Packers To Trade Rashan Gary To Cowboys

Until today, it remained unclear if the Packers would be moving on from Rashan GaryThe former first-rounder will in fact be playing elsewhere next season, though.

Gary is being traded to the Cowboys, Dianna Russini of The Athletic reports. A Day 3 pick in the 2027 draft will be heading the other way; NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport clarifies it will be a fourth-round selection. Dallas was a runner-up in the Maxx Crosby sweepstakes, leaving the team to explore other edge rush options. Instead of waiting for free agency to commence, the Cowboys have already swung a deal in that regard.

This agreement will allow for a reunion between Gary and new Cowboys defensive coordinator Christian Parker. Parker was a defensive quality control coach with Green Bay during Gary’s rookie campaign. A prominent role should await Gary, whose contract runs through 2027. This trade will create just under $11MM in cap savings for the Packers while generating a dead money charge of $17MM.

Gary said his Instagram account was hacked when a goodbye message emerged from it Friday, but rather than being released, the seven-year Packer generated (minimal) trade value. Gary comes over after a season as Micah Parsons‘ edge rush tandem partner but will now rejoin Kenny Clark — the player sent to the Cowboys in the blockbuster Parsons swap — in Dallas.

Two years remain on Gary’s four-year, $96MM contract, and this trade comes after the Cowboys were mentioned as interested in free agents Trey Hendrickson, Jaelan Phillips, Odafe Oweh and Boye Mafe. The Cowboys fielded an abysmal defense and could conceivably add one of those options, but Gary is 28 and fills a need — even if he has not lived up to this $24MM-AAV extension. This marks the second time since August the Cowboys have taken on a Packers deal worth at least $22MM per year. Clark has since come up as an extension candidate, as the Cowboys will look to bring down his 2026 cap number.

After trading Parsons, the Cowboys have 2025 edge rushers Jadeveon Clowney, Sam Williams and Dante Fowler unsigned. The team used a second-round pick on Donovan Ezeiruaku last year and then tragically saw 2024 second-rounder Marshawn Kneeland pass away during the season. More work will need to be done at OLB for the Cowboys, and they will have a player who — despite playing as a 4-3 DE over the past two years — did his best work in a 3-4 scheme.

Gary registered 9.5 sacks in 2021 and nine in 2023, garnering a Green Bay payday. He still combined for 15 sacks over the past two seasons but came up as a name to monitor with regards to a release or trade. The Packers used a 2023 first-round pick on Lukas Van Ness but have not seen that move pay off yet. While Van Ness could see more playing time as a result of Gary’s exit, ESPN.com’s Rob Demovsky notes the Packers should be expected to target defensive linemen soon after making two trades — the other sending Colby Wooden to the Colts — that cut into the unit’s depth.

Adam La Rose contributed to this post.

Patriots To Add G Alijah Vera-Tucker

Alijah Vera-Tucker has seen three seasons heavily impacted by injuries, but he found a taker on Day 1 of free agency. The former Jets first-round pick is heading to the Patriots, NFL.com’s Ian Rapoport tweets.

The Giants were negotiating with the ex-Jet guard’s camp, per SNY’s Connor Hughes, but the NFC East club could not close the deal. Vera-Tucker instead will join the defending AFC champions. The Giants may have balked at the price, per Hughes, and it appears a few teams were willing to bet on upside here.

The Pats are giving Vera-Tucker a three-year, $42MM deal that could climb to $48MM, ESPN’s Adam Schefter reports. Guarantees are not yet known, but it looks like the injury-plagued blocker has done well for himself.

Vera-Tucker has moved between guard and right tackle as a pro, though the USC alum has shown his best stuff inside. Pro Football Focus ranked the 2021 first-rounder ninth overall among guards in 2024. Unfortunately, he could not build on that momentum. A third season-ending injury transpired in 2025, hurting Vera-Tucker’s extension case — a cause also affected by the Jets’ organizational turnover.

Encountering triceps tears in both arms, Vera-Tucker also sustained an Achilles tear during his rookie contract. He missed 41 games as a Jet. The team viewed the former No. 14 overall pick as a Pro Bowl-caliber guard, but injuries impeded him. Still, Vera-Tucker is heading into an age-27 season. The Patriots will bet on upside, though it is worth wondering how much they’re betting.

