Rams Would Welcome Aaron Donald Unretirement
Aaron Donald ended one of the greatest careers in NFL history at age 33, stopping after 10 Rams seasons. The three-time Defensive Player of the Year made a case as the greatest defensive tackle ever during that period, but the Rams have been able to get by defensively without the all-time great.
The Rams have been able to stay afloat defensively due in large part to successful front-seven draft investments. The team hit on Kobie Turner and Byron Young in the 2023 third round and then landed Jared Verse and Braden Fiske in the 2024 draft’s first two rounds. Los Angeles used Verse as the headline asset in the Myles Garrett package, and Donald took notice of another future Hall of Famer joining the Rams’ defense.
Going a whole two seasons without a surefire Hall of Famer on defense, the Rams acquired Garrett and will pair him with the Young-Turner-Fiske trio. Donald, however, created considerable buzz in the wake of the trade by indicating he is considering a return to football. The Rams’ three-year, $95MM Donald — agreed to months after Super Bowl LVI — contract carries one more season, in the event Donald would want to follow Philip Rivers in delaying his Canton clock.
Unlike Rivers, Donald is a no-doubt first-ballot Hall of Famer. He also plays a far more rigorous position. Unsurprisingly, Sean McVay said (via ESPN.com’s Sarah Barshop) the Rams would welcome a Donald return. But the former superstar, who regularly posts workout videos to social media, is far from certain to complete a comeback even with Garrett headlining Chris Shula‘s third defense.
“Aaron’s a guy that I stay really close in touch with and I know the respect that he has for Myles,” McVay said. “Talked to [Donald] about the opportunity to be able to bring [Garrett] on board. If Aaron decides he wants to dust them off at the age of 35, I bet you he could still do it at a pretty high clip.”
Perhaps the only D-lineman whose peak rivals Donald’s this century, J.J. Watt also teased an unretirement earlier this decade. Retiring after the 2022 season, when a heart scare occurred, Watt said he would consider a comeback to join the Texans or Steelers. But the CBS analyst said that window would close after the 2024 season. Donald is further removed from his career than his former peer was when he mentioned the prospect of a comeback, offering another complication.
Rather than rejoining the Rams this summer and going through another training camp, Donald could delay an unretirement for a bit and consider an in-season return. This seems like the more realistic path, Sports Illustrated’s Albert Breer offers. Mentioning Eric Weddle‘s unretirement in time for the 2021 playoffs — after the Rams had lost multiple safeties — as a potentially notable example (Weddle initially retired after the 2019 season).
The Eagles also signed Ndamukong Suh and Linval Joseph in mid-November 2022, adding the vets to their D-line after neither had gone through training camp or played in the first half of that season. Both played rotational roles for the NFC champions that year.
Donald playing a rotational role would be rather strange given his abilities pre-retirement. After missing a chunk of the 2022 season due to injury, Donald roared back with a seventh first-team All-Pro season in 2023. He finished that ’23 season with eight sacks and 16 tackles for loss, helping a Rams team that had themed 2023 around cost-cutting moves back to the playoffs.
Los Angeles has Fiske and Turner as locked-in regulars on its D-line. Donald returning would stand to cut into the younger 3-4 ends’ playing time. But a defense rostering Garrett and Donald to go with some rising young talents would obviously be formidable. Beyond a 2022 high ankle sprain, Donald does not have much of an injury history. Prior to 2022, the only two games he missed were due to a 2017 holdout. This may be a storyline to monitor well into the season — or until Donald shuts it down — as the Rams are viewed as early Vegas favorites to win a Super Bowl set to take place at SoFi Stadium.
Giants DL Roy Robertson-Harris Could Return This Season
The Giants have bought in bulk on their defensive line following the Dexter Lawrence trade. New York added Shelby Harris, D.J. Reader, Zacch Pickens, Leki Fotu and Josh Tupou this offseason. The team also drafted Bobby Jamison-Travis in Round 6.
Part of this spree did come after a notable setback, as Roy Robertson-Harris — given a two-year contract in 2025 — suffered an Achilles tear. While the veteran interior D-lineman is facing a long recovery journey, the Giants are not placing him on IR. John Harbaugh said (via The Athletic’s Dan Duggan) the team has hope Robertson-Harris can return late in the season.
Robertson-Harris going down in late May would conceivably support an in-season return. We have seen similar timetables emerge involving players to suffer this injury during offseason work. Terrell Suggs‘ 2011 Defensive Player of the Year season preceded an Achilles tear in spring 2012. Suggs underwent surgery and returned in Week 7, helping Baltimore win its second Super Bowl. A year later, Michael Crabtree suffered an Achilles tear during 49ers OTAs. He came back in Week 13 as the 49ers reached a third straight NFC championship game.
