Alvin Kamara Plans To Play For Saints In 2026, Broncos Could Be Suitor

JUNE 3: Kamara was at the Saints’ facility today, as noted by Matthew Paras of NOLA.com. That marked his first appearance for voluntary offseason work, something Kamara usually declines to take part in. As the wait for clarity in this case continues, team and player are at least managing to avoid a public rift.

JUNE 1: With A.J. Brown and (perhaps unexpectedly) Myles Garrett having been traded, focus will now shift to Saints RB Alvin Kamara. We heard yesterday that while other teams have expressed interest in the veteran, the Saints have yet to determine whether they’ll move on from the franchise icon.

For what it’s worth, Kamara is currently planning to spend next season in New Orleans. NFL Network’s Mike Garafolo spoke to the player’s agent, Brad Cicala, who said the RB “plan[s] on playing for the Saints in 2026.”

When Kamara was believed to be on the trade block last season, the player made it clear that he wanted to stick in New Orleans no matter what, with the running back going as far as to threaten retirement if he was dealt to a new team. It’s uncertain if the addition of Travis Etienne has changed the 30-year-old’s stance, but at the very least, the Saints’ offseason acquisition has led to renewed trade interest in Kamara.

Throughout the saga, there haven’t been any teams definitively connected to the running back, although Albert Breer of SI.com hints that the Broncos could be a suitor. The reporter says Denver “would be interested” in Kamara if the player says he’d be willing to play elsewhere in 2026.

Despite Denver’s rushing attack finishing middle-of-the-road in 2025, the team is set to return similar depth in 2026. J.K. Dobbins led the team in rushing last year despite missing half the season, and the team is hoping 2025 second-round pick RJ Harvey can take another step forward after finishing his rookie campaign with 896 yards from scrimmage and 12 touchdowns. The team did make one notable addition in fourth-round rookie Jonah Coleman, but considering their current depth, the Broncos would be a logical landing spot for a player of Kamara’s caliber.

We heard yesterday that a post-June 1 move would be more beneficial for the Saints’ cap sheet, although that was positioned in the context of Kamara being cut. Either way, if the running back does hope to stick in New Orleans for at least the 2026 season, he may have to rework his contract to make it a reality.

WR Chris Olave Expects To Sign Saints Extension Before Training Camp

Chris Olave has been a participant in Saints OTAs with extension negotiations ongoing. GM Mickey Loomis has expressed optimism that an agreement will be reached, and that feeling is mutual.

As things stand, Olave is a pending 2027 free agent. He is currently set to play on his $15.49MM fifth-year option, while a long-term commitment would carry a much larger price tag. No extension has been signed yet, but Olave believes one will be finalized in the near future.

“I feel like we’re going to come down to that before training camp,” the soon-to-be 26-year-old said (via Ben Dackiw of WBRZ). “I hope we do, so we don’t affect the chemistry going into training camp, but I think it’s going to get done soon.”

Injuries in general, and concussions in particular, represented a potential cause for concern in Olave’s case after he was limited to just eight games in 2024. He managed to avoid any lengthy absences last season, however. That allowed him to set a new career high in catches (100), yards (1,136) and touchdowns (nine) in 2025. A substantial raise will no doubt be in store in the event Olave and the Saints manage to work out a new pact.

New Orleans’ receiver room has lacked depth for much of Olave’s tenure in the league, and the team traded away Rashid Shaheed ahead of the 2025 deadline. Adding a wideout early in the draft was known to be a Saints priority, so it came as no surprise when Loomis and Co. elected to take Jordyn Tyson eighth overall in April’s event. Even with the Arizona State product now in the fold, Olave will be counted on to remain a focal point on offense this season and well into the future provided a long-term agreement can be reached.

The Saints have moved on from several veterans this offseason, something which has cleaned up their cap outlook to a large extent. Affording a big-money Olave investment should be feasible, and it appears as though an extension will likely be on the books in time for this summer.

Saints Approaching Decision On RB Alvin Kamara

MAY 31: With June nearly here, it doesn’t seem like any decisions have been made in regard to Kamara. According to ESPN’s Jeremy Fowler, “there hasn’t been a lot of traction yet on the Saints’ direction with Kamara, but there is some interest” in Kamara potentially coming back, perhaps on a revised deal. Cutting or trading him before June 1 was always out of the question as it would do little to alleviate his cap impact.

