Packers’ Micah Parsons Uncertain To Play In Week 1?
SEPTEMBER 2: During a Tuesday appearance on First Take, agent David Mulugheta said (via ESPN’s Rob Demovsky) Parsons’ back is feeling “much better” following the use of the corticosteroid. He added Parsons will push to play on Sunday, although his workload will be something to monitor.
SEPTEMBER 1: Through much of the Cowboys-Micah Parsons saga, back tightness was cited as the reason he did not participate in training camp practices. Following last week’s blockbuster trade to the Packers, Parsons is still dealing with the issue.
The All-Pro edge rusher has a facet joint sprain in his fourth and fifth lumbar vertebrae, ESPN’s Adam Schefter reports. This ailment — clearly a legitimate one, rather than a simple negotiating ploy during extension talks which proved to be rather contentious — has resulted in at least a degree of uncertainty regarding whether Parsons will play in Week 1, Schefter adds. Green Bay’s season kicks off Sunday against the Lions.
[RELATED: Parsons Attempted To Resume Cowboys Extension Talks Before Trade]
If Parsons is to suit up, an epidural injection may be required. The Cowboys had the four-time Pro Bowler on a plan involving the use of an anti-inflammatory corticosteroid for five days along with a physical therapy program prior to the trade. Parsons had been cleared by Dallas’ medical staff before seeking out a second opinion.
Parsons went through a limited Packers practice in his first workout — the first true practice work he has gone through since last season — but The Athletic’s Dianna Russini, Matt Schneidman and Zach Powell add a full practice is possible later this week and that it would surprise if Parsons is not at least in uniform for some part-time work against the Lions. When asked about his health at his Packers introductory presser, Parsons described himself as “great” physically.
“Physically, I’m great. I think I can contribute a lot,” Parsons said. “I’m going to team up with the doctors in creating a plan. We already talked about how we can ramp things up and get me into a flow where they feel comfortable and I feel comfortable. But my plan is to be here. They didn’t give up what they gave up for me to sit on the sidelines and make this big of a risk and change for me to do that, so I’m going to give them my all.”
Green Bay sent two first-round picks and nine-year defensive tackle starter Kenny Clark to Dallas for Parsons, and the trade haul has been widely viewed as insufficient for a player on Parsons’ trajectory. While the Cowboys’ trade timing has drawn more scrutiny, Parsons having a genuine back issue does inject some risk for the Packers. Green Bay brass is clearly unconcerned through a long-term lens, as evidenced by the record-smashing extension (four years, $186MM), but the superstar’s short-term status will need to be monitored as his first Packers season nears.
Sam Robinson contributed to this post.
WR Tim Patrick Drew Trade Interest From Multiple Teams
Tim Patrick survived roster cuts last week but he did not remain in place with the Lions long after that point. The veteran wideout was traded to the Jaguars one day after Detroit’s initial roster was in place. 
A sixth-round pick was exchanged to allow Patrick to head to Jacksonville just ahead of Week 1. That return certainly suggests a tepid market existed in this case, but other suitors were in the mix as well. Lions general manager Brad Holmes said (via ESPN’s Eric Woodyard) multiple teams showed interest in acquiring Patrick.
In 2024, the 31-year-old found success in a complementary role with Detroit. Patrick totaled 394 yards and three touchdowns on 33 catches, and that production landed him $2.5MM guaranteed on a new Lions pact in the spring. Instead of a second campaign in the Motor City, though, the former Bronco will spend the coming campaign in Jacksonville. He will add a veteran presence to a heavily renovated WR room in the process.
The Jaguars traded away Christian Kirk while also releasing Gabe Davis and Devin Duvernay. Jacksonville’s new regime will rely heavily on 2024 first-rounder Brian Thomas Jr. along with No. 2 pick Travis Hunter (whose exact offensive workload is yet to be determined, of course) in the passing game. Free agent addition Dyami Brown is also in the fold for 2025, but Patrick – a fellow pending free agent – will look to carve out the No. 3 role on his latest team.
In the meantime, the Lions will move forward with plenty of continuity at the receiver spot. Amon-Ra St. Brown, Jameson Williams and Kalif Raymond are set to reprise their roles from last season. Third-year tight end Sam LaPorta can again be expected to serve as a focal point in the passing game as well. With a limited workload in store for Patrick had he remained with the Lions, Holmes noted he felt the change of scenery was the best case scenario for all involved.