Cam Akers beat those two standouts’ timetables in 2021, suffering a tear in late July and returning by Week 18. The Rams running back was not in great form upon return, but he made his way back to dress for Los Angeles’ four-game playoff run that culminated with a Super Bowl LVI win. Robertson-Harris is not on a team with lofty aspirations, but there is precedent for players in his circumstance completing a rehab effort by season’s end.
It looks like the Giants will stash Robertson-Harris on their reserve/PUP list when they set their 53-man roster in late August. He would miss at least the first four games, and a late-May Achilles tear will almost certainly lead to a longer hiatus. If the Giants were to place Robertson-Harris on IR now, he would — barring a situation involving a release and injury settlement — be forced to miss the season. The Giants would not lose one of their eight injury activations by activating Robertson-Harris from the PUP list.
A 10th-year veteran, Robertson-Harris started 17 games for the Giants last season and played 56% of their defensive snaps. The former Bears, Jaguars and Seahawks defender signed with the Giants — on a two-year, $9MM deal — after a Seattle release.
The Giants, who geared their D-line group (and pretty much their entire front seven) around Lawrence’s presence for seven years, have four 30-somethings rostered along their defensive front post-Lawrence. Robertson-Harris, 32, will not join Harris and Reader — and perhaps Tupou, who is 32 — on New York’s active roster for a while, but the team will hold out hope he can come back this season.
Minor NFL Transactions: 6/4/26
Several NFL teams made minor transactions on Thursday. Here’s a look…
Cleveland Browns
- Signed: DE Benton Whitley
Houston Texans
- Signed: TE Louie Hansen
- Waived: WR Jalen Walthall
Los Angeles Rams
- Placed on IR: OL Chad Lindberg, OLB Eddie Walls
Minnesota Vikings
- Signed: WR Michael Briscoe, WR Trayvon Rudolph
- Waived: WR Joaquin Davis
New York Jets
- Signed: WR Gee Scott
Pittsburgh Steelers
- Signed: LB Jamin Davis
- Waived: TE Chamon Metayer
Out of the 11 players listed above, Davis is the only one with a first-round pedigree. Washington took the former Kentucky Wildcat 19th overall in 2021, but his stock has plummeted during his five-year career. As a member of the Commanders for three-plus seasons, he totaled 282 tackles and seven sacks over 50 games (36 starts).
The Commanders experimented with Davis at defensive end in 2024, but it didn’t work out to their liking. They waived Davis in late October that year, and he has since gone to short stints with the Packers, Vikings, Jets and Raiders. The 27-year-old got into two games with the Raiders last season and made three tackles. Davis is now reuniting with Steelers defensive coordinator Patrick Graham, who held the same position in Las Vegas in 2025.
Dolphins Sign Fifth-Rounder Seydou Traore, Wrap Up Draft Class
The Dolphins signed fifth-round tight end Seydou Traore to his rookie deal on Thursday, the team announced. They now have all 13 of their 2026 draft picks under contract.
Traore was Miami’s 11th pick in a class headlined by two first-rounders, offensive lineman Kadyn Proctor (No. 12) and cornerback Chris Johnson (No. 27). They grabbed Proctor after moving down a spot in a trade with Dallas, which gave up the 177th and 180th picks. The Dolphins used the 180th choice on Traore, who was born in France and raised in England. Along with Jordan Mailata (Eagles; seventh round, 2018), Travis Clayton (Bills; seventh round, 2024) and Uar Bernard (Eagles; seventh round, 2026), Traore is one of four NFL draft picks to come from the International Pathway Program.
A former soccer goalie, Traore joined the NFL Academy in London and then moved to Clearwater, Fla., for his senior year of high school, per Dane Brugler of The Athletic. As a three-star recruit, Traore began his college career in 2021 at Arkansas State. He broke out in his second season – a 50-catch, 655-yard, four-touchdown campaign – and earned first-team All-Sun Belt honors. Traore sat out the next year after transferring to Mississippi State, but he was a solid producer there from 2024-25. He totaled 69 catches, 730 yards and six TDs over 25 games with the Bulldogs. The 6-foot-4, 223-pounder is now part of a Miami tight end group that also includes Greg Dulcich and third-round rookie Will Kacmarek.