Cutting Kamara post-June 1, though, could have a potential two-year effect. His cap hit in 2026 would only be reduced $376K, but his 2027 void year cap hit would reduce from $16.26MM to $5.13MM. Trading Kamara post-June 1 has the most benefit if New Orleans is looking to unload Kamara’s contract, providing $3.38MM in cap savings this year and $11.13MM next year. If Fowler is correct and a restructure remains on the table, Kamara may have to agree to a pay cut in order to stay and compete with Etienne for touches.

MAY 18: Alvin Kamara‘s place with the Saints became cloudy after the team shelled out a big contract to Travis Etienne, who received a hefty guarantee to join Kellen Moore‘s roster in March. Kamara drew trade interest soon after Etienne’s commitment, but he remains on New Orleans’ offseason roster.

Mickey Loomis said Kamara does not currently have a decision to make on his contract, which points to the Saints not yet insisting on a pay cut. But uncertainty still exists here. The longtime Saints GM said the team is moving toward a decision on the decorated dual-threat back.

[RELATED: Saints Extend Offer To Cam Jordan; Latest On Taysom Hill]

We’re just trying to see how he’s going to fit in our roster, and obviously there’s a resource management element to it, and we’ll get to that over the next week or two,” Loomis said, via NewOrleans.football.

The 25th-year Saints front office boss said OTAs provides “a little bit” of a deadline but cautioned the voluntary workouts — which Kamara has not attended in years — do not serve as the endpoint for the sides’ latest chapter. New Orleans’ OTAs begin May 27. Kamara would see his base salary reduced by $358K if he does not attend every Saints OTA workout, ESPN.com’s Katherine Terrell notes.

Kamara, 31 in July, is entering the final season of a two-year, $24.5MM extension. He is due a $1.35MM base salary but secured $3MM in guaranteed 2026 compensation in March 2025. Being that this is the Saints, a sizable dead money hit would come if Kamara is traded or released.

Loomis’ timeline seemingly aligns with the pivotal June 1 date. The Saints likely will not act before that point, as making a move after that date would be a more cost-effective solution (with regards to 2026). Parting with Kamara after June 1 would allow the Saints to spread the dead cap charges over the next two years. Cutting him after that date would take away around $900K in cap space, whereas a summer trade would save the Saints approximately $456K.

The Saints would be hit with $24.4MM if they cut Kamara, but making that move after June 1 would allow them to spread that penalty between their 2026 and ’27 payrolls. Four void years being included in this deal represents the primary dead money source if Kamara is jettisoned.

Loomis’ team was in the strange position of not carrying the NFL’s worst cap situation entering the offseason, which deviates from several years of the restructure-crazed franchise’s winter situations. The Saints hold $8.29MM in cap space. Nearly 12 months from the 2027 league year, New Orleans is projected to hold more than $48MM in cap space in 2027. Though, many variables between now and then will change the equation.

Etienne signed a four-year, $48MM deal that includes $24MM guaranteed. The ex-Jaguar’s fully guaranteed figure ranks sixth among running backs, matching Christian McCaffrey‘s 2024 extension. The Saints also have holdovers Kendre Miller and Devin Neal rostered; Neal was drafted to play in Moore’s system while Miller — who is in a contract year — arrived under Dennis Allen. Former Vikings backup Ty Chandler is also on the Saints’ roster.

It would seem the Saints could get by without Kamara, given Etienne’s presence. Kamara’s five-year run of Pro Bowls stopped after the 2021 season — Sean Payton‘s New Orleans finale — and he averaged a career-low 3.6 yards per carry last season. This came after a bounce-back 2024, when the ex-Payton chess piece tallied 1,493 scrimmage yards and eight touchdowns in 14 games. Kamara missed the team’s final six games last season with an MCL sprain. He also missed time to close the ’24 season, battling a groin injury. Altogether, Kamara has missed 19 games since 2021.

Teams will undoubtedly be interested in a free agency agreement if the Saints move on via release. Kamara came out against a trade before last year’s deadline, indicating he would potentially retire rather than be dealt away from New Orleans. With Etienne in the fold, it is worth wondering if the Pro Bowl RB’s stance has changed. We should find out soon, with the June 1 date — even as the A.J. Brown situation overshadows other NFL matters pertaining to the pivotal point on the NFL calendar — will provide some clarity.

