Pro Football Rumors Front Office Subscriber Chat: 11/6/25
Pro Football Rumors' Sam Robinson will be holding a live chat at 3:30pm Central today, exclusively for Trade Rumors Front Office subscribers!
Cowboys DE Marshawn Kneeland Passes Away
11:17pm: The Texas Department of Public safety classified Kneeland’s death as suicide, according to the Fort Worth Star-Telegram’s Nick Harris. At 10:33pm Wednesday night, police attempted to stop a vehicle for a traffic violation. The driver of the vehicle refused to stop, leading to a police pursuit. Police losing sight of the vehicle ended the pursuit. Initial reports then stated Kneeland fled the scene on foot, according to a report from the Frisco (Texas) Police Department (via ESPN’s Adam Schefter).
According to the police report, police found the vehicle abandoned after a crash on the Dallas Parkway. The driver of the vehicle, Kneeland, was found after authorities searched the area. After the discovery, police ruled Kneeland died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound. According to the Frisco Police report, authorities discovered Kneeland expressed “suicidal ideations.” The Plano (Texas) Police Department received a call at approximately 11:40pm regarding a welfare concern “at an address they were told belonged to Kneeland.” The call went unanswered with a police pursuit underway (via NFL.com’s Tom Pelissero). He was found at 1:31am.
8:46am: The Cowboys have made a shocking announcement. Marshawn Kneeland, a defensive end the team drafted in last year’s second round, passed away. He was 24.
“It is with extreme sadness that the Dallas Cowboys share that Marshawn Kneeland tragically passed away this morning,” the Cowboys said in a statement (via NFL.com’s Mike Garafolo). “Marshawn was a beloved teammate and member of our organization. Our thoughts and prayers regarding Marshawn are with his girlfriend Catalina and his family.”
Arriving as the No. 56 overall pick out of Western Michigan last year, Kneeland made four NFL starts. His tragic death comes less than three days after he scored his first NFL touchdown. Kneeland returned a blocked punt for a score against the Cardinals on Monday night in Dallas. After Sam Williams notched the second-quarter block, Kneeland pounced on the recovery for a score. It marked Kneeland’s first touchdown in the college or professional ranks.
A fast-rising prospect from the MAC program, Kneeland memorably set up 16 pre-draft visits last year. The traits he showed during a five-year college career intrigued plenty of teams, as the pass rusher came to the NFL with less-than-stellar college numbers. Kneeland did not have a five-sack college season, but he recorded 25 tackles for loss over his final three. A Cowboys team that at the time was looking for Micah Parsons complementary rush talent swooped in, adding the rookie on Day 2.
Kneeland missed a chunk of his rookie season due to a partially torn lateral meniscus sustained in early October of last year, but he made it back before season’s end. The Cowboys saved an IR activation for the rookie, who returned for the team’s Thanksgiving game. Kneeland played in 11 games last season, making one start for a team that lost DeMarcus Lawrence to injury early in the season. Kneeland made three starts this season, as the Cowboys traded Parsons months after letting Lawrence walk in free agency.
Kneeland did not record a sack as a rookie but notched one this season, dropping Jalen Hurts in the Cowboys’ opener. The part-time starter, who was viewed as part of the Cowboys’ solution post-Parsons, tallied three tackles for loss in his second season.
Colorado Rockies Hire Browns’ Paul DePodesta As Head Of Baseball Ops
Paul DePodesta is headed back to Major League Baseball.
The Browns’ longtime Chief Strategy Officer is expected to join the Colorado Rockies as their next head of baseball operations, per Ken Rosenthal, Zac Jackson, and Brittany Ghiroli of The Athletic. The move is now official.
DePodesta, 52, was hired by the Browns in 2016. He spent the preceding two decades in a variety of front office roles around the MLB, starting with the Cleveland Indians in 1996. DePodesta is perhaps best known for his stint as the assistant general manager of the Oakland Athletics from 1999 to 2004.
During that time, he was a pioneer of sabermetrics and helped bring data analytics into the sports mainstream. He later introduced analytics into many aspects of the Browns organization. He was one of the main individuals featured in Michael Lewis’ bestselling book, “Moneyball,” and Jonah Hill earned an Oscar nomination for playing a DePodesta-based character in the film adaptation. DePodesta was hired in 2004 to be the general manager of the Los Angeles Dodgers, but was fired after just two seasons. He then spent five years each with the San Diego Padres and the New York Mets in top front office positions before making the leap to the NFL with the Browns.