With Patrick no longer in the fold, third-round rookie Isaac TeSlaa could stand to benefit. The training camp standout primarily worked with the backups on offense this summer, but Dave Birkett of the Detroit Free Press notes an increased role could become available as the season progresses. During his two-year run at Arkansas, TeSlaa flashed potential based on his size and athleticism. Especially with Raymond scheduled for free agency next spring, a starting spot could be available to TeSlaa in 2026 or even earlier depending on how the coming months play out.
Offseason In Review: Pittsburgh Steelers
With Alex Smith the opposing quarterback in the Steelers’ most recent playoff win, the team had set up camp as perhaps the NFL’s lead middle-class resident. The Steelers spun their wheels at quarterback following Ben Roethlisberger‘s retirement, missing on Kenny Pickett and seeing its bargain-basement Russell Wilson/Justin Fields setup deliver predictably modest returns. The franchise’s long-held hesitancy about splashy outside acquisitions also persisted during Omar Khan‘s first years at the helm; that changed noticeably this offseason.
The Steelers operated aggressively on the trade front, extending D.K. Metcalf and Jonnu Smith upon acquiring them and taking on nearly $20MM in Jalen Ramsey money. While another T.J. Watt megadeal transpired weeks after the Dolphins swap, the team’s early-June agreement with Aaron Rodgers — after months of stalling on the future Hall of Fame QB’s part — represents the most important move for the 2025 team’s outlook. Will the high-action offseason finally move the needle for a franchise that continues to end seasons in the wild-card round?
Trades:
- Sent Seahawks Nos. 52, 223 for WR D.K. Metcalf, No. 185
- Traded WR George Pickens, 2027 sixth-round pick to Cowboys for 2026 third-rounder, 2027 fifth
- Acquired CB Jalen Ramsey, TE Jonnu Smith, 2027 seventh-round pick for S Minkah Fitzpatrick, 2027 fifth-rounder
A draft-and-develop receiver factory, the Steelers showed signs of a stripe change last year when they inquired about several pass catchers — most notably Brandon Aiyuk — via trade. The team had trade parameters worked out with the 49ers on Aiyuk, who was interested throughout the saga despite the Steelers not reaching the $30MM-per-year price point the Patriots had. Aiyuk recommitting to San Francisco changed Pittsburgh’s plan, and after Mike Williams did not accomplish much in what turned out to be his final season, the Steelers dedicated the early part of their offseason to a legitimate upgrade.
While a Deebo Samuel rumor circulated, the Steelers aimed higher. Samuel has an All-Pro season on his resume, but Metcalf has been the steadier option. The Steelers’ monthslong WR trade quest included checking in on Metcalf with the Seahawks before the 2024 deadline; Seattle balked then. Months later, Metcalf requested a trade. In the same week, Seattle unloaded 2020s pillars Metcalf and Geno Smith. The Chargers and Texans came up as preferred Metcalf destinations. The Steelers including a second-round pick in their offer sealed the deal.
Rather than renting Metcalf and evaluating his fit in Arthur Smith‘s offense, the team paid up by giving the two-time Pro Bowler an extension that ranked third among wide receivers at the time. Months later, Metcalf is the NFL’s fourth-highest-paid wideout.
He had sought a $30MM-plus-AAV deal upon requesting a trade, and a Steelers team not known for big investments in its own receivers — let alone other teams’ — stepped up. Metcalf received nearly a $10MM-per-year raise, following A.J. Brown (and now Terry McLaurin) as 2019 WR draftees to land a lucrative third contract.
Metcalf’s $60MM fully guaranteed also ranks fourth among receivers. The Steelers kept their non-Roethlisberger/T.J. Watt guarantee precedent here by refusing to guarantee any of Metcalf’s post-2026 salary, splitting his full guarantee between 2025-26 salaries and a $30MM signing bonus. The Steelers have some flexibility beginning in 2027, when roster bonuses begin to appear in the contract. If rostered on Day 5 of the ’27 league year, Metcalf will see a $6.5MM roster bonus. Day 5 of the 2028 and ’29 league years will provide a $5MM roster bonus.