Minor NFL Transactions: 5/27/26

Wednesday’s minor NFL transactions:

Buffalo Bills

  • Waived: TE Max Tomczak

Cleveland Browns

New Orleans Saints

New York Giants

New York Jets

Philadelphia Eagles

Seattle Seahawks

It’s a family reunion in New Orleans, where Sirmon will join the position room coached by his father, Saints linebackers coach Peter Sirmon. The two worked together in a similar manner when Peter served as inside linebackers coach and defensive coordinator at Cal. Jackson spent the first two years of his career on the Jets’ practice squad as an undrafted free agent and will now head to New Orleans for Year 3.

After trading for wide receiver/special teamer Irv Charles earlier today, the Seahawks have waived Rudolph, an undrafted rookie, to make room on the roster.

Saints Extend Offer To Cameron Jordan; No Taysom Hill Proposal On Table

Linked to edge rushers in Round 1, the Saints made it through the draft without addressing this position. Though, the team did send the Raiders a fifth-round selection for Tyree Wilson in a pick-swap trade. Wilson joins a New Orleans edge-rushing group headlined by Chase Young and Carl Granderson.

Another deal with Cameron Jordan, however, remains in play. Twenty-fifth-year GM Mickey Loomis said Monday (via NewOrleans.football’s Mike Triplett) the Saints have an offer out to the accomplished sack artist. As for Taysom Hill, Loomis responded in the negative when asked if the team has made an offer to the versatile veteran.

Jordan, 37 in July, accepted a pay cut to return to the Saints last year. He finished out a one-year deal worth $6.1MM, outplaying the revised contract. Jordan’s 10.5 sacks were his most since the 2021 season — his most recent Pro Bowl slate — and his 15 tackles for loss matched his most since the 2018 campaign.

The 15-year veteran will assuredly have options beyond New Orleans, but he is interested in staying. Jordan has missed just two career games, offering nearly unmatched durability, but he only combined for six sacks and 10 TFLs from 2023-24.

While Rickey Jackson‘s rookie year came before sacks were deemed official, the Hall of Famer has been retroactively credited with eight in that 1981 season. That places his career total (136) four ahead of Jordan. The latter’s 2025 season gave him the lead in official Saints sacks, but the former first-round pick would have a great chance to become the franchise’s undisputed sack kingpin by returning for a 16th season.

Likely waiting on a better offer from the Saints, Jordan has earned just more than $147MM in his career. The Bears, who employ ex-Saints HC Dennis Allen as DC, may not be a true suitor. That being the case would be a blow to Jordan’s ability to push the Saints for better terms. A number of proven vets are available as well. Jordan joins Von Miller — who would also be set for an age-37 season if/when he lands with a team — along with Leonard Floyd, Joey Bosa, Haason Reddick, Jadeveon Clowney, Kyle Van Noy and A.J. Epenesa among notable unsigned edge defenders.

Hill is set to turn 36 in August. The long-running jack-of-all-trades presence has played 10 Saints seasons. His ACL rehab concluded early last season, and the BYU product/perennial fantasy nuisance totaled 205 scrimmage yards on 63 touches. The Saints let Foster Moreau walk in free agency but used a third-round pick on Georgia tight end Oscar Delp and signed former first-rounder Noah Fant. The duo joins Juwan Johnson, who is coming off a career-best season, in New Orleans’ tight end room.

Although Hill is certainly more than just a tight end, the additions of Fant and Delp to go with Johnson — who is coming off a 77-catch, 889-yard season (both numbers smashed his previous career-high marks) — presents a crowded depth chart.

While it would be odd to see Hill in another uniform, he may need to depart Louisiana to continue his career. Prominent ex-Saints staffers are present in Denver and Buffalo, presenting potential landing spots. Hill indicated uncertainty when discussing his Saints future late last season.

Hill played out a four-year, $40MM contract; he will be unlikely to closely approach that value this year. Hill, however, has 45 career touchdowns to go with 12 career TD passes. The historically unique talent profiles as an interesting free agent as teams assess their rosters during spring workouts.

Saints GM Mickey Loomis Addresses Chris Olave Extension Talks

Earlier this spring, it was learned extension negotiations were underway between Chris Olave and the Saints. No deal has been struck yet, but team and player are looking to finalize an agreement.

