Giants’ Draft Plan Turned Off Some Veteran QB Targets
The Giants now have their quarterback room assembled, adding Jameis Winston, Russell Wilson and Jaxson Dart to join Tommy DeVito. This is the first room assembled by the current regime, which inherited Daniel Jones and stuck with the Dave Gettleman draftee for three years.
A Winston-Wilson pairing to join Dart did not check in as the Giants’ preference, as the team aggressively pursued Matthew Stafford and extended an offer to Aaron Rodgers. Stafford regrouped with the Rams, spurning Giants and Raiders proposals, while Rodgers’ Vikings preference became clear. The Giants may well have sat third in Rodgers’ rankings, as he met with the Steelers on a visit four days before the Giants agreed to terms with Wilson.
Rodgers held a private discussions with Brian Daboll, according to ESPN.com’s Jordan Raanan, who adds some of the available quarterbacks were not onboard with joining a Giants team viewed as one that could then use a high draft choice on the position. Based on how the Steelers proceeded in the draft, Rodgers could certainly be assumed as a player who fits that description. While the increasingly outspoken QB said during a Pat McAfee Show offseason interview he would not object to a team doing what it needed to do in the draft, Pittsburgh not choosing a passer until Round 6 (Will Howard) proves telling.
The Giants made their move much earlier, trading up for Jaxson Dart without using a future first- or second-round pick to do so. New York, which could not convince New England to accept its 2024 trade-up proposal (aimed at acquiring Drake Maye) or Tennessee to sign off on a Cam Ward-geared pursuit this year, used No. 34 overall and 2025 and ’26 third-rounders to move up for Dart.
Stafford was briefly available, and Rodgers continues to hold off on a Steelers signing. It is not known if the Giants engaged with the Seahawks on Geno Smith, but they did look closely at a Sam Darnold pursuit. PFR’s No. 1 2025 free agent, Darnold was believed to be high on the Giants’ QB list in March. Coming off a bounce-back season with the Vikings, Darnold carried tremendous value due to his 2024 form and age. The 2018 Jets draftee will not turn 28 until June, and after he had signed on to be a bridge QB in Minnesota last year, a 35-touchdown pass season gave him more leverage on the market this year. It would thus be unsurprising if Darnold did not strongly consider a Giants team that had also been closely tied to a QB draft move for months.
Darnold returning to New York, considering how his Jets run went, also loomed as a hurdle in the Giants’ path. The eighth-year veteran is now a Seahawk, having joined the team on a deal (three years, $100.5MM) that reminds of Derek Carr‘s 2022 Raiders extension. Seattle can escape the contract with fairly low dead money by releasing Darnold before a roster bonus is due in mid-February. The Seahawks did discuss their Jalen Milroe plans with Darnold, who enters the season as the team’s clear-cut starter.
Daboll has confirmed Wilson is the Giants’ starter, but with the team investing plenty in Dart in a year that features Daboll and GM Joe Schoen on hot seats, the No. 25 overall pick usurping the ex-Seahawks superstar early in the season should not be ruled out.
The Giants do open their season with a gauntlet, as six games against 2024 playoff teams reside on their schedule’s first eight weeks. A friendlier second half does present a Dart runway, but Daboll and Schoen already moved to their respective hot seats based largely on the Jones situation. It stands to reason they will want to at least see Dart in action early, as pressure mounts, though the team will also need to balance this desire out with a debut range that would make the Ole Miss prospect look promising.
Broncos Rehire Jordan Dizon For Front Office Role, Make Other Staff Changes
Front office turnover continues post-draft, as teams regularly use this stretch to rearrange staffs after prioritizing continuity for the draft. These changes generally hit scouting departments, as contracts often run through the draft.
The Broncos have made a few changes since the draft, most notably promoting Reed Burckhardt to fill Darren Mougey‘s assistant general manager post. They also hired Camren Williams from the Patriots as co-director of player personnel. With Burkhardt moved up, Williams and A.J. Durso will share that role.
