Commanders To Start QB Josh Johnson In Week 17
With Jayden Daniels shut down for the season and Marcus Mariota dealing with hand and quad injuries, the Commanders will call on Josh Johnson to start on Christmas, per The Athletic’s Nicki Jhabvala.
Johnson, 39, has appeared in three games this year, though he threw his first pass of the season on Saturday night against the Eagles. After Mariota went down on Saturday night, Johnson completed five of his nine passes for 43 yards and an interception to close out the game. He will, undoubtedly, be looking for better results in a full game.
Jeff Driskel, who re-signed with the Commanders on Monday, will back up Johnson, while Sam Hartman will be signed from the practice squad to serve as the emergency third quarterback on game day. (A quarterback elevated from the practice squad cannot be the emergency QB3, so Hartman had to be signed to the active roster to fill that role.)
In theory, Dallas’ bottom-ranked pass defense could be a relatively welcoming matchup for Johnson’s first start since 2021. However, the Commanders’ passing offense has been one of the league’s worst, due in large part to injuries that are still taking their toll. Johnson will be Washington’s third different starting quarterback this year with a short-than-usual week between games, so success is no guarantee.
Panthers Designate Robert Hunt For Return From IR
Carolina has gone through most of 2025 without starting right guard Robert Hunt, but a late-season return from IR is on the table. The Panthers opened his 21-day practice window on Wednesday, per Darin Gantt of the team’s website.
After spending his first four NFL seasons with the Dolphins, Hunt joined the Panthers in March 2024 on a five-year, $100MM agreement. Hunt, who became the fourth guard in history to sign for $20MM-plus per year, started in 16 games and earned his first Pro Bowl nod last season.
This year has been a lost campaign for Hunt, who hasn’t played since suffering a torn biceps in Week 2. The Panthers have still managed an 8-7 record, and they’re holding a slim lead over the Buccaneers in the NFC South with two games left. Carolina won the first meeting between the two teams last Sunday. A rematch in Week 18 could decide the division. It’s unclear whether Hunt will be ready by then.
Hunt’s injury has led to the Panthers using several different options at right guard. Chandler Zavala, Jake Curhan, Brady Christensen, and Austin Corbett have all seen time there in Hunt’s absence. Zavala is now on IR with a knee injury, while Christensen tore his Achilles in late October.
Although Hunt is considered a better run blocker than pass blocker, Carolina ranks a respectable 11th in rushing. Lead back Rico Dowdle has already eclipsed the 1,000-yard mark, but his production has declined since early November. Hunt’s return would aid his cause and perhaps boost the Panthers’ chances of winning the division and making noise in the playoffs.
Buccaneers Open Calijah Kancey’s Practice Window
Having lost six of seven, the once-thriving Buccaneers are sitting at 7-8 and out of the playoff picture. Still with a chance to win the NFC South, the Buccaneers may welcome defensive tackle Calijah Kancey back from IR soon. They opened his 21-day practice window on Wednesday, per Scott Smith of the team’s website.
Kancey, the 19th overall pick in the 2023 draft, started in all 26 appearances in his first two seasons. He hoped to build on a 7.5-sack showing from 2024, but a pectoral tear has limited him to two games. Kancey underwent surgery after Week 2, his most recent appearance.
While Kancey missed five games last year, he still finished second among Buccaneers defensive linemen in snaps. Standout nose tackle Vita Vea led the way then, and that remains the case this season.
With Kancey out of commission for most of 2025, Logan Hall, Elijah Roberts, and Greg Gaines have logged the most playing time alongside Vea. Those three have combined for just 4.5 sacks, three fewer than Kancey posted a year ago.
The Bucs rank a respectable 11th in total defense, but they’re 16th in sacks and 24th in points allowed. A potential Kancey return, whether in the regular season or playoffs, should improve the unit. However, it may not happen until next season if Tampa Bay doesn’t rally for a playoff berth.