The Browns went 3-13 in 2015, their worst record since 2000. They fired general manager Ray Farmer and hired DePodesta as CSO and future general manager Andrew Berry as the vice president of player personnel. General counsel Sashi Brown – now the team president of the Ravens – became the vice president of football operations and de facto general manager. The team then went 1-31 over the next two seasons; Brown was fired and John Dorsey took over as general manager in December 2017.
Having amassed a lot of draft capital, including back-to-back No. 1 picks that they used on Myles Garrett and Baker Mayfield, the Browns dug themselves out of the AFC North cellar to finish third in the division in 2018 and 2019, albeit with losing records. Dorsey was replaced with Berry, and new head coach Kevin Stefanski led the 2020 squad to an 11-5 record, the best finish since the team was re-established in 1999.
A step back in 2021 inspired the Browns to move on from Mayfield and trade three first-round picks to the Texans for Deshaun Watson. Watson was then handed a fully guaranteed five-year, $230MM extension. The move, driven in part by DePodesta, drew criticism at the time and has not aged well.
Watson was suspended for the first 11 games of his Browns tenure, and the team went 7-10 that year. An 11-6 finish and playoff berth in 2023 offered a glimmer of hope, but Cleveland has won just five games since. Watson suffered back-to-back season-ending injuries in 2023 (shoulder fracture) and 2024 (Achilles tear) and now appears to be out of the team’s future plans, though his contract will still be on the books for a few more years.
An 11-6 record and a playoff berth in 2023 offered a glimmer of hope in Cleveland, but the team has won just five games since. They now appear to be looking for their next franchise quarterbacks in the next two drafts, for which they should have ample draft capital. The Browns will now continue their seemingly endless rebuild without DePodesta guiding the team’s high-level roster strategy.
The Rockies’ present situation is strikingly similar to the Browns’ when they hired DePodesta. The Rockies went 43-119 in 2025, tied for the third-most losses in Major League Baseball history and their third straight season with at least 100 losses. They have not made the playoffs since 2018 and have never won their division, the National League West.
DePodesta will now be charged with turning the hapless franchise around after precious few successful seasons since their inception in 1993. Owner Dick Monfort has been roundly criticized for a lack of financial investment in the team’s roster and management infrastructure, making DePodesta’s ‘Moneyball’ history particularly relevant. However, his track record since leaving Oakland – in essence, the performance of the teams he has helped run – is not very encouraging.
Dolphins DT Zach Sieler Drew Trade Interest
The out-of-contention Dolphins didn’t orchestrate a fire sale before Tuesday’s trade deadline, but they also didn’t sit on their hands. Interim general manager Champ Kelly pulled off one significant move in sending outside linebacker Jaelan Phillips to the Eagles for a third-round pick.
It was no surprise the Dolphins cut ties with Phillips, a pending free agent. On the other hand, considering Zach Sieler signed a three-year, $67.75MM extension with Miami in August, parting with the defensive tackle would have raised eyebrows. Teams inquired about Sieler’s availability ahead of the deadline, but the Dolphins “weren’t entertaining” offers that didn’t involve a high Day 2 draft pick, NFL insider Jordan Schultz reports.
Sieler began his NFL career as a Ravens seventh-round pick in 2018 (Ozzie Newsome‘s last selection as their GM), but he didn’t blossom until he the joined the Dolphins on waivers in December 2019. The former Ferris State Bulldog began breaking out in 2020, and he impressed enough during the ensuing couple of seasons that ex-Dolphins GM Chris Grier signed him to a three year, $38.65MM extension in August 2023. Sieler responded with back-to-back 10-sack seasons, leading Grier to authorize the D-lineman’s latest extension last summer.
Grier is now out of the picture in Miami, having lost his job on Halloween after the team’s abysmal showing over the first several weeks of the season. Sieler has surprisingly been among the Dolphins’ struggling players during a 2-7 start. The 30-year-old hasn’t recorded a sack in 2025, while his three QB hits place him well behind his typical pace (he combined for 41 from 2023-24). Pro Football Focus ranks Sieler’s performance 91st out of 122 qualifying linemen.