The Broncos also made a notable scouting-side hire by bringing back Jordan Dizon. The former John Elway-era exec is returning as Denver’s director of pro personnel. This will be a move up for Dizon, who had previously served as a national scout for the Eagles. Although the Broncos have lost some front office cogs this offseason, 9News’ Mike Klis notes the team now has six assistants at the pro personnel director level or higher. That doubles the number of such staffers when Elway stepped down in 2021. In addition to GM George Paton and the aforementioned staffers, GM interviewee Kelly Kleine Van Callighan remains with the team as executive director of football ops.
Dizon, 39, left for Philadelphia shortly after the 2022 draft; the move certainly looks to have proved beneficial. The Eagles ventured to two Super Bowls in this span, winning Super Bowl LIX. Rookies acquired during the two drafts in which Dizon served as a national scout (from Jalen Carter to Quinyon Mitchell to Cooper DeJean) provided considerable aid, and George Paton will bring Dizon back to Denver. Elway hired Dizon, a former Colorado and Lions linebacker, in 2015. Dizon stayed on through Paton’s first GM year and will come back under Elway’s successor. Prior to leaving for Philly, Dizon had served as the Broncos’ assistant director of pro personnel.
Denver had lost Mougey, Mark Thewes, Brian Stark and David Shaw from its front office this offseason. Mougey and Stark’s exits — the latter is now the Raiders’ assistant GM — headlined this brain drain of sorts, but the Broncos also announced a promotion for their longest-tenured staffer. Paton elevated Scott DiStefano, who has been with the team since 1982, to senior college scout. One of the NFL’s longest-tenured employees, DiStefano has served on the scouting level throughout his tenure with the team.
It is interesting that the Broncos’ scouting department has not changed significantly since Sean Payton‘s arrival, and the team made some moves to retain hires from previous regimes. The Broncos bumped Bryan Chesin — in his 12th year with the team — to college scouting director. The Elway hire had been the team’s Midwest national scout. Second to DiStefano in scouting seniority with the Broncos, Dave Bratten will move from west area scout to assistant college scouting director. Bratten has been with the Broncos since 1997. Previously in that role, Nick Schiralli is now in place as a senior personnel executive entering his 18th year with the club. He joins former NFL linebacker Roman Phifer in holding that title in Denver.
DB Notes: 49ers, Gordon, Lions, Colts, Titans
The 49ers‘ decision to let Charvarius Ward walk in free agency points to Renardo Green receiving an extended opportunity to become a full-time starter opposite Deommodore Lenoir. Extended months before Ward’s departure, Lenoir has worked as both a boundary and slot corner. His $17.96MM-per-year contract, which checks in far north of the slot-only market, reflects this versatility. But the 49ers have been unable to find a pure slot option since K’Waun Williams departed in 2022. The team will give third-round pick Upton Stout a shot to buck that trend, according to NBC Sports Bay Area’s Matt Maiocco.
Standing 5-foot-8, Stout profiles as a slot performer. He excelled in the role in a college career spent at North Texas and Western Kentucky. Stout also led all DBs in the gauntlet drill and bench press (21 reps) at the Combine, creating an interesting profile. The 49ers’ issues in the slot have prompted them to use Day 2 picks on two corners (Green, Stout) since 2024; Stout proving up to the task would stand to limit Lenoir’s inside work. It will be interesting to see if the 49ers will keep their top cover man on the perimeter.
Here is the latest from NFL secondaries:
- Kyler Gordon‘s $13.3MM-per-year deal set the market for slot patrolmen recently. That deal checks in more than $11MM south of Jaycee Horn‘s extension and a whopping $16MM-plus lower than where Derek Stingley Jr. has taken the boundary CB market. While a recent Trade Rumors Front Office post highlighted the value teams receive when they identify a quality slot defender, the Bears are not committed to keeping Gordon inside. New Bears DC Dennis Allen said (via ChicagoBears.com’s Larry Mayer) Gordon will train at safety and at outside corner in his scheme, as the team looks to increase its recently extended defender’s usage rate. Gordon played 97% of Chicago’s defensive snaps as a rookie, but upon shifting to more of a slot role in 2023, the former second-round pick has not cleared 80% in a season since.