With a 23-20 loss to Carolina last week, the Buccaneers fell behind the 8-7 Panthers in the division race. Nevertheless, Tampa Bay still controls its own destiny. If the Bucs beat the Dolphins this Sunday and defeat the Panthers in a Week 18 rematch, they’ll win the NFC South for the fifth straight year.
Steelers “Reaffirmed Their Commitment” To D.K. Metcalf
D.K. Metcalf‘s two-game suspension was upheld earlier this evening. While the ban will obviously keep the Steelers receiver off the field for the rest of the regular season, it will also have an impact on his cap outlook moving forward.
[RELATED: Steelers WR D.K. Metcalf Issued Two-Game Suspension]
As noted earlier tonight, the suspension also voided the $45MM in guaranteed money that was remaining on the player’s contract. That includes the $25MM that was fully guaranteed for next season. Metcalf will also forfeit $555K in salary. The 28-year-old inked a five-year, $150MM extension with the franchise following his offseason trade from Seattle.
Of course, this wrinkle would only be notable if the Steelers suddenly wanted out of their commitment with the player. It doesn’t sound like that’s the case, at least for the time being. According to NFL Network’s Tom Pelissero, the team “reaffirmed their commitment” to Metcalf for 2026 and beyond. The two sides plan to move forward “together,” following Mike Tomlin‘s vote of confidence from earlier today.
“He did explain to me why he did what he did. And I certainly don’t condone the behavior, but I support DK,” Tomlin said (via ESPN’s Brooke Pryor). “And I really don’t have a lot to add other than what I just told you.”
The suspension stemmed from Metcalf’s altercation with a fan in Detroit on Sunday. Meanwhile, Pelissero reports that neither the NFL nor the Lions plan to take action against the other individual because “there was no violation of the fan code of conduct.”
Metcalf’s suspension was upheld by commissioner Roger Goodell’s designee, former NFL coach Chris Palmer (per ESPN’s Adam Schefter). Former wideout Jordy Nelson has served in a similar role for a handful of suspensions during the 2025 season, including Denzel Perryman‘s recent appeal.
Cardinals QB Kyler Murray Unlikely To Generate Large Trade Market
Kyler Murray has been sidelined since Week 5, and he will not play again this season. Naturally, speculation continues to swirl about the former No. 1 pick’s future in Arizona. 
Murray’s contract runs through 2028; more importantly, it includes $36.8MM in guarantees for next season. Suitors will of course not be enthused about taking on that figure in the event of a trade, and it would come as no surprise if the Cardinals were to retain salary to facilitate a swap. Even so, a large market may not exist in this case.
Multiple executives informed Jeff Howe of The Athletic (subscription required) Murray is viewed as having little or no trade value at this point. The two-time Pro Bowler underperformed when on the field in 2025, his seventh season as a Cardinal. Murray has largely avoided lengthy absences in his career, aside from his 2023 ACL tear and the current ailment which will keep him sidelined until the offseason. His latest injury will no doubt hinder Arizona’s ability to receive any substantial value in a trade.
The Cardinals beat the Dolphins to the punch here, with momentum toward a separation from Murray emerging weeks before the Tua Tagovailoa benching. It would surprise if Murray did not land somewhere with at least a chance to start next year, but he has struggled to reprise his early-career form.
Murray, 28, was also not playing especially well in Kliff Kingsbury‘s system before suffering an ACL tear in December 2022. A two-time original-ballot Pro Bowler (2020, 2021), Murray ranked 19th in QBR before his tear that season. He ranked 22nd in 2023 and saw his QBR and yards-per-attempt numbers (46.6, 6.0) drop to career-low figures in his five-game 2025. That said, Murray did place ninth in QBR last season. And the Cardinals’ 8-9 record in 2024 has suddenly aged pretty well.
That said, Murray has also missed 30 games due to injury. He came up as a shutdown candidate well before it was determined the Cards were sticking with journeyman Jacoby Brissett. While it is worth wondering if Murray would be ready to go now had the Cardinals not taken the direction they have, he has missed 10 contests this season.