The Dolphins made more picks than any other team in this year’s draft. Here is their full list of newcomers:
- Round 1, No. 12 (from Cowboys): Kadyn Proctor (T, Alabama) (signed)
- Round 1, No. 27 (from 49ers): Chris Johnson (CB, San Diego State) (signed)
- Round 2, No. 43: Jacob Rodriguez (LB, Texas Tech) (signed)
- Round 3, No. 75: Caleb Douglas (WR, Texas Tech) (signed)
- Round 3, No. 87 (from Eagles): Will Kacmarek (TE, Ohio State) (signed)
- Round 3, No. 94 (from Broncos): Chris Bell (WR, Louisville) (signed)
- Round 4, No. 130 (from Broncos): Trey Moore (EDGE, Texas) (signed)
- Round 4, No. 138*: Kyle Louis (LB, Pitt) (signed)
- Round 5, No. 158 (from Vikings): Michael Taaffe (S, Texas) (signed)
- Round 5, No. 177 (from Cowboys)*: Kevin Coleman Jr. (WR, Missouri) (signed)
- Round 5, No. 180 (from Cowboys)*: Seydou Traore (TE, Mississippi State) (signed)
- Round 6, No. 200 (from Panthers): DJ Campbell (G, Texas) (signed)
- Round 7, No. 238 (from Chargers via Titans and Jets): Max Llewellyn (EDGE, Iowa) (signed)
Chargers, Akheem Mesidor Agree To Deal
The Chargers have agreed to a deal with first-round edge defender Akheem Mesidor, Adam Schefter of ESPN reports. As the 22nd overall pick, Mesidor inked a four-year, $20.46MM contract.
Despite his age (25) and past injury issues, Mesidor was widely expected to come off the board in the first round. He was one of the top 30 prospects available, according to both Daniel Jeremiah of NFL.com (No. 26) and Dane Brugler of The Athletic (No. 28). The Buccaneers reportedly would have taken Mesidor 15th overall had former Miami teammate and fellow edge defender Rueben Bain Jr. not slid to them.
Mesidor is entering the NFL with plenty of experience, having played in 65 college games over six seasons. The Canada native began at West Virginia, where he tallied 70 tackles, 14.5 TFL and 14.5 sacks from 2020-21.
Mesidor was mostly an interior lineman with the Mountaineers, but he took on an edge role upon transferring to Miami in 2022. After racking up 10.5 TFL and seven sacks in 11 games in his first season with the Hurricanes, foot problems held Mesidor to three appearances in 2023. He stayed healthy in his final two seasons at Miami, though, and his production exploded during a 15-game 2025. The 6-foot-3, 259-pounder amassed 38 tackles, 17.5 TFL and 12.5 sacks en route to first-team All-ACC and second-team All-America honors.
As someone who is also a capable run defender, Mesidor projects as a three-down player in the pros, according to Brugler. He could begin his career as the third or fourth option in a talented group of edge defenders in Los Angeles.
The Chargers lost Odafe Oweh to the Commanders’ four-year, $100MM offer in free agency, but they still boast Khalil Mack and Tuli Tuipulotu as starters. Bud Dupree and Kyle Kennard are in the mix as depth. Kennard is the only member of that quartet signed past the upcoming season, but the 2025 fourth-round pick disappointed during a five-game, two-tackle rookie campaign. The Chargers will expect much better production from Mesidor during his first season. If he pans out and the Chargers extend Tuipulotu, which general manager Joe Hortiz hopes to do, they will have a formidable pass-rushing duo for the next several years.
With Mesidor under wraps, the Chargers have locked up seven rookies from an eight-player class. Fourth-round receiver Brenen Thompson is the last unsigned pick standing.
Texans Sign 1st-Rounder Keylan Rutledge
The Texans have signed first-round guard Keylan Rutledge to his four-year rookie contract. As the 26th overall pick, the former Georgia Tech Yellow Jacket will receive a fully guaranteed deal worth $19.28MM.
The Texans entered the draft holding the 28th selection, but general manager Nick Caserio traded up two spots with the Bills to reel in Rutledge. While Rutledge did not look like a first-round lock going into the draft, at least one other team eyed him in the top 32. Tennessee, one of Houston’s AFC South rivals, tried to jump ahead of the Texans to take Rutledge. Meanwhile, an executive from an NFC team told Jeremy Fowler of ESPN that Rutledge, not Vega Ioane, was the best guard in this year’s class. Ioane went 14th overall to the Ravens.
Rutledge spent his first two college seasons at Middle Tennessee State, where he was the primary starter at right guard. After transferring to Georgia Tech in 2024, he remained at the position and served as a full-time starter. Rutledge became the Yellow Jackets’ first player since legendary wide receiver Calvin Johnson to earn first-team All-ACC honors in two straight seasons (h/t: Dane Brugler of The Athletic). The 6-foot-3, 316-pounder was also a first-team All-American in 2025. Caserio sees Rutledge as a perfect fit for his club.
