News Commanders Team Notes

Daily Slop: 31 Jan 26 – Commanders coaching staff in flux as Brian Johnson interviews for Broncos offensive coordinator job

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EAST RUTHERFORD, NEW JERSEY - AUGUST 10: Assistant head coach and offensive passing game coordinator Brian Johnson of the Washington Commanders looks on against the New York Jets in the second half of the preseason game at MetLife Stadium on August 10, 2024 in East Rutherford, New Jersey. The Jets defeated the Commanders 20-17. (Photo by Mitchell Leff/Getty Images) | Getty Images

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The Athletic (paywall)

What we know and what’s still ahead as Commanders reconfigure their coaching staff


Jones checks a lot of Quinn’s boxes for a new coordinator

The Vikings ranked fifth in forced turnovers over Jones’s four seasons there leading the defensive backs. He also helped develop younger players such as Byron Murphy, who was voted to the Pro Bowl in 2024 and drew praise from veterans, notably safety Harrison Smith.

Jones also has experience leading a full group, even if it wasn’t in the NFL. He was LSU’s defensive coordinator in 2021.

Then there’s this: One of the top names on Washington’s list was Flores, [who Jones worked under in Minnesota].

More changes are coming

The Commanders are looking for a coach to oversee the front seven, with a focus on the pass rush, according to two sources with knowledge of the team’s thinking. That means the positions of all the assistants currently coaching the defensive line and linebackers are uncertain.

Two names to watch in particular: Darryl Tapp, who was the D-line coach the last two seasons, and Ryan Kerrigan, the team’s assistant linebackers coach. Either or both could end up with new roles on the staff, or end up elsewhere.

As others have reported earlier this week, Commanders assistant coaching staff are currently fluid. A press conference with both coordinators, Blough and Jones, will be held once their staff is set.

**The team did the same thing with Kingsbury and Whitt. Held their pressers…

— CWallSports (@cwallse) January 30, 2026


Commanders.com

5 things to know about DC Daronte Jones


His secondary was one of the best in the NFL last year.

Jones reportedly became one of the more popular coordinator candidates in the league this offseason, and there’s a reason for that: his secondary played a key role in the Vikings having a potent defense.

As Vikings defensive coordinator Brian Flores’ “right-hand man,” Jones coached a secondary that made life difficult for opposing quarterbacks. The group allowed the second-fewest passing yards per game (158.5) and generated eight interceptions. They allowed the second-fewest completions in the league, and 13 players had at least one pass breakup. Veteran Harrison Smith had another strong season, recording 10 pass breakups for the seventh time in his caree

But Jones has a history of getting the most out of his players. During his time as the Bengals’ cornerbacks coach, former fifth-round pick Darius Phillips recorded four interceptions with seven pass breakups in a breakout 2019 season. It was the best season of Phillips’ career, which is even more impressive considering he only played in eight games that year.

The Commanders were one of the worst teams in the league at defending the pass last season. There will be high expectations for Jones, whose entire coaching career has been focused on the secondary, to shore up the secondary.



ESPN

Listing Commanders’ biggest roster needs this offseason


There’s no use separating the categories on defense because the Commanders need help all over. One opposing coach who faced Washington in the second half of the season called it the “easiest” defense they faced all season. He said they weren’t worried about any spots beyond the interior of the line — Daron Payne and Javon Kinlaw in particular.

Another opposing coach said earlier this week that Washington needs to add a lot more talent on that side of the ball regardless of who got the coordinator job.

The Commanders, who own the seventh pick in the draft and the sixth most cap space according to Spotrac and Overthecap.com, don’t disagree. At the season-ending press conference Peters was asked about potential defensive positions to address in the offseason.

“There’s a lot of spots we can look at,” Peters said. “Certainly another pass rusher would be something we’d definitely be looking for.”

[O]ne team source said [new defensive coordinator Daronte] Jones — who has specialized in coaching defensive backs — could help the development of young players such as safety Quan Martin and corner Mike Sainristil, both of whom struggled more than anticipated this past season. Regardless, one starting corner — Marshon Lattimore — tore his ACL in November and the team could save $18.5 million vs. the cap by releasing him.

Also, if the Commanders want to replicate what Minnesota could do with safety Harrison Smith, then it will have to find a versatile player who can play in multiple spots — in the back; in the box and occasionally along the front. They currently lack that player.

All of this leads to one theme for the defense over the next few months:

“You’re always trying to get younger and faster,” Peters said. “That’ll be a big emphasis for us this offseason.”



Riggo’s Rag

Grading the first eight moves from Commanders’ 2026 offseason revolution


Commanders promoted Darnell Stapleton to OL coach

When Bobby Johnson was removed from his role as offensive coordinator, almost everyone thought the Commanders would bring in an outside hire for fresh ideas and coaching strategies to potentially improve the group. But once again, an in-house promotion was the preferred route.

The Commanders gave the job to Darnell Stapleton. He was the assistant offensive line coach under Johnson. So if the departed coach deserves praise for turning this unit into a cohesive force, then his replacement also deserves a chance.

Stapleton is a young, ascending coach. He’s spent the last two years in Washington. He was also a high-priority addition to the staff when Johnson came on board. This speaks volumes and maintains stability amid drastic changes across the board.

  • Grade: A

The blocking concepts will probably change, but this was a shrewd move to keep around a coach held in high regard around the league.


Podcasts & videos

Because what else would you do on a Friday night: here are 5 things I learned about Daronte Jones after watching a lot of videos etc on his coaching style, philosophies etc. ⁦@ESPNRichmondhttps://t.co/izeSsR4EiR

— John Keim (@john_keim) January 31, 2026

NFC East links


Blogging the Boys

Why Cowboys will change their ‘bargin bin’ approach to free agency in 2026


They’ve chosen to shop from the “bargain bin” for about 11 years now and haven’t really paid an outside free agent over $6 million annually in that timeframe. This approach to free agency hasn’t netted any positive results and it’s definitely time for a big shift.

As luck would have it, it looks like 2026 will be the year Jerry Jones and Company are finally willing to make some big changes in order to become more productive as an organization.

With the Super Bowl LX set between the New England Patriots and Seattle Seahawks, this will mark the 30th season the Dallas Cowboys have had to watch the big event from home. As difficult as that is to fathom, this could actually serve as a learning experience for Jerry Jones and Company, and if he’s paying attention, follow the blueprint both of these teams utilized to have a chance to lift the ever elusive Lombardi trophy.

Coincidence or just their roster-building strategy, both the Patriots and Seahawks were among the league leaders in the free agency spending a year ago and now both organizations are vying for the opportunity to be the sole survivor and Super Bowl champion as a result. Both teams were in the Top 5 in the offseason free agent spending (Patriots 1st, Seahawks 4th).

This is the blueprint the Cowboys should follow in regards to free agency. They don’t necessarily need to go out and blow the budget, but the days of “bargain bin” shopping should come to an immediate halt because it’s painfully obvious it is not working. Instead, Dallas needs to properly identify the free agents who can come in and upgrade things and pay accordingly.



Philadelphia Inquirer (subscription)

What the Sean Mannion hire as Eagles offensive coordinator says about Nick Sirianni’s future


The hire says more about Nick Sirianni’s future than it does about almost anything related to Mannion or the Eagles offense. Whether he made the ultimate decision or not, the coach will have to take ownership for selecting one of the least experienced coordinators in the NFL, if not the least experienced.

Sirianni could be rewarded with immediate success. The Eagles could even have marginal offensive improvement that would allow him to maintain Mannion for more than one season. But if there is further regression, or even sudden failure, the gamble could push Sirianni into a firing line that saw nine coaches lose their jobs over the past several months. And here’s why: The line between success and failure for Sirianni is thinner than for most because he doesn’t have a discernible offensive philosophy or calls plays. He does a lot as a CEO-type coach, more than some on the outside are willing to concede. But winning here is suddenly not like winning at most places.

Sirianni helped raise those expectations. But clearing that bar or falling short of it would both seemingly have him back where he’s been four times before: having to replace an offensive coordinator.


Very interesting conversation with the new @Giants pic.twitter.com/YzASOHVJ53

— Giants (@2026_NYGIANTS) January 30, 2026

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ESPN

Sources: Seahawks will go up for sale after Super Bowl LX


The Seattle Seahawks will go up for sale after Super Bowl LX, league and ownership sources familiar with the arrangement told ESPN, ending years of questions about when the team would seek new ownership following the 2018 death of former owner Paul G. Allen.

Sale discussions have taken place at ownership and league levels for at least the past week, the sources said.

Here’s the statement from the Allen Estate on the ESPN report about a sale of the @Seahawks:@komonews pic.twitter.com/7svwd18MGX

— Chris Daniels (@ChrisDaniels_TV) January 30, 2026

The Seahawks and the NBA’s Portland Trail Blazers have been owned by Allen’s estate since the former owner and Microsoft co-founder died in 2018 from complications of non-Hodgkins lymphoma. His sister, Jody Allen, has controlled the teams as the executor of the trust, with a directive from her brother to eventually sell both and donate the proceeds to charity.

From The Athletic:

In July 2022, Jody Allen said in a statement that there was no timeline for the sale of the teams, adding the estate could take “10 to 20 years to wind down.” According to 2023 reports from Sports Business Journal and the Washington Post, any sale of the Seahawks before May 2024 would have incurred a 10 percent fee to the state of Washington, under a 1997 law that funded the team’s stadium, now known as Lumen Field. That fee no longer applies.



ESPN

Vikings fire GM Kwesi Adofo-Mensah after 4 seasons


The Minnesota Vikings fired general manager Kwesi Adofo-Mensah on Friday, a shocking turn after an organization-wide failure to make the playoffs this season.

The #Vikings announce General Manager Kwesi Adofo-Mensah has been relieved of his duties. pic.twitter.com/JYUHgjbU5x

— Minnesota Vikings (@Vikings) January 30, 2026

Adofo-Mensah, hired in 2022 as the first NFL general manager who rose primarily through an analytics-based background, declined to comment.

Wilf declined to lay out the reasons for the firing, including the extent to which it was prompted by a series of 2025 offseason decisions that led quarterback Sam Darnold to sign with the Seattle Seahawks and pushed 2024 first-round draft pick J.J. McCarthy onto the field before he was ready.

“It’s not necessarily a fair thing to talk about any one decision, and that’s the way we approach it,” Wilf said. “It’s a body of work; it’s a cumulative set of decisions. It’s four years of where we’ve been. We as ownership, and I know our fans, feel it, and our entire organization feels it. We need to get to a better place. This is strictly an ownership and organizational decision that we feel this is the best path going forward. It’s not about one player, one decision, one draft pick. It’s about organizationally what we can do the best for our organization and our fans.”

The timing was unusual, as Adofo-Mensah had given a postseason news conference Jan. 13 and had spent this week in Mobile, Alabama, scouting Senior Bowl practices. He is seven months removed from signing what the Vikings called a multiyear contract extension.

Asked Friday about the timing, Wilf said the team’s ownership group wanted to avoid a “knee-jerk” reaction.

Minnesota had three winning seasons in Adofo-Mensah’s four-year tenure, and its .632 winning percentage over that period is tied for the fifth best in the NFL. But the Vikings are 0-2 in the postseason, and Adofo-Mensah’s drafts have been among the league’s least productive. The team’s attempt to draft McCarthy without taking a step back competitively failed this season despite a league-high $350 million cash commitment to its 2025 roster.

The Vikings have received only 172 starts from players drafted between 2022 and 2025, the second fewest in the league. They are one of 11 NFL teams that haven’t drafted a Pro Bowl player over that period.

Throughout the season, there was talk about an underlying “tension” in the Vikings’ building in league circles, sources told ESPN’s Adam Schefter. One league source told Schefter it had been “ugly” in Minnesota.

💻 @TomPelissero

Breaking news from Minnesota as reportedly #SKOL has fired its GM Kwesi Adofo-Mensah — WOW!!#NFL pic.twitter.com/scLREdJI2n

— Rich Eisen Show (@RichEisenShow) January 30, 2026


ESPN

NFL to consider replay for missed player-safety penalties


Non-calls are currently not reviewable, but penalties such as grabbing the face mask, unnecessary roughness, roughing the passer and hip-drop tackles could be subject to review. It will be an offseason topic for the NFL competition committee.

The NFL will discuss using video review to assess penalties for violations related to player safety that are missed by officials, the league said Friday.

“I would just say from a player health and safety perspective, we would like to introduce all and any opportunity and options for either putting a flag on the field or any way to try to address this in-game,” NFL head of football operations Dawn Aponte said in a conference call with reporters.

Aponte said the league issued 30 fines for hip-drop tackles, which put players in danger of sustaining severe knee and ankle injuries. Officials threw just two flags for that tackle, and Aponte said one was an incorrect call and therefore didn’t result in a fine.



NFL.com

NFL salary cap projected at $301.2 million to $305.7 million per team for 2026 season


The NFL salary cap is continuing on its astronomical trajectory in 2026.

On Friday, the league informed clubs it is projecting a salary cap in the range of $301.2 million to $305.7 million for the upcoming 2026 season, NFL Network Insider Tom Pelissero reported, per a source.

Such a number would represent an increase of more than $20 million from the 2025 mark of $279.2 million and reach nearly $100 million in additional space since the $208.2 million cap set for the 2022 season.

NFL salary cap over the years:

2013: $123M
2014: $133M
2015: $143.28M
2016: $155.27M
2017: $167M
2018: $177.2M
2019: $188.2M
2020: $198.2M
2021: $182.5M
2022: $208.2M
2023: $224.8M
2024: $255.4M
2025: $279.2M
2026: $301.2M-$305.7M (projected)

Business is booming. https://t.co/lNPmrwBQq0

— Tom Pelissero (@TomPelissero) January 30, 2026

Selected coaching updates​

Denver requested an interview with Washington pass game coordiantor Brian Johnson for their OC job, per source as @Schultz_Report 1st reported. My understanding is that other teams have possible interest but not sure they've requested an interview yet (which is what matters).

— John Keim (@john_keim) January 30, 2026
Johnson's status has been one that has been up in the air. Would he feel passed over for the OC job and want to leave? That's been the question. But if he can get an OC job, it's a promotion. Wash would then need to hire someone experienced in the pass game role.

— John Keim (@john_keim) January 30, 2026
"Klint Kubiak is getting the Raiders or the Cardinals job..

He's definitely getting one of those jobs"@AdamSchefter #PMSLive pic.twitter.com/Wq3s2i604i

— Pat McAfee (@PatMcAfeeShow) January 30, 2026
Catching up on a newsy Friday:

🏈 Steelers name Patrick Graham as DC. ESPN reported this week that Commanders' assistant Jason Simmons expected to join Graham's staff.

🏈 Ravens name a new OC and it's not Kingsbury. Many thought a good fit with Lamar. Still other openings but…

— Ben Standig (@BenStandig) January 31, 2026
"The coaching salaries this offseason have spiked..

They have gone up quite a bit and it speaks to how desperate these teams are to get these coaches"@AdamSchefter #PMSLive pic.twitter.com/sIu7bpjm3e

— Pat McAfee (@PatMcAfeeShow) January 30, 2026

NFL Draft

More Sr Bowl thoughts:

1) Having called the games of so many of these players during the season, I felt as locked into this group as any in recent years.

2) The National Team LB group as a whole set the tone for the 3 days of practice. Kyle Louis, Jacob Rodriguez, Kaleb…

— Louis Riddick (@LRiddickESPN) January 30, 2026
Some of the top risers from my perspective at the 2026 Senior Bowl, written at @PFSN365:

– Tyren Montgomery makes himself known
– Caleb Banks does what elite talent does
– Kyle Louis never lets up
– Thaddeus Dixon finishes strong

Full list linked below!https://t.co/UBnzrjPbdS

— Ian Cummings (@IC_Draft) January 30, 2026
Senior Bowl Standouts 2026

QB: NDSU Cole Payton
RB: Arkansas Mike Washington Jr
WR: Wisconsin Vinnie Anthony
TE: Stanford Sam Roush
OT: Arizona St. Max Iheanachor
IOL: Georgia Tech Keylan Rutledge

DT: Florida Caleb Banks
Edge: Michigan Derrick Moore
LB: Pitt Kyle Louis
CB: Duke…

— Bobby Skinner (@BobbySkinner_) January 30, 2026
Remember Pierre Garcon? He started at Division III Norwich University and transferred to Division III Mount Union. He is the single season leader in receptions for the Burgundy and Gold.

London Fletcher is a John Carroll graduate. Just saying.

Don't ignore Montgomery. https://t.co/E3xziUsSex

— Ken Johannesen (@BurgundyBurner) January 29, 2026
💻 @MoveTheSticks

It's that time of the year — Mock Draft SZN!

The @nflnetwork analyst breaks down his 1.0 version head of the #SeniorBowl:#NFL pic.twitter.com/WHFGJWyA4O

— Rich Eisen Show (@RichEisenShow) January 30, 2026
Started the draft process with QBs and had to start with Fernando Mendoza. Came away impressed. Clear QB1. Would have him as QB1 in last years draft as well.

I see his future as a really solid starter. Might not get to that next level but a guy you can win a lot of games with

— Nick Akridge (@PFF_NickAkridge) January 30, 2026
And two years ago? How you measure him between Caleb, JD, Maye…

— Sergio Martín (@checo3x) January 30, 2026
Firmly behind those three and above where I had Nix/McCarthy

— Nick Akridge (@PFF_NickAkridge) January 30, 2026

Discussion topics

The NFL says the injury rate on artificial surfaces is statistically the same as on grass fields. Injury rate is .43 on artificial surfaces, .42 on grass.

— Judy Battista (@judybattista) January 30, 2026
We published a study looking at this based on data from the 2021 and 2022 seasons, and this is what we found:

"When combining injuries for the 2021 and 2022 seasons (N = 718 injuries), the incidence rate of lower extremity injury was 1.22 injuries/game for natural grass and 1.42…

— Dr. Nirav Pandya, M.D. (@DrNiravPandya) January 30, 2026

aBit more Twitter

Kevin Sheehan on the Commanders' DC search: "I keep hearing, more and more, excellent things about Daronte Jones." pic.twitter.com/S0y3xsoG8z

— The Team 980 (@team980) January 30, 2026
NFL data points announced today:

• Kickoff returns jumped to a whopping 74.5% in 2025, up from 32.8% in 2024 — and most importantly, the injury rate on kickoffs was lower than it was under the previous rules.

• ACL injuries were down 25% from last year, hitting a 7-year low.…

— Ari Meirov (@MySportsUpdate) January 30, 2026


Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/daily-slo...s-about-the-commanders-and-the-nfl-in-general
 
Daily Slop: 1 Feb 26 – Veteran safety Will Harris and Senior Bowl standout Bud Clark are names for Commanders fans to track this offseason

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FORT WORTH, TX - SEPTEMBER 13: TCU Horned Frogs safety Bud Clark (21) returns a fumble that gets called back during the game between the TCU Horned Frogs and the Abilene Christian Wildcats on September 13, 2025 at Amon G. Carter Stadium in Fort Worth, Texas. (Photo by Matthew Pearce/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

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Commanders Roundtable

More defensive staff shakeup for Washington Commanders


News broke on Saturday that several defensive coaches are expected to depart with assistant linebackers coach Ryan Kerrigan, assistant defensive line coach Sharrif Floyd and player development coach Pete Ohnegian all expected to depart the organization. Defensive pass game coordinator Jason Simmons, who is reported to take a “prominent” role elsewhere, was also reported as another not expected to return to Washington in 2026.

It marks the latest shakeup for head coach Dan Quinn with now both coordinator roles filled earlier this week. While assistant Anthony Lynn materialized into a head coaching candidate for two teams, whether another departure on the offensive side of the ball materializes after passing game coordinator Brian Johnson drew an offensive coordinator interview. JP Finlay of NBC also noted more changes could be on the way with still much undecided in the positions under both David Blough and Daronte Jones.