Although short-term second contracts for Diontae Johnson and JuJu Smith-Schuster commenced, the Steelers have only awarded Antonio Brown and Hines Ward long-term deals at receiver this century. Metcalf breaks stride due to being a six-year Seahawk, but the Steelers spent most of 2024 trying to add an outside hire here. They paid up to do so a year later.
Certainly more good than great, Metcalf is 2-for-6 in Pro Bowl nods and 3-for-6 in 1,000-yard seasons. While not proving himself a high-ceiling player, Metcalf has some prime years left. He is going into an age-28 season, having shown plus durability throughout his career. Metcalf has missed just three career games. The Ryan Grubb offense did not prove beneficial to the former second-rounder, who posted a 992-yard year in 2024. Mike Tomlin played a key role in recruiting Metcalf, as he did Aiyuk, and Metcalf in turn attracted Rodgers to Pittsburgh.
At the time the Steelers acquired Metcalf, Pickens was still on the roster. A future with both was technically possible, but it does not sound like Pittsburgh wanted to remain in business with its latest mercurial wideout. Pickens follows Brown, Chase Claypool, Martavis Bryant and Santonio Holmes as modern-era Steeler WRs traded during their rookie deals. Even though Pickens and Metcalf overlapped, the Steelers decided after last season they were going to get out early on the talented WR.
Rumblings about a separation emerged in January, thought it was not known if Pickens would follow the likes of Mike Wallace and Emmanuel Sanders as WR talents who merely played out their rookie deals before leaving in free agency. Trade rumors surfaced during draft week, however. The Packers were mentioned as a suitor, but the Steelers held tight during the draft. The post-draft period does not regularly bring trades; the Cowboys were unconcerned with trade timing, as it turned out, this offseason.
Omar Khan said the Cowboys reached out post-draft, and the team will pair Pickens with CeeDee Lamb. The Cowboys trading for Pickens and then unloading Micah Parsons is a rather interesting transaction log. Only going into his age-24 season, Pickens has a significant opportunity to impress after being the Steelers’ No. 1 target for much of his rookie deal. It is now quite possible he will be on a third team in three years after the 2026 free agency period, though a franchise tag — particularly with Parsons in Wisconsin — will be in play.
Attitude issues, which are not new for a Steelers wide receiver, affected the team’s view of the 2022 second-round pick. And a summer report pegged Pittsburgh as not deeming Pickens and Rodgers as an ideal partnership. Depleting a receiving corps before the QB had even committed is an interesting move, and big questions about Roman Wilson‘s viability as a WR2 — after a five-snap rookie season — exist.
The Steelers did add a weapon for Rodgers, but it involved the tight end room. Smith also became the third name in the Ramsey-Fitzpatrick swap. After acquiring a disgruntled Fitzpatrick in Year 2 of his rookie deal, as the Dolphins used 2019 as a teardown mission, the Steelers sent him back to Miami at 28. Ramsey enters the picture at 30, coming after yet another instance of the likely Hall of Fame-bound corner wearing out his welcome with a team.
Obtaining Ramsey for a third-round pick and tight end Hunter Long in 2023, the Dolphins generally received solid play from the three-time All-Pro. Ramsey missed nearly half the 2023 season after knee surgery but played 17 games last year. Pro Football Focus graded the versatile cover man 11th among CB regulars in 2024, but Ramsey became unhappy in Miami.
A clash with Mike McDaniel and general discontent with the state of the Dolphins was believed to have irked Ramsey, though his reasoning for seeking an exit after two seasons is still not fully known. Despite a rumor pointing to Ramsey eyeing another West Coast move, the Steelers became a suitor.
The extension the Dolphins gave Ramsey last summer limited his trade market. Teams were believed to have balked at taking on too much of Ramsey’s 2025 compensation, but Chris Grier — despite yet another instance of the GM catering to a star player with an early extension or guarantee package — did well on this trade.
The Dolphins are only picking up $7MM of Ramsey’s 2025 tab, leaving the Steelers with $19.6MM. Ramsey’s three-year, $72.3MM extension runs through 2028, and the Dolphins took on the dead money (a non-QB-record $35.68MM). The Steelers cutting Ramsey during one of the next three offseasons, barring the corner securing yet another payday, would not bring any dead money.