- The Lions will have 2024 second-round pick Ennis Rakestraw train on the outside in Kelvin Sheppard‘s first DC offseason, per Detroit Football Network’s Justin Rogers. Playing only 46 defensive snaps as a rookie, the 5-11 CB received what amounted to a redshirt year. The Lions used a premium pick on Rakestraw, though he does not look to have a path to a starting job in a secondary that will feature Terrion Arnold, D.J. Reed and Amik Robertson as regulars.
- Detroit also added some depth in Avonte Maddox, a longtime Eagles slot corner who drifted to a backup role after a slew of injuries. Maddox will be expected to serve as a backup in the slot and at safety, according to Lions safeties coach Jim O’Neil (via Rogers). Maddox, who did make a pivotal pass breakup in Super Bowl LIX, saw his snap share drop to 33% last season — after he missed most of 2023. The eighth-year veteran is on a one-year, $1.42MM deal ($1.2MM guaranteed).
- Titans third-round pick Kevin Winston, per HC Brian Callahan, is expected to be cleared for training camp after sustaining a partial ACL tear last year. Winston, who suffered the injury in early September, underwent knee surgery but had recovered in time to run at the Penn State pro day. The Titans chose Winston with the No. 82 overall pick.
- The Colts roster one of the NFL’s best slot corners, and Kenny Moore is going into his ninth season with the team. Indianapolis, however, may be grooming an heir apparent. They team is likely to have third-round pick Justin Walley begin his offseason in the slot, ESPN’s Jeremy Fowler notes. Moore’s three-year, $30MM contract features a fully guaranteed 2025 salary but no guarantees beyond this year. The Pro Bowl defender, who has protected the Colts at one CB spot while they have dealt with enduring issues on the perimeter, is going into his age-30 season.
Bills To Hold QB2 Competition Between Mitchell Trubisky, Mike White
The Bills have turned to Mitchell Trubisky as Josh Allen‘s backup in two nonconsecutive seasons, reacquiring the former No. 2 overall pick after he spent two years in Pittsburgh. Trubisky’s second Buffalo stint is set for a second season, but his grip on the team’s backup gig may not be as firm as what it was in 2024.
Mike White‘s move up from the practice squad in January came with a year added to his contract, carrying into 2025. The former Jets Zach Wilson replacement will be set to vie for the Allen backup role against Trubisky, according to The Athletic’s Joe Buscaglia (subscription required).
A potential role reversal here would come in White’s second year with the organization, as the ex-Jets and Dolphins backup gained seasoning in Joe Brady‘s system by spending a full season in Buffalo. This is White’s first offseason in western New York, however.
The Bills added White to their practice squad shortly after the Dolphins jettisoned him last August. Although Miami had signed White to a two-year, $8MM deal, Skylar Thompson beat him out for the team’s QB2 post during training camp last year. The Dolphins grew to regret that Thompson decision and have since changed up again — by adding Wilson — this offseason.
Now 30, White raised his profile by posing an unexpected threat to Wilson in New York. As the Jets erred by not adding a bridge-level backup for the No. 2 overall pick in 2021, White showed himself to be more effective running Mike LaFleur‘s offense that year. The QB’s 405-yard passing performance in an upset win over the eventual AFC champion Bengals made him a popular presence in New York, and even though the ex-Cowboys draftee crashed back to earth in the weeks that followed, he eventually replaced Wilson as the BYU product fizzled by 2022. The Jets did not deem it a priority to have a veteran presence behind Aaron Rodgers in 2023, however, and White moved on.
Trubisky, 30, has been Allen’s backup in 2021 and ’24. He served as Kenny Pickett‘s bridge for the Steelers in 2023 and did not impress as an injury replacement in 2024. The Steelers, who had seen Mason Rudolph prove a better option late in the ’23 season, released Trubisky after having previously extended him. Trubisky entered the 2022 and ’23 seasons ahead of Rudolph on Pittsburgh’s depth chart, and after signing a two-year deal worth $5.25MM to return to Buffalo, the ex-Bears bust still likely will enter Bills training camp in front of White.