“The things that stand out about him, toughness, violence, physicality, his playing style, his intelligence,” Caserio said (via Aaron Wilson of KPRC 2). “Basically, the guy wants to step on your throat on every play, which I would say sort of embodies what our football team is about, the way we play.”
While Houston expects Rutledge to emerge as a long-term starter, it may not be at his typical position. The Texans have a pair of pricey veteran guard starters in the extended Ed Ingram and free agent addition Wyatt Teller. With those two in the fold, Rutledge could battle Jake Andrews for the starting center job, according to Wilson. Rutledge lined up at center at the Senior Bowl and has also gotten first-team work there in practices with the Texans.
The Rutledge signing brings the Texans one step closer to getting all of their draft picks under contract. Fourth-round guard Febechi Nwaiwu is the lone member of their eight-player class who remains unsigned.
Cardinals Release K Joshua Karty, Sign S Isaiah Oliver
The Cardinals have brought an early end to the battle between kickers Joshua Karty and Chad Ryland. They released Karty on Thursday, per a team announcement. Arizona signed safety Isaiah Oliver in a corresponding move.
The Rams spent a 2024 sixth-round pick on Karty, a Stanford product who impressed as a rookie. Karty converted 29 of 34 field goals and 32 of 36 extra points then, but his production declined during a rough 2025 for the Rams’ special teams unit. He missed five of his 15 field goal tries and went 23 of 26 on extra points over eight games, leading the Rams to elevate kicker Harrison Mevis from their practice squad in Week 10.
Mevis thrived after his promotion and never gave the job back to Karty, whom the Rams cut in late November. While they brought him back a few days later as a member of their practice squad, the Cardinals signed him away on Dec. 23. Karty did not get into either of the Cardinals’ last two games, but they retained him as an exclusive rights free agent.
Barring another outside addition, the Cardinals will continue with Ryland, who re-signed on a one-year deal in March. The former Patriot has made just 76.7% of field goals during his three-year career, though he has converted 86 of 88 extra points. He nailed all 36 PATs in 2025.
The 6-foot, 202-pound Oliver entered the league in 2018 as a second-round pick of the Falcons. Oliver became a starter in his second season, but he has mostly worked as a backup since a knee injury limited him to four games in 2021. He stuck with the Falcons through 2022, left for the 49ers in 2023, and then spent the past two seasons with the Jets. As part of a New York defense that failed to intercept a pass in 2025, Oliver got into 14 games, made two starts and recorded 55 tackles. The 29-year-old’s season ended in mid-December as a result of a knee injury.
Overall, Oliver has totaled 110 appearances (53 starts), 42 passes defensed and three picks during his eight-year career. The Phoenix native will now try to earn a spot in a Budda Baker-led safety group that also includes Dadrion Taylor-Demerson, free agent pickup Andrew Wingard, Joey Blount, Kitan Crawford and undrafted rookie Wydett Williams Jr.
Lions Not Close To Extension Agreement With RB Jahmyr Gibbs
JUNE 4: When speaking to the media on Thursday, Gibbs said (via ESPN’s Eric Woodyard) he is not worried about agreeing to a new deal in time for the upcoming season. He added he is also not concerned about the possibility of Robinson signing his extension earlier. It will be interesting to see how the timing shakes out with those two backs, and the impact one deal will ultimately have on the other.
MAY 30: The Lions have finalized one big-money second contract with a member of their 2023 draft class (linebacker Jack Campbell). Three other notable players from that group are eligible for extensions, including Jahmyr Gibbs.
A payday for Detroit’s lead back has long been on the team’s radar. It would come as little surprise if Gibbs were to find himself securing a new deal relatively soon as he appears to be the next in line for one. There is plenty of work still to be done on that front, however.
During an appearance on NFL Live yesterday (video link), ESPN’s Jeremy Fowler reported there has not yet been much progress during negotiations between Gibbs and the Lions. Plenty of time remains for an agreement to be reached before the start of training camp, of course. Detroit also has the option of remaining patient in this case with Gibbs under team control through 2027.
A key factor as it pertains to Gibbs will no doubt be the movement seen in the running back market as early as this summer. Fowler noted, to no surprise, a pact averaging $20MM or more per year is likely for Gibbs. Saquon Barkley‘s pact currently leads all running backs with an average annual value of $20.6MM, but the bar could move multiple times in short order. Bijan Robinson is a strong candidate to become the league’s highest-paid back; he and Gibbs have become two of the NFL’s most productive at the position across the past three years.