Ramsey appears set for a hybrid role in Pittsburgh. The former Jaguars boundary defender began seeing extensive slot time with the Rams, logging 325 inside snaps in 2021 and 213 in 2022. After a perimeter role under Vic Fangio in 2023, Ramsey saw 185 slot snaps last season. He still played mostly on the boundary, which will be something to monitor here. But the Steelers could best utilize their top three corners by playing Ramsey inside more; that would leave room for Joey Porter Jr. and Darius Slay outside.
Fitzpatrick moved himself toward at least the Hall of Fame fringe with three first-team All-Pro seasons (2019, 2020, 2022), helping the Steelers remain a top-tier defense for most of his Pennsylvania stay. The dynamic safety intercepted 17 passes from 2019-22 and just one between the 2023 and ’24 seasons. The Steelers used Fitzpatrick closer to the line of scrimmage frequently in 2023, but even after a return to more of a deep safety role last season, his playmaking did not increase. The Steelers determined a $22MM 2025 cap hit was not worth what Ramsey (and Smith) could bring.
Pittsburgh gave Fitzpatrick a then-safety-record four-year, $72.99MM extension in 2022. Two years remain on the deal. The Steelers took on just $6.86MM in dead money by dealing the eighth-year vet. Lower-cost cogs DeShon Elliott and Juan Thornhill are set to work as the first-string safeties. This could bring a substantial downgrade, but the expected cornerback improvement may offset it to a degree.
This will be Jonnu Smith‘s third time playing for Arthur Smith, the former Titans OC and Falcons HC. Two years after Atlanta traded for Jonnu, Pittsburgh was connected to yet another Smiths reunion in May. Although Jonnu Smith-Dolphins extension talks occurred and the veteran tight end — who had been attached to a two-year, $8.4MM deal agreed to shortly after his 2024 Falcons release — expressed a desire to stay in Miami. A trade came together a month later, with the Steelers readier to pay the resurgent tight end than the Dolphins, who operated more conservatively this offseason.
Chock full of tight ends thanks to the presences of Pat Freiermuth, Darnell Washington and Connor Heyward, Jonnu Smith completes an interesting set. With the Steelers light at receiver beyond Metcalf, plenty of two-TE sets figure to emerge. Jonnu improved on his 2023 bounce-back season under Arthur (50 catches, 582 yards, three TDs) with a banner Miami slate (88/884/8). The 30-year-old TE’s cap hit will rise from $5.13MM in 2025 to $10.87MM in 2026.
Extensions and restructures:
- Gave OLB T.J. Watt three-year, $123MM extension ($108MM guaranteed)
- Extended S DeShon Elliott two-year, $12.5MM extension ($7.17MM guaranteed)
- Re-upped RB Jaylen Warren on two-year deal worth nearly $17.5MM
- Agreed to restructure with Cole Holcomb, clearing $5MM in cap space; LB now on one-year, $2MM deal
The cost of Watt’s extension began to rise when Maxx Crosby started the offseason edge rusher market boom, but the price crystalized after the Browns convinced Myles Garrett to rescind his trade request with a $40MM-per-year extension. While Garrett’s deal reset the market, the Steelers were smart to hammer out a Watt deal when they did. Had Pittsburgh waited until September like they did in 2021, the contract would assuredly have been pricier thanks to the Packers’ Micah Parsons windfall.
Unlike in 2021, Watt skipped minicamp. Plenty of rumors pegged the sides as far apart — particularly on guarantees — but a Steelers organization that does not negotiate in-season beat its self-imposed deadline by nearly two months.
Trade rumors became part of this process, but it never appeared anything was close. Watt’s slower finish (after a torrid start) last season was believed to factor into the Pittsburgh negotiation, but with the team in Year 4 without franchise-QB money on the books, flexibility existed. It took a monster guarantee package to seal this deal, though. Considering the Steelers are 1-10 without Watt since his 2017 arrival, the ninth-year sack ace carried notable leverage in his second round of extension talks.
NFL Practice Squad Updates: 9/1/25
Here are the latest practice squad transactions from around the NFL:
Chicago Bears
- Signed: LB Cale Jones Jr.