Though, it appears White is a bigger threat to Trubisky’s job now compared to 2024, per Buscaglia. A potential change would mostly need to emerge from practice work, as Trubisky only saw relevant game action in Week 18 last season. He went 15 of 21 for 101 yards and one touchdown in a loss to a Patriots team sitting Drake Maye last season.
Allen has not missed a start since his 2018 rookie season. While elbow and hand maladies have come up since, Allen has proven one of the NFL’s safest bets. Though, the superstar’s bruising style and high run-game usage rate does leave him vulnerable annually.
With Allen’s durability pointing to the Bills only carrying one active-roster backup, only one non-practice squad salary appears available for the two QB2 hopefuls. Both Trubisky or White could reach the practice squad without clearing waivers. This would be new territory for Trubisky, however, and the Bills would take a $1.75MM hit were they to cut the more seasoned QB. (No dead money would come from a White release.) That said, seeing if White can usurp the former top prospect will be a storyline to monitor in Buffalo this offseason.
Rams Add Anthony Robinson To Front Office
MAY 16: The Robinson addition is now official, per a team announcement. He will operate as a national scout, a notable step down in title compared to his Titans stint. Robinson will nevertheless provide Los Angeles with considerable experience in the scouting department.
MAY 13: The Titans’ offseason moved one of Ran Carthon‘s assistant GM hires (Chad Brinker) to the top of Tennessee’s personnel pyramid, following Carthon’s firing, and the other (Anthony Robinson) out of the picture altogether. Robinson, though, has bounced back.
Months after his Titans ouster, Robinson is heading back to the NFC. The two-year Titans assistant GM will join the Rams’ front office, according to ESPN’s Jeremy Fowler.
Robinson agreed to leave the Falcons, his employer for 15 years, for an opportunity to become assistant GM in Tennessee. The Titans gave Robinson that title weeks after hiring Brinker in 2023. Both held the assistant GM title entering 2025, but a significant restructure left Brinker in charge. Robinson was soon fired, as Brinker — now the Titans’ president of football operations — led the way in hiring Mike Borgonzi as GM.
As it turned out, Robinson only participated in one draft with the Titans, who had hired him shortly after the 2023 draft. Teams regularly keep staffs together through the draft, as the Jaguars did with assistant GM Ethan Waugh (before moving on earlier this month), but Robinson received the boot shortly after Carthon.
Prior to coming to Nashville, Robinson had served as a long-running exec in Atlanta. A Thomas Dimitroff Falcons hire during the GM’s first year with the Falcons (2008), Robinson became a full-time scout in 2011 and had worked his way up to the team’s college scouting director gig by 2019. Current Falcons GM Terry Fontenot kept Robinson aboard for two-plus years, before his Titans defection. The Rams, who also have former GM Ray Farmer on Les Snead‘s front office roster, will give the veteran staffer another shot.
Trey Hendrickson Prepared To Hold Out Into Regular Season
MAY 15: It is indeed safe to assume guarantees beyond the 2025 season are a key issue in this situation, ESPN’s Dan Graziano writes. The Bengals were willing to break with organizational tradition with Burrow, Chase and Higgins when they were 26 at signing, but whether or not that will be the case for Hendrickson at his age will be worth watching when (or if) talks resume.
MAY 14: The Bengals have developed an earned reputation as slow starters during Zac Taylor‘s time at the helm. This pattern has been a significant impediment to the team, one that began 0-3 last year and stood 0-2 to start the 2022 and ’23 seasons. With the team now having paid both its wide receiver standouts, more pressure will be on Taylor to have his crew ready to go when the season starts.
Trey Hendrickson‘s status suddenly factors into this equation. The Bengals’ top defensive player has gone public with his frustrations, with a Monday text from Taylor prompting a Tuesday grievance rundown. Hendrickson has officially threatened a holdout. Training camp holdouts have become more difficult to wage under the current CBA, leading to the hold-in tactic, but some players have bucked that trend and stayed away anyway.
[RELATED: How Will Hendrickson’s Situation Play Out?]