When speaking about the status of contract talks, general manager Mickey Loomis said (via ESPN’s Katherine Terrell), “obviously we’d love to have something done sooner than later and I’m sure Chris would as well, but we’re not there yet.” It will be interesting to see if progress can be made in the near future.

Loomis added (via Terrell) Olave has frequently been around the team with talks going well so far. That certainly suggests an agreement will be in place prior to training camp this summer. As things stand, Olave is a pending 2027 free agent since he is set to play on his fifth-year option. The Ohio State product is due $15.49MM in 2026.

Any long-term pact will no doubt cost more. The top of the receiver market moved to $42.15MM when Jaxon Smith-Njigba inked his Seahawks extension. Olave will not be expected to reach that figure on a second Saints contract, but 15 wideouts currently average between $20MM and $30MM annually. A pact toward the more lucrative end of that range could be feasible for Olave, who is approaching his age-26 season.

New Orleans has relied heavily on the former No. 11 pick since his arrival. Olave has been targeted at least 119 times in three of his four NFL seasons. The lone exception was 2024, a campaign in which injuries limited him to eight games. Olave previously gave thought to retirement in the wake of his concussion history, but he managed to return to full health and reprise his role as a focal point on offense this past season. Even with first-round rookie Jordyn Tyson in the fold, Olave will be counted on to remain a 1,000-yard producer well into the future provided an extension gets worked out.

The Saints find themselves in much better financial shape than previous years with respect to contract flexibility. New Orleans is currently projected to have roughly $49MM in cap space in 2027, a figure which should make an Olave raise viable. If positive indications continue to emerge in this case, news of an agreement could be coming shortly.

Each NFL Franchise’s Richest RB Contract

Running back value has become a divisive topic in the modern NFL, and teams’ histories with these investments reveal a large gap in their respective approaches to RB contracts. Following our installments covering the highest-paid quarterback, wide receiver and off-ball linebacker in each team’s history, here are the most lucrative deals — ranked by guaranteed money — for running backs in each franchise’s history (the list excludes rookie contracts).

Unlike the QB and WR markets, some teams’ top RB deals occurred decades ago. This list covers contracts agreed to across four different decades.

Arizona Cardinals

Jeremiyah Love‘s rookie contract brings the highest guarantee ($53MM) in RB history, but for veteran accords, Conner’s second Arizona pact is the organizational standard

Atlanta Falcons

Baltimore Ravens

Buffalo Bills

LeSean McCoy‘s March 2015 extension included more guaranteed at signing ($18.25MM), but Cook’s brought a rolling guarantee structure that eclipsed that package in total

Carolina Panthers

Chicago Bears

  • Matt Forte; July 16, 2012: Four years, $30.4MM ($17.1MM guaranteed)

D’Andre Swift‘s 2024 agreement included more guaranteed at signing ($14MM), but Forte’s guarantee package remains the Chicago standard

Cincinnati Bengals

  • Corey Dillon; May 11, 2001: Five years, $26MM ($10.5MM guaranteed)

The Bengals more than doubled Dillon’s AAV number in 2020 for Joe Mixon (four years, $48MM) but only guaranteed $10MM of that pact

Cleveland Browns

Dallas Cowboys

Denver Broncos

Detroit Lions

  • Barry Sanders; July 21, 1997: Six years, $33.5MM ($11.5MM guaranteed)

David Montgomery‘s two Lions deals topped the Hall of Famer in AAV, but neither surpassed $11MM guaranteed; Jahmyr Gibbs is tied to the highest RB guarantee in franchise history ($17.85MM) but got there via a rookie deal 

Green Bay Packers

Josh Jacobs‘ 2024 pact edges Jones in AAV but fell short of his predecessor’s deal in guarantees

Houston Texans

  • Arian Foster; March 5, 2012: Five years, $43.5MM ($20.75MM guaranteed)

Indianapolis Colts

Jacksonville Jaguars

Leonard Fournette received a $27.15MM guarantee — still in the top 10 in RB history — but it came on a rookie contract

Kansas City Chiefs

Las Vegas Raiders

Raiders sweetened Jacobs’ franchise tag agreement; Ashton Jeanty‘s 2025 rookie slot deal included $35.9MM guaranteed

Los Angeles Chargers

Los Angeles Rams

Miami Dolphins

Minnesota Vikings

  • Adrian Peterson; September 10, 2011: Six years, $86.28MM ($36MM guaranteed)