- Released: LB Power Echols
Indianapolis Colts
- Signed: LB Anthony Walker
- Released: DT Josh Tupou
Las Vegas Raiders
- Signed: QB Jeff Driskel, LB Brian Asamoah II
- Released: LB Matt Jones, S Trey Taylor
Miami Dolphins
- Signed: CB Isaiah Johnson
- Released: CB BJ Adams
New Orleans Saints
- Signed: QB/WR Tommy Mellott, DT Coziah Izzard
New York Jets
- Signed: LB Mykal Walker, RB Lawrance Toafili
- Released: LB Aaron Smith
Seattle Seahawks
- Signed: S D’Anthony Bell
- Released: G Sataoa Laumea
Tennessee Titans
- Signed: TE Drake Dabney
- Released: DB Kendell Brooks
With backup quarterback Aidan O’Connell starting the season on injured reserve, the Raiders – who already traded for Kenny Pickett – added some more veteran depth by signing Driskel. The 32-year-old has spent the last seven years in the NFL but only took one snap for the Commanders last season. Now, Driskel will join rookie QB Cam Miller on the practice squad in Las Vegas.
Minor NFL Transactions: 9/1/25
NFL teams are continuing to make minor roster moves as the regular season approaches. On Monday, four clubs released players from their injured reserve lists with an injury settlement. Players who land on the IR without a return designation have to remain there for the entire season, but those with a chance to recover often seek injury settlements so they can return to the field that season. The settlements pay a portion of the player’s salary, typically based on the amount of time the player is expected to miss, while freeing up cap space for the team during the season.
Houston Texans
- Removed from IR with injury settlement: WR Juwann Winfree
Los Angeles Chargers
- Removed from IR with injury settlement: S Jaylen Jones
San Francisco 49ers
- Removed from IR with injury settlement: CB Tre Brown, OT Isaiah Prince
Seattle Seahawks
- Removed from IR with injury settlement: LB Wesley Steiner
Rasheed Walker Wins Packers’ LT Battle
Packers offensive lineman Rasheed Walker said on Monday (via ESPN’s Rob Demovsky) that he will start at left tackle in Week 1.
In training camp, Walker battled 2024 first-rounder Jordan Morgan for the right to protect Jordan Love‘s blind side this season. Walker, a two-year incumbent, long seemed to have a lead over his younger teammate, who only played guard in his six appearances before shoulder surgery ended his season.
Walker, a 2022 seventh-round pick, took over for an injured David Bakhtiari in his second season and held onto the left tackle job through 2024. However, the Packers’ selection of Morgan – a standout left tackle at the University of Arizona – indicated that Walker may not be Green Bay’s long-term solution on the blind side.
Walker will retain his job heading into the final year of his rookie contract, but an extension does not seem like a certainty. The Packers spent significant money on left guard Aaron Banks and right tackle Zach Tom this year and may not want to foray into an ever-growing left tackle market. They also added two left tackle prospects in Morgan and Anthony Belton across the last two drafts.
However, with neither of the younger tackles emerging as a more capable starter this summer, Walker will retain his job with the hopes of playing his way into a massive raise, either from the Packers or another team.
49ers’ Jauan Jennings Returns To Practice; No Agreement On Contract
A year after signing a modest extension as a restricted free agent, Jauan Jennings nearly reached 1,000 yards. He then saw Deebo Samuel traded and Brandon Aiyuk land on the reserve/PUP list. A push for better contract terms has commenced, but Jennings remains tied to the deal he signed last year.
Attached to a two-year, $11.89MM contract that expires at season’s end, Jennings will be expected to start for the 49ers this year. Understandably, the sixth-year veteran has tried to procure a better deal as another season with a starter’s workload is on tap. While the 49ers do not intend to resolve this matter with a trade, it does not sound like negotiations are dead in the water.
[RELATED: Recapping 49ers’ 2025 Offseason]
But the team must now begin preparations for Week 1. Decimated at receiver thanks to the injuries to Aiyuk and Jacob Cowing accompanying the Demarcus Robinson suspension, the 49ers have made a few moves — in adding Skyy Moore, Russell Gage and Marquez Valdes-Scantling — while their Kendrick Bourne workout commenced today. Jennings also returned to practice, per The Athletic’s Matt Barrows.