CeeDee Lamb held out well into Cowboys camp last year, with Zack Martin doing the same in 2023. Trent Williams did the same, and teammate Nick Bosa held out in 2023 as well. All four of these Dallas- and San Francisco-based absences led to new contracts. Haason Reddick staged an unsuccessful holdout last year, eventually reporting to the Jets in late October and playing out the string.
The Chiefs went into the 2023 season with Chris Jones engaged in a holdout. After a Week 1 loss to the Lions, the Chiefs agreed to a temporary solution that brought the future Hall of Famer back into the fold. Kansas City then caved on a player-friendly deal for Jones two days before the 2024 free agency period began. Jones was 29 when he signed that monster Chiefs extension. By the time Hendrickson would be free agency-eligible, he will be 31. The All-Pro defensive end’s age represents a key component in his Bengals stalemate.
Few players have proven willing to pass on game checks to extend holdouts into the regular season. Le’Veon Bell famously did on the franchise tag in 2018, while Duane Brown (2017) and Vincent Jackson (2010) sat out lengthy stretches as well. It is still too early to predict Hendrickson will follow suit, but ESPN.com’s Jeremy Fowler notes some close to the disgruntled pass rusher believe his contract stance would lead to him skipping regular-season games — should Cincinnati not reward its ace sack artist before Week 1.
As part of a one-year, $21MM extension he signed in 2023, Hendrickson is due a $15.8MM base salary this season. This works out to just more than $920K in game checks. Teams regularly win bets on players being unwilling to pass on game checks, but Hendrickson’s only play against the Bengals would be to withhold services. He managed Defensive Player of the Year runner-up status on one of the league’s worst defenses last season. Removing Hendrickson from the mix would certainly threaten a Bengals team committed to complementing Joe Burrow better than it did in 2024. That will be an interesting storyline to follow.
Although the Bengals let Hendrickson seek a trade just before free agency, the Cincinnati Enquirer’s Kelsey Conway notes the team wants its All-Pro sack artist back in 2025. What is unclear is how much Cincy wants Hendrickson beyond this season. Contract structure represents the central hang-up here, Hendrickson said, as negotiations have paused. A structural issue would seemingly point to guarantees. The Bengals almost never authorize post-Year 1 salary guarantees, though they made exceptions for Burrow, Ja’Marr Chase and Tee Higgins.
While the franchise has a history extending D-lineman in Hendrickson’s age range (via the 2018 Carlos Dunlap and Geno Atkins paydays), a March report pointed to hesitancy regarding the new edge rusher going rate. Hendrickson is not a candidate to eclipse Myles Garrett‘s $40MM-per-year number, but Maxx Crosby‘s $35.5MM-AAV accord — which settled in north of Bosa’s ($34MM per) — represents a lofty number as well.
As the Hendrickson saga keeps producing notable plotlines, the Bengals also saw first-round pick Shemar Stewart — their potential long-term Hendrickson replacement — sit out rookie minicamp due to his contract. Bonus structure kept Stewart off the field last weekend, per Pro Football Talk’s Mike Florio. Players regularly participate in offseason work unsigned, as many first-rounders have yet to put pen to paper. Waivers protecting them are commonplace, but while the Bengals attempted to complete a Stewart deal early, nothing transpired.
First-round contracts (and now at least two second-round draft slots) bring fully guaranteed deals, but the percentage of Stewart’s money to be paid as a training camp roster bonus, per Florio, became an issue. That percentage checked in lower than last year’s No. 17 overall pick received, leading to the absence. First-round contract drama does not rival what took place before the rookie-scale system debuted in 2011, but the Bengals have brought at least a hiccup during Stewart’s first weeks in town. And it has come amid the higher-stakes Hendrickson dispute.
Packers C Elgton Jenkins Seeking Contract Adjustment
MAY 14: Jenkins is indeed looking for a contract adjustment to protect his future financial earnings if he remains at center past this season, per ESPN’s Rob Demovsky. However, the Packers rarely renegotiate with players who have more than one year left on their contracts. A compromised proposed by Demovsky would be to guarantee some of the $32.8MM remaining on Jenkins’ deal.
