strong commitment to their restricted free agents. With a second-round tender coming to kicker Brandon Aubrey, Dallas has another one planned for a lesser-known player.
Three-year guard T.J. Bass will receive a second-round RFA tender, ESPN.com’s Jeremy Fowler tweets. The second-round tender price is not yet known, as the salary cap has not been revealed, but OverTheCap projects it to come in at $5.81MM. This will mean around $12MM allocated to two RFAs for the Cowboys.
Bass has been a key backup in Dallas, starting 10 games in relief during his career. Part of the Cowboys’ 2023 UDFA class, the Oregon alum has logged between 315 and 351 offensive snaps in each of his three seasons. Bass split his time nearly equally at LG and RG last season, making starts in relief of Tyler Smith and Tyler Booker. Pro Football Focus graded Bass 29th overall among qualified guards last season.
With Smith extended and Booker locked in at the other guard spot after being drafted 12th overall, Bass has no pathway to a starting job in Dallas. That does make the use of a second-round tender interesting, but the Cowboys are effectively making sure they would collect a valuable asset (a Round 2 pick) if a team signed Bass to an offer sheet and Dallas did not match.
This tender is also interesting due to Bass having only taken snaps at guard as a pro. In place as a second-stringer throughout his Dallas run, the soon-to-be 27-year-old blocker has not made any appearances at tackle or center. Bass, though, came to Dallas after spending his final Oregon season as the Ducks’ left tackle during Bo Nix‘s first Ducks season. Bass moved to LT during his junior season at Oregon, being a guard starter for the Ducks in the 1 1/2 seasons prior to that switch.
Dolphins Almost Hired Lions DC Kelvin Sheppard As HC?
Lions defensive coordinator Kelvin Sheppard was a finalist for the Dolphins’ head coaching job that went to Jeff Hafley. His comments this week indicate he might have been the runner-up.
“Full disclosure, I was in communication with the Dolphins for about two weeks,” Sheppard said (via Dave Birkett of the Detroit Free Press). “After the interview I was contacted by three people from that front office.” Sheppard not provide more details into his communication with Miami , but said information he received was “as real as it gets.”
Hafley interviewed with the Dolphins on January 17 and Sheppard followed the next day. Hafley’s was announced the evening of Sheppard’s interview. That raised some concern that Sheppard’s interview was a sham, intended only to fulfill the NFL’s Rooney Rule requirement. But he is appreciative of the invitation nonetheless, as the Dolphins were the first team to express formal interest in him for a head coaching jog.
“Real or not, I got the opportunity to do it,” Sheppard said. “Real or fake, I went through the process and I learned a lot and I grew from it, so that’s what I’m taking from it.”
The 38-year-old faced an uphill battle in his first year as Detroit’s defensive coordinator. Several of his top players went down with injuries during the season, forcing them to limp to the finish line as they missed the playoffs. A bounce-back year in 2026 could raise his profile around the league and get him in the mix for vacancies next hiring cycle.
Bears QB Tyson Bagent Drawing Interest
FEBRUARY 26: The Bears will need “a significant package of picks and/or players” to move Bagent, per Essentially Sports’ Tony Pauline. It is hard to imagine a team getting that aggressive on such an unproven passer, but the renaissance of quarterback reclamation projects could encourage one to acquire Bagent and his cheap contract. He is only owed $8.5MM over the next two years. His $4MM salary in 2026 is set to guarantee in March, per OverTheCap, but a team acquiring him would be planning to pay that money either way.
FEBRUARY 24: Shortly before he began his third NFL season in 2025, backup quarterback Tyson Bagent inked a two-year, $10MM extension with the Bears. The deal keeps Bagent under wraps through 2027, but he may finish it in another uniform. General manager Ryan Poles revealed Tuesday that teams have inquired about Bagent. Poles wouldn’t rule out trading the 25-year-old, Patrick Finley of the Chicago Sun-Times reports.
Bagent, who joined the Bears as an undrafted free agent from Division II Shepherd in 2023, backed up Justin Fields as a rookie. But Bagent still made five appearances and four starts, during which he completed 65.7% of throws for 859 yards (6.0 per attempt), three touchdowns, six interceptions and a 71.4 passer rating. Bagent has barely seen any regular-season action since then.
The Bears cut the cord on the failed Fields experiment when they traded him to the Steelers in March 2024. Although the Bears won seven games during the Fields/Bagent season, they had already secured the No. 1 pick in the draft thanks to a March 2023 blockbuster with the Panthers.
A month after the Bears dumped Fields, they used the top selection in 2024 on former USC Heisman Trophy-winning QB Caleb Williams. As expected, Williams was the Bears’ starter from Day 1. He has not missed a game two years later.
While Williams’ career got off to a somewhat rocky start during a 5-12 rookie year, he and the Bears made enormous strides in an NFC North-winning campaign in 2025. The Bears went on to win their wild-card matchup against the hated Packers, but their season ended a week later with an overtime loss to the Rams in the divisional round.
With Williams now looking like the long-awaited answer under center for the Bears, Bagent does not have a real path to playing time in Chicago. The 6-foot-3, 212-pounder has attempted just six passes in seven appearances since Williams came to town, but head coach Ben Johnson regards his backup as a starting-caliber QB.
“I do think there is a lot of merit to having a strong No. 2 quarterback, which he certainly fits that bill,” Johnson said Tuesday (via Finley). “I’m of the mind that he’s probably one of the best 32 in the NFL. His preseason tape over the last few years has probably confirmed that, in my opinion. But if I took myself out of the equation, I want what’s best for him. If he would like an opportunity to start, I certainly hope he can get that somewhere.”
That’s a glowing endorsement from Johnson, one of the league’s brightest offensive minds. If at least one other team agrees with Johnson’s assessment, it could put Poles in position to sell high on Bagent this offseason.