While Sieler will finish the season in Miami, he could be a name to watch during the offseason. Unless the Dolphins promote Kelly to a full-time post, they’ll likely hire someone from outside to lead their front office. Should teams that were interested in Sieler before the deadline circle back to him in 2026, they may have a better chance to acquire him if Miami has a new regime.
Ravens Explored Trade For OLB Bradley Chubb
The trade deadline has come and gone, and rumors continue to trickle in concerning details on potential trades that fell short. One of the latest such rumors concerns Baltimore’s search for a pass rusher which failed to yield a trade for Dolphins outside linebacker Bradley Chubb, an avenue the Ravens explored, according to Jeff Zrebiec of The Athletic. 
After finishing with the second-most sacks in the NFL in 2024, Baltimore’s defense has been unrecognizable from last year’s. Currently, the Ravens are tied with two other teams for the second-lowest sack total in the NFL. Their current sack leaders — Nnamdi Madubuike (2.0) and Tavius Robinson (2.0) — both currently sit on injured reserve; Madubuike has sat atop the Ravens’ sack leaderboard since hitting the IR after Week 2. Madubuike was joined on IR by fellow interior defender Broderick Washington.
Additionally, both of the team’s Penn State pass rushers are not available to them. Former first-round pick Odafe Oweh was traded to the Chargers in an exchange that brought safety Alohi Gilman to the secondary. Adisa Isaac, last year’s third-round pick, has yet to make his 2025 debut after only appearing in four games his rookie year. The team used one of two preseason designations to return from IR on Isaac, so he’s clearly expected to be a factor at some point this year, but nine weeks into the season, we haven’t even seen his 21-day practice window open.
There were plenty of attractive pass rushing options on the trade market. The Dolphins, alone, had three in Chubb, Jaelan Phillips, and Matt Judon. There were also big names coming out of New York — Quinnen Williams and Jermaine Johnson II — and a familiar name from Arizona in Calais Campbell. Some of these options were going to be much more expensive than the others, and the Ravens are known for valuing fit over pure talent.
A top-tier option like Williams was likely never on the table for Baltimore. Johnson and Phillips were going to be a stretch, as well, but they were certainly available for teams willing to shell out some higher draft picks. The Ravens opted for a middle-of-the-road option in Tennessee’s Dre’Mont Jones.
Over six years with the Broncos and Seahawks, Jones proved to be a middling performer with career highs of 6.5 sacks, nine tackles for loss, and 13 quarterback hits. Through only nine games with the Titans this season, Jones’ totals — 4.5 sacks, five tackles for loss, and nine quarterback hits — have him on pace to set some new career highs, especially considering he’ll get to 18 games by coming to Baltimore before the Titans’ bye week but after the Ravens’.
Chubb and Judon were seemingly around a similar tier as Jones — Judon less so, considering his age (33) and declining production over the past few years. Chubb is two years removed from his strongest season since his 12-sack rookie campaign, but one of those removed years was spent sitting out the 2024 season with a torn ACL. That wasn’t the only time Chubb has missed extensive time, either. Over his eight years in the NFL, Chubb has missed over half of the season three times. Considering that injuries are the reason Baltimore was shopping at this position at all, an injury history like Chubb’s may have weighed heavily on their ultimate decision.
The Dolphins could also have been a factor in the deal not getting done. Despite rumors of a fire sale following the departure of former general manager Chris Grier, when it came to the team’s major assets, there didn’t appear to be any discounts. According to Ian Rapoport of NFL Network, the Dolphins held firm on their asking prices, meaning that Chubb was not going to be a cheap acquisition.
Ultimately, it appears both Chubb and the Dolphins are pleased with how things played out. The Miami Herald’s Barry Jackson quoted Chubb talking about the conversations that interim general manager Champ Kelly made sure he was privy to. While Chubb got to stay in Miami for now, the team made no promises for what happens after the season.
Chubb’s contract has no more guarantees after this year, and base salaries over the next two years of $19.45MM and $18.48MM are accompanied by $31.2MM and $31.54MM cap hits. The prospect of inheriting a contract with such heavy commitments likely hindered Chubb’s tradability, as well. Ultimately, a release with a post-June 1 designation following the season has the potential to put Chubb back on the free agent market.