PFR’s No. 44-ranked free agent, Vera-Tucker probably would have been the top guard this year had he endured one or two season-ending maladies. But the second triceps tear wiping out all of his 2025 season made this an unpredictable market. New England has probably secured one of the highest-upside plays this year, though it comes with obvious risk.

As Ben Levine’s Patriots Offseason Outlook noted, 2025 left guard starter Jared Wilson was a college center. With the Pats trading Garrett Bradbury to the Bears, it is possible Wilson slides there and Vera-Tucker camps at LG. Vera-Tucker was primarily a right guard as a Jet; Michael Onwenu plays there for the Pats, though he has proven malleable as well. As for the Jets, they are down to one player from their five-first-rounder contingent from 2021-22. Garrett Wilson remains, while Zach Wilson, Vera-Tucker, Sauce Gardner and Jermaine Johnson are gone.

The Giants have been connected to a few guards. Two of those rumored optionsWyatt Teller, Daniel Faalele — remain unsigned as we wind down an explosive first day of the legal tampering period.

RFA/ERFA Tender Decisions: 3/9/26

Here are today’s tender decisions:

RFAs

Tendered:

Non-tendered:

ERFAs

Tendered:

Chiefs To Sign S Alohi Gilman, Re-Sign WR Tyquan Thornton

Bryan Cook departed for the Bengals today, and the Chiefs have a host of secondary holes to fill. One of them will come from Baltimore. Alohi Gilman is signing with the Chiefs, NFL.com’s Tom Pelissero tweets.

Kansas City is giving the former Charger a three-year, $24.75MM deal that includes $15MM fully guaranteed. Kansas City is also bringing back wide receiver Tyquan Thornton, veteran insider Jordan Schultz tweets. Thornton is coming back on a two-year, $11MM deal, per Schultz.

Among a glut of starter-level safeties hitting the market Monday, Gilman played out a Chargers-designed contract in Baltimore. The Ravens traded Odafe Oweh in a deal that brought Gilman to Maryland. Although Day 3 picks were exchanged in that swap, Oweh fetched a monster Commanders deal today while Gilman will be tied to a midlevel Chiefs pact. That could represent a nice value play for Kansas City, which saw Cook land a three-year, $40.25MM Cincinnati accord.

Gilman will join fellow former Charger defenders Drue Tranquill and Kristian Fulton in Kansas City (though, the latter is a clear-cut release candidate). Entering an age-29 season, Gilman is a seventh-year veteran who has started for the past three seasons. The Chargers turned to the former sixth-round pick in 2023, and a solid contract year led to a two-year, $10.13MM deal as a 2024 free agent. Gilman started all 28 games he played on that contract, jumping into the Ravens’ lineup immediately after the October trade.

Cook started for three seasons in Kansas City, but he follows Justin Reid, Tyrann Mathieu and Juan Thornhill as one-contract Chiefs safeties in recent years. The Chiefs also lost three corners — Trent McDuffie (traded), Jaylen Watson and Joshua Williams — in recent days. Moves to replace that trio will be needed, though Fulton, Chamarri Conner and Nohl Williams remain on the roster.

Thornton played a bigger role early in the season, with Rashee Rice on the shelf due to a suspension. Xavier Worthy also missed early-season time due to a shoulder injury. A Patriots second-round washout, Thornton made some notable contributions as a deep threat for Patrick Mahomes. Thornton averaged a whopping 23.1 yards per catch last season, catching 19 passes for a career-high 438 yards and three touchdowns.

The Chiefs have Marquise Brown unsigned while Rice’s future is murky due to domestic violence allegations surfacing. Rice is also in a contract year, while Worthy is signed through 2027. JuJu Smith-Schuster joins Brown as a free agent, and 2025 fourth-rounder Jalen Royals did not see much action as a rookie.

Minor NFL Transactions: 3/9/26

Here are the minor move from a frenzied free agency first day:

Atlanta Falcons

Buffalo Bills

Carolina Panthers

Houston Texans

Jacksonville Jaguars

Las Vegas Raiders

Los Angeles Rams

Miami Dolphins

New York Giants

New York Jets

Pittsburgh Steelers

Cowboys To Re-Sign DE Sam Williams

Sam Williams is sticking in Dallas for at least another season. The free agent defensive end is returning to the Cowboys on a one-year deal, according to NFL Network’s Mike Garafolo. The one-year pact is worth $3MM.