MAY 13: The Packers hatched an interesting plan to replace departed center Josh Myers. Elgton Jenkins is changing positions again, as a guard-to-center shift is on tap ahead of his seventh season.
Two seasons remain on the extension Jenkins signed late in the 2022 season, and while a center switch would stand to hurt his long-term earning potential, the standout blocker may be angling for the team to reward him for the sacrifice he is making this offseason. Jenkins is seeking a contract adjustment, according to WISC-TV’s Jason Wilde.
Jenkins has not yet showed for early Packers offseason workouts, though OC Adam Stenavich said the absence is not related to the new center’s contract. Stenavich had described Jenkins as “open” and “excited” about the switch. Jenkins, who has played all five positions along Green Bay’s front during his career, played 72 snaps at center last season. His other NFL center work came back in 2020, when he made 297 snaps. Otherwise, the former second-round pick has settled at guard and tackle.
After the Packers used Jenkins as their 2021 David Bakhtiari LT replacement, they shifted him back to left guard in 2022. Jenkins’ play at that post prompted the team to extend him — on a four-year, $68MM deal — as a runway for Jordan Love formed. Love’s first starter season featured only a one-game Bakhtiari cameo, leaving Jenkins as the team’s veteran presence up front. After Jon Runyan Jr. left in 2024, the Pack continued to field a young O-line around Jenkins, who has now seen the guaranteed money on his contract run out.
The Packers regularly refrain from post-Year 1 salary guarantees on non-QB contracts; they have Jenkins tied to a nonguaranteed $11.7MM base salary this season. He will count $17.6MM against Green Bay’s cap. This will be a situation to monitor, especially as the Packers continue to navigate the Jaire Alexander issue, and Jenkins’ contract will likely need to be adjusted before 2026. He is due to count $24.8MM on Green Bay’s cap sheet next year.
While four guards are tied to $20MM-per-year contracts, the center market only features one player (Creed Humphrey) earning more than $14MM per year. The All-Pro Chiefs snapper is at $18MM AAV. Jenkins, 29, would likely not be amenable to a discount based on agreeing to help the team regarding a position switch. An organizational hesitancy to pay players post-30 also may factor into a true Jenkins standoff, per Wilde, who adds the Mississippi State alum could become a 2026 release candidate if the center move does not go smoothly.
Another factor that could conceivably be affecting this Jenkins push would be the Packers giving more money to a less proven outside addition (free agent Aaron Banks); the ex-49ers starter is now on a four-year, $77MM agreement. Banks could operate opposite 2024 first-rounder Jordan Morgan, though the latter is first expected to compete with Rasheed Walker at left tackle. A “best five” scenario, though, could see a Walker-Banks-Jenkins-Morgan-Zach Tom configuration.
It will first be interesting to see if Jenkins will threaten a holdout or if he changes course to avoid a center move, especially as the center market pales in comparison to where the guard salary landscape sits. Alexander may be Green Bay’s front-burner contract matter, but Jenkins’ is now one to monitor.
NFC West Notes: Rams, Kittle, Hawks, Cards
Tyler Higbee has been the Rams‘ top tight end for many years, dating back to the team’s separation from Gerald Everett in 2021. Higbee, however, is now in Year 10 and coming off a three-game season. The Rams have attempted to install an heir apparent on multiple occasions, most notably failing in an attempt to trade up for Brock Bowers last year. Los Angeles then was tied to an effort to move up for Colston Loveland last month, and ESPN’s Jeremy Fowler indicates the team did discuss trades with teams holding top-10 picks.
Once Loveland went to the Bears at 10, the Rams regrouped and traded down, picking up a 2026 first-rounder (from the Falcons) to do so. Upon leaving Round 1, however, the Rams eyed the next wave of tight ends in this draft. Both Mason Taylor (LSU) and Terrance Ferguson (Oregon) were on the team’s radar, per Fowler, who notes Ferguson was rated higher despite Taylor going to the Jets four spots earlier. The Rams have Ferguson (591 receiving yards in 2024) readying to become the Higbee heir apparent.