Rams’ Joshua Karty, Harrison Mevis Competing For Kicker Job
After a decorated run at Stanford, where he was a two-time All-American, kicker Joshua Karty joined the Rams as a sixth-round pick in 2024. Karty went on to enjoy a productive rookie season in Los Angeles, but the 23-year-old is now in the midst of a disappointing sophomore campaign. His job is in jeopardy as a result.
The Rams added Harrison Mevis, undrafted out of Missouri in 2024, to their practice squad on Wednesday. Head coach Sean McVay has since revealed that Mevis and Karty will compete for the position ahead of a crucial matchup with the NFC West rival 49ers on Sunday (via Adam Grosbard of the Los Angeles Daily News).
The Rams’ kicking woes helped lead to a 26-23 overtime loss to the 49ers in the teams’ first matchup in Week 5. Karty missed one of his two field-goal attempts in that game, and the 49ers blocked one of his three extra-point tries.
While the Rams have since won three in a row to climb to 6-2, Karty’s struggles have continued. He missed his lone field-goal attempt and one of five extra points in a 34-10 blowout over the Saints last Sunday.
The Rams’ kicking operation has accounted for eight misses or blocks, the most in the NFL. A blocked field goal against the Eagles cost the Rams a buzzer-beating road win in Week 3. Overall, Karty has converted just 10 of 15 field goals – his 66.7% success rate ranks last in the league – and 23 of 26 extra points.
The Rams coasted against the Saints, but McVay was frustrated with their kicking issues after the game, saying: “It’s going to cost us — it’s cost us already. It’s been a momentum killer. It does take the air out of our sails” (via Myles Simmons of Pro Football Talk).
Although McVay added that “this is not sustainable to continuously go where we want to go,” he went on to express confidence in Karty. Now, however, Karty will have to fend off Mevis to remain the Rams’ starter.
Mevis, a 5-foot-11, 243-pounder who’s also known as “Thiccer Kicker,” previously spent time with the Panthers and Jets. He doesn’t carry any regular-season experience in the NFL, however. Mevis impressed last year as a member of the UFL’s Birmingham Stallions, cashing in on 21 of 23 field goals (including playoffs).
While the Rams could have a new kicker this Sunday, a change at long snapper appears likely. Alex Ward has held the role since 2023, but McVay said he expects Jake McQuaide to take over in San Francisco. McQuaide is a 14-year veteran whose career began with the St. Louis Rams in 2011. He stuck with the organization through 2020 and made a pair of Pro Bowls during that span. After seeing action with four other teams since then, McQuaide reunited with the Rams on a practice squad deal on Tuesday.
Minor NFL Transactions: 11/6/25
Here are Thursday’s minor transactions:
Chicago Bears
- Waived: LB Carl Jones Jr.
Denver Broncos
- Signed from practice squad: WR Michael Bandy
- Elevated: TE Marcedes Lewis, CB Reese Taylor
Houston Texans
- Waived: CB Alijah Huzzie
Las Vegas Raiders
- Activated from IR: S Lonnie Johnson
Miami Dolphins
- Waived: TE Tanner Conner
Philadelphia Eagles
- Designated for return from IR: G Willie Lampkin
Pittsburgh Steelers
- Waived: DE DeMarvin Leal
Leal, a third-round pick out of Texas A&M in 2022, has failed to live up to his draft stock thus far in the NFL. After only seeing game time in three games this year, he’s been waived to make room for the defensive tackle Pittsburgh signed off of the Chiefs’ practice squad yesterday.
Huzzie, after spending much of his rookie season on the reserve/non-football injury list, is being sent to waivers. Should he clear them, it’s expected that he’ll return to Houston on a practice squad deal.
NFL Practice Squad Updates: 11/6/25
Today’s taxi squad updates:
Baltimore Ravens
- Signed: S Sanoussi Kane
Seattle Seahawks
- Signed: TE Marshall Lang
- Released: T Logan Brown
Kane, a seventh-round pick last year, was waived after undrafted rookie Keondre Jackson proved to be a recent factor on special teams. Having cleared waivers, Kane’s back in Baltimore, but his rookie contract is gone.
Cardinals Reunite With QB Jeff Driskel
The Cardinals signed Jeff Driskel to their practice squad, per a team announcement, adding a third quarterback to their team after playing Kyler Murray on injured reserve.
Driskel, 32, spent most of the 2023 season on Arizona’s practice squad. He was elevated for one game during the regular season but did not play. Last year, he played exactly one snap for the Commanders.