Jennings, 28, had been out for more than a month with a calf injury. That malady surfaced shortly after his contract push became known. Players have used injuries as de facto hold-in measures during a CBA that makes holdouts difficult to wage. Kyle Shanahan, however, said Jennings had not formally requested a trade and ultimately expected him to play in Week 1. It seems that is on track to happen, as the 49ers will have Jennings teaming with 2024 first-round pick Ricky Pearsall as their top wide receivers against the Seahawks.
Even if Jennings returns for Week 1, his contract situation will be one to monitor. The 49ers may be leery about a second notable WR deal after ending the monthslong Aiyuk saga with a $30MM-per-year deal. Jennings is not a candidate to land a contract on that level, but the 49ers also paid Brock Purdy this offseason and handed out third contracts to George Kittle and Fred Warner. San Francisco’s budget may not include a significant Jennings raise, which would make this a pivotal year for the former seventh-round pick.
With Pearsall and ex-Arizona State teammate Aiyuk in place as the 49ers’ long-term weapons alongside Kittle, Jennings — absent an extension — will be a player to monitor ahead of the 2026 free agency period. With 2026 set to be Jennings’ age-29 season, he may have one real chance to cash in. And even that might bring an age-driven discount. For now, Jennings will be a crucial part the 49ers’ offense — particularly while Aiyuk is sidelined due to a longer ACL recovery timetable.
Jalen Sundell Earns Seahawks’ Center Job
Reminding of the Panthers’ pre-Ikem Ekwonu left tackle streak or the Broncos’ run of pre-Mike McGlinchey right tackles, the Seahawks have amassed a lengthy string of their own up front. They will have a new Week 1 center for the seventh straight season.
A recent UDFA from the Division I-FCS level, Jalen Sundell has done enough to be tabbed to snap to Sam Darnold in Week 1. After The Athletic’s Michael-Shawn Dugar indicated Sundell was on track to start the season at center, Mike Macdonald (via ESPN.com’s Brady Henderson) confirmed Sundell will be at center and Anthony Bradford at right guard. This wraps monthslong competitions.
For Sundell, this represents quite the climb. It will also bring two North Dakota State alums alongside each other along the Seahawks’ O-line. The team drafted Grey Zabel in Round 1 and slotted him at left guard. Zabel played with Sundell at the FCS powerhouse. The duo started together for the Bison during the 2022 and ’23 seasons, while Sundell — who began his college career two years earlier than Zabel — was a Bison starter during the two prior seasons.
The COVID-19 pandemic reshaped all of the divisions’ seasons south of the FBS level, forcing FCS players to play spring and fall 2021 seasons (Previous Bison QB Trey Lance opted out of the spring slate as a high-end draft prospect). Sundell started 20 North Dakota State games at center that year and continued as the team’s top snapper in 2022. After an injury-marred ’22 season, Sundell kicked out to left tackle in 2023 and became a first-team All-American. The Seahawks did not add him as a UDFA until July 2024, but he made the 53-man roster and played as a 12-game backup.
With Zabel immediately given the LG job and Bradford the favorite to stick at RG, Zabel unseated Olu Oluwatimi. The team had turned to Oluwatimi following Connor Williams‘ in-season retirement, but the 2023 fifth-round pick suffered a back injury during training camp. That allowed Sundell an extended audition, and the Seahawks will go with him to open the season. While Macdonald said Oluwatimi is a candidate to reclaim his job in-season, the Seahawks will return three 2024 starters up front to go with their North Dakota State imports. If Bradford or Zabel went down, Macdonald said (via the Seattle Times’ Bob Condotta) Sundell would slide to guard while Oluwatimi would take over at center.
Sundell follows Williams, who succeeded Evan Brown. From 2019-22, the Seahawks used Justin Britt, Ethan Pocic, Kyle Fuller and Austin Blythe as their season-opening centers (though, Pocic was still Seattle’s primary center in 2021, starting 10 games after missing Week 1). The Seahawks do not have much invested at center presently, but they will give a long-odds option a chance to provide stability.
Rams’ Alaric Jackson Expected To Play In Week 1
SEPTEMBER 1: Jackson’s return to team work has not produced a setback, and McVay said (via the Orange County Register’s Adam Grosbard) the plan is for the team’s starting left tackle to be protecting Stafford in Week 1.