Here is the latest from the NFC West:
- Ferguson is unlikely to unseat George Kittle as the NFC West’s top tight end anytime soon, as the 49ers extended their All-Pro dynamo recently. San Francisco’s four-year, $76.4MM deal includes $35MM guaranteed at signing. Beyond fully guaranteed money in 2025 and ’26, Pro Football Talk’s Mike Florio notes $2MM of Kittle’s 2027 pay ($17.15MM) is locked in at signing. The 49ers have also dived into the option bonus game, which will help keep Kittle’s cap hits under $19MM until 2029. Kittle can unlock $5MM more in 2027 guarantees by being a 2026 Pro Bowler or landing on the All-Pro first or second team that year; reaching a number of statistical benchmarks that year also could allow Kittle to cash in on that $5MM 2027 bump, Florio adds.
- Sam Darnold‘s three-year, $100.5MM Seahawks contract became classified as a pay-as-you-go pact, and ESPN’s Brady Henderson provided an important detail here. Seattle gave Darnold a $15MM roster bonus, but it is not due until February 13 — five days after Super Bowl LX. The Seahawks can cut bait during that window, reminding of the Raiders’ 2023 Derek Carr divorce, if the Darnold partnership does not pan out. Seattle would still pick up a $25.6MM dead money hit (due to signing bonus proration) by cutting Darnold after one season.
- DC Aden Durde pushed for Rylie Mills in Round 5 (via the pick obtained in the Sam Howell trade), but the Seahawks will wait a bit to see the Day 3 D-lineman in action. A torn ACL sustained in December is expected to keep the Notre Dame product out until at least midseason, John Schneider said (via Henderson). A late-season return is also in play for a player who will be more of a long-term option in Seattle.
- Not rostering a fullback in many years, the Seahawks had planned to add one to work in Klint Kubiak‘s offense. They did so in the draft, as Schneider confirmed (via Henderson) Alabama tight end Robbie Ouzts — a fifth-round pick — will begin his career at fullback. The 274-pound SEC product will compete with Brady Russell, who has played 26 Seahawks games (zero starts) since arriving in September 2023.
- A former South Carolina defensive back, Landon Grier made an early foray into the NFL scouting ranks. The Cardinals hired him straight out of college to be a scouting assistant. The son of Dolphins GM Chris Grier, Landon is not expected back with the Cards in 2025, with InsidetheLeague.com’s Neil Stratton noting the younger Grier is on track to return to the college ranks for a personnel role.
- The 49ers are also parting ways with a scouting staffer, with Stratton adding Michael Zyskowski is moving on after three years with the franchise. Late spring regularly serves as a point teams reshuffle scouting staffs, as contracts usually run through the draft in an effort to ensure continuity ahead of the event.
Derek Carr ‘Extremely Unlikely’ To Unretire
Delivering great value as a second-round pick, Derek Carr lasted 11 seasons as a starting quarterback. Among second-round picks in NFL history, only Drew Brees and Brett Favre have accumulated more passing yards. Carr’s 257 TD passes also presently edge Andy Dalton‘s 253 for third in that category among QBs chosen in Round 2. While second-rounders in lower-volume passing eras were considered better QBs as well, Carr did quite well from his No. 36 overall draft slot.
Carr did not exactly approach a lower-quality Brees season during his time with the Saints, however; that 2023 signing not panning out as the organization hoped. A compromise upon retirement will help ease the financial burden the Saints will carry as a result of the restructure-generated dead money on the QB’s contract, but the team is now without insurance in the event Tyler Shough does not prove a viable option after being chosen in the second round.
[RELATED: Saints Preparing For Open QB Competition]
The Saints revealed Carr will walk away after suffering significant degenerative changes to his rotator cuff, stemming from a 2023 injury, and fans should not expect the 34-year-old passer to change his mind. Carr is considered “extremely unlikely” to unretire, according to Pro Football Talk’s Mike Florio. The former Raiders and Saints starter is already making other plans, which are not yet known.
Considering this injury has dogged Carr for over a year, his retirement is not quite an Andrew Luck-level shock. Luck retired just before his age-30 season, doing so after he had claimed Comeback Player of the Year honors. Luck unretirement rumors never produced much of consequence, and the once-promising passer quickly drifted out of the spotlight. Carr dealt with extensive injury trouble in New Orleans, having sustained two concussions in 2023 — in addition to his shoulder malady — before missing time with oblique and hand injuries last season.