The former second-round pick has spent his entire career in Dallas, although he hasn’t necessarily lived up to his draft stock. He showed flashes while playing a part-time role through his first two years in the NFL, when he tallied 8.5 total sacks. He finished fifth in Defensive Rookie of the Year voting in 2022 after he tallied 22 stops, four sacks, and three fumble recoveries.

There was hope he’d take another step in 2024 following the departures of Dorance Armstrong and Dante Fowler. However, Williams suffered a torn ACL during that year’s training camp, ending his season before it even began.

He was back in time for the start of the 2025 season and got into all 17 games this past year. He didn’t have the same pass-rush ability, but he still finished the year with a sack, seven tackles for loss, and four QB hits. He also got into a career-high 474 defensive snaps.

The Cowboys acquired Rashan Gary to line up opposite Donovan Ezeiruaku, meaning Williams may be hard pressed to work his way into the starting lineup. Still, considering the uncertain status of free agents Jadeveon Clowney and Dante Fowler Jr., there could still be plenty of snaps on the edge for Williams in 2026.

Panthers To Sign LB Devin Lloyd

Devin Lloyd is heading to Carolina. The former first-round pick is inking a three-year deal with the Panthers, according to NFL Network’s Mike Garafolo.

The three-year contract is worth $45MM and includes $25MM in guaranteed money. Lloyd may not have reached the very top of the linebacker market at $20MM per year as he was hoping (via Sports Illustrated’s Albert Breer), but he will still come in with the fourth-highest annual pay at the position after receiving Pro Bowl and second-team All-Pro recognition in 2025.

Lloyd, 27, was a highly-touted prospect out of Utah in 2022 who landed in Jacksonville via the No. 27 overall pick. He took over a starting job as a rookie, but struggled mightily in his transition to the NFL. Lloyd finished the 2022 season with a 48.1 grade from Pro Football Focus (subscription required), the ninth-worst among starting linebackers.

Two years of improvement followed. Then, in 2025, Lloyd emerged as a game-changer on the defensive side of the ball. Though his tackle production lagged relative to his first three seasons, he recorded a career-high five interceptions, allowed just a 57.1 passer rating when targeted, and added 28 pressures as a pass rusher, the third-most among off-ball linebackers.

The Panthers, who also inquired after Tremaine Edmunds before he signed with the Giants, will be banking on Lloyd to have a similar impact. He will slot in as Carolina’s starting linebacker next to Trevin Wallace, a 2024 third-rounder who has shown promise but missed nine games due to injury since being drafted.

Lloyd will likely take over the green dot role in a Panthers defense will also feature edge Jaelan Phillips in 2026. The two former first-rounders will hope to continue the unit’s ascension in Carolina’s third year under defensive coordinator Ejiro Evero.

Ben Levine contributed to this story.

NFL Announces 2026 Compensatory Picks

The NFL has awarded compensatory draft picks for teams in the 2026 draft. Based on an add/subtract formula that covers the 2025 free agency period, comp picks span from Round 3 to Round 7. The higher picks go to the teams that endured the most significant free agent losses.

This year, the NFL awarded 33 comp picks. The comp pick formula assigns picks to franchises who suffered the largest net losses, so teams that signed multiple free agents have a lesser chance of receiving picks.

Sorted by round and by team, here are the league’s 2026 compensatory selections:

By round:

Round 3: Vikings (No. 97), Eagles (98), Steelers (99), Jaguars (100, from Lions*)

Round 4: 49ers (No. 133), Raiders (134), Steelers (135), Saints (136), Eagles (137), 49ers (138), 49ers (139), Jets (140)

Round 5: Ravens (No. 173), Ravens (174), Raiders (175), Chiefs (176), Cowboys (177), Eagles (178), Jets (179), Cowboys (180), Lions (181)

Round 6: Steelers (No. 214), Eagles (215), Steelers (216)

Round 7: Colts (No. 249), Ravens (250), Rams (251), Rams (252), Ravens (253), Colts (254), Packers (255), Bronc0s (256), Broncos (257)