This would be a well-timed ramp-up period for the Rams, who had a backup LT protecting Jimmy Garoppolo for most of training camp. Although McVay confirmed the blood-clot issue will need to still be monitored to open the season, the Rams are poised to be at full strength on offense against a top-tier Texans defense.
AUGUST 28: Sidelined by the second blood-clot issue of his career, Alaric Jackson moved out of the picture for an extended period this summer. D.J. Humphries resides as the Rams’ emergency left tackle starter, with Jackson not taking part in team drills throughout training camp.
While the Rams spent much of camp trotting out backups at LT and quarterback, the prospect of Jackson being ready to protect Matthew Stafford — who has returned to practice after an extended bout with back trouble — is on the table. Jackson returned to 11-on-11 drills this week, Sean McVay said (via the Los Angeles Times’ Gary Klein).
[RELATED: Assessing Rams’ 2025 Offseason]
McVay voiced an expectation Jackson will be ready for the Rams’ opener, which would represent a significant development considering how long he has been sidelined. The blood-clot diagnosis emerged in mid-June, and while the recently re-signed blocker remained on the Rams’ roster throughout, he had not been cleared for team drills. This led to a Humphries-Warren McClendon competition for the emergency role.
Added on a one-year, $2.5MM deal that came nearly fully guaranteed, Humphries joined the Rams around the time Jackson’s blood-clot issue surfaced. The former Cardinals mainstay did not make much of an impact with the Chiefs last season, suffering an injury in his first assignment and not earning his starting job back. After an apparent 49ers commitment, no deal commenced. That kept Humphries an option to fill in for Jackson. While the eight-year Arizona starter brings considerable experience to the table, his most recent work revealed a substantial quality gap between he and Jackson.
Given a three-year, $57.75MM deal to pass on free agency and stay in Los Angeles, Jackson secured $30MM guaranteed on this contract. He has worked as L.A.’s starting left tackle for the past two seasons, helping the Rams recover from a Joe Noteboom misevaluation as the Andrew Whitworth successor. While Jackson missed eight games due to blood clots in 2022, he returned to win an LT competition over Noteboom.
Jackson began last season serving a two-game suspension but did not miss any more time (beyond a Week 18 rest). If the former UDFA find is not ready for Week 1, his return to practice points to an early-season return.
WR Hunter Renfrow Addresses Decision To Re-Sign With Panthers
Hunter Renfrow was one of the Panthers’ roster cuts last week, but it soon became clear a Carolina reunion could be worked out. That proved to be the case on Saturday when the veteran wideout was re-signed. 
Renfrow’s bid to return to the NFL saw him join the Panthers this spring. The Myrtle Beach, South Carolina native was out of the league in 2024 due to ulcerative colitis, but he did enough during training camp to warrant attention around the NFL. Panthers head coach Dave Canales noted continued work on his conditioning was a key factor in any future reunion, one which came about following the Adam Thielen trade and Jalen Coker‘s move to injured reserve.
A slot role is in place for Renfrow, who exceled in that capacity during part of his Raiders tenure. The 29-year-old topped 1,000 yards and scored nine touchdowns in 2021, earning a Pro Bowl nod. He was unable to duplicate that production afterwards, resulting in his Vegas release. Renfrow is now in position to resume his career with his hometown team, the only one he considered playing for in recent days.
“I kind of told [my agent] I was going to be here or nowhere,” the Clemson product said about remaining in Carolina (via the team’s website). “I know he told me a few teams, but I think he was getting calls throughout the weekend. But I just told him this is where I wanted to be. Just because this is home for me, this is what I wanted to do.”
The Panthers added a first-round receiver in the form of Xavier Legette last spring. The team went the same route in April, meaning Tetairoa McMillan is positioned to pair with Legette as a starter on the perimeter. Coker will be tasked with handling first-team duties upon return, but in the meantime Renfrow will be able to contribute in the passing game. His new Panthers pact is reportedly worth more than the veteran minimum contract he originally signed, a reflection of the market which existed in this case and Carolina’s immediate need at the receiver spot.
A healthy and productive campaign from Renfrow would provide a boost to the Panthers’ passing game. It would also strengthen his chances of continuing to play beyond 2025, something which was in question until his Carolina return was worked out.