The diminutive dual-threat performer has made 87 starts since the Cards became the rare team to draft first-round QBs in back-to-back years. He commanded a five-year, $230.5MM extension — a deal framed around the Browns’ Deshaun Watson re-up (albeit without guarantees rivaling the embattled Cleveland arm) — in summer 2022. The extension featuring the early guarantee triggers has proven beneficial to the former top-10 MLB draftee. The Cardinals will need to move on before the fifth day of the 2026 league year, a date that brings another $19.5MM guarantee — this one covering 2027 money.
A handful of teams, per usual, will be looking for a quarterback soon. That should give Murray a chance. The Vikings and Jets surfaced as potentially interested parties weeks ago. If the Cardinals truly do not have a buyer, they would eat $53.26MM in dead money, a figure which would surely be halved via a post-June 1 designation. Tagovailoa’s dead cap hit ($99.2MM) dwarfs this, and both the Jets and Saints took on this much in parting with Aaron Rodgers and Derek Carr this year.
A free agent market would certainly emerge if Murray were jettisoned via release, but even considering the seven-year veteran’s inconsistency and injury issues, the QB supply-and-demand cycle will undoubtedly lead to teams showing some trade interest. With the mid-March vesting date, we still have a ways to go before finality on this topic surfaces.
Adam La Rose contributed to this post.
Vikings Activate RB Ty Chandler From IR
The Vikings will welcome back Ty Chandler for the final two weeks of the season. The team announced that they’ve activated the running back from injured reserve.
Chandler suffered a knee injury way back in Week 1 that ultimately kept him off the field for several months. He returned to practice earlier this month, and now he’ll be activated to the active roster for the final stretch of the season.
The former fifth-round pick has seen an inconsistent offensive role through his three-plus seasons in the NFL. He got his most work as a sophomore in 2023, when he finished with 620 yards from scrimmage and three touchdowns on 123 touches. In his other three professional seasons, Chandler has been limited to 244 yards on 68 touches.
The 27-year-old has also earned himself some playing time with his special teams work. Chandler returned 12 kickoffs between 2023 and 2024, averaging 25.2 yards. He appeared to have the full-time KR gig in 2025, as he returned three kickoffs for 84 yards in the season opener.
Aaron Jones and Jordan Mason have led the depth chart this season, meaning Chandler would have been limited to backup reps even if he was healthy. The Vikings have also given looks to C.J. Ham, Zavier Scott, and Cam Akers. Chandler is set to hit free agency after this season, so he’ll have a final chance to show suitors that he’s fully healthy.
Chargers LB Denzel Perryman Issued Two-Game Suspension
TODAY: Perryman’s suspension has been upheld, per Jonathan Jones of CBS Sports.
DECEMBER 22: The Chargers’ defense has been among the league’s best in 2025. The unit is set to be shorthanded for the closing stages of the regular season, however. 
Linebacker Denzel Perryman has been issued a two-game suspension, the NFL announced on Monday. Perryman’s discipline comes in the wake of repeated violations of “playing rules intended to protect the health and safety of players.” This ban stems from a play during yesterday’s game against the Cowboys.
“During the second quarter, Perryman was penalized for unnecessary roughness for delivering a forcible blow to the helmet of Cowboys wide receiver Ryan Flournoy while he was on the ground after making a catch,” a league statement reads in part (h/t Ian Rapoport of NFL Network).
Perryman received an unnecessary roughness penalty on the play in question. He is eligible to appeal the suspension. Otherwise, the 33-year-old will be sidelined for Week 17 against the Texans and Week 18 against the Broncos. Los Angeles sits at 11-4 on the year. The season finale against Denver could prove to be pivotal in deciding the AFC West and potentially the No. 1 seed in the conference.
KPRC2’s Aaron Wilson reports Perryman will indeed appeal his suspension. The hearing on the matter will take place tomorrow. As a result, it will not take long to find out if the two-game ban will be upheld or if its length will be reduced. Perryman has totaled 47 tackles in 10 games this season, his second with the Chargers.