Originally a sixth-round pick by the 49ers in 2016, Driskel did not appear in a regular-season game until 2018 for the Bengals. He started five games that year, but spent the next four years with three different teams as a backup and third-stringer. He also started one game for the Browns at the end of the 2023 season.
2024 UDFA Kedon Slovis has been backing up Jacoby Brissett for a few weeks, but Driskel could take over relatively quickly due to his “experience and knowledge of the offense,” per CardsWire’s Howard Balzer. The seven-year veteran can be elevated from the practice squad for three games and would have to be promoted to the 53-man roster to be active on game days after that.
Driskel has appeared in a total of 25 games in his career with a 58.6% completion rate and a 79.4 passer rating. He does not offer much under center, and the Cardinals will be hoping that Brissett can stay healthy to avoid either Driskel or Slovis taking the field.
TE David Njoku Eyeing Browns Extension
Although the Browns moved Joe Flacco to the Bengals and Joe Tryon-Shoyinka to the Bears, ridding their team of Joes did not constitute a fire sale. Cleveland kept its contract-year guards (Joel Bitonio, Wyatt Teller), defensive linemen Shelby Harris and Alex Wright and held onto David Njoku.
Cleveland has seen positive returns from third-round rookie tight end Harold Fannin, and pre-deadline rumors pointed to Njoku being available for the right offer. The contract-year tight end made it clear following the deadline he wants to stay in Cleveland. The nine-year Browns cog said (via cleveland.com’s Mary Kay Cabot) he wants an extension, with Cabot adding the Browns had no intention of trading him.
The Browns paid Njoku in 2022, authorizing a four-year extension worth $54.75MM after franchise-tagging the former first-round pick. Njoku has seen the Browns’ quarterback carousel affect him, but he has remained a useful player amid another Cleveland descent. Njoku has started seven games this season and exits the Browns’ bye at 27 catches, 260 yards and two touchdowns.
Fannin, who put together a monster senior season at Bowling Green, has outproduced Njoku thus far as a pass catcher. The MAC product has 38 receptions for 352 yards and two scores. Pro Football Focus views neither as a particularly effective run blocker, though the advanced metrics site ranks Njoku as one of the NFL’s worst run-blocking tight ends this season. Fannin is signed through 2027 and profiles as a potential long-term piece in Cleveland. Will the Browns attempt to ensure Njoku stays alongside the younger player?
Njoku, who amassed 628 receiving yards in 2022 and a career-high 882 in ’23, sits third in Browns history for receiving yards by a tight end (4,029). That total is less than 200 behind Milt Morin for second in franchise history — behind Hall of Famer Ozzie Newsome. Passing Morin would also mean Njoku moves into the top 10 for receiving yardage at any position in Browns annals. Despite being a 2017 draftee, Njoku is only 29. He figures to generate considerable interest as a free agent.
Making it clear he wants to stay with the Browns is interesting given their post-Baker Mayfield quarterback direction. Dillon Gabriel has struggled early, and the team has not exactly shown signs Shedeur Sanders starts are in its plans. The Browns have an extra first-round pick in 2026 to potentially target a quarterback, but that position is uncertain for the time being. Njoku could target teams with more established passers, as Cleveland has not enjoyed any kind of QB1 longevity here since Mayfield — and he went through an up-and-down career in Ohio.
The Browns are still on the hook for Deshaun Watson money in Year 5 of that calamitous contract, one the team has restructured several times. Those restructures ballooned the overpriced QB’s 2026 cap figure to $80.72MM, which would smash an NFL record. The Browns, per OverTheCap, are projected to be more than $12MM over the 2026 salary ceiling. And that is without either of their starting guards under contract.
Barring an extension, Njoku will join a few veteran tight ends in free agency come March. Travis Kelce, Mark Andrews, Dallas Goedert, Zach Ertz and Tyler Higbee are unsigned. Njoku is younger than that lot. Among first-time UFAs at the position, Cade Otton, Chig Okonkwo and Isaiah Likely stand out. The Ravens will likely take one of their top two tight ends off the market, with Likely on their extension radar. The Browns have until the March legal tampering period to negotiate exclusively with Njoku, but it does not sound like he is a threat to leave Cleveland without giving the Browns a chance to match an open-market offer.