Although Carr will pass on $30MM in 2025, he has already earned more than $285MM during his time in Oakland, Las Vegas and New Orleans. If Carr unretired and the Saints did not release him in 2026, that $30MM that was to be due this year would move back into the picture for the team. The QB having encountered the injury volume he has, finding a trade partner — in the event of an unretirement — would be quite difficult for the Saints, especially considering his contract. New Orleans gave Carr a four-year, $150MM deal in 2023. That contract became more difficult to escape thanks to a 2024 restructure. Although the sides’ 2025 restructure will be modified as part of this retirement, the Saints will still have this contract on their books through 2026.
Shough joins holdovers Spencer Rattler and Jake Haener in New Orleans’ QB room, but KPRC2’s Aaron Wilson passes along a fourth option – – Hunter Dekkers — will sign on as well. Dekkers played last season at Iowa Western Community College. Dekkers had previously served as Brock Purdy‘s successor at Iowa State, starting for the Cyclones in 2022. Three years later, he profiles as an offseason/camp arm that will not bring a great chance to unseat Rattler or Haener for a roster spot. The Saints, though, have moved into their post-Carr stage by adding another QB for this purpose.
Broncos Add Camren Williams To Front Office; Kareem Jackson In Play For Staff Role
This offseason has produced a few notable exits from the Broncos’ staff. In addition to the team losing two coaches (John Morton, Declan Doyle) to NFC North OC positions, it has seen some departures — most notably assistant GM Darren Mougey‘s — key changes in the front office.
In addition to Mougey — the new Jets GM — the Raiders poached Brian Stark and Mark Thewes from the Broncos’ executive ranks (Stark is Las Vegas’ new assistant GM). David Shaw, who had worked in a front office role in 2024, is back on the sideline as a Lions assistant as well. As the Broncos make a post-draft attempt to restock their staff, they added a Patriots exec as one of their replacements.
Camren Williams is joining the Broncos, according to MassLive.com’s Mark Daniels. He will serve as the team’s co-director of player personnel, per ESPN’s Adam Schefter. This represents a high-ranking move for Denver, as Williams had previously served as New England’s college scouting director. Williams had been with the Patriots since 2016.
The Pats had installed Williams — an Easton, Mass., native — as their college scouting director in 2022, after Dave Ziegler had joined Nick Caserio among the GM ranks. Working alongside the likes of Caserio, Ziegler, Eliot Wolf and Monti Ossenfort under Bill Belichick, Williams helped the Pats move into their post-Belichick era last year.
Playing a key role in the Patriots’ Drake Maye selection, Williams also had ties to Mike Vrabel. The latter recruited Williams — a former Ohio State linebacker — when he was on the Buckeyes’ staff. Camren Williams’ father, Brent, also played seven seasons for the Pats in the 1980s and ’90s. After going through a draft with Vrabel, Williams took part in a recent Broncos interview (per Schefter) — one that will lead to a separation early in Vrabel’s return to Foxborough. Williams will join Reed Burkhardt as staffers with player personnel director titles in Denver.
Beyond Williams, the Broncos’ rookie minicamp featured an interesting presence working alongside GM George Paton. Kareem Jackson was operating with Paton’s personnel staff at the weekend event, 9News’ Mike Klis notes. Jackson, 37, but saw action in just two games — for the Bills — last season. Although a suspension-marred season defined Jackson’s final year in Denver, the veteran safety was a regular starter for five seasons with the team.
The longtime Justin Simmons sidekick signed four Broncos contracts and started 69 games with the team, completing a conversion from cornerback to safety in that time. Jackson making inroads on the scouting side, and not as a coach, would be interesting as well. Paton was not yet in Denver when the Broncos initially signed Jackson in 2019, but he authorized three one-year contracts to keep the veteran DB on the roster. This included an immediate return, via pay cut, after a release in Paton’s first offseason as Broncos GM.