Los Angeles ranks in the top 10 in the NFL across several defensive categories this season. Maintaining that level of play will be critical down the stretch and into the playoffs. As it stands now, however, Perryman will not be available for the next two weeks.
NFL Practice Squad Updates: 12/23/25
Today’s practice squad moves:
Atlanta Falcons
- Signed: LB Eugene Asante
Buffalo Bills
- Signed: CB M.J. Devonshire
Carolina Panthers
- Signed: CB Michael Reid
Chicago Bears
- Signed: TE Thomas Gordon
Denver Broncos
- Placed on practice squad/injured: S Delarrin Turner-Yell
Los Angeles Chargers
- Signed: RB Royce Freeman
Miami Dolphins
- Signed: S Jack Henderson
New England Patriots
- Signed: RB Elijah Mitchell, WR Brandon Smith
- Released: OT Sebastian Gutierrez
Seattle Seahawks
- Signed: CB Tyler Hall
Tampa Bay Buccaneers
- Signed: LB Nick Jackson
NFL Minor Transactions: 12/23/25
Today’s minor moves:
Chicago Bears
- Designated for return from IR: OL Luke Newman
Cleveland Browns
- Placed on IR: RB Quinshon Judkins (story)
Houston Texans
- Designated for return from IR: CB Ajani Carter
Los Angeles Chargers
- Signed to active roster: RB Jaret Patterson
New England Patriots
- Signed to active roster: OL Brenden Jaimes
- Placed on IR: DT Joshua Farmer
Tampa Bay Buccaneers
- Returned to practice: RB Josh Williams
Washington Commanders
- Waived: WR Jamal Agnew
Buccaneers running back Josh Williams returned to practice today after serving his six-game suspension for violating the league’s policy on performance-enhancing substances. According to ESPN’s Jenna Laine, the player’s suspension has been officially lifted and he’s now attached to the exempt/commissioner permission designation, which doesn’t count against the 53-man roster limit. However, Williams will need to be activated to the actual roster if the Buccaneers want him on the field before the season ends. The running back has seen time in three games this season, collecting 11 yards on four touches.
Meanwhile, Jamal Agnew won’t be joining the Commanders after he was claimed off waivers yesterday. According to Aaron Wilson of KPRC2 in Houston, the veteran wide receiver was waived today with a failed physical designation.
Cardinals Sign K Joshua Karty
The Cardinals have turned to a division rival for some extra depth at kicker. The team announced that they’ve signed Joshua Karty to the 53-man roster.
Karty was previously on the Rams practice squad, where he’s been lingering since getting replaced by Harrison Mevis in late November. The 2024 sixth-round lived up to his draft billing as a rookie, converting on 85.3 percent of his field goal tries. However, he struggled as a sophomore, converting 10 of his 15 FG tries before getting benched.
Now in Arizona, Karty will provide some competition for Chad Ryland. The former Patriots draft pick has served as the Cardinals’ full-time kicker for the better part of the past two years. He had a standout performance in 2024 but has similarly struggled in 2025, missing eight field goals. That includes a showing from this past weekend when Ryland miss two of his six field goal attempts.
“It’s disappointing when it doesn’t happen for whatever reason – operation, protection, kicker, whatever,” special teams coordinator Jeff Rodgers said of Ryland’s performance (via the team’s website). “[The Falcons game] did start off well … there were positives and negatives. I try to not focus too much on results and being consistent on technique, process, reps. I thought last Thursday was one of [Chad’s] better days striking the ball. On game day, we’ve got to be able to make those kicks, and we have to be good around him as well.”
With two games remaining, it seems likely that Karty will get the majority of the looks at kicker over Ryland. However, considering the incumbent’s restricted free agent status after this season, there’s a good chance he sticks around the roster for the remainder of the 2025 campaign.
The Cardinals weren’t done making moves today. The team officially placed defensive lineman Walter Nolen III and cornerback Garrett Williams on injured reserve, moves that were anticipated. The team also signed cornerback Kalen King from the Panthers practice squad. The former seventh-round pick got into one game for Carolina this season.