A report from last month indicated Robinson is expected to land a more valuable extension than Gibbs. According to Fowler, however, some around the league view Detroit’s RB1 as being better than Atlanta’s. That could result in Gibbs moving to the top of the financial pecking order. In any case, the timing of extensions being worked out will no doubt be critical, and each fourth-year producer could prefer to wait until the other signs a deal.
Gibbs split carries with David Montgomery during his rookie season in particular, but he has taken on a major workload on the ground and through the air since arriving as a first-round pick. The 24-year-old has amassed over 5,000 scrimmage yards to date while scoring 49 total touchdowns. Any commitment made by the team will ensure Gibbs remains in the Motor City while making him one of several offensive players attached to a big-ticket deal.
The likes of quarterback Jared Goff, receiver Amon-Ra St. Brown and left tackle Penei Sewell are already on the books at a large cost for Detroit. Tight end Sam LaPorta is a pending 2027 free agent, and the Lions are also interested in a new contract in his case. Fitting Gibbs into that financial setup will carry challenges, but an uptick in negotiations to work out a long-term pact is likely to take place over the coming weeks.
Jaguars Sign CB Dane Jackson, OL Trystan Colon; CB Keith Taylor Placed On IR
The Jaguars have added a pair of veterans ahead of minicamp. Cornerback Dane Jackson and offensive lineman Trystan Colon have been signed, the team announced on Thursday.
In corresponding moves, cornerback Keith Taylor has been placed on injured reserve while offensive lineman Sal Wormley has been waived (meaning he will hit the wire before becoming a free agent if unclaimed). Players moved to IR at this stage of the offseason are guaranteed to miss the entire campaign, so today’s news is a major blow for Taylor. Ryan O’Halloran of the Florida Times-Union reports the veteran recently suffered a pectoral tear while weightlifting.
Jackson was one of several members of Buffalo’s secondary who was released in March. Being cut brought an end to his second Bills stint; the six-year veteran has played five totals seasons with the team. A one-year run with the Panthers which did not go according to plan preceded Jackson’s Buffalo return for 2025. The 29-year-old will look to provide an injury replacement for Taylor and offer Jacksonville with depth in the secondary.
Colon saw sparse usage across a three-year Ravens stint to begin his career. The former undrafted free agent then spent a pair of seasons in Arizona, totaling 11 starts. Colon was with the Lions for 2025 and made 12 appearances (including four starts) as Detroit worked through a number of injuries up front. He has seen over 300 snaps at center along with both guard positions over the course of his career. A depth role on the interior will be sought out this summer.
Jacksonville entered Thursday with roughly $9.5MM in cap space. The additions of Jackson and Colon can be expected to check in at or near the veteran minimum. Further roster shuffling in advance of training camp – along with mandatory minicamp, which will run from June 15-17 – should be possible as a result.
Tyler Guyton, Nate Thomas Competing For Cowboys’ LT Position
Tyler Guyton has totaled 21 starts at left tackle early in his career. It is not certain he will remain atop the depth chart heading into his third Cowboys season, however.
Head coach Brian Schottenheimer said on Thursday (via ESPN’s Todd Archer) Guyton and Nate Thomas will compete for the starting gig at left tackle this offseason. Spring workouts are underway already, but the evaluation for offensive and defensive linemen in particular will of course truly begin during padded practices in training camp. That period will be critical for Guyton.
Schottenheimer offered praise for the 2024 first-rounder based on how things have gone so far in offseason work. Guyton will nevertheless need to earn his first-team position this summer. Penalties and sacks allowed were issues during his rookie campaign. While the Oklahoma product managed to improve in both areas in 2025, his PFF evaluation for last year left plenty to be desired.
Guyton will enter training camp as the favorite to retain starting duties at left tackle, Jon Machota of The Athletic writes. 2026 will mark his age-25 season, and improved play would be critical in stabilizing the blindside for Dallas now and in the future. It would also make the Cowboys’ fifth-round option decision easier in Guyton’s case, of course; a call on that front will need to be made next spring.
Thomas was also taken in the 2024 draft, joining Dallas as a seventh-rounder. After not playing during his rookie campaign, Thomas appeared in all 17 games last season (totaling four starts). The Louisiana alum drew poor PFF grades for his pass protection in particular, so expectations would be tempered in the event he were to begin 2026 on the blindside. Machota writes fourth-round rookie Drew Shelton could also see looks at left tackle if needed.
A contingency could be for the Cowboys to move Pro Bowl guard Tyler Smith to left tackle. As Smith recently told Schottenheimer (via the team’s website), though, his preference would be to remain on the inside on a permanent basis. Machota confirms Smith playing at tackle is a scenario neither team nor player would prefer. As a result, the performances of Guyton and Thomas will be worth monitoring closely over the course of the summer.