By team:

  • Baltimore Ravens: 4
  • Philadelphia Eagles: 4
  • Pittsburgh Steelers: 4
  • San Francisco 49ers: 3
  • Dallas Cowboys: 2
  • Denver Broncos: 2
  • Indianapolis Colts: 2
  • Las Vegas Raiders: 2
  • Los Angeles Rams: 2
  • New York Jets: 2
  • Detroit Lions: 1
  • Green Bay Packers: 1
  • Jacksonville Jaguars: 1
  • Kansas City Chiefs: 1
  • Minnesota Vikings: 1
  • New Orleans Saints: 1

* = awarded for Lions DC Aaron Glenn becoming Jets’ HC

The Bears lost a minority executive to a GM role, with Ian Cunningham taking over in Atlanta. But the NFL will not award Chicago two third-round picks for that hire because the Falcons have Matt Ryan positioned as their president of football. Although Cunningham — Chicago’s assistant GM for four years — holds plenty of organizational say, Ryan is atop its front office hierarchy. The Bears disagree with the NFL’s ruling, per NFL.com’s Mike Garafolo.

Bears GM Ryan Poles confirmed (via ESPN.com’s Courtney Cronin) the team spoke with the NFL about the matter, but the league did not rule in the team’s favor. Had this decision gone the Bears’ way, they would have received third-round picks in the 2026 and ’27 drafts.

Teams Eyeing Alvin Kamara In Trades

The Saints agreed to terms with Travis Etienne earlier today, putting Alvin Kamara‘s New Orleans future in jeopardy. Teams around the league are now wondering if Kamara could be traded.

Not interested in leaving New Orleans last year, Kamara may reasonably change his stance after the Etienne news. Teams are looking into this situation and wondering if a trade could happen, ESPN’s Adam Schefter tweets.

One season remains on Kamara’s $24.5MM extension. Kamara is due $3MM guaranteed for 2026. Our Rory Parks examined this situation recently, indicating the team’s most recent Kamara restructure was separate from a standard base-to-bonus adjustment and is something to keep an eye on regarding a potential separation. The Etienne news certainly points to Kamara’s Saints stay wrapping after nine seasons.

Kamara is heading into an age-31 season and is far removed from his Pro Bowl years. Teams showed interest in the former Sean Payton chess piece at the deadline, but the veteran running back said he would retire rather than be traded. Kamara then suffered an MCL sprain that shut him down for the season’s final six games.

It does not seem like Kamara would have too much trade value anymore, but teams would certainly be interested if the Saints cut him. A release would cost New Orleans more than $10MM in 2026 dead money. Such moves are not uncommon in New Orleans, the NFL’s epicenter for cap gymnastics. But this will be a situation to follow now that the Saints have added a true starter-caliber back for the first time since Mark Ingram’s initial departure.

Chargers To Sign G Cole Strange

Cole Strange is heading to Los Angeles. The former first-round pick reached an agreement with the Chargers this evening, according to ESPN’s Adam Schefter.

Strange will ink a two-year deal worth $13MM, per Schefter. This move reunites the lineman with Mike McDaniel, who took a chance on Strange in Miami.

The lineman was considered a reach when the Patriots selected him out of Chattanooga in 2022. Strange started all 17 of his appearances as a rookie but was limited to 10 games as a sophomore thanks to a torn patellar tendon. He was activated back to the active roster the following December, and he ultimately got into three games for the 2024 Patriots. He was cut by the organization at the end of the 2025 preseason.

After initially catching on with the Browns practice squad, Strange joined the Dolphins active roster in September. He proceeded to start all 14 of his appearances with Miami, with Pro Football Focus crediting him with 21 pressures allowed and 16 hurries allowed. Strange was also responsible for a pair of sacks.

Still, McDaniel apparently saw enough in the lineman to recruit him to Los Angeles. The Chargers are down both of their starting offensive guards; the team released Mekhi Becton and free agent Zion Johnson agreed to a three-year, $49.5MM contract with the Browns today. The front office re-signed Trevor Penning, although he could profile as OT insurance behind Rashawn Slater and Joe Alt. That means Strange may initially be pencilled into the Chargers starting lineup.