Washington has reportedly filled four positions under the coordinators so far this offseason with DJ Williams and Danny Etling joining as quarterbacks and assistant quarterbacks coach, while the team made a pair of internal moves to fill the offensive line and assistant offensive line coaching positions in 2026.

Reports surfaced earlier in the week that head coach Dan Quinn was likely to hire a coach “to oversee the front seven” after general manager Adam Peters noted that adding a pass rusher is a focus during his end of season press conference.

Surprised Donatell is sticking around if that’s what’s happening.

— Marshall (@MarshW_7) January 31, 2026
@PRHH1974 and I talked about this the other day. Daronte Jones worked with Tom Donatell’s brother and father in Minnesota. So there are pre-existing ties there.

Also, you can’t just get rid of everybody nor should you really

— Resh (@reshmanuel) January 31, 2026


A to Z Sports

The Commanders needed an upgrade in the secondary, regardless


The secondary was a huge weakness for the Commanders last season, and they allowed the fifth-most passing yards at 242 yards per game. We also saw younger players like Mike Sainristil take a major step back in his second season, and he needs to continue his development under sound coaching. Jones’ scheme is unique, and a lot of it goes through the secondary with zone and match concepts, blitzes from the secondary, and defensive backs playing multiple roles.

The Commanders need to add more talent in the secondary, especially at safety, but getting the most out of Sainristil and Trey Amos is just as important. Safety Will Harris will also likely be a strong fit in the system with his ability to play safety and nickel, and don’t be surprised if Caleb Downs is at the top of the NFL board with his ability to be a leader at multiple positions on defense, and a sure blue-chip prospect.



A to Z Sports

Several prospects had a standout day three at the 2026 Senior Bowl, led by Bud Clark, Owen Heinecke, Barion Brown, and Tanner Koziol


General manager Adam Peters only has six picks to work with in the draft this year, so he has to maximize every single one of them with a roster that needs help. There are a handful of underdogs who made a name for themselves on the third and final day of the Senior Bowl that the Commanders need to target.

Bud Clark, Safety, TCU

Bud Clark is a very experienced safety with over 2,400 snaps at TCU, and it’s something the Commanders would love in Daronte Jones’ defense. Clark flashed on the field and showed his ball skills at the Senior Bowl. He had 14 interceptions over the last four years, and four in 2025. There were multiple plays on the day where he showed his coverage ability, and he dropped back over the top for an interception. He also had a pass breakup to save a touchdown in a one-on-one drill. Clark was one of the most impressive defensive players all week long, but really won on day three.

TCU Safety Bud Clark been good… love this INT him coming off the hash… also great rep by Chandler Rivers in press pic.twitter.com/mcg4rFFfVi

— (Foots The King) (@FootsDaKing) January 29, 2026

ELITE SPEED: Safety Bud Clark SHINES in front of Washington Commanders in Mobile at Senior Bowl​



Riggo’s Rag

Commanders may not need Will Harris in Daronte Jones’ defensive scheme


Alex Ballentine of The Bleacher Report thought veteran safety Will Harris could be on the chopping block after an underwhelming first season in Washington. The analyst cited his limited coverage capabilities as a primary reason he could be released with one year remaining on his deal, and the logic is hard to dispute.

“Will Harris is another Commanders defender whose best days might be behind him. Just about everyone in the secondary should be on high alert after the Commanders finished in the bottom five of passer rating allowed. That includes 30-year-old Will Harris who gave up a 117.1 passer rating when targeted this season.”Alex Ballentine

Getting injured early in the campaign dented Harris’s impact. He struggled to find his feet upon returning to the lineup, which made the Commanders’ decision to let Jeremy Chinn leave for the Las Vegas Raiders even worse. Jones needs athletic, explosive safeties to operate within what’s expected to be a creative and aggressive system, which could leave last year’s free-agent signing on the outside looking in.

Cutting Harris would save $3.76 million on Washington’s salary cap with $1 million in dead money. The financial ramifications don’t matter much, so this is about how Jones views the player and whether he can handle the increased demands of his defensive schematics.

I know I’ve harped about getting younger all over this roster, but Harris’ versatility in Jones’ defense may keep him here for his second season.

I thought he’d be a cut candidate, but how Jones values versatility at S, I think Harris stays. https://t.co/7Zt16JV2V2

— Mark Tyler (Hogs Haven) (@Tiller56) January 31, 2026

Podcasts & videos

Lucky Number 7 + Logan Live from Shrine Bowl + Smoot’s Big Decision | Command Center​


Great pod today talking the Daronte Jones effect – learned a ton from my guy @thorku breaking down projected scheme, desired player traits and draft analysis – plus check out this pic of DJ from Commanders/Vikes earlier this year @apr *chefs kiss* https://t.co/GKTt5e5GQh pic.twitter.com/Q609ggWfAF

— Mitchell Tischler (@Mitch_Tischler) January 30, 2026

NFC East links

As @JimmyKempski reports here, Vic Fangio’s return has been uncertain and sort of still is. It’s been leaning to the positive recently but could change again. The #Eagles haven’t confirmed or denied anything to this point. https://t.co/9WeHPRCs8E

— Mike Garafolo (@MikeGarafolo) February 1, 2026
Meanwhile, expect some changes to the #Eagles’ offensive coaching staff. New OC Sean Mannion met with position coaches on Friday and is huddling with Nick Sirianni on which to retain. The team wants to give Mannion some of his own guys to help him. Expect a blend of old and new.

— Mike Garafolo (@MikeGarafolo) February 1, 2026
The Eagles have dealt with this before with Fangio. He went back and forth a bunch after they won the Super Bowl.
We’ll see if ultimately decides to step away. As one source shared, “we’ll convince him to stay” https://t.co/snzDN9xwhG

— Dianna Russini (@DMRussini) February 1, 2026

Bleeding Green Nation

11 more thoughts on the Eagles hiring Sean Mannion as their new offensive coordinator


Speaking of, the 2026 offseason is a big one for Howie Roseman as it relates to re-shaping this offense. Will A.J. Brown be traded? If so, who’s added to help replace him? Is Lane Johnson going to retire? If so, who’s his replacement? Do the Eagles let Dallas Goedert walk in free agency with no obvious successor in place? What’s the plan with Landon Dickerson and Cam Jurgens, just hope that they get healthy and play much better next season? There’s a lot for the Eagles to figure out in order to put Mannion in the best possible position to succeed.

I wonder if the Eagles will add a more senior offensive coach (or two) to the staff. They’ve already hired Josh Grizzard, who has one season of play-calling experience, to accompany Mannion as the Eagles’ new pass game coordinator. Will they add more? The Eagles reportedly showed interest in Matt Nagy for their offensive coordinator opening and he’s still currently unemployed.

The possibility of a “too many cooks in the kitchen” dynamic is on my radar. The Eagles struggled with blurred lines of power in 2020 with a disjointed collaborative effort among Doug Pederson/Press Taylor/Rich Scangarello/Marty Mornhinweg. I’m not saying this 2026 setup is identical. Maybe it won’t be an issue. Maybe hiring multiple offensive assistant could be good! But I think it’s something to monitor.

We obviously have no idea what Sean Mannion will and will not bring with him in terms of ideas from Green Bay…but this is a very funny graph.

Will it be out with the hitches and in with the…outs?#Eagles pic.twitter.com/lBOqxhIil5

— Deniz Selman (@denizselman33) January 30, 2026

Kliff Kingsbury is expected to be in the mix to be the New York Giants offensive coordinator under new head coach John Harbaugh. (via @JordanRaanan)

"He was the offensive coordinator the past two seasons for Washington and has a strong track record of calling plays. Kingsbury is…

— COMMANDERS FOOTBALL (@HogsHaven) January 31, 2026

NFL league links

Articles​


ESPN

Regulators OK ESPN’s deal for NFL Network, RedZone rights from NFL


ESPN’s purchase of NFL Network and other league digital assets has been finalized after government regulators approved the transaction.

The league and ESPN officially announced the closing of the deal Saturday night after the Justice Department and other non-US antitrust authorities completed their reviews.

ESPN acquired NFL Network, NFL Fantasy and the rights to distribute the RedZone channel to cable and satellite operators, and the league will get a 10% equity stake in ESPN.

From NFL.com:

  • NFL Network, including both linear and digital rights, would be owned and operated by ESPN and fully integrated into ESPN DTC, alongside traditional pay television distribution, increasing accessibility and flexibility for consumers and promoting innovation in sports programming.
  • ESPN would own broad rights to the RedZone brand and distribute the NFL RedZone Channel to pay TV operators for continued inclusion into their sports packages.
  • NFL Fantasy Football would merge with ESPN Fantasy Football, creating the official Fantasy season-long game of the NFL and one best-in-class digital experience, driving innovation and enabling broader reach to meet global demand.
  • In total, ESPN’s platforms will license an additional three NFL games per season to air on NFL Network as a result of today’s news. In addition, ESPN will adjust its overall NFL game schedule, with four games (including some from overlapping windows) shifting to NFL Network, which will continue to present seven games per season.
  • The NFL will continue to own and operate its retained media businesses including properties such as NFL Films and key fan-facing platforms such as NFL+, NFL.com, the NFL Podcast Network, the NFL FAST Channel and the official sites for the league’s 32 clubs. It will also continue to own, operate, and produce NFL RedZone, and retain the rights to distribute NFL RedZone digitally.

From Pro Football Talk:

Marchand reports that the NFL employees who have staffed NFL Network will become ESPN employees in April 2026. Whether and to what extent staffing changes occur after that remains to be seen.

Likewise, the Monday Night Football doubleheaders will end (thank football gods). Those four games likely will be sold by the NFL. With the three games NFL Network has retained, ESPN will now televise 28 total games per year.

As the next wave of TV deals looms, it’s hard to imagine ESPN not having a significant package. The most awkward aspect of the arrangement is that the NFL will essentially be [charging] itself 10 cents on every dollar that ESPN pays for the privilege of presenting NFL games.



ESPN

Bills hire former player Leonhard as defensive coordinator


Former Bills player Jim Leonhard has been hired as the team’s new defensive coordinator, it was announced on Saturday.

The hiring marks a change in direction on the defensive side of the ball after Sean McDermott was fired following nine seasons leading the Bills and their defense.

Leonhard, 43, is currently the defensive pass game coordinator/assistant head coach with the Denver Broncos. This year, the Broncos’ defense put up 68 sacks, four short of tying the single-season record (72, 1984 Bears), and allowed the second-fewest yards per game (278.2).

Leonhard marks the second Broncos coach that new Bills coach Joe Brady has added to his staff in a coordinator role. The Bills also hired Pete Carmichael as their offensive coordinator. Brady and Carmichael worked under then-New Orleans Saints coach Sean Payton in 2017-18.

Brady and Leonhard have not overlapped on a coaching staff previously.

“I only get one opportunity to be a head football coach,” Brady said during his introductory news conference. “I’m not in the business of hiring my friends, and making sure I want to get the best football coaches for these players cause they deserve that, and so, that’s what’s important to me.”


Discussion topics


NFL.com

2026 Senior Bowl takeaways: Garrett Nussmeier delivers MVP performance in NFL draft showcase


The American Team defeated the National Team, 17-9, in the 2026 Panini Senior Bowl on Saturday at Hancock Whitney Stadium in Mobile, Alabama.

Here are three takeaways from the 77th annual all-star contest, which capped off a week of events, including three days of practice, featuring 100-plus top prospects for the 2026 NFL Draft.

Defenders open eyes. Naturally, in a game with fewer than 500 combined yards of offense, there were several defenders who stood out.

Missouri edge rusher Zion Young had a productive week of practice in his quest to be a high pick, and he earned Defensive MVP honors in Saturday’s game. Young was in on a couple stops for short gains and recovered a fumble, also providing several pressures.

Oregon LB Bryce Boettcher was all over the place for the National Team defense, making a game-high 10 tackles — five more than any other player — and breaking up a pass. Boettcher’s coverage ability and intensity stood out all week.

Boston College edge rusher Quintayvious Hutchins had three tackles for losses (for a combined minus-12 yards) and stopped Cole Payton’s run on a two-point conversion attempt. Western Michigan’s Nadame Tucker also stood out, finishing with two sacks, three tackles for loss and a forced fumble.

Another sleeper who didn’t stuff the box score was Michigan DT Rayshaun Benny, who battled his way into the backfield multiple times for the American Team and also stoned Clemson’s Adam Randall for no gain.

Washington CB Ephesians Prysock was a standout in coverage, batting down two passes to help the American Team to victory.

ALL-SENIOR BOWL DEFENSE

DE TJ Parker
DE Nadame Tucker
DE Zion Young
IDL Lee Hunter 🌟
IDL Rayshaun Benny
LB Jacob Rodriguez
LB Kyle Louis 🌟
CB Malik Muhammad
CB Ephesians Prysock
S Bud Clark
S DeShon Singleton
DB Skyler Thomas pic.twitter.com/BbLq4CXJcV

— NFL Draft Files (@NFL_DF) February 1, 2026
Listening to Dane Brugler's appearance on Crown Global Media from yesterday.

Important to note the point he made that a lot of teams won't be comfortable taking safeties or linebackers in the top 10, which could lead to a Sonny Styles or Caleb Downs to slip.

Why is that?

The… pic.twitter.com/F3a9EYNAxz

— John “Draft” Vogel (@DraftVogel) January 31, 2026
Things to expect under Daronte Jones in Washington:

• Physical, athletic, tone-setting LBs.

• Alignment versatile DBs, instincts from varying levels of a defense (should be more post-snap rotation).

• Length & quick-twitch in his edge rushers.

FA and the draft could…

— Ryan Fowler (@_RyanFowler_) January 27, 2026

aBit o’Twitter

Most of the Commanders’ posts in January feature players in their Super Bowl-era uniforms, past & present 👀

And the last 4 posts of current players are in those uniforms too…

Like I said from my post on October 15 last year, making them permanent + getting a burgundy version… https://t.co/8K8SjEHRZE pic.twitter.com/wXcU8Iz5kJ

— Zach Cohen (@ZachCohenFB) January 31, 2026
NFL owners believe that Jody Allen is now ready for her brother’s estate to sell the Seahawks and the process could begin soon after the Super Bowl, sources say, but there’s skepticism among some owners that Jeff Bezos would be a bidder. https://t.co/e7Ntvo2rWj

— MarkMaske (@MarkMaske) January 31, 2026


Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/daily-slo...s-for-commanders-fans-to-track-this-offseason
 
Commanders fans are upbeat about the hire of Daronte Jones to replace Joe Whitt as defensive coordinator

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Hogs Haven readers feel pretty good about the Commanders new defensive coordinator, Daronte Jones.

In a survey here last week, more than half the respondents said so.

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While 5% of respondents felt that they didn’t have enough information to form an opinion, 94% of respondents felt that they did (the results had a 1% rounding error).

The calculated weighted average score for the 94% of respondents who expressed an opinion is 3.78 out of 5, which is very solid support for Jones.

Here’s a bit more detail about Jones from a recent article published on Commanders.com:

1. A unique coaching journey.

Jones told NFL insider Ari Meirov that he “definitely took the long way” in his coaching career. In the past 26 years, Jones has coached at nearly every level spanning across multiple leagues, from high school and college to the CFL and NFL.

Jones started his coaching career in 2001 as a graduate assistant at Lenoir-Rhyne — a Division II school in North Carolina. He then went from Nicholls State to Franklin High School in Louisiana, where he got his first shot at being a defensive coordinator. From there, he got a coordinator job at Jeanerette High School and then Bowie State for five seasons. That led to him coaching at UCLA and then the Montreal Alouettes and then Hawaii for two seasons. A brief stay at Wisconsin preceded a two-year stint as the Miami Dolphins’ assistant defensive backs coach.

Since 2016, Jones has spent most of his time at the professional level. His one season as LSU’s defensive coordinator was sandwiched between stints with the Cincinnati Bengals and Vikings. He returned to the Vikings’ coaching staff in 2022 and was promoted to the team’s pass game coordinator in 2023.

2. His secondary was one of the best in the NFL last year.

Jones reportedly became one of the more popular coordinator candidates in the league this offseason, and there’s a reason for that: his secondary played a key role in the Vikings having a potent defense.

As Vikings defensive coordinator Brian Flores’ “right-hand man,” Jones coached a secondary that made life difficult for opposing quarterbacks. The group allowed the second-fewest passing yards per game (158.5) and generated eight interceptions. They allowed the second-fewest completions in the league, and 13 players had at least one pass breakup. Veteran Harrison Smith had another strong season, recording 10 pass breakups for the seventh time in his career.

3. He’s a Maryland native and played in the DMV.

Jones is coming home now that he’s an official addition to the Commanders’ coaching staff.

Jones grew up in Capitol Heights, Maryland, and played football at Bishop McNamara High School. He later accepted a scholarship from Temple University and played one season for the Owls before transferring to Morgan State, where he played defensive back.

But Jones’ connections to the DMV don’t end there. During his five seasons coaching at Bowie State, he served as the team’s assistant head coach and defensive coordinator.

4. He’s learned from some of the best defensive minds in the NFL.

Jones’ list of influences is certainly impressive. It includes Vance Joseph during his two seasons with the Miami Dolphins; current Indianapolis Colts defensive coordinator Lou Anarumo when he coached for the Bengals; Mike Zimmer during his first coaching stint with the Vikings; and Flores over the last three seasons. Together, those coaches have produced defenses with 14 top 10 finishes in yards allowed.

Jones is already putting his stamp on the coaching staff with the announcement that several defensive position coaches are leaving the team, at least one position coach has been promoted and another hired, with more changes expected in the coming days and weeks.

One would imagine that Daronte Jones will also have a lot of input into the offseason roster plan. While Washington’s offense will need only routine maintenance this offseason, the defensive side of the ball requires an overhaul and a substantial injection of high-end talent.

The process of releasing and re-signing players from the ‘25 roster will be interesting. Even more fascinating should be the process of signing veteran free agents from other teams starting March 15th as well as the NFL Draft at the end of April.

By May, the Commanders should have a tremendous new-look defense led by first-time NFL coordinator Daronte Jones.

Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/washingto...to-replace-joe-whitt-as-defensive-coordinator
 
Daily Slop: 2 Feb 26 – Is there a good case to be made for the Commanders to hire Darrell Bevell to mentor David Blough?

gettyimages-1630117953.jpg

HOUSTON, TEXAS - AUGUST 19: Quarterback coach Darrell Bevell of the Miami Dolphins on the sidelines during the preseason game against the Houston Texans at NRG Stadium on August 19, 2023 in Houston, Texas. The Dolphins defeated the Texans 28-3. (Photo by Wesley Hitt/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Commanders links

Articles​


Bullock’s Film Room (Subscription)

State of the Roster 2026: Commanders Defense


Obviously the hiring of Jones plays a significant factor here. We’re still not certain exactly what changes he’ll bring. The staff has yet to be finalized, but news broke over the weekend that many of the defensive assistant coaches are leaving, including Ryan Kerrigan. There could well be more changes coming and they may have already happened by the time you read this. With that much uncertainty, it’s hard to project forward how the Commanders will see their current roster under a new defensive coaching staff.

However, I’m going on the assumption that Jones landed this job largely for the work he’s done under Brian Flores with the Vikings. He can’t just copy and paste the Vikings defense here, but I think he will try and implement a lot of the core principles of that defense. That will likely include a shift to a base 3-4 defense, which means there are position and role changes for a lot of players incoming. We’ll also likely see a shift to a more zone-match based coverage system instead of man coverage, and we’re likely to get a much more aggressive defense that generates pressure via aggressive blitzes rather than rely on four-man rushes.

I broke down the likely scheme changes under Jones last week. I also broke down how the current Commanders personnel potentially fits, or doesn’t fit, that system. So make sure you check out those break downs if you missed them last week. But with those in mind, we can now try to look forward and see what positions the Commanders will be targeting to improve this offseason.

Defensive tackle/Interior defensive line

It’ll be interesting to see the way that the Commanders approach the interior defensive line group this offseason. We don’t know for certain they will be switching to a 3-4, but their moves in free agency with defensive lineman could give us a good hint at what their intentions are. If they do go out and sign a couple of cheap, big-bodied run-stuffers, then I think that’s a good indication that they’re planning a switch. But I know that approach wouldn’t play well with fans after the previous two years, despite it making plenty of sense for the profile of lineman they’d be looking for in that system.

I’m setting the need level at medium. Clearly if the Commanders switch to a 3-4 they will need more bodies on the interior, which means the need level can’t be low. If they cut Payne, that need increases too. But with the potential profile of players they’d be looking for in this system, I don’t think they’d feel like they urgently have to go out and spend a ton of money. They wouldn’t need to go give out a Milton Williams $100million contract like the Patriots did last year. So I think the balance between those thoughts makes the need level more of a medium than high.



Commanders Roundtable

The Case for Darrell Bevell: Logical “Safety Net” for Commanders


Blough is an inexperienced play-caller who has never called plays in a professional game. The “ebb and flow” of an NFL Sunday requires a certain level of “game-feel” and savvy that can typically only be developed through years on the headset.

With the potential departure of Assistant Head Coach Brian Johnson—who is currently being courted for coordinator roles elsewhere—Washington would be wise to insulate its young coordinator with a grizzled veteran who has experience leading a room through high-pressure situations. Enter Darrell Bevell.

The most obvious link to Bevell is his history with Head Coach Dan Quinn. The two weren’t just colleagues in Seattle; they were the lead coordinators of the Seahawks’ back-to-back Super Bowl appearances in 2013 and 2014. While Quinn oversaw the legendary “Legion of Boom” defense, Bevell managed the league’s top-rated rushing attack and guided the rise of Russell Wilson. Quinn has firsthand knowledge of Bevell’s temperament, leadership, and offensive philosophy.

Another compelling component to Bevell is his recent connection with Mike McDaniel. Over the last four seasons, Bevell has served as the Passing Game Coordinator and Quarterbacks Coach for McDaniel in Miami. This is beneficial to Washington for two reasons: First, it has been widely documented that Quinn and McDaniel have a deep relationship and communicate often, so the Bevell connection is further deepened. Second, Bevell has now expanded his repertoire and gained firsthand experience running the Shanahan offensive system—something Washington is reportedly hoping to adopt this season.

In addition to running the traditional Shanahan wide-zone scheme, McDaniel is renowned for integrating high-speed pre-snap motion and a vertical West Coast philosophy. McDaniel dresses his offense with “eye candy,” and now the 15-year coordinator can add those modern learning principles to his cap.

Both Blough and Bevell have connections to [Bears head coach Ben] Johnson from their shared time in Detroit. In 2019, when Bevell took over as the Lions’ Offensive Coordinator, he actually scouted Johnson and gave him his first real opportunity in the league.

Considering that Bevell has spent over 15 years as an elite offensive mind and reached the Super Bowl twice, it would be highly beneficial for him to come to Washington and support a novice play-caller. Although Blough is an “upside” move as a coordinator, he would benefit from having a veteran thought-partner to bounce ideas off of and ask for guidance. After all, Bevell has also served as an interim head coach twice—with the Detroit Lions (2020) and the Jacksonville Jaguars (2021)—so he has experience leading an entire room.




Commanders Wire

What is the outlook for LB Jordan Magee?


Rising third-year linebacker Jordan Magee, from Temple University, was interviewed very briefly recently by Ben Standig, and Standig played the interview this past week on his podcast.

“I thought there was a lot of growth for me as a player,” expressed Magee. “As I got out on the field more, I got more comfortable.”

“I wanted to work on getting off of blocks better. Working on my tackling, my tracking ability. For me, I want to play lower, for better leverage. So I work on my knee bend, trying to stay low while moving.”

As for this 2026 offseason, what are the plans for Magee? Well, he will certainly be…working out. But he also has a special trip that he wants to make this offseason.

Magee said he wanted to go to Tokyo last year, but an injury needed rehab, so he did the work instead. He said he and his girlfriend plan to go this offseason to see what life and the culture are like in a major city in Japan.



Commanders Wire

Where will Joe Whitt land next?


Whitt was fired after the 2025 season, in which the Commanders finished 5-12 and had one of the worst defenses in the NFL. There were injuries, of course, but even as early as Week 2 in a Thursday Night game at Green Bay, Whitt’s defense looked lost.

McCarthy and Whitt worked together for many years. Perhaps we will hear this week that Joe Whitt is going to the Steelers.


Podcasts & videos

Targets in Free Agency I Like for Washington​


On video with ⁦@nwagoner⁩ discussing a player he covered in SF: Brandon Aiyuk. He’s not going back to the 49ers. Should the Commanders be interested? Listen to Nick’s terrific insight. ⁦@ESPNRichmondhttps://t.co/aY7KyEPzcy

— John Keim (@john_keim) February 2, 2026

Playmaker DEBATE: Will the Commanders Ignore Sonny Styles And Chase Top Pass Rusher in 2026 Draft?​


NFC East links


Bleeding Green Nation

Vic Fangio reportedly considering retirement


Philadelphia Eagles defensive coordinator Vic Fangio is considering retirement from the NFL, according to a report from PhillyVoice’s Jimmy Kempski.

It sounds like the Eagles are optimistic that the 67-year-old will return for at least one more season. But a final decision still awaits.

More from Kempski:

According to multiple sources, the Philadelphia Eagles got a big scare recently when legendary defensive coordinator Vic Fangio informed the team that he was retiring from coaching in the NFL. However, sources said that Fangio was convinced by the team’s brass to stay for at least one more season in 2026.

For now, Fangio is back, though it should be noted that PhillyVoice reached out to an Eagles spokesperson to confirm that Fangio is still the team’s defensive coordinator, and they declined to answer until further notice. As such, wiggle room exists for Fangio to change his mind again.

If Fangio does NOT return, well, that would be a pretty devastating loss. Especially after losing his potential successor Christian Parker to the Dallas Cowboys. The Eagles would do well to find a way to get Schwartz back in Philly if needed. Otherwise, it’s unclear who would replace Fangio.

Even if Fangio does come back for 2026, it’s clear that the Eagles need to be ready that he might not be coaching for too much longer.



Blogging the Boys

3 players the Cowboys could release to open up cap space for free agents


The Cowboys are going to have to make some hard decisions about their roster

Kenny Clark

There is such a thing as too much of a good thing. When the Cowboys acquired Kenny Clark from the Green Bay Packers in the Micah Parsons trade, we thought for a moment Dallas hit the lottery. The Cowboys acquired two first-round picks and a former Pro Bowl-level player with a decorated pedigree. Clark, alongside Osa Odighizuwa, should have formed a great duo capable of stopping the run and giving interior pressure on passing downs. However, everything changed when Dallas upped the stakes and traded for Quinnen Williams, prying him away from the New York Jets.

Williams is a star talent with multiple years left on his contract and has perennial All-Pro potential. Odighizuwa carries a dead cap hit charge of $32M in 2026 and $12M in 2027, cementing his place with the team. Also, Clark has dropped off some over the last two years, with four sacks and 26 quarterback pressures in that span.

While Dallas would hate to release an integral part of their return from the Parsons trade and a solid veteran for nothing, his cost makes it too much to not at least consider it. Clark would not carry a dead salary cost against the cap if the Cowboys let him go, and $21M in savings, making him a possibility if they decide to shed some contracts.



ESPN

2026 NFL head coach openings: Assessing new hires from this year’s coaching carousel


New York Giants – 2025 record: 4-13

HIRED: John Harbaugh


It’s not hyperbole to say that landing John Harbaugh as the next head coach represents the best day for the Giants franchise since they last won the Super Bowl 14 years ago. After wandering in the coaching wilderness for a decade, the Giants reeled in the top fish in this year’s cycle, a Super Bowl winner, a tone-setter, a steady leader who will command the entire building and which has set off giddy celebrations from an exhausted fan base.

This hire also says a few things. This was the best job available to Harbaugh and he never would have accepted it if he had concerns about collaborating with general manager Joe Schoen, who worked doggedly to convince Harbaugh to take the job. And, despite the recent losing, the Giants ownership of the Mara and Tisch families remains deeply and rightly respected in league circles.

Harbaugh is expected to bring along from Baltimore offensive coordinator Todd Monken, which is a boon for quarterback Jaxson Dart, given Monken’s previous work with, among others, Lamar Jackson. But more than the Xs and Os, Harbaugh has already brought respectability back to the Giants. It’s been a rough few years for them, particularly the last one. This is a huge win for John Mara, Steve Tisch, Schoen and legions of energized and now hopeful fans.



Big Blue View

NY Giants news: 2 experienced offensive coordinators emerge as candidates


Brian Callahan, Kliff Kingsbury reportedly drawing interest from John Harbaugh

Jeremy Fowler of ESPN is reporting that Kingsbury and former Tennessee Titans head coach Brian Callahan have been “involved in [the] Giants’ initial OC search.”

Fowler reported that interviews held to this point have been virtual, and that the expectation is that in-person interviews with finalists could be held at some point this week.

An interesting detail provided by Bob Brookover of NJ.com is that in 18 seasons as a head coach Harbaugh has never hired a first-time offensive play-caller.


NFL league links

Articles​


ESPN

Sources: Raiders expected to hire Seahawks’ Kubiak as coach


The Las Vegas Raiders are expected to hire Seattle Seahawks offensive coordinator Klint Kubiak as their next head coach after the Super Bowl, sources told ESPN’s Adam Schefter on Sunday.

A deal between Kubiak and the Raiders cannot be finalized until after the Super Bowl, in which the Seahawks will play the New England Patriots next Sunday.

With Kubiak off the board, the Cardinals hired Los Angeles Rams offensive coordinator Mike LaFleur as their new head coach, the team announced.

Las Vegas is headed toward a rebuild after firing coach Pete Carroll, who went 3-14 in his lone season with the organization. Under Carroll, the Raiders had one of their worst seasons in franchise history. Las Vegas ranked at the bottom in every major offensive category, including rushing yards per game (77.5). The team endured a 10-game losing streak and fired offensive coordinator Chip Kelly and special teams coordinator Tom McMahon.

The Raiders are positioned well to jump-start the rebuild process. They are projected to have the second-most cap space in the NFL to work with during free agency.

Cardinals hire Rams OC Mike LaFleur as head coach


The Arizona Cardinals have hired Mike LaFleur as their new head coach with the Los Angeles Rams offensive coordinator agreeing to a five-year contract, the team announced Sunday.

The Cardinals met with Seattle Seahawks offensive coordinator Klint Kubiak on Saturday night but he is expected to become the Raiders’ head coach after the Super Bowl, sources told ESPN’s Adam Schefter, so Arizona pivoted to another offensive coordinator in the NFC West.

Arizona initially interviewed LaFleur virtually early in the cycle and then hosted him for a two-day interview, which included dinner with team executives, last Monday and Tuesday.

LaFleur, 38, replaces Jonathan Gannon, who was fired as Arizona’s coach Jan. 5, kicking off a search for Gannon’s replacement that lasted nearly a month.

LaFleur is the sixth straight head coach hired by the Cardinals who does not have permanent NFL head coaching experience.

The full 2026 head coaching cycle:

Giants: John Harbaugh
Falcons: Kevin Stefanski
Dolphins: Jeff Hafley
Titans: Robert Saleh
Ravens: Jesse Minter
Steelers: Mike McCarthy
Bills: Joe Brady
Browns: Todd Monken
Raiders: Klint Kubiak
Cardinals: Mike LaFleur

— Dianna Russini (@DMRussini) February 1, 2026

Sources: 49ers hire ex-Falcons coach Raheem Morris as DC


The San Francisco 49ers are hiring Raheem Morris as their new defensive coordinator, sources told ESPN’s Adam Schefter on Sunday.

Morris will become the team’s fifth coordinator in as many years. He replaces Robert Saleh, who departed to become the head coach of the Tennessee Titans.

Morris was considered a finalist for the Arizona Cardinals head coaching job, which went to Mike LaFleur, the Los Angeles Rams’ offensive coordinator.

Morris and 49ers coach Kyle Shanahan are close friends from previous coaching stops with Tampa Bay (2004-05), Washington (2012) and, most recently, the Atlanta Falcons in 2015-16.



Pro Football Talk

Report: Vikings will pay Brian Flores more than $6 million per year


Vikings defensive coordinator Brian Flores, whose contract expired after the season, has rejoined the team on a deal that will pay him, via Kevin Seifert of ESPN.com, more than $6 million per year.

Because coaching pay lacks the transparency of player pay, it’s impossible to know with certainty how much anyone makes. It was reported that Raiders offensive coordinator Chip Kelly received $6 million per year. Eagles defensive coordinator Vic Fangio makes $4.5 million annually.

With Kelly now fired, those numbers would make Flores the highest-paid coordinator in the league.


NFL inks multi-year deal for more regular season games in Madrid. https://t.co/X5nl2lS7GV

— Jeremy Fowler (@JFowlerESPN) February 2, 2026

Super Bowl


Front Office Sports

Super Bowl LX Get-In Prices Fall Nearly 30% Since Matchup Set


A sprawling host market and newly available ticket inventory are helping explain what’s happening in recent days with the Super Bowl LX ticket resale market

he Super Bowl LX ticket resale market is showing another big decline, but unlike the lodging-related pricing crash last year in New Orleans, the latest decrease is more straightforward.

Low-end, get-in pricing for the Feb. 8 matchup at Levi’s Stadium between the Seahawks and Patriots is now hovering around $4,600 per ticket on multiple marketplaces. That is down nearly 30% from the comparable, entry-level figure of $6,500 right after Seattle and New England clinched their conference championships.

a recent push of newly available ticket inventory hitting the market since the middle of last week is contributing heavily to the recent pricing declines. The overall ticket market for Super Bowl LX, however, remains fluid, and several additional factors are entering the situation, including a geographically sprawling locale for this year’s game and a relatively smaller stadium.

Average cost of a 30-second Super Bowl commercial over the last 10 years…

2025 – $7.3M
2024 – $7.0M
2023 – $6.8M
2022 – $6.5M
2021 – $5.6M
2020 – $5.6M
2019 – $5.2M
2018 – $5.2M
2017 – $5.4M
2016 – $4.8M

— NFL Stats (@NFL_Stats) February 1, 2026

aBit o’Twitter

It's funny… I went down a rabbit hole looking at the skill players used by Washington's last four head coaches.

Two were defensive-minded and two were offensive-minded.

To me, it's clear that Gruden and Shanahan had better overall personnel and placed a heavier emphasis on… pic.twitter.com/FDva1VJNfi

— George Carmi (@Gcarmi21) February 1, 2026
The NFL announced it will play a 2026 regular-season game in Paris, with the Saints as one of the participating teams. It’s now up to eight regular-season games that will be played overseas this season.

1 – Melbourne
1 – Rio
1 – Munich
3 – London
1 – Madrid
1 – Paris

— Nicki Jhabvala (@NickiJhabvala) February 2, 2026
Commanders getting one of these. Though not Paris since Washington is the host team.

I'd take London. Melbourne if a fat cat who can't get enough Commanders' coverage wants a travel buddy. https://t.co/DDrFgCUDxB

— Ben Standig (@BenStandig) February 2, 2026


Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/daily-slo...to-hire-darrell-bevell-to-mentor-david-blough
 
2026 Washington Commanders: depth chart, salary cap update, upcoming free agents and roster issues for the impending offseason

gettyimages-2254664079.jpg

PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA - JANUARY 04: Jeremy Reaves #39 of the Washington Commanders celebrates with teammates after an interception during the second quarter of the game against the Philadelphia Eagles at Lincoln Financial Field on January 04, 2026 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Emilee Chinn/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Lots of white space on the canvas​


GM Adam Peters and head coach Dan Quinn return to a team with a 3rd-year roster that probably cannot yet be said to have a substantial ‘core’, especially on the defensive side of the ball. The approach in 2024 was to replace most of the ‘23 roster with new players, primarily drawn from veteran free agency, and with a strong reliance on one-year contracts, creating a situation where the Commanders, in February last year, prior to signing future contracts with practice squad players, had the fewest players under contract in the NFL per Over the Cap.

This year, the Commanders are a bit further along. With 52 players currently under contract, there are 7 NFL teams with fewer players (though that number includes the two super bowl teams, who have not yet signed players to future contracts).

Future Contracts​


Reserve/future contracts are signed in January and February each year with practice-squad quality players who are not on any team’s regular roster at the end of regular season play.



In the NFL, a reserve/future contract is an agreement between a team and a player that takes effect at the start of the next league year, typically in March. These contracts are often signed with players who have been on a team’s practice squad during the previous season or with free agents who are not currently under contract with any team.

While the NFL’s Collective Bargaining Agreement (CBA) does not provide a specific definition for reserve/future contracts, it outlines the rules and procedures for player contracts, including the timing and conditions under which these contracts can be signed. Reserve/future contracts are signed after the conclusion of the regular season and before the start of the new league year. This timing allows teams to secure players for the upcoming season without exceeding the roster limits set by the CBA.




So far in 2026, the Commanders have signed 16 players to reserve/future contracts, bringing the total number of contracted players to 52.

temp-future-contracts.jpg

That is 6 more players than the Commanders had on February 3rd a year ago, which means that in comparing year to year, Washington has fewer roster spots to fill now than they did at this time last year.

The three units that make up the team are all in different situations at the moment​


Offensive overview

In February last year, the Commanders entire roster — both offense and defense (outside of quarterback) — was an almost blank canvas.

The situation is a little different this offseason. After two drafts and two free agent classes, the Commanders have the makings of an offense, with a talented quarterback, a proven wide receiver, a competent running back room, and an offensive line that was in the top third of the league in 2025.

Since February last year, on the offensive side of the ball, the following changes have taken place:

  • Starting LT Laremy Tunsil acquired via trade
  • Starting RT Josh Conerly drafted in the 1st round
  • Starting RG Sam Cosmi returned from ACL injury
  • Andrew Wylie, Nick Allegretti & Brandon Coleman all ‘demoted’ from starters to backups
  • Chris Paul (who will be a free agent in March if not extended) was promoted from backup to starting LG
  • Bill Croskey-Merritt was added to the backfield (and Austin Ekeler lost to major injury & unlikely to return)
  • Deebo Samuel was added to the WR unit, but he will be a free agent in March if not extended
  • WR Treylon Burks was signed as a free agent
  • WR Jaylin Lane was drafted

In short, Adam Peters and Dan Quinn worked together to fill in nearly half the canvas with key changes on the offensive line and additions at running back & wide receiver. While the team certainly needs to add a talented wide receiver this offseason and may also need to bolster the running back and tight end positions, the core talent is in place for newly-promoted offensive coordinator David Blough to hit the ground running.

Special teams

Special teams play was good in 2024 and elite in 2025 under coordinator Larry Izzo.

The front office and coaches have taken a very healthy approach to special teams for two seasons now and seem to have figured out an approach that puts Washington firmly near the top of the league in kickoffs, kickoff returns and punts.

The big empty space that needs to be colored in is on the defensive side of the ball

The defense, as poorly as it performed in 2024, actually regressed in 2025, ending the season ranked 32nd in yards allowed and 27th in points allowed.

It is hard to identify a true defensive ‘core’, though the players who are not pending free agents and most ‘established’ on the roster probably comprise the following:

  • CB Trey Amos
  • DE Dorance Armstrong
  • DE Javonte Jean-Baptiste
  • DT Daron Payne
  • DT Javon Kinlaw
  • DT Johnny Newton
  • LB Frankie Luvu
  • LB Jordan Magee
  • CB Mike Sainristil
  • S Will Harris
  • S Quan Martin
  • S Jeremy Reaves

New coaches

The unit will have new leadership in 2026. The defensive coordinator from 2024 & 2025, Joe Whitt, is gone, replaced by Daronte Jones, the former defensive backs coach and passing game coordinator for the Vikings. Gone too are several assistant coaches, with the best-known probably being former Redskins player and franchise all-time sack leader, Ryan Kerrigan.

Talent injection is badly needed

While there are some players to work with in the list above, the defensive unit lacks elite playmakers; Adam Peters has stated publicly that he will be looking to add youth, speed and talent in free agency and the draft. At a minimum, the Commanders need to add a highly-skilled pass rusher, a talented linebacker, one or two skilled and versatile safeties, and an elite-level cornerback. One or two of those needs might be filled via the draft, but the others will probably need to be found in free agency.

Fortunately, the Commanders are blessed with quite a lot of cap space, and the opportunity to ‘create’ more.



Salary cap​


In a recent article, I outlined the Commanders projected cap situation before any roster moves are made, and stressed the dynamic (that is, constantly changing) nature of the salary cap.

Just a day after that article was published, the NFL updated its advice about what the league-wide salary cap is expected to be. In just the last 24 hours, Over the Cap changed the projected 2026 cap space for the Commanders, requiring all the cap calculations in this article to be updated prior to publication. The salary cap picture is constantly evolving.

It seems useful, in this space, to discuss the current projections for Washington’s available cap space along with possible roster moves and contract situations that could affect it between now and the March 11th start of free agency — while remembering that all these numbers will change with every roster decision and each new salary cap data entry.



Please note that all salary cap numbers that I quote in this article come from Over the Cap. OTC is one of two major sources of publicly available salary cap information (Spotrac is the other). Over a dozen or so years of careful study of the NFL salary cap, I have found that the two sources typically differ somewhat in their salary estimates as the NFL season progresses, and that by January or February each year, there is a difference of several million dollars between the two. This is one of the many reasons why salary cap reporting is often confusing for fans — especially in terms of headlines or Twitter reporting, which, by their nature, lack detail and nuance.

On two occasions, I have done ‘deep dives’ where I looked at the line-by-line calculations to find the source of the differences, and on both occasions I have found data missing from the Sportrac calculation that mean that Over the Cap was the more accurate estimate.



Projected cap space available before any roster moves​

temp-update-1.jpg

Over the Cap estimates at the moment that the Commanders will have about $76m in cap space available for the 2026 season.

However, when Deebo Samuel’s contract voids shortly after the new league year begins, it will trigger a $12.4m dead cap hit that will decrease the cap space available for free agency to about $63.7m. This dead cap hit can be avoided/delayed if the Commanders re-sign Deebo to a new contract, but that contract will have to be paid for out of the $76m.

Thus, the starting point for free agency using current estimates is $63.7m before any roster moves are made.

Potential salary-cap saving roster cuts​


I see 8 players who could be cut because the team doesn’t think the on-field performance justifies the cap space devoted to the player. Only one of these players is on offense (Nick Allegretti, backup G/C).

temp-proj-cuts-salary-cap-2.jpg

It’s important to remember that every player released is one more roster spot that needs to be filled. I don’t see any circumstances under which the Commanders would release all 7 of these defensive players.

I have organized the list in 3 color-coded tiers from those players I see as most-likely to be released to those least-likely to be released.

The only player in Tier 1 (bright green) is Marshon Lattimore. I think his release is academic at this point.

I see the chances of release for the three Tier 2 yellow-coded players to be roughly 50/50, depending on the combined perceptions of Adam Peters and the coaching staff. Daron Payne, in particular, could be offered a contract extension that would keep him on the roster at a lower cap hit. I think the decisions on Harris and Allegretti would come down to whether their new coordinators have roles for them, and whether or not they could be replaced by better players at the same (or lower) salary cap cost.

The three players that comprise Tier 3 are ones that I expect to be retained, but whose value at current cap hits may merit discussion between the front office and the coaching staff. Again, the key question for each of these players will be whether they fit into the new defensive scheme and whether they can be replaced by a better player at the same price.

If we assume that the ONLY current player to be released is Marshon Lattimore, then the roster would fall from 52 players to 51, and the adjusted cap space available would rise from $63.7m to $82.2m

Extensions​


Typically, extending a player — that is, signing a contract that keeps him on the team for additional years — provides the opportunity to lower a player’s immediate cap hit by deferring cap dollars to later years when the salary cap will be higher (and when the player might be cut, meaning that he won’t be paid his salary in those later years).



EXAMPLE

When Terry McLaurin’s contract extension was signed last year, prior to the regular season, $13.75m of Terry’s 2025 base salary was converted to signing bonus, reducing the 2025 cap hit by $11.3m ($25.5m – $14.2m)

Terry’s old contract was set to expire at the end of the 2025 season. While the team converted most of Terry’s affected ‘25 base salary at the same time the contract was signed, the extension added 3 seasons — ‘26, ‘27, and ‘28 (plus a void year) — it did NOT cancel or replace the existing contract signed in 2022.

This is typical in contract extensions that Washington has done with other veterans.



Laremy Tunsil​


Adam Peters has already confirmed that he plans to engage in extension talks with Tunsil this offseason, and Peters further indicated that he will try to expedite the process more efficiently than the process he went through with McLaurin last year.

Tunsil’s contract with the Commanders was ‘inherited’ when he was acquired via trade from the Texans last offseason.

View Link

However, in order to open up additional 2025 cap space, the team added 3 void years and converted $18m of his base salary in 2025 to signing bonus, creating $14.4m in cap space for 2025. His contract, following that restructure, currently looks like this:

Temp-laremy-tunsil-contract.jpg

In a 2026 offseason extension, the current contract will run its course and the $10.8m dead cap in the 3 void years will accelerate into the 2027 salary cap calculation (See 2025 extension for Panthers player Austin Corbitt for reference; Spotrac used because the site lists details for all contracts signed by the player).

Hypothetical contract extension for Laremy Tunsil

Let’s keep the numbers fairly simple and assume that Tunsil:

  • signs a 4-year extension (2027-2030),
  • worth $30m per year ($120m total),
  • with $18m of his 2026 salary converted to signing bonus
  • roster bonus of $25m paid at the start of the 2027 season

The new structure could look something like this:

temp-tunsil-restructure-hypothetical-1.jpg

Under this structure, Tunsil’s CASH FLOWS would be:

  • 2026 – $31.35m
  • 2027 – $27.0m
  • 2028 – $27m
  • 2029 – $27.5m
  • 2030 – $28.5m

Impact on 2026 salary cap​


As you can see, under this hypothetical 4-year, $120m extension, Tunsil’s 2026 cap hit drops from $24.9m under the current contract to $12.5m — a savings of $12.4m.

Other potential contract extensions/restructures​


A few other players who could be extended prior to the start of the ‘26 season (with estimated potential cap savings):

  • Daron Payne ($11m)
  • Dorance Armstrong ($5m)
  • Franke Luvu ($4m)
  • Tyler Biadasz ($4m)


Number of players on the roster


When you scan the current 52-man offseason roster, it’s easy to see that, not counting Marshon Lattimore, perhaps 18 names belong to guys who are marginal NFL players that populate roster bubble and practice squads spots. They are on short-term, low-dollar, non-guaranteed contracts that make them easily replaceable. In essence, the team has around 33 quality NFL players that would be likely to make any NFL roster as either a backup or starter.

Of course, Washington has a long list of impending free agents that can be re-signed — coincidentally, there are 33 of them as well (including Deebo Samuel), according to Over the Cap.

This number also includes 3 RFAs Chris Rodriguez Jr, Tyree Jackson, and Jake Moody.

Re-signing some of these players would make the offseason roster look a bit healthier.

Pending free agents likely to be re-signed​


Of these 33 impending free agents from the 2025 Commanders roster, I think only 5 are likely (i.e., more than 50% chance) to return for the 2026 season:

  1. P Tress Way
  2. RB Jeremy McNichols
  3. WR Treylon Burks
  4. RB Chris Rodriguez Jr
  5. LG Chris Paul

The first 4 players on that list had a combined 2025 cap hit of $4.74m; I think they could all be re-signed in 2026 at a cap space cost of no more than about $6.5m.

Opinions vary on the cost to extend Chris Paul. I think we can all agree that the Commanders have sufficient cap space to extend him at market cost if they want to keep him.

If all 5 of these players were to be re-signed this offseason, it would increase the total number of players under contract to 57 (including Deebo Samuel & Marshon Lattimore), and the number of NFL roster-caliber players to 38 (excluding Marshon Lattimore).

Some other pending Commanders free agents who could get consideration in 2026​


A few other players set to become free agents in March — like Marcus Mariota, Von Miller, Andrew Wylie, Deatrich Wise, Jacob Martin, Deebo Samuel and Jake Moody — may get consideration, but none of them seem better than 50/50 (in my opinion) to get contract extensions.

So, what’s the big picture overview of free agency needs?​

  • With 6 scheduled draft picks, to reach the offseason limit of 90, the Commanders would need to sign around 27 free agents, with many of those being ’camp bodies’.
  • Roughly speaking, less than half of those 27 free agents — about a dozen — would need to be good enough to make the 53-man roster
  • Of that dozen, probably 5 or 6 need to be capable of starting or playing a significant role as a rotational player.

The draft


Per tankathon, Washington currently has 6 picks in April’s draft.

temp-trankathon.jpg

Adding these 6 picks to the current slate of 52 players would bring the total roster to 58 players, well above the offseason salary-cap cutoff of 51 players.

Here are a couple of older articles from 2021 and 2024 that cover some of the arcane details of salary cap and player contracts. The examples are obviously slightly out of date, but the information can all be useful in understanding the Commanders current situation. I will likely update and re-publish these articles in the coming weeks:

The salary cap cost of Washington’s 6 draft picks needs to be deducted from the available cap space and set aside for the post-draft period, but these six players won’t use up as much cap space as you might expect. A back-of-the-envelope calculation says that, when taking into account the Rule of 51, the Commanders need to set aside about $6m in cap space to sign their six draft picks.



So, bottom line, how much cap space will the Commanders have available for free agency?​


The breakdown looks like this:

  • Current estimated available cap space (52 players): $76m
  • Cap space required to sign draft picks: $6m
  • 2026 Effective Cap Space: $70m
  • Minus: Deebo Samuel contract voids: <$12.34m>
  • 2026 Adjusted Effective Cap Space: $57.66m
  • Plus: Cap space savings for cutting Marshon Lattimore: $18.5m
  • Plus: Projected savings from Laremy Tunsil extension: $12.4m
  • 2026 Effective Cap Space after cuts/extensions: $88.56m
  • Less: allowance for injury replacement during season: $6.56m
  • 2026 Cap space available for signing/re-signing veteran free agents: $82m

After accounting for draft picks, injury replacements, Deebo Samuel’s dead cap hit and then adding back space for the expected release of Marshon Lattimore and the extension of Laremy Tunsil, the Commanders should have around $82m in cap space available for the 2026 free agency period.

You can use the information I provided in the article to estimate the impact of additional roster cuts (e.g., Nick Allegretti), restructures (e.g., Tyler Biadasz), or extensions (e.g., Tress Way).

In effect, the Commanders are flush with cap space, which should allow Adam Peters to be aggressive in veteran free agency this year as he attempts to keep the offense competitive while re-constructing the team’s terrible defense.



Offseason depth chart​


Let’s get a look at the roster, then talk about each position group one-by-one.

Color Coding:

  • White/bold = under contract now; no known issues
  • Grey/italics = pending unrestricted free agent
  • Red block/white font = expected to be released before March 11th
  • Black block/white font = serious injury; pending unrestricted free agent; possible retirement
  • Yellow block/bold/italics = Deebo will be an unrestricted free agent when contract voids within days after start of new league year
  • Beige/italics = pending Restricted Free Agent
depth-3-Feb-2026-1.jpg

The numbers that appear beside some players’ names are 2026 cap hits per Over the Cap. I have not included cap hits below $1.5m.

The Commanders currently have 26 defensive players, 25 offensive players and one special teams player (LS Tyler Ott).

Please note that assigned positions are my own personal opinions. They do not necessarily represent the thinking of Washington’s coaches or front office, nor are they necessarily consistent with fan consensus. This chart represents my personal interpretation, and may not reflect the thoughts of other writers on Hogs Haven. Finally, when it comes to backup players, I don’t put much effort into making sure that they are on the right or left or behind the specific player that they backup. I mostly just try to fit everyone on the chart efficiently.




Position-by -position discussion​

Quarterback


Clearly, Washington has found its franchise quarterback in Jayden Daniels. The only questions here relate to backups — how many the team keeps, who they are, and how much they get paid.

Based on what Marcus Mariota did in 2025, it would seem reasonable to be able to bring him back in ‘26, but he may have done enough to get a shot as a starter with another team or he may want to follow Kliff Kingsbury if KK gets another OC job. Of course, Mariota may want to stick with Washington where he seems to be pretty happy and comfortable. With David Blough taking over from Kliff Kingsbury, it may be that Blough will want to bring in a different backup or Adam Peters may want to spend less cap space on the backup as Jayden Daniels enters his 3rd NFL season. I think there are a lot of issues to be considered here.

Sam Hartman’s strong relationship with Daniels may count for something or it may not. It feels like it’s time to end the experiment.

Josh Johnson and Jeff Driskel both offer reasonable options for an inexpensive QB3. There’s a good chance that new offensive coordinator David Blough may have a connection to someone else he prefers.

Offensive Line


Left Tackle

Laremy Tunsil
is among the best at the position in the NFL. Adam Peters has already confirmed his plan to extend Tunsil this offseason. I detailed my general (and simplified) expectations for a contract extension earlier in this article. With Tunsil, this position should be locked down for at least the next four or five seasons.

Left Guard

Chris Paul
did well in his first NFL season as a starter. He is scheduled to enter free agency in March. While it might be good to extend him, Brandon Coleman may offer a good option on a rookie deal, or the front office may be able to bring in a competent replacement at a lower price point.

Center

Tyler Biadasz
has done well in 2 seasons with the Commanders. It may be a good idea to give the 29-year-old, who is in a contract year, a 2- or 3-year extension between now and September.

Right Guard

Sam Cosmi
returned from an ACL tear and played well in the second half of 2025. Look for him to return to Pro Bowl form in 2026.

Right Tackle
In his rookie season, Josh Conerly got thrown in the deep end. He was a bit up & down early, but finished strong in the final 2 months of the season. Look for a step forward in 2026.

Tight End


It feels like Zach Ertz, with his late-season knee injury, may have finally reached the end of his career. It’s hard to imagine him returning to play at 36 years of age.

This could mean that Ben Sinnott, who has been largely invisible in the passing game, may get the chance to show what he can do in Ertz’s absence and under a new offensive coordinator, BUT it could mean that the Commanders will be looking for a receiving tight in free agency in March.

It will be interesting to see which players will return and which new faces may be added to this unit.

Wide Receiver


The only certainty here is that Terry McLaurin will be back in 2026 along with Luke McCaffrey and Jaylin Lane. The Commanders desperately need to add at least one more high-quality receiver to pair with McLaurin. The team may have something in Treylon Burks, who was a late free agent signing in 2025, but his 10 catches for 130 yards on 22 targets in 2025 won’t be enough to keep the team from looking for more help in free agency and/or the draft.

Running Back


It feels as if Austin Ekeler, like Zach Ertz, may have had his career ended by serious injury.

The 3-man unit of Bill Croskey-Merritt, Chris Rodriguez and Jeremy McNichols was…adequate in 2025. Bill is the only one of the three who is under contract in ‘26, though CRod is a Restricted Free Agent, which means that the Commanders can bring him back if they want to by tendering him.

I’d be happy enough to have CRod or McNichols (or both) back, but it feels like the running back group could easily be upgraded with the right free agent signing or the right draft pick. I think Adam Peters will try to do exactly that between now and May.

Defensive Tackle


There are questions.

Will the new defensive coordinator, Daronte Jones, prefer a 3-man or 4-man front (or will the defense be so multiple that the base defense will be hard to define)?

Javon Kinlaw’s contract pretty much insures his return in 2026, and I can’t imagine AP or the coaching staff giving up on Johnny Newton yet. Looking at the depth chart, I have the feeling that Daron Payne will be back despite having the biggest cap hit on the Commanders roster. Washington probably needs to add at least one more solid DT in free agency — maybe more if the team expects to play more 3-man fronts.

DE/Edge


Again, it’s hard to know whether the team will be relying on DEs in a 4-man front or OLBs flanking 3 interior DTs. The scheme will have a lot to do with the type of players Washington tries to sign and draft this offseason to play the edge.

Dorance Armstrong was having a great season before his Week 7 injury, and I think we all hope he returns to that same form to open up the ’26 season.

After that, the position looks rather barren.

The Commanders will need to attack this position group via both free agency and the draft if they hope to generate pressure and build the kind of attacking defense that most analysts seem to think Daronte Jones will try to implement.

Washington simply isn’t close right now at this position group.

Off the ball linebacker


I think Bobby Wagner is done in DC; he certainly can’t continue playing as a 3-down linebacker. With Adam Peters declaring that he wants a ‘younger and faster’ defense, it’s hard to imagine how Wagner fits in anymore.

Jordan Magee, Frankie Luvu , Kain Medrano and Ale Kaho fit the mold of a young & fast linebacker group, but if Daronte Jones wants to implement the kind of defensive schemes he helped coach in Minnesota, the Commanders probably need one or two very significant upgrades at this position group via free agency and the draft.

Cornerback


Clearly, the Marshon Lattimore trade was a failure. I’ll be flabbergasted if Lattimore isn’t released before March 11th.

Mikey Sainristil had an outstanding rookie season, but struggled mightily in 2025. Let’s hope that a fresh approach from the coaching staff reignites his career. I actually feel pretty good about Mikey making a resurgence in ‘26.

Trey Amos was injured in early November of his rookie season, but in his first 10 games before the injury, he looked like the best CB on the team. Let’s hope that he looks as good or better this season; Washington needs at least one solid cornerback returning to the team in 2026.

Like nearly every other defensive position group, the Commanders need to acquire at least one or two high-impact players at the cornerback position in free agency and the draft. Good talent with dramatically improved coaching will be the dual keys that will help reverse Washington’s defensive fortunes.

Safety


Surprisingly, all of Washington’s safeties from the ‘25 season remain under contract in 2026. Unfortunately, the safety play last season was just as bad as the rest of the defense.

Quan Martin seemed to take a big step backwards in ’25. Some have suggested that he might benefit by moving to the slot (or he may find a role in Daronte Jones’ defense, which is expected to rely heavily on 3-safety looks).

Will Harris was praised by coaches early last season, but he missed several games with an injury and the defense didn’t get any better when he returned. He may be the kind of player who will excel in the new defensive scheme.

Jeremy Reaves is a player that’s easy to love, but he’s much easier to love on special teams than he is as a defensive starter.

The Commanders absolutely need at least one high-impact player added at the safety position, and if the team plans to increase the amount of 3-safety sets used this season, may also need a pair of players via draft and free agency to upgrade the safety group.

Special Teams

Punter


Tress Way is the longest-tenured player to have been on the roster continuously, and he offers a lot. He is a good punter, a valuable member of the locker room, an active member of the DMV community, and very popular with fans.

The 2025 All-Pro punter is a pending free agent, but I expect him to return in ’26 despite his age. He is signed on a specific contract (defined in the CBA) that allows the team to pay him $2.8m for one season while being charged only about $1.4m against the cap, so there’s not really any reason to move on from him given his outstanding punting and budget cost.

Long snapper


The long-snapper is Tyler Ott. He may be the least criticized player on the team.

Kicker


The Commanders finished the season with Jake Moody as the kicker. He is a Restricted Free Agent, so the Commanders can control his contract by offering him a tender, but I don’t expect them to do so (it would cost over $3m). Moody was just the latest in a long list of interchangeable kickers.

Adam Peters made costly mistakes at the position in both of his first two seasons. In 2024, he paid a $1.5m signing bonus to Brandon McManus, then cut him before training camp when he was the subject of sexual harassment accusations. In 2025, he signed Matt Gay to a contract with $4m in guaranteed money, only to see Gay struggle during the season and get cut at the end of November.

I have to think that we’ll see a pair of kickers without big signing bonuses or guarantees coming to camp for a kicking battle this year.

It’s time for a dramatically different approach.



Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/washingto...-and-roster-issues-for-the-2026-nfl-offseason
 
Daily Slop: 3 Feb 26 – Is Quay Walker the free agency answer to the Commanders linebacker needs in 2026 revamped defense?

gettyimages-2242087335.jpg

GLENDALE, ARIZONA - OCTOBER 19: Quay Walker #7 of the Green Bay Packers celebrates after a defensive stop in the fourth quarter of a game against the Arizona Cardinals at State Farm Stadium on October 19, 2025 in Glendale, Arizona. (Photo by Christian Petersen/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Commanders links

Articles​


Commanders Roundtable

Three Senior Bowl standouts who fit Washington Commanders


Washington CB Ephesians Prysock

The Huskies had a couple of defensive backs on the NFL radar with Tacario Davis also drawing buzz as one to watch early in his career, but Prysock, a 6-foot-4 cornerback, has drawn growing buzz as a stock riser. Prysock has been the one to draw buzz through the week of practices into Saturday’s Shrine Bowl, finishing the game with a pair of pass deflections and two total tackles including one solo. He’s been a standout in coverage whether on Saturday or in one-on-ones, ending the week named to the All Senior Bowl Defense after contributing in the American team’s win.

Prysock — a possible early day three candidate — began his college career at Arizona, like Davis, before transferring to Washington to follow head coach Jedd Fisch in 2024. At Arizona, he played in 23 games over two seasons with 16 starts before earning honorable mention All-Pac 12 in 2023. He went on to start all 26 games for the Huskies his final two seasons, finishing with 14 pass deflections and an interception before ending his college career as an honorable mention All-Big Ten selection.

UW CB Ephesians Prysock has serious length, but moves pretty well for his size pic.twitter.com/waBTlc7yS5

— Billy M (@BillyM_91) January 29, 2026


Riggo’s Rag

Dream free agents who could revolutionize the Commanders’ defense in 2026


Commanders could sign Jaquan Brisker

Speculation continues to soar about the Commanders taking Ohio State safety Caleb Downs with the No. 7 pick, but an experienced difference-maker with proven credentials should also be a priority in free agency. Jaquan Brisker has the physicality and versatility that look tailor-made for Daronte Jones’ system, and the Chicago Bears may not be willing to meet his demands in free agency.

Brisker is an exceptional force against the run. He can get down to the second level with instinctive force while also being disciplined enough to maintain positional leverage. At 26, this represents an investment in both the present and the future.

Commanders could sign Quay Walker

With prolific veteran linebacker Bobby Wagner set to either retire or take his chances elsewhere in free agency, the Commanders need to find an adequate replacement. Going down the draft route with someone like Arvell Reese or Sonny Styles is an option, but adding to the second-level with an ascending free agent may also be something for general manager Adam Peters to contemplate.

That brings Quay Walker under the microscope. He fits the mold as a dynamic tone-setter who thrives against the run and on blitz packages. There are some coverage deficiencies to address, but he’s young enough to make the desired improvements under defensive coordinator Daronte Jones’ exceptional guidance.

The Packers are currently projected to be $1.4 million over the cap. Some tough decisions are coming, and Walker may be allowed to leave. The Commanders should monitor this situation closely, as it could be a viable option alongside Frankie Luvu and Jordan Magee.


The #Commanders #1 offseason need? PASS RUSH. 😤

The drop-off last year was steep: 📉 The defense had a 7.9% Sack Rate before Dorance Armstrong's injury. 📉 After he went down? It basically ceased to exist.

To run Daronte Jones' aggressive scheme, you need finishers. Expect the… pic.twitter.com/5SY0auMYFF

— David Harrison (@DHarrison82) February 2, 2026


Commanders.com

2025 Commanders position review | Quarterback


What does the team around Daniels look like in 2026? Almost every question about the Commanders heading into Daniels’ third season revolves around this topic. One way or another, the team will be drastically different in 2026, both in terms of the coaching staff and roster. David Blough is the new offensive coordinator, which will help with some continuity, but the first-time play caller will want to bring in his own ideas about how to elevate Daniels’ skill set.

There will likely be a new wide receiver corps around No. 1 option Terry McLaurin and a new starting tight end. The defense is going to be completely new with Daronte Jones now officially taking over as the coordinator. Daniels should be completely healthy after an injury-riddled 2025 season, which bodes well for the Commanders as they try to get back to the playoffs.

Daniels has already shown that he can be a difference maker, and he will naturally be important for any success the team has in 2026. However, he’ll need a better supporting cast around him if they truly want to maximize his potential.

— What does the rest of the quarterback room look like? Although the ideal plan is for none of the Commanders’ backups to start in 2026, it’s still a priority for the Commanders to put together a strong quarterback room around Daniels in his third season. They did a solid job of this over the last two seasons with a mixture of Mariota, Johnson and Driskel, but all three of those players could be gone in 2026.

Mariota might be the biggest departure. It’s possible that Blough will want to keep him around, but Mariota might also want to either rejoin Kliff Kingsbury wherever he gets a job or pursue other options. Regardless of who they sign, it will be important for the Commanders to get it right, even if none of the backups play.



A to Z Sports

The Commanders could end up keeping Assistant HC Brian Johnson on the staff after he missed out on the Broncos’ offensive coordinator position


Running game coordinator Anthony Lynn had several head coaching interviews this coaching cycle, but he’s likely to stay now as well. He wasn’t the only candidate receiving calls in Washington as assistant head coach and offensive passing game coordinator Brian Johnson interviewed for the Denver Broncos offensive coordinator position.

The Washington Commanders have undergone many staffing changes this season, and more could happen with dominoes still falling around the league.

Johnson has been coaching since 2010, and actually has offensive coordinator experience with the Philadelphia Eagles in 2023.

Losing Johnson would’ve hurt with the inexperienced staff taking over the offense, but the Broncos decided to stay in-house and promote Davis Webb as the offensive coordinator instead. Webb was a hot name this coaching cycle, who had real head coaching interest from multiple teams, and they didn’t want to lose him.

Scratch off Marcus Dixon's name from the list of ex-Vikings coaches Daronte Jones might bring to Ashburn. https://t.co/ZaGFp1DmYH

— Ben Standig (@BenStandig) February 3, 2026


A to Z Sports

Commanders’ 2026 international game location is still unknown, but latest NFL news paints a clearer picture


[T]he Commanders are heavily rumored to be playing an international game as a home game next season. The exact location hasn’t been announced yet, and it probably won’t be for a while, but the latest NFL news ruled out one location that would’ve been high on fans’ lists.

Paris, France, is the newest destination, and of course, the NFL has selected the New Orleans Saints as the hosting home team for that game, which means the Commanders are out.

Where the Commanders can still play, and who they could face

The Los Angeles Rams are rumored to be included in the Melbourne, Australia game, and the Commanders do play them next season, so there’s still a chance. International games are usually cross-conference games; however, it’s likely that the Commanders will face one of their home AFC opponents in the international game, so Australia may be out.

The Commanders face the Houston Texans, Indianapolis Colts, and Cincinnati Bengals at home, so you can count on one of those three teams being the opponent. I could see the NFL marketing a Jayden Daniels vs Joe Burrow international game in 2026, and fans should be excited about that matchup, no matter where it is.


Podcasts & videos

🎙 Guest: @RossTuckerNFL

🏈 Commanders must fixes
🏈 OC challenges for Blough
🏈 Key difference for inexperienced OC hires in Wash, Philly
🏈 Former OL on the new OL coach
🏈 Super Bowl 60 – Trusting Sam Darnold?

Also, latest on the coaching staff.https://t.co/N3e1V6VLB5

— Ben Standig (@BenStandig) February 3, 2026

View Link

While Washington may be years away from a ring, I made my return on @BeltwayFootball to talk about giving my girlfriend a ring of her own! https://t.co/KgfzLr0tXQ

— Pete Hailey (@PeteHaileyNBCS) February 2, 2026

NFC East links


Bleeding Green Nation

Enjoy Conspiracy Theories?


It felt like Eagles were going to bring on a familiar face–one that wasn’t necessarily a new direction but at least had some experience calling plays and working with Sirianni or Hurts. Names like Jim Bob Cooter, a previous Eagles’ offensive consultant, and Matt Nagy, an Andy Reid disciple that worked with Sirianni in Kansas City, popped up and interviewed. From the outside, it looked like the Eagles were going to settle for familiarity over innovation much like they did in 2025, hoping that familiarity would finally start clicking. As previously mentioned, the Eagles pivoted quickly from the familiarity pool and hired two guys with very little experience calling plays, but guys whose offensive systems are worlds apart from where the Eagles have been operating during the Sirianni era.

At this point, you must be wondering, so where is the conspiracy theory fun? Just as Schefter hinted that some bigger news might come out this week, following the reports of the new hires, it was revealed that Vic Fangio told the team he intended to retire. Now the Eagles and Fangio are in some kind of renewal of vows dance, where currently, Fangio has agreed to come back for 2026. What if Fangio informed the team that he wanted to hang up his clipboard because he wasn’t going to come back if the Eagles’ offense was in familiar hands? What if Fangio didn’t feel like wasting another season coaching up a young defense only to watch an offense go three and out 8 of 11 times per game? And what if the discussions with Fangio begging him to come back for at least one more season were the impetus for the Eagles to hard zag away from familiarity, experience, and a limited ceiling to the novelty, youth, and unknown ceiling of the offensive guys they just decided to bring on? Vic Uncle to the rescue again!



Blogging the Boys

Cowboys 2026 offseason preview: Offensive tackles


What’s Needed?

If the Cowboys decide to keep rolling with Terence Steele, then probably not much. They’ll also likely continue to work with Tyler Guyton on the left side, knowing they have Nathan Thomas to compete and also the emergency option of sliding Tyler Smith over. Given the youth of Guyton and Thomas, plus the welcome consistency of the offensive staff carrying over from last year, there’s a case to be made for preserving what you have and banking on development.

However, there’s also a case to be made for finally moving on from Steele and trying to get stronger on the edges. Steele continues to be what he’s always been, a solid run blocker with very limited pass protection ability. We kept hoping the latter would improve with experience, but that ship has sailed after five seasons. Now turning 29 this summer, Steele’s liabilities will only worsen with any athletic decline.

If Dallas does want to move on, it could be beneficial to the salary cap. Steele is scheduled to count about $18.1 million in 2026 and only has $9.4 million in dead money left. They could cut him outright for $8.75 million in cap space, usable in this year’s free agent market, or get $14 million with the June-1st provision.

The big question is whether Dallas thinks it can get the same level of play while reducing costs. Could they run with Thomas as the new RT, or maybe play him at left and move Guyton to the right side? Would they decide to move Tyler Smith to tackle permanently and let Guyton and Thomas compete for the right job? We can argue all day about the pros and cons of converting Smith to tackle over keeping him as an All-Pro guard, but the narrow view is that it would likely upgrade the LT position from the last two years. And Guyton, who played right tackle in college, could maximize his upside returning to that spot.



Big Blue View

Davis Webb will stay in Denver, won’t be NY Giants offensive coordinator


Davis Webb will remain with the Denver Broncos, who are promoting him from passing game coordinator to offensive coordinator, rather than join the New York Giants or any other NFL team.

Webb, the two-time Giants backup quarterback, has been a hot commodity this offseason. He interviewed for three head-coaching jobs, and has been thought to be a candidate for a number of offensive coordinator jobs, including with the Giants.

Webb, though, will stay with the Broncos. He has been in Denver the past three seasons working under Sean Payton, and has chosen to stay there although he will not get to call plays. Payton handles that job himself.

The Giants are expected to narrow their list of finalists for offensive coordinator this week and hold in-person interviews.

Known candidates with previous play-calling experience include Jim Bob Cooter of the Indianapolis Colts, Kliff Kingsbury, and Brian Callahan. Known candidates without play-calling experience included Colts’ passing game coordinator Alex Tanney, a former Giants backup quarterback, and Los Angeles Chargers’ quarterbacks coach Shane Day.


NFL league links

Articles​


ESPN

59 Super Bowl rings, 59 stories


Super Bowl XVII 1982: Washington

Alvin Garrett, WR
In 1989, Garrett decided his Super Bowl ring held no value to him and could help fund his desire to become a minister. He took out an ad in the Washington Post and sold the ring. “I flew to La Guardia in New York and the guy paid me cash for it,” Garrett said. “My life was so screwed up I needed God.” In 2016, someone who worked in the jewelry business in New York was picking through a box of items. They found Garrett’s damaged ring with the diamonds missing. They contacted Washington, who located Garrett, living in Huntsville, Alabama. The ring was restored and, Garrett said, “You can’t tell the difference.” He now keeps it stored away. But he’s thankful. “It was like a miracle,” he said. “It blew me away. I’m serious. Thirty years man and the circle comes back to you.”

Super Bowl XXII 1987: Washington

Doug Williams, QB
As the the first African American quarterback to start — and win — the Super Bowl, the ring signifies so much for Williams. “You open the case and it’s realizing what I had been through and things I had overcome,” Williams said. He rarely wears the ring, but plans to hand it down one day. When he does wear it, he said: “They all want to touch it; they all want to put their hands around it and they all say, ‘Wow, what a great day. Man I prayed for you. It’s bringing back memories for them because it was such a history-making day. The people from where I grew up, it’s almost like they wear that ring. That day will never happen again in the history of football; there will never be another first African American quarterback to win.”

Super Bowl XXVI 1991: Washington

Brian Mitchell, RB
A limo, a night on the town and cold weather. It was not a good combination for Mitchell and it nearly led to him losing his Super Bowl ring for good back in 2000. After going out drinking, Mitchell woke up the next morning without his ring. “When it’s real cold, your fingers seem smaller,” he said. That’s why he guessed: Maybe it’s still in the limousine. He called the driver who opened the door and found it stuck in the door jamb. “I was like, ‘Ohhhh,'” Mitchell said. “But, dude, that’s why I don’t wear it as much now and, definitely, when I’m going out and hanging with my boys, I don’t wear it.”


NFL Draft


Commanders Wire

2026 NFL Draft: Pittsburgh linebacker dominates Senior Bowl week


Kyle Louis made a name for himself last week at the Senior Bowl. The Pittsburgh linebacker stood out as much, if not more, than any other player in front of all 32 NFL teams in Mobile, Alabama.

But if you watch college football, you probably know Kyle Louis. Louis played four seasons at Pitt, starting the last two. In those two seasons, Louis finished with 182 tackles, including 24 for loss, 10 sacks and six interceptions. As you see, Louis does a little bit of everything.

During his time at the Senior Bowl last week, Louis showed off his versatility and is likely the best coverage linebacker in the upcoming 2026 NFL Draft.

Louis measured in at just under 6 feet tall and weighed 224 pounds. In the past, some would have deemed him too small to play linebacker in the NFL. Not these days. Louis’ hybrid style is actually perfect for the modern game. Louis played the “STAR” position for the Panthers, a hybrid role that is part safety/part linebacker.

Pittsburgh Linebacker Kyle Louis Since 2024:

🦈 84.7 PFF Grade (10th)
🦈 31 TFL’s/No Gain (1st)
🦈 50 QB Pressures (1st)
🦈 87.0 Coverage Grade (8th)@Pitt_FB pic.twitter.com/2L0auo3yUo

— PFF College (@PFF_College) January 30, 2026

aBit o’Twitter

#Commanders with an Easter Egg in their promotion?

WSH has leaned into Greco-Roman themes during this season's in-game entertainment. Defining "What is a Commander?"

Many fans have expressed enthusiasm about bringing back the 1960s spear helmet as an alternate.

Is this a… https://t.co/Jfa6HmeyiE pic.twitter.com/obZIqjsSBt

— George Carmi (@Gcarmi21) February 3, 2026
These are the top 12 available wide receivers heading into the NFL offseason 👇 pic.twitter.com/Krx6FrtVqB

— Underdog Fantasy – Josh & Hayden (@UDFootballShow) February 2, 2026
The Ravens are hiring Anthony Weaver to be their new defensive coordinator under Jesse Minter, per source.

Weaver returns to Baltimore, where he both played and coached. pic.twitter.com/cjmAqehYBl

— Dianna Russini (@DMRussini) February 2, 2026
The #Jets completed in-person interviews with veteran coaches Darrell Bevell and Greg Roman for their offensive coordinator job. Each has been an NFL OC four times.

— Mike Garafolo (@MikeGarafolo) February 3, 2026
NFL commissioner Roger Goodell announces the league will have a game in Mexico City in December. So that's NINE international games in 2026.

He also says the goal is to get to 16 international games every year.

— Albert Breer (@AlbertBreer) February 2, 2026
My method of fixing the Pro Bowl (and the offseason calendar, sort of).

1. Put it back in Hawaii.

2. Make it the week of free agency, during the legal tampering period. Have it be a huge in-person March event that anchors the free agency frenzy.

3. To avoid pro days clashing… pic.twitter.com/JyNPQZf5wq

— Brett Kollmann (@BrettKollmann) February 3, 2026
#Seahawks HC Mike Macdonald was asked what he’d do if it’s 2nd-and-goal from the 1-yard line, with 26 seconds left and down by four…

“Is Beast Mode in the backfield?” 💀

(🎥 @BussinWTB)

pic.twitter.com/SYftPiFF2x https://t.co/zM5gtkKcpm

— Ari Meirov (@MySportsUpdate) February 3, 2026
Slash, Duff McKagan, Chad Smith, Andrew Watt and Post Malone paying tribute to Ozzy Osbourne at 2026 Grammy Awards pic.twitter.com/EF4UO81IZ2

🎸 Rock History 🎸 (@historyrock_) February 2, 2026


Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/daily-slo...ers-linebacker-needs-in-2026-revamped-defense
 
Daily Slop – 4 Feb 26 – Josh Harris on Branding relaunch: “Commanders, leader of Warriors” and “tip of the spear”

temp-spear-helmet.jpg

Commanders links

Honestly never saw it this way, but I like it.

Let’s also listen back to when Commanders owner Josh Harris spoke with @Ourand_Puck about why the use of the spear on Ourand’s “The Varsity” podcast #RaiseHail https://t.co/rc50pj9vnq pic.twitter.com/MrUBpHMfgR

— Resh (@reshmanuel) February 3, 2026
Changing the uniform/logo/helmet will take time. NFL has rules. But I think eventually the "Super Bowl" jerseys are the permanent ones and they get back to a spear helmet. Pretty obvious the new ownership wants to. https://t.co/M3UStQ9ZFY

— JP Finlay (@JPFinlayNBCS) February 3, 2026

Articles​


Bullock’s Film Room (subscription)

NFL Draft Preview: David Bailey, Rueben Bain & Caleb Downs


A quick preview look at 3 draft prospects frequenly mocked to the Commanders

Free agency is up first in a little over a month’s time, but before jumping into free agent profiles, I’d just take a quick look at a few of the draft prospects regularly being linked to the Commanders.

So today, I thought I’d do a draft preview post to give some thoughts on the three players I’ve seen mocked to the Commanders most already, edge rushers David Bailey and Rueben Bain, and safety Caleb Downs. I’ll state here that these thoughts are merely first impressions from having only seen a few games of these players. By no means is this a final evaluation on these guys. As I watch more of them and we get through the pre-draft processes like the combine and pro days and interviews, we’ll learn a lot more about each prospect that will likely change these evaluations. But I thought it would still be fun to have a quick look at them as they’re being talked about a lot by Commanders fans online right now.

David Bailey, Edge, Texas Tech

Bailey’s freakish athleticism and quickness stands out immediately when watching him. There won’t be many pass rushers in this draft class that can match his combination of size, speed and quickness. When he times the snap right, he has a strong get off and will threaten tackles for speed off the edge. If they don’t cut him off, he’ll attack that outside shoulder and bend the edge all day. He has the ability to dip and turn the corner sharply too, so if tackles get too high with their hands he can just go under them.

When tackles do manage to negate that speed, and NFL tackles will manage that more frequently than the college tackles he was up against, he has a nasty spin move to play off his speed rush. He has the ability to line up on either side of the line and spin both directions, so it’s not an easily predictable spin move either. But it is a very sharp one.

But there are some concerns with his game. In the games I’ve seen so far. As a rusher, he can miss a lot of hand fighting moves. He will throw out cross chops and swipes, but will frequently miss with them or not hit them strongly enough to impact the tackle. That being said, he’s often quick enough to make it work regardless.

While he can convert speed to power and generate some push, he didn’t appear to be a real powerful rusher, at least in the two games I’ve studied so far. It’s one thing taking the momentum from his quickness and exploding into the chest of a tackle with a strong two-handed punch, it’s another to try and bullrush a tackle off the snap, or use a long-arm rush. Those are things that would develop him into a more well-rounded rusher rather than relying purely on his quickness. But that quickness is something that can’t be taught and every rusher in the league would like to have.

He also needs to work on his rush discipline and handling chips. He receives a lot of extra attention because of his quickness which gives most college tackles a lot of problems. That meant opposing offenses would often put a tight end or running back to his side to chip him and help out. Too often those chips would delay him too much as he tried to work around them to avoid them instead of fighting through them, like we saw in the play above. There was more than one occasion where he’d move inside to avoid a chip and work directly into the path of a blitzing linebacker or safety behind him, cutting them off. He can’t allow that to happen.



Commanders.com

Logan Paulsen’s top 10 edge rush prospects of 2026


6. Cashius Howell

One thing:
“He’s just fun to watch. He’s super instinctive and very natural. He kind of has this basketball-esque nature to how he plays. He’s kind of got a wide base. He hops around and does a really good job of when the tackle is overextended and playing off his inside foot and swiping his hands … He’s got great bend off the edge. He kind of rushes from what I would call an unorthodox stance. His hips are square to the ball as opposed to the line of scrimmage, so he’s taking this false step crossover, which works really well for him.”

4. Akeem Mesidor

One thing:
“The film is excellent. The first time I watched the film, I thought he was Rueben Bain. He has a wide array of pass rush moves. He’s got power. He uses his hands well. He’s got a cross chop. He’s got a dip move. He understands the rush line. He’s fantastic, man. He is NFL ready, rocked and ready to go. He is awesome. The only thing I have in terms of negative feedback is I think he’s an old football player with a lot of miles on him, and just how long is he gonna be in your program?”


4 Senior Bowl standouts from Trevor Sikkema


Tyren Montgomery, WR, John Caroll

Height:
5-foot-11
Weight: 190
2025 stats: 119 receptions, 1,528 yards, 15 TDs

Sikkema: I knew nothing about Tyren Montgomery heading into this event. He was a late add … From what I’ve been told, he hasn’t been playing football that long. He’s former basketball player, like a legit D-I basketball player, and it shows up. There are times when he doesn’t have the most diverse release package for an NFL receiver. He’s not always getting off the line super clean. His hand work could be better and a little more precise, but when that ball’s in the air and it’s time to go up and get it, full pun intended, he goes above the rim, and he can jump out of the gym. I’m so excited to see this guy out at the combine to see what his 40 time is, what the broad is, what the vertical is to measure just how explosive this guy is. Because that has absolutely shown up.

Tyren Montgomery

The biggest riser from Senior Bowl.

119 rec, 1,528 yds, 15 TDs insane production this szn.

Coming from D3 program flashing elite ball skills. pic.twitter.com/PKl0T7sUwn

— Elite Drafters (@Elite_Drafters) January 29, 2026


Commanders Roundtable

Mock drafts as split as ever on Commanders’ 2026 first round pick


Seven different picks by eight outlets on what the Washington Commanders should do with the seventh overall pick in the 2026 NFL Draft

Connor Hughes, SNY: Clemson DL Peter Woods

Nick Baumgardner & Scott Dochterman, The Athletic: Texas Tech edge David Bailey

Danny Kelly, The Ringer: Texas Tech edge David Bailey

Lance Zierlein, NFL.com: Auburn edge Keldrick Faulk

Ben Standig, Substack: Miami (FL) DL Rueben Bain Jr.

Ryan Wilson, CBS Sports: Clemson edge TJ Parker

PFF: Ohio State linebacker Arvell Reese

Matt Miller, ESPN: Ohio State safety Caleb Downs

What’s also clear is the focus on updating the front seven with the expectation that head coach Dan Quinn also adds a specialist to the coaching staff to focus on the front seven in 2026. The lone exception to the latest round of projections is Matt Miller’s projection for the Commanders to select Caleb Downs with the seventh overall pick, who has been a popular pick through the second half of the season.

Both the cornerback and safety rooms will need major upgrade as the selection of Downs would give the Commanders a difference maker along the back line. It’s as much of a need for a Washington defense that needs major upgrades under first-year defensive coordinator Daronte Jones, who will put a premium on takeaways thanks to his proven track record of producing exactly that with the Minnesota Vikings.



Riggo’s Rag

5 delicate Commanders contracts suddenly on the clock after a dreadful season


Some tricky decisions await

Tyler Biadasz – Commanders C

The Washington Commanders’ offensive line was a rare positive area of the roster. Although the unit went through significant early upheaval, everyone acquitted themselves well, providing a solid base for new offensive coordinator David Blough to work with.

If left guard Chris Paul is extended, all five of Washington’s starting offensive linemen will be back in 2026. This continuity is essential and equally favorable. Offensive line coach Bobby Johnson may have been let go, but the players’ cohesion remains intact.

The glue that holds it all together is Tyler Biadasz. He’s been a rock at the center position over the last two seasons, developing strong pre-snap chemistry with Jayden Daniels while also providing solid, if unspectacular, protection.

Biadasz finished the campaign on injured reserve, but there are no real long-term concerns. The veteran lineman has one more year remaining on his deal, counting $10.98 million against the salary cap. What the Commanders need to figure out is whether the former Wisconsin standout is worthy of another extension ahead of time.

That is more debatable. Biadasz won’t be forcing the issue, so he’ll be more than happy to play out the last year before taking things further. And if he performs well over the early stages of the campaign, the Commanders could always extend him in-season.


Wrote the other day about why Kliff Kingsbury is close to getting shutout of main OC jobs. Giants were arguably his last and perhaps only shot remaining.https://t.co/ik5wdQnxAH https://t.co/PDRRFrZRyk

— Ben Standig (@BenStandig) February 3, 2026

Podcasts & videos

Daronte Jones: Breaking Down the NEW DC + Super Bowl Preview | Podcast | Washington Commanders | NFL​


Washington Commanders Reveal New Spear Logo in mock draft graphic


VOLTRON: Washington Commanders Push Jayden Daniels to THRIVE Outside His Comfort Zone and ELEVATE​


NFC East links


NFL.com

Cowboys’ George Pickens knows his price tag ‘went up,’


His 93 receptions, 1,429 receiving yards and nine touchdown catches were all career bests by sizable margins. Thus, the impending free-agent wide receiver readily admits he’d love to stay put with the Cowboys, but insists it’s not completely in his control.

“I would love to,” Pickens said Monday when asked if he’d like to remain with the team for the long term, via the team website’s Tommy Yarrish. “But when you can’t control it, you kind of just hope for the best.”

He put together an outstanding season and has risen to new heights and raised his price tag.

“I feel like, if anything, it went up,” he said. “But me personally, my value is just a playmaker type of guy. I feel like any team or wherever I play, I can be playing in Canada, I just want them to know that I’m definitely a playmaker.”



Blogging the Boys

Cowboys 2026 draft: EDGE David Bailey scouting report


David Bailey is a pass rusher first and foremost. His job is to get to the quarterback, and that’s what he does best. He’s quick off the snap, he closes fast, and he has a good mix of moves that helps him create pressure even when opponents know he’s coming. That’s why he piles up sacks, tackles for loss, and forced fumbles. It’s simple, he’s disruptive and he finishes plays.

Where he’s still a work in progress is the dirty work parts of playing on the edge every snap. He isn’t the biggest or longest edge defender for the NFL, so bigger tackles can sometimes lock onto him and push him around in the run game. He can also get a bit too aggressive chasing the big play and losing his lane, which can open running or scrambling lanes if he isn’t careful.

Overall, he looks like a player who can be a very good NFL pass rusher early, especially on obvious passing downs, and if he improves his strength and consistency against the run, he has a path to becoming a full-time starter who produces sacks year after year.

CONSENSUS OVERALL RANKING

8th
(Consensus ranking based on the average ranking from 90 major scoring services)



Big Blue View

Matt Nagy hired by Giants: Big Blue View writers have varied reactions


Just like everyone else, BBV contributors aren’t sure what to think

Anthony Del Genio ….

“Am I wrong, or is that an underwhelming choice?”

Chris Pflum …

“I am… Whelmed. I think I want to go back to his offense before [Justin] Fields to get an idea of what he’d do with Dart.

“He does have a rep as a great ‘culture’ guy, so I can see the appeal for Harbaugh.”

Anthony Del Genio ….

“I suppose on the plus side, he got more out of [Mitch] Trubisky than anyone else has, and it would have been more if not for the double doink. But I don’t have any impression of him as far as a distinct offensive philosophy. Osmosis from being with Reid maybe.”

David Hartman …

“The Chiefs’ offense has been pretty stagnant the last few years (despite the 2 SB wins). But some of that has been personnel-driven. It’s not an exciting pick but I’m not sure how much else was still out there.”


NFL league links

Articles​


ESPN

Falcons president Matt Ryan won’t commit to Penix as starter


Penix is recovering from surgery to repair a torn left ACL, which he suffered last November. He is expected to be out anywhere from nine to 12 months.

At Tuesday’s introductory news conference for new general manager Ian Cunningham, Ryan was asked if Penix will be the Falcons’ starter when he returns and Ryan would not say either way.

“Neither of us are the head coach of the football team, so we can’t answer your question on that,” Ryan said. “… I think as we start to get into this process and dive deeper into the roster — how it currently stands, where it’s going in the future — I think those are conversations that’ll be a part of it.

“Quarterback’s obviously very important, and we’re excited about Mike and what he’s doing with his rehab. I’ve been up at the facility the last three weeks, and Michael’s been in there attacking that and he’s in a good space right now, so we’re excited about where he is at. But certainly, a lot of discussions for us about the entire roster.”


Brandon Beane dismisses Bills’ critics: ‘F— the outside’


Beane, the Bills president of football operations and general manager, discussed Buffalo’s controversial decision to fire longtime coach Sean McDermott and replace him with Joe Brady in a recent interview with Go Long.

“F— the outside,” Beane told Go Long, which published an excerpt of the interview Monday. “It’s about the right selection for this team. And if we win, they’ll love it.”

A recent survey conducted by The Buffalo News showed that over 75% of the participants disagreed with the decision to fire McDermott. The Buffalo News ran another survey in which less than 38% agreed that Brady was the right hire for head coach.

Beane told Go Long that he was aware of the widespread criticism and acknowledged that his job security might depend on Brady’s success.

“It’s the same thing I said when I took Josh Allen,” Beane said. “If I’m wrong, the moving company will be at my house.

“So I understand, and I’m not going to have regret of choosing someone to appease the outside if I thought it should have been something different. If I’m wrong, I’ll f—ing take my job and f—ing go home.”


NFL updated OC tracker:

1) Titans: Brian Daboll
2) Chargers: Mike McDaniel
3) Chiefs: Eric Bieniemy
4) Lions: Drew Petzing
5) Dolphins: Bobby Slowik
6) Commanders: David Blough
7) Falcons: Tommy Rees
8) Bucs: Zac Robinson
9) Bills: Pete Carmichael
10) Ravens: Declan Doyle
11)… https://t.co/x5FNWRQ9uh

— Ari Meirov (@MySportsUpdate) February 3, 2026


Front Office Sports

Scott Hanson: ‘They Didn’t Consult Me’ on Hated NFL RedZone Ads


With the injection of ads during the 2025 regular season, Hanson can no longer champion RedZone as “seven hours of commercial-free football.”

During an interview here with Ryan Glasspiegel and Baker Machado of Front Office Sports, the popular host put the blame for the ad creep squarely on NFL Network.

“First and foremost, they didn’t consult me. Your boy Uncle Scott was not responsible for commercials. Not even a little bit. Not consulted. The business folks handle the business side of things,” Hanson told FOS here on Radio Row.

“I was told we were going with commercials,” Hanson said. “I said, ‘OK, let’s handle this as best we can.’ What we ended up with, at the end of the season, was eight 15-second commercials that we spaced out about 45 minutes apart. So never two commercials back to back. And always in-between plays.”

[T]he good old days came to an end when the NFL added commercials during the 2025 season–sparking outrage among millions of viewers. Hanson was forced to alter his slogan to: “Seven hours of RedZone football stars now.”

“The NFL is a for-profit business,” Hanson noted. “I don’t believe that horse is going back into the barn.”

“Yes, there will be some 15-second advertisements that will pop in. People need to make their own determinations. But I’m still going to be there—and I’m still going to give you everything I’ve got. I hope people say, ‘You know what? Even if I don’t like it, I’m still going to hang with RedZone.’”


NFL Draft


NFL.com

Lance Zierlein 2026 NFL mock draft 1.0: Electric RB Jeremiyah Love cracks top 10; 49ers take tight end


Pick 6 – Cleveland Browns – Carnell Tate

Ohio State · WR · Junior


Whether the Browns’ quarterback is already in the building, in this draft class or currently on another roster, Tate will make that man’s job much easier.

Pick 7 – Washington Commanders – Keldric Faulk

Auburn · Edge · Junior


Faulk has impressive size, can play in odd or even fronts and is still filling out his frame. The upside trumps the unremarkable 2025 production.

Pick 8 – New Orleans Saints – Jeremiyah Love

Notre Dame · RB · Junior


Love instantly lifts a healthy portion of the workload from QB Tyler Shough‘s shoulders as a three-down home run hitter.

Pick 9 – Kansas City Chiefs – Rueben Bain Jr.

Miami · Edge · Junior


There are other needs, but Bain simply fits the mold of what Brett Veach and Andy Reid look for in a rugged QB hunter and two-way player off the edge.

Pick 10 – Cincinnati Bengals – Francis Mauigoa

Miami · OL · Junior


Protecting Joe Burrow must continue to be the priority, so the Bengals can wait on addressing the pass rush. In the hypothetical world of this mock, Mauigoa bumps inside to guard and shores up Cincy’s interior.


aBit o’Twitter

With another Run-and-Hit inside linebacker added to pair with Magee and a good EDGE rusher, I can GUARANTEE this defense would look a LOT better.

Wagner and Luvu as off-the-ball LBs, and the weak (and injured) edge rushers, absolutely CRUSHED the 2025 Commanders.

— Mark Tyler (Hogs Haven) (@Tiller56) February 4, 2026
Kevin asks Liam Griffin if we will see a Brian Flores-esque scheme with Daronte Jones calling plays for the Commanders defense pic.twitter.com/Q9BL7oVIIq

— The Team 980 (@team980) February 3, 2026
Ty Simpson was next. There's some stuff to like there. I think he really would've benefit from another year in college.

Needs to have a better feel in the pocket and accuracy is a concern right now but really like his processing and his anticipation over the middle of the field https://t.co/y6wOJL0GEp

— Nick Akridge (@PFF_NickAkridge) February 3, 2026
NFLPA interim ED David White on a 18th reg szn game: “Our members have no appetite for a reg szn 18th game. … it’s not casual for us. It’s a very serious issue.”

— Kalyn Kahler (@kalynkahler) February 3, 2026
NFC really tried a tush push in flag football 😂

Pro Bowl Games on ESPN
Stream on @NFLPlus and ESPN App pic.twitter.com/swPLyidkzy

— NFL (@NFL) February 4, 2026


Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/daily-slo...nders-leader-of-warriors-and-tip-of-the-spear
 
Former Washington Commanders defensive coordinator Joe Whitt Jr hired by the Steelers

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ASHBURN, VA - JULY 29 : Washington Commanders defensive coordinator Joe Whitt Jr. during day six of the Washington Commanders training camp in Ashburn, VA on July 29, 2023. (Photo by John McDonnell/ for The Washington Post via Getty Images)

Dan Quinn brought Joe Whitt Jr with him to Washington when he was hired as the Commanders head coach in 2024. This was Whitt’s first stint as a DC in the NFL, and it ended after two seasons. The defense was not good as GM Adam Peters worked to rebuild the franchise from the ground up after years of mismanagement and neglect. Quinn took over playcalling in early November last year, but kept Whitt on the staff until the season ended.

Joe Whitt Jr has reportedly landed on his feet, getting hired by new Pittsburgh Steelers head coach Mike McCarthy as assistant head coach/secondary coach. He has coached the defensive backs for years, and now gets another opportunity under new DC Patrick Graham. Whitt and Graham were on McCarthy’s coaching staff in 2018, his last season as the Green Bacy Packers head coach.

The Washington Commanders hired former Minnesota Vikings defensive backs coach/pass game coordinator Daronte Jones as their new DC, and there have already been several coaches that reportedly wont be part of his new coaching staff.

The Steelers are hiring former Commanders DC Joe Whitt Jr. as assistant head coach/secondary coach, sources say.

Whitt, 47, spent 11 seasons on Mike McCarthy’s staff with the Packers. Now, they’re reunited in Pittsburgh. pic.twitter.com/8fwVxOVIJk

— Tom Pelissero (@TomPelissero) February 4, 2026

Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/washingto...oordinator-joe-whitt-jr-hired-by-the-steelers
 
Daily Slop: 5 Feb 26 – Links to articles, videos and tweets about Commanders football and the NFL in general

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Commanders links

Articles​


Commanders Roundtable

Five free agent options for Washington Commanders at WR2


Rashid Shaheed, Seahawks:

Shaheed is the definition of a big-play threat since coming into the league. A former undrafted player out of Weber State back in 2021, he’s had a catch of at least 50 yards every year since coming into the league. Shaheed’s value isn’t just on the offensive side of the ball, as he’s one of the most dangerous return men.

His playmaking skills came alive in the playoffs for the Seahawks, as he took the opening kickoff for a touchdown in the rout over the 49ers in the divisional round. In the Conference Championship against the Rams, Shaheed had a 51-yard catch that set up the Seahawks’ first touchdown of the game.

Players like Shaheed are hard to come by, and every team would love to have one. Washington could have some fun with where they line him up and how they could get the ball in his hands.



Commanders Roundtable

Washington Commanders hire Big Ten assistant Eric Henderson on defensive staff


This will mark the third coaching opportunity in the NFL for Dickerson, who joins the organization after two years as the co-defensive coordinator, run game coordinator and defensive line coach. He joined the Trojans staff under head coach Lincoln Riley after previously spending four seasons in the NFL.

Henderson first joined the NFL coaching ranks in 2017 when he served as the assistant defensive line coach with the Los Angeles Chargers for two seasons before moving onto a defensive line coach role with the Los Angeles Rams for two seasons beginning in 2019. Lynn overlapped with Anthony Lynn, current Commanders run game coordinator and then-head coach who also materialized into a candidate for a pair of teams this offseason, during his time with the Chargers before being part of the Rams staff that won Super Bowl LVI to end the 2021 season. He was then elevated to run game coordinator in 2023.



A to Z Sports

Patriots cornerback Christian Gonzalez had high praise for his brother-in-law, David Blough


New England Patriots cornerback Christian Gonzalez has a close connection to Blough as his brother-in-law, as Blough is married to his sister, Melissa Gonzalez.

Gonzalez was asked about Blough at the Super Bowl media day before the big game, and he had nothing but strong praise for the Commanders’ new offensive coordinator.

“Yeah, I think it’s awesome. So excited for him. To us, to people who know him, it’s no surprise. He’s a brilliant football mind. Knows so much about ball. I’m fortunate to know him since they were together in high school, so I got to see a lot of it. And, I mean, it’s been really cool. I think he’s gonna do great. He’s got weapons out there, and I’m excited for him, for his new journey, and my sister and their family, and just they get to put it together and enjoy it, and I’m happy for him.”

Christian Gonzalez, on his brother-in-law David Blough being named offensive coordinator for the Commanders: pic.twitter.com/pD8P1zGM5J

— Nicki Jhabvala (@NickiJhabvala) February 3, 2026


Riggo’s Rag

Raiders projected as landing spot for Deebo Samuel if the Commanders don’t re-sign him


Seth Trachtman from Yardbarker thought the Las Vegas Raiders could take a big swing for Samuel if the Commanders let him see what he can get on the market. The AFC West club needs to support Fernando Mendoza if he becomes the top pick as expected. Adding someone with versatility and proven production would be a good place to start.

“[Deebo] Samuel performed well in a disappointing season for Washington with 802 yards from scrimmage and six touchdowns, but it remains to be seen if he will return. The Raiders are among the teams desperate for wideout help, as the team looks to support likely No. 1 overall draft choice Fernando Mendoza.”Seth Trachtman

[P]rojections [for] Samuel…on his next deal…have come down to just over $13 million, so the Commanders could easily absorb that figure if they want to re-sign the player. At the same time, there is also a need to get younger, faster, and more explosive almost everywhere on the roster.


Podcasts & videos

Logan Paulsen on the new D; Insight from the Senior Bowl | JOHN KEIM REPORT​


NFC East links


Bleeding Green Nation

Jeff Stoutland announces Eagles departure


Jeff Stoutland is no longer the Philadelphia Eagles’ offensive line coach.

Stoutland announced the news himself via his official social media accounts:

Philadelphia,

I’ve decided my time coaching with the Eagles has come to an end.

When I arrived here in 2013, I did not know what I was signing up for. I quickly learned what this city demands. But more importantly, what it gives back.

The past 13 years have been the great…

— Jeff Stoutland (@CoachStoutland) February 4, 2026

This development comes after last week’s reporting that revealed Stoutland was effectively stripped of his run game coordinator title during the 2025 season. It was also said that Stoutland was expected to return in 2026 … but that clearly is no longer the case.

There’s no getting around it; Stouland’s exit is a massive loss for the Eagles. It’ll be very interesting to see how the team plans to replace him with Sean Mannion taking over as offensive coordinator.

The plan is for Jeff Stoutland to have some sort of involvement with the #Eagles’ organization. But he will absolutely have other teams checking in with him immediately. They’ve smelled blood in the water for quite some time and are interested in him. pic.twitter.com/KUeqKWAvHR

— Mike Garafolo (@MikeGarafolo) February 4, 2026
The Eagles wanted Stoutland back, according to a league source. It sounds like this was Stoutland’s decision to step away.

From my understanding, he’ll still be welcome around the team in an unofficial capacity. https://t.co/cqegMJonlG

— Zach Berman (@ZBerm) February 4, 2026
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Will Lane Johnson retire now that Jeff Stoutland is gone?


For 13 years Lane Johnson played for Jeff Stoutland, but now that the OL is leaving the Eagles, what’s next for the right tackle?

He spoke last year about feeling like he was still in his prime, but went on to miss the second half of the season with a Lisfranc injury that also kept him out of playoffs. Injuries have weighed on the lineman throughout his career, and having another that sidelined him longer than expected, could impact his desire to return. Plus, the number of changes throughout the Eagles organization continues to grow, and with news that Jeff Stoutland is resigning as OL coach — the only OL coach Johnson has ever played for in the NFL —, the All-Pro right tackle might more fervently consider walking away.

In a business that is ever-changing, the Eagles organization had it’s core group of players and coaches who withstood head coaching changes, roster moves, and trade rumors. They won the City’s first Super Bowl together, and were considered the pillars of the locker room. That warm and cozy familiarity started slowly chipping away — first with Jason Kelce and Fletcher Cox, then with Brandon Graham (who then came back), and now with Stoutland. Johnson could be the last man standing, which is a lonely place to be.


Vic Fangio reportedly will return as the Eagles’ defensive coordinator in 2026


Despite many coaching changes in Philadelphia, they’ll have some stability at defensive coordinator this season.

After what felt like a kick in the chest learning that Jeff Stoutland wasn’t returning to the Eagles coaching staff in 2026, there was a shimmer of good news reported by Jeff McLane, who was finally able to confirm that Vic Fangio will return as the defensive coordinator.



Blogging the Boys

4 prospects who fit Christian Parker’s vision for the Cowboys linebacker corps


These four prospects can help give the Cowboys linebackers group a new identity

C.J. Allen, Georgia

Allen enters the 2026 draft cycle as the gold standard of the modern, well-rounded linebacker. Emerging from the powerhouse Georgia defense, Allen has spent his collegiate career operating in a pro-style system that mirrors the complexities of the NFL. He is constantly around the ball, consistently leading the Bulldogs in tackles while anchoring a unit that rarely conceded explosive plays. His ability to read and react to the game’s flow allowed him to thrive as a primary signal-caller in the SEC, making him one of the most battle-tested prospects in the nation.

#Georgia LB CJ Allen was terrific vs. Florida pic.twitter.com/rekEX0OkEC

— Jordan Reid (@Jordan_Reid) November 2, 2025

Giants are hiring NFL executive Dawn Aponte into a VP role, per me and @AdamSchefter.

Aponte has been with the league since 2017 as the chief administrator of football operations. She also has previous experience working on the team side with the Dolphins, Browns and Jets.

— Jordan Raanan (@JordanRaanan) February 4, 2026

"It's our position, you gotta be much more selfless than selfish… It gets demoralizing after you go a quarter or two without seeing the ball."

– CeeDee Lamb on understanding A.J. Brown's frustrations@_CeeDeeThree | @heykayadams pic.twitter.com/83yDY7S0RO

— Up & Adams (@UpAndAdamsShow) February 4, 2026

aBit o’Twitter

The Commanders are hiring Eric Henderson as defensive run game coordinator and DL coach, per source.

Henderson, who was most recently USC’s co-defensive coordinator and run game coordinator, won a Super Bowl with the Rams and Aaron Donald. Now, he heads to Washington.

— Tom Pelissero (@TomPelissero) February 5, 2026
Source confirms the Eric Henderson hire in Washington. Also means Daryl Tapp moves to asst D-line coach. Henderson had a lot of success with D-linemen in LA

— JP Finlay (@JPFinlayNBCS) February 5, 2026
Henderson served as the Rams' DL coach/run game coordinator from 2019-23. The Rams ranked third vs. the run in 2020; 6th in '21 and 12th in '23. Served as USC's co-DC/run game coordinator/DL coach last year.

— John Keim (@john_keim) February 5, 2026
Jay Glazer says Maxx Crosby is done with the Raiders, and that Crosby has shared that sentiment with owner Mark Davis. https://t.co/8sXbh4DsSD

— ProFootballTalk (@ProFootballTalk) February 5, 2026
At the end Jay says it's "Maxx's decision". I always heard that if Maxx Crosby was going to be traded, it was going to most likely come from his side when he was tired of going through new head coaches and rebuilds. That's exactly what this sounds like. https://t.co/9tSqndhNvT

— James Palmer (@JamesPalmerTV) February 4, 2026
"My phone blew up" 💬@RapSheet@SeatGeek | #RaiseHail

— Washington Commanders (@Commanders) February 4, 2026
Frank Reich has been named the newest offensive coordinator of the Jets 🙌

The NFL Live crew discusses what this will look like and who could potentially be named QB1 👀 pic.twitter.com/BZQcGUayUF

— NFL on ESPN (@ESPNNFL) February 4, 2026
Potentially significant news from @kalynkahler's pool report: Seahawks rookie Nick Emmanwori left practice early today after hurting his ankle.

Mike Macdonald told Kahler: "We brought him in to look at it, and we'll kind of go from here and figure out what are the next steps?" pic.twitter.com/9vsQSdv6NC

— Brady Henderson (@BradyHenderson) February 5, 2026
The Patriots will make Super Bowl history on Sunday no matter the outcome 👀

If New England wins they will have the most Super Bowl wins ever with seven, and if they lose they will have the most Super Bowl losses with six. pic.twitter.com/UzWJmZx3lf

— ESPN Insights (@ESPNInsights) February 4, 2026
And The Washington Post doesn't have a Sports Section to cover it. https://t.co/IIYoQZguql

— Paul Conner (@P_ConnerJr) February 4, 2026
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This is the moment Maikel Melero did something no one thought was possible in freestyle motocross. pic.twitter.com/s3b5bN6E5o

— Dudes Posting Their W’s (@DudespostingWs) February 4, 2026


Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/daily-slo...ut-commanders-football-and-the-nfl-in-general
 
The Washington Commanders hire a new defensive run game coordinator/DL coach

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Jan 24, 2019; Kissimmee, FL, USA; Los Angeles Chargers assistant defensive line coach Eric Henderson during AFC practice for the 2019 Pro Bowl at ESPN Wide World of Sports Complex. Mandatory Credit: Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

The Washington Commanders hired Daronte Jones as their new defensive coordinator, and more changes to his coaching staff were reported last night. Several coaches have already found new jobs, including former DC Joe Whitt Jr. Washington also reportedly moved on from a few more coaches who haven’t found a new team.

The Commanders are reportedly hiring former Los Angeles Rams defensive line coach/run game coordinator Eric Henderson for the same position in Washington. He helped the Rams win their first Super Bowl since moving back to LA. He was Aaron Donald’s coach when he was dominating offensive lines, and now comes to Washington to work with Daron Payne, Javon Kinlaw, and Johnny Newton.

Henderson spent the last two years as USC’s co-defensive coordinator, defensive line coach and run game coordinator. Before that he was with the Rams for five years, and he got his NFL coaching break with the other team from Los Angeles. Henderson also played in the NFL for three seasons with the Cincinatti Bengals.

The Washington Commanders previous DL coach was Darry Tapp, and he will be “reassigned” to assistant DL coach. That job was filled by Sharrif Floyd, but he was one of the three coaches the team was reportedly moving on from. Tapp and Floyd both came to Washington when Dan Quinn was hired as head coach. Tapp was also a former Washington Redskins player(2013).

The Commanders are hiring Eric Henderson as defensive run game coordinator and DL coach, per source.

Henderson, who was most recently USC’s co-defensive coordinator and run game coordinator, won a Super Bowl with the Rams and Aaron Donald. Now, he heads to Washington.

— Tom Pelissero (@TomPelissero) February 5, 2026
The Commanders are hiring Eric Henderson as their defensive line coach/defensive run game coordinator, per source. Darryl Tapp is being reassigned to assistant DL coach.

— Nicki Jhabvala (@NickiJhabvala) February 5, 2026
Heres what Aaron Donald said about working with new #Commanders DL coach Eric Henderson back in 2022

(via:@RamsNFL) pic.twitter.com/sUbNPKY0zO

— brandon (@JayDanielsMVP) February 5, 2026

Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/washingto...a-new-defensive-run-game-coordinator-dl-coach
 
Redskins legend Sonny Jurgensen passed away on Friday at the age of 91

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Washington Redskins Hall of Fame quarterback Sonny Jurgensen. (Photo by Fred Roe/Getty Images) *** Local Caption ***

I’m old enough to have grown up watching Sonny Jergensen, who played for the Washington Redskins from 1964 to 1974.

His on-field accomplishments were impressive, including a championship with the Eagles in 1960 as well as 4 Pro Bowls and 3 All-Pro selections as a Redskin (5 total Pro Bowls and 4 total All-Pro seasons), but Sonny became known to generations of Washington football fans as part of the radio broadcast team of Sonny, Sam Huff & Frank Herzog, who brought Redskins football to life for decades. Sonny retired from broadcasting in 2019, but he continued to be a fixture at team events in recent years.

Although his jersey number was only recently retired in 2023, the iconic No. 9 has been synonymous with Jergensen since his playing days.

The team released a statement once news of Jergensen’s passing was made public.

A statement from the family of Christian A. "Sonny" Jurgensen III pic.twitter.com/vbW5bIV9xn

— Washington Commanders (@Commanders) February 6, 2026

As a player, broadcaster and member of the community, Sonny Jergensen left a deep impression on Washington and fans of the burgundy & gold.

As a member of the NFL’s 1960s All-Decade team, the Pro Football Hall of Fame, the Washington Ring of Fame, Washington’s ‘90 Greatest’, and holding many NFL records, including 5 times as the league’s passing yards leader, Sonny will forever be remembered as an NFL great.

In Washington, he will be remembered with fondness by parents, children and siblings who spent many a Sunday afternoon with the radio turned up and the TV turned down to listen to Sonny, Sam & Frank.

He’ll be missed and he’ll be remembered.

Rest in Peace #9!

Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/general/4...gensen-passed-away-on-friday-at-the-age-of-91
 
Former Washington Commanders offensive coordinator Kliff Kingsbury joins the Rams

NFC Wild Card Playoffs: Washington Commanders v Tampa Bay Buccaneers


Dan Quinn hired Kliff Kingsbury when he became head coach of the Washington Commanders in 2024. Kingsbury was working on a deal with the Las Vegas Raiders, but when they wouldn’t go three years, Washington stepped in and hired the former head coach of the Arizona Cardinals. That relationship ended after his second season when they mutually agreed to part ways, and assistant QB coach David Blough was hired as his replacement.

Kingsbury had success crafting an offense to make rookie QB Jayden Daniels successful in his first year. The Commanders made it to the NFC Championship Game and Daniels was the NFL Offensive Rookie of the Year. That led to high expectations for year two, but multiple injuries, and a contract holdin slowed the offense, and the team skidded to the end of the season with a 5-12 record.

Kingsbury interviewed for several head coach and offensive coordinator jobs. This offseason has seen a higher turnover rate than usual, but Kingsbury didn’t land anywhere until now. He will be joining the coaching staff of another former Waahington OC. Kingsbury is joining Sean McVay’s staff on the Los Angeles Rams after not getting the Giants OC job.

Kingsbury and McVay have been speaking over the last two weeks and there's mutual excitement to finally get to work together. When the Giants opted to hire Matt Nagy as OC, the path was cleared for Kingsbury to the Rams. https://t.co/dWZPorR9Dl

— Peter Schrager (@PSchrags) February 6, 2026

Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/washingto...coordinator-kliff-kingsbury-joins-by-the-rams
 
Commanders fans scoff at the idea of a competitive game on Sunday

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SANTA CLARA, CALIFORNIA - FEBRUARY 05: Drake Maye #10 of the New England Patriots addresses the media prior to Super Bowl LX at the Santa Clara Marriott on February 05, 2026 in Santa Clara, California. (Photo by Thearon W. Henderson/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Reading through the comments that followed this week’s Reacts survey, it became clear that many, if not most, of the people responding to our survey expect the Seattle Seahawks to beat the New England Patriots quite handily in Super Bowl LX. The word “blowout” appears frequently in those comments.

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It turns out that those Washington fans are in good company.

While 87% of respondents in our survey expect Seattle to win, 82% of fans in a nationwide poll (that includes Patriots supporters) also believe the Seahawks will be hoisting the Lombardi trophy Sunday night.

Of course, no team has more Super Bowl wins than the New England Patriots. They are a really good and deserving team of reaching this level, but throughout the season they have had to deal with people criticizing their strength of schedule. With former player and 3-time Super Bowl champion Mike Vrabel now in charge as head coach of the Pats, they could surprise everybody — well, around 85% of everybody, anyway.

Some Commanders fans are asking out loud: if the Patriots defy the odds and win on Sunday, what would that say about the Commanders’ decision to draft Jayden Daniels ahead of Drake Maye, who, in addition to being the runner up in the MVP voting, would now be a Super Bowl champion in his 2nd NFL season?

Super Bowl LX could turn out to be a defense-dominated, low scoring affair in which the team that makes the fewest mistakes wins. After all, the two teams facing off on Sunday fielded the two stingiest defenses in the league, with the Seahawks and the Patriots allowing a regular season average of 17.1 and 17.3 points per game, respectively.

Of course, neither team is an offensive slouch either. The Seahawks were the 2nd ranked regular season scoring offense at 29.2 points per game; New England ranks 8th at 27.2 ppg.

In the playoffs, the Seahawks have been the highest scoring offense (36 ppg) while the Patriots have had the toughest scoring defense (allowing just 8.7 ppg). It feels like something will have to give.

Just prior to publishing, the Seahawks are 4.5-point favorites, while the over/under for total points scored is 45.5.

Per SB Nation:

  • The last time there was a spread entering the Super Bowl of at least 4.5 was four years ago when the Los Angeles Rams were 4.5-point favorites over the Cincinnati Bengals. It hasn’t been more than that since Super Bowl L when the Carolina Panthers were 5-point favorites over the Denver Broncos.
  • In the previous 25 seasons there have been 13 Super Bowls with a spread of at least four points, prior to that it was relatively common to have multi-score spreads in the Super Bowl. But in those 13 games, only twice has the favorite covered the point spread. To be fair, the underdog in the Super Bowl beats the spread most of the time, but it’s even more dramatic when looking at games that the experts think will be lopsided.
  • More than that, in those 13 games the underdog won outright seven times. If history offers a guide, this could turn out to be a game where the Seahawks fail to cover the spread, and one in which the Patriots surprise most people by flying back home with a 7th Lombardi Trophy in hand.

The game kicks off at 6:30pm on Sunday, February 8th and will be televised on CBS.



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Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/washingto...super-bowl-predictions-2026-seahawks-patriots
 
Daily Slop: 7 Feb 26 – Sonny Jurgensen, Kliff Kingsbury, Hall of Fame voting and Washington’s biggest offseason decisions

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Unknown date & location, USA; FILE PHOTO; Washington Redskins head coach Vince Lombardi talks to quarterback Sonny Jurgensen (9) on the sidelines during the 1969 season. Mandatory Credit: Malcolm Emmons-Imagn Images

Commanders links

Articles​


ESPN

Commanders’ biggest extension candidates and free agent decisions

Extension possibilities​


Daron Payne | Defensive Tackle

Payne has one year left on his contract and will cost $28 million against the salary cap for next season. That’s the fourth-most cap space by a defensive tackle — and a lot of room for a player with only one Pro Bowl (in 2022) and no All-Pro selections in his career.

But the Commanders were pleased with how he played in 2025.

Laremy Tunsil | Left Tackle

Tunsil has one year remaining on his contract, but the Commanders traded away a lot when they acquired him last offseason (along with a fourth-round pick last year). They sent picks in the third and seventh round last season in addition to picks in the second and fourth rounds this April.

In terms of discussing a new deal, Peters said there’s been “constant communication” between the team and Tunsil.

“We definitely want to get something done with him and sooner rather than later,” Peters said a day after the season ended.

Frankie Luvu | Linebacker

A year ago, an extension would have been more likely. In his first season with Washington, Luvu recorded a career-high eight sacks and finished with 12 tackles for a loss. But Luvu, who has one year remaining on his contract, did not have a similar impact in his second year in D.C. He finished with three sacks while being forced to play more as an edge rusher due to numerous injuries at the position.

Key free agent decisions​


Von Miller | Defensive End

Miller has stated he wants to return but, as with Ertz and Wagner, age could be an issue. And the desire for more youth and athleticism applies to the edge. Miller did show he can still play, leading the team with nine sacks. But he’ll turn 37 next month.

Marcus Mariota | Quarterback

The situation will be a lot like last offseason for Mariota. If he finds somewhere he can compete for a starting job, he likely will leave. Otherwise, the Commanders love him backing up Daniels, and the young quarterback has said often how much he likes having Mariota around.

“If something presents itself, great,” Mariota said last month. “I will take time to iron it out, but I do love it here.”



The Athletic (paywall)

Sonny Jurgensen, in word and deed, was a majestic figure in Washington sports history

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Sonny died Friday. He was 91. The franchise hasn’t had a quarterback with his combination of electricity or personality since. Well, until 2024, maybe. But in the pantheon of Washington quarterbacks, only Sammy Baugh and Doug Williams had the presence and impact that Sonny did. Beloved doesn’t begin to describe what D.C. thought of Sonny, whose second act in town was as part of the beloved radio broadcast trio that did games for WMAL-630: Sonny, Sam (Huff, the Hall of Fame linebacker) and Frank (Herzog, the play-by-play man and sports anchor for many years for the ABC and CBS affiliates in town).

Thow the ball,” Sonny would say on the radio, over and over, swallowing the “R.”

Sonny thew the ball as well as anyone of his generation. He never became as well-known nationally as he deserved because his teams were mostly terrible, while Johnny Unitas’ Colts won multiple NFL titles, and Joe Namath’s Jets pulled off one of the great upsets in sports history, beating Unitas’ Colts in Super Bowl 3.

But people in D.C. know. They remember Sonny leading the Skins 60 yards down the field in the final two minutes against Miami in 1974, at age 40, throwing the game-winning pass to Larry Smith in the final seconds to beat the mighty Dolphins. They remember the 99-yard TD pass to Jerry Allen in 1968 — which, of course, equaled an NFL record.



Commanders.com

PHOTOS | 80 pictures of Sonny Jurgensen through the years


Check out the top photos of Sonny Jurgensen’s career in Washington

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This is one of the most iconic sports photos of all time. Billy Kilmer replacing Sonny at QB for good. Sonny tore his Achilles. You can see Kilmer looking down at it. pic.twitter.com/BCL6muzMbT

— Seth Davis (@SethDavisHoops) February 6, 2026


The Athletic (paywall)

Kliff Kingsbury joining Los Angeles Rams’ coaching staff: Source


Kingsbury’s new role is not yet clear. The Rams have an opening at offensive coordinator after Mike LaFleur left to become the Arizona Cardinals’ head coach, and they must go through an interview process that includes satisfying the Rooney Rule, which states that the franchise must interview at least two minority or female candidates for the coordinator position.

The Rams have a strong internal candidate in passing game coordinator Nathan Scheelhaase, who interviewed for the Cleveland Browns’ head-coaching job, which went to Todd Monken. If Scheelhaase were to be named the Rams’ offensive coordinator, it could open up the passing game coordinator spot for Kingsbury. Scheelhaase could also remain in his position if Kingsbury were to take over the offensive coordinator role.


Podcasts & videos

In Memoriam: A Tribute to the Legendary Sonny Jurgensen After His Passing at 91 Years Old​


Washington Commanders Just Got Exactly What They Wanted in new DL coach Eric Henderson, new DC Daronte Jones & new OC David Blough​


Five Thoughts: On the new DL coach, Jayden Daniels and Chris Paul | John Keim Report​


NFC East links


Bleeding Green Nation

The Eagles are showing change can be very ugly


The departure of Jeff Stoutland is one ripple effect of the change we’ve all been asking for

t’s virtually impossible to have change and for there not to be both positive and negative consequences.

I’ve been thinking a lot about this as we watch the Eagles go through some changes of their own. It’s hard to believe that exactly one year ago this weekend, your Philadelphia Eagles were on top of the football world.

In the wake of their 40-22 destruction of the Chiefs in Super Bowl 59, many fans talked themselves into the idea that we were on the precipice of a possible Birds dynasty.

There was no reason to believe, one year later, the Eagles would be in the position they are right now, desperate for change and reacting to the consequences those changes have wrought.

It appears A.J. Brown, miserable all season, cannot coexist with Jalen Hurts and wants out of Philadelphia. Jeff Stoutland, the team’s revered offensive line coach, lost his run game coordinator duties at some point last year and has decided to leave the team entirely. Landon Dickerson and Lane Johnson may both retire.

It could have been worse. Vic Fangio considered retirement. Happily, he’s staying.

A lot is changing, more than anyone could have anticipated 12 months ago.

Much of this change is necessary. It was clear last year’s elevation of Kevin Patullo to offensive coordinator was a disaster, and while Nick Sirianni tried to slap band-aids on the sucking chest wound mid-stream, none of it worked.

No one likes the trend lines we’re seeing with the Philadelphia Eagles. Nick Sirianni is on the hot seat yet again after seemingly bungling a potential title defense season. The 2026 season could be one that sees a lot of change.

Eagles defensive assistant reportedly leaving Philly


Philadelphia Eagles defensive assistant Tyler Yelk is leaving the Birds to become Nebraska’s new safeties coach on Matt Rhule’s staff, according to a report from Matt Zenitz of CBS Sports, and the Eagles might have another coaching position to fill depending on how they want to go about replacing him.

Landon Dickerson is another Eagles offensive lineman who might not return


The Eagles familiar OL room could look incredibly different in 2026

Things were not great for Landon Dickerson last season, and the Philadelphia Eagles starting left guard was dealing with injuries even before Week 1 — the 3x Pro Bowler missed most of training camp after undergoing a knee procedure. He went on to face a long list of ailments throughout the season, and left multiple games early due to injuries to his ankle, calf, knee, and back. At locker clean out day following their playoff to the San Francisco 49ers, Dickerson didn’t seem optimistic that he’d be able to return to full health, even with the benefit of the offseason.

Jeff McLane recently reported that it wasn’t just Lane Johnson who is contemplating his NFL future, saying that Dickerson isn’t a lock to return.

“Landon Dickerson may be even more of a question mark to me [than Lane Johnson].”

The report was corroborated by Mike Garafolo who had heard similar rumblings about the left guard.

An offseason of significant change for the #Eagles could include G Landon Dickerson‘s uncertain future. @Jeff_McLane mentions here Dickerson’s no certainty to return. I’ve heard some of the same. Only 27 and five years into his career but his body has been through a lot. TBD. https://t.co/NUMdVoLnY2

— Mike Garafolo (@MikeGarafolo) February 6, 2026


Blogging the Boys

It’s Jerry’s World, but our nightmare: Making sense of the Cowboys playoff paralysis


It is a frustrating time to be a Cowboys fan when we reach Super Bowl week

The finger-pointing often starts and ends at the top with owner and self-appointed general manager Jerry Jones. While Jones has turned the franchise into a $13 billion global behemoth, fans increasingly feel that his unique approach to roster building is the primary culprit behind the drought. The front office has rightfully earned a reputation for being bargain shoppers in free agency. For 10 consecutive offseasons, the Cowboys haven’t signed a single outside free agent to a contract that exceeds $6 million per year. They have consistently finished near the bottom in spending on outside talent over the last decade.

Despite their cheap ways, the front office always cries out about being strapped for cash, yet they somehow manage to pay astronomical prices for some of their own stars thanks to delayed contract negotiations. Fans often feel like they are watching a billionaire try to win a drag race in a Toyota Prius. While it’s highly economical, they’re not going to win very often. Cutesy phrases like “Pie” and “All In” only serve to infuriate fans as their roster-building ineptitude is atop the suspect list for the team’s lack of playoff success.

Despite the 30-year wait, there are still reasons to hold onto hope as we head into 2026.


NFL league links

Articles​


ESPN

Hall of Fame eyes changes, will return to in-person voting


Porter said the Hall plans to return to in-person voting and discussion for the 50-member committee after moving to a virtual meeting room following the COVID-19 pandemic. He also said the vote will likely happen closer to the annual reveal at NFL Honors — the Thursday before the Super Bowl — to reduce the chances of leaks. He added that the Hall would consider releasing vote totals and individual ballots in the future but won’t do it for this year’s class.

Porter said the Hall also will look at replacing voters who might have violated the rules either by publicly discussing the off-record debate about the candidates or by not voting for the “most deserving” candidates in each category.

“I’m not here to tell them who the most deserving is,” Porter said. “If the Hall was to tell who the most deserving is, we wouldn’t need them to vote. We understand that. We just want the rules followed.”

Porter said picking Seniors players over a coach because the players might not be guaranteed another chance as a finalist was not allowed.

“That’s not an option,” Porter said. “You have to pick the most deserving. Those are the instructions that were read four times.”

Some voters have expressed frustration over rule changes put in place last year that have grouped players in the Seniors category who have been retired for at least 25 years, along with coaches and contributors. The new rules also made it harder for anyone to reach the 80% threshold.

This is the third straight year that no coach got the honor, leading to calls from some people — including voters — to separate coaches and contributors from the Seniors.

Porter didn’t seem inclined to change that process, saying that for more than 50 years, coaches and contributors were grouped with players before changes about 10 years ago.

“The question is, what changed?” Porter asked. “What was it that the selectors could do that for the 50-some years but now can’t. They could get the right person in that didn’t require a category. I don’t know. We’ll find it out. We’ll talk to a lot of people. … But there’s a responsibility there. The responsibility is to pick the most deserving. They got down to where that number was. So, my question is, is everybody picking the most deserving?”

This was also the second straight year with fewer than five modern-era candidates getting in after a rule change. Instead of an up-or-down vote on five players, seven made it to the final stage, with voters allowed to pick five. The top three and anyone else above 80% gets into the Hall.

Last year, only three players reached that threshold. This year, there were four.

“We’ll do some tweaks, and we’ll take a look,” [Porter] said. “We’re going to do what’s best for the Hall of Fame. My job is to protect the integrity of the Hall, protect the integrity of the process.”



Front Office Sports

Ticket Prices for Super Bowl LX Steadily Dropping


Low-end, get-in pricing for the matchup at Levi’s Stadium is now hovering around $3,800 per ticket on multiple marketplaces. That is a 17% drop from the beginning of this week, and is down 42% from the comparable, entry-level figure of $6,500 right after Seattle and New England clinched their conference championships.


Officially official. https://t.co/AzaXX4g90t

— Ian Rapoport (@RapSheet) February 6, 2026
Jim Schwartz made clear he wanted out after being passed over for the head coaching job. The Browns wanted to keep him, but after discussions, Schwartz stood firm and now is expected to sit out this season. https://t.co/0xlMkrQFro

— Tom Pelissero (@TomPelissero) February 6, 2026
Jim Schwartz is still under contract for 2026, and the Browns hold a team option for him for 2027. So anyone who wants him has to go through them. https://t.co/ZxFImoMlHK

— Albert Breer (@AlbertBreer) February 6, 2026

Ahead of a Patriots-Seahawks Super Bowl rematch, this is what I’m hearing on:

– Maxx Crosby
– Parcells on Belichick and Kraft’s Canton snubs
– Another Browns mess
– Kirk Cousins’ future
– Notes on Travis Kelce, A.J. Brown and morehttps://t.co/P4kwbuMPJf

— Dianna Russini (@DMRussini) February 7, 2026

Discussion topics


The Athletic (paywall)

The decision that has divided football and could determine the Super Bowl


Every week on college and pro football fields across America, coaches have been going for it on fourth downs more frequently than ever before. At the same time, a civil war breaks out on social media over whether it was the right decision.

[T]he analytics side is winning the raging debate over whether to go for it or take the points — NFL teams opted to go for it on nearly 34 percent of fourth-down opportunities in opponent territory in 2025, according to TruMedia data. That’s the highest rate of any season this century. I’ve long been a proponent of following the math and going for it, although coaches like Mike Martz make a compelling case to kick. Martz is basically disgusted by what football has become.

“Analytics has gotten way too big of a bite with what’s happening in football today, and it’s unjustified,” he said. “Because whether you go for it or not, those numbers are based on other teams with different people, different plays, different play calling against different defenses. The only commonality between the two is the situation: fourth-and-1.”

The math behind going for it is relatively straightforward. The win probability gained from converting fourth downs is greater than what a team risks losing by turning the ball over on downs, particularly deep in the opponent’s territory.

The NFL’s changes to its kickoff rules before the 2024 season drastically shifted the data. Now, teams on average begin drives from the 30-yard line following kickoffs, according to TruMedia.

The risk of going for it in the red zone and failing is better than kicking a field goal (and giving the opponent the ball at the 30) because play calling near a team’s own goal line is typically more conservative. Hold a team to a three-and-out, get the ball back around midfield following a punt and try again.

temp-starting-field-position-the-Athletic-article.jpg

Taking the points isn’t a guarantee. Kickers still have to make their kicks, which they did 97 percent of the time on attempts within 35 yards, according to TruMedia. Teams are converting fourth downs about 57 percent of the time. It’s easy to see why fans get so upset when teams turn down a 97 percent chance for a 57 percent chance, yet the numbers indicate teams have gotten better at going for it on fourth down in the red zone over the years.

As recently as 2020, teams went for it on fourth down 159 times in the red zone and converted 51 percent of them. The average line to gain was 2.4 yards away, according to TruMedia.

This season, the line to gain was 2.7 yards away. Still fairly similar to five years ago. Yet teams went for it 237 times and converted on 57 percent of the attempts. The 57 percent conversion rate has held relatively steady over the last three years, but this is easily the most often teams have gone for it on fourth down in the red zone since TruMedia began tracking such data in 2000.


Draft Analysis​


Blogging the Boys

NFL Draft 2026: Finding playmaking pass rushers


Since 2011, we’ve intermittently used a metric called the ‘Production Ratio’ to assess who the potential playmakers in the draft might be. The Production Ratio alerted us early to the likes of Kawann Short in 2013 or Aaron Donald in 2014.
The Production Ratio was initially proposed by NFL.com’s Pat Kirwan, and is really a very simple metric that adds up sacks and tackles-for-loss and divides the sum by the number of college games played. The resulting ratio is one tool among many – albeit a pretty good one – that measures the playmaking potential of front four players coming out of college. The Production Ratio is calculated as follows:

PRODUCTION RATIO = (SACKS + TACKLES FOR LOSS) / NUMBER OF GAMES PLAYED

The ratio is usually calculated over the entire college career of a prospect, but that method can be inaccurate because not every prospect has a four-year career in college. To correct for that, we’ll only look at the last two seasons of a player’s college career. For the two-year measure, a number above 1.5 is often indicative of premier talent for a pass rusher, a value above 2.0 can be indicative of elite talent.

Because double-digit sack players are exceedingly rare. Of all the edge rushers drafted in the nine drafts between 2017 and 2025, only seven have managed to average 10 or more sacks per year. The table below shows the top pass rushers drafted between 2017 and 2025 and includes each player’s Production Ratio.

temp-BTB-chart.jpg

With two exceptions, all players in the table above have remarkably high production ratios over their last two college years. But not every successful NFL pass rusher necessarily had prolific college production, as we can see here with Micah Parsons and and T.J. Watt. In Parsons’ case, he mostly played as an off-the-ball linebacker at Penn State, thus limiting his overall pass rush production. In Watt’s case, even the reduced two-year measure doesn’t do him justice. Watt went from almost no production in his sophomore season to a standout junior season with a one-season Production Ratio of 1.93.

But while almost all of the most successful pass rushers of the last nine years all had high Production Ratios, it doesn’t mean that a high Production Ratio automatically translates to high NFL production. The Cowboys now this all too well: Taco Charlton had a “green” Production Ratio of 1.59 but never amounted to anything in the NFL.

The Production Ratio, like every other stat-based projection tool, is not going to be a perfect predictor of how successful college players are going to be in the NFL. But it does give you something to think about as you evaluate these players and their potential, and it may be one building block in identifying who this year’s playmakers will be – and who won’t. The NFL combine will provide us with even more metrics, giving us an even bigger data base from which to assess players, and we’ll look at those in due time, but today we’re talking Production Ratio.

2026 Edge Rusher Prospects

The tables below show the 16 potential edge rushers that currently rank in the T0p 101 on Consensus Big Board at NFLmockdraftdatabase.com along with each player’s Production Ratio.

temp-BTB-chart-2.jpg

As we saw in the case of T.J. Watt described above, we may have to acknowledge that dogmatically sticking to the two-year time frame for the Production Ratio may not do every prospect justice, so here are the five players whose production ratio improves the most when only looking at their final year in college:

temp-BTB-chart-3.jpg

So we do get some “blue” prospects in this draft after all, but teams will need to understand what drove the jump in production for each player and what that means for their NFL future.


aBit o’Twitter

I have just 3 “blue-chip” players in this draft, and they all happen to be at positions of need for Washington.

Caleb Downs
David Bailey
Arvell Reese

That’s it…

There are others who I feel are very good, but not at that level.

— Mark Tyler (Hogs Haven) (@Tiller56) February 6, 2026
Here is Jayden Daniels on radio row at the Super Bowl.

When asked about the offense under new OC David Blough, Jayden said, “I’ve been very vocal about stuff I want to do.”

Let’s see what Blough and Jayden cook up for 2026! pic.twitter.com/fHV8EsDyJw

— Scott Abraham (@Scott7news) February 6, 2026
On Thursday, the National Capital Planning Commission approved the initial concept plans for the Commanders' new stadium on the site of the old RFK stadium. Another step among many in the stadium design/development process. https://t.co/v7SlVi4oni

— Nicki Jhabvala (@NickiJhabvala) February 6, 2026
#Raiders DE Maxx Crosby, wearing team gear and inside the team facility, said a bunch of random people have been speaking for him this week — and he’s just sitting back laughing at it.

“All the noise. It’s news to me.”

(🎥 @TheHerd)

pic.twitter.com/ozxmQHJIQ0

— Ari Meirov (@MySportsUpdate) February 6, 2026
Sonny Jurgensen. Larger than life.

They say never meet your heroes, but Sonny was the exception. #Commanders @Markein & #ESPNs @andypollin1 offer their insight into one of DC's most beloved athletes. pic.twitter.com/xIt0r57zIN

— Natalie Spala (@_nataliespala) February 7, 2026
Of all the ridiculous stats and stories about Sonny Jurgensen it's absolutely wild he still holds the Washington single season TD passing record from 1967! The only Washington QB to ever throw for 30+ TDs in a season. Absolutely nuts. pic.twitter.com/gT09KLTYoC

— JP Finlay (@JPFinlayNBCS) February 6, 2026
REMEMBERING SONNY: @JPFinlayNBCS speaks with #Commanders Head Coach Dan Quinn on Sonny Jurgensen's legacy in DC and the football world#RaiseHail pic.twitter.com/c1BvEpReIM

— NBC4 Sports (@NBC4Sports) February 6, 2026
Incredible tribute for Sonny Jurgensen by the great @riggo44.

Video from @riggo44 pic.twitter.