New England Patriots

New Orleans Saints

New York Giants

Barkley’s rookie slot deal included $31.19MM guaranteed — fourth all time among all RB contracts — while Devin Singletary‘s $9.5MM represents the franchise’s high-water mark on a multiyear deal

New York Jets

Philadelphia Eagles

Pittsburgh Steelers

Bell’s second franchise tag (2018) covered $14.54MM, but the RB became the first tagged player this century to skip a season; Jaylen Warren‘s 2025 extension brought the highest Steelers RB guarantee ($7.1MM) on a multiyear deal

San Francisco 49ers

Seattle Seahawks

Tampa Bay Buccaneers

Tennessee Titans

Washington Commanders

  • Clinton Portis; March 1, 2004: Eight years, $50.52MM ($13MM guaranteed)

Information from OverTheCap and Spotrac was used in the creation of this post

Saints Place OL Nick Saldiveri On Reserve/PUP

After a knee injury knocked Nick Saldiveri out for the entire 2025 campaign, the guard is set to miss another season. The Saints placed the offensive lineman on the reserve/PUP list, per ESPN’s Katherine Terrell.

Mike Triplett of NewOrleans.football clarifies that the reserve/PUP list is different than the active/PUP list that’s often used at the beginning of training camp. Today’s designation means Saldiveri will not be able to suit up for New Orleans during the upcoming season.

It’s an unfortunate development for the 2023 fourth-round pick. The guard worked his way back from calf and shoulder injuries early in his career, eventually starting six of 11 appearances as a sophomore. That 2024 campaign ended early thanks to a first knee injury, but Saldiveri seemed to have established himself as at least a dependable depth piece for the Saints.

Saldiveri suffered his second knee injury during last year’s training camp, landing him on season-ending injured reserve. That same injury will now erase his 2026 campaign. The 25-year-old will be a free agent next offseason.

The Saints recently used a fourth-round pick on Jeremiah Wright, and the team could end up depending on the rookie behind Cesar Ruiz and David Edwards. New Orleans is also still rostering versatile lineman Dillon Radunz, who started 10 games for New Orleans in 2025.

Saints Restructure LB Pete Werner’s Deal

The 2026 offseason required far less in the way of salary cap gymnastics than previous years for the Saints. The team has still tweaked a few contracts, though.

The latest example on that front is linebacker Pete Werner. His pact was recently restructured, as noted by ESPN’s Katherine Terrell. As a result of the move, Werner’s 2026 cap charge has been lowered from just under $8MM to $3.94MM.

Werner was one of many veteran Saints who drew trade interest in 2025. New Orleans elected to keep him in the fold, though, and two years remain on his contract. The five-year veteran is due to collect $6.25MM this season and $6.5MM in 2027, although none of the latter figure is guaranteed.

Werner’s future will thus depend in large part on how he fares in 2026. The former second-rounder has amassed 63 starts during his New Orleans tenure, and he will be expected to remain a key defensive figure for at least one more season. Werner has recorded at least 80 tackles in each of the past four year; he added career-high totals in sacks (two), pass deflections (five) and fumble recoveries (three) in 2025.

The Saints brought back Kaden Elliss this spring. The former Falcon inked a three-year, $33MM deal in free agency and he will be counted on to produce alongside Werner. Replacing Demario Davis will be no small feat in 2026, but managing to do so could help team build off its momentum from late last season and contend for a playoff berth.

With the financial wiggle room brought on by the Werner restructure, the Saints now have roughly $8MM in cap space. No major additions should be expected, but low-cost roster moves will be more viable moving forward.

Minor NFL Transactions: 5/11/26

Today’s minor moves:

Atlanta Falcons

Baltimore Ravens

Buffalo Bills

  • Waived: CB M.J. Devonshire

Chicago Bears

  • Signed: WR Kyron Hudson, LB Wayne Matthews III, LB Jon Rhattigan

Cleveland Browns

Denver Broncos

Houston Texans

  • Signed: RB Evan Hull
  • Waived: TE Luke Lachey

Las Vegas Raiders

Miami Dolphins

  • Signed: FB DJ Herman

Minnesota Vikings

New England Patriots

New Orleans Saints

  • Signed: WR Brock Rechsteiner

New York Jets

Pittsburgh Steelers

San Francisco 49ers

Tampa Bay Buccaneers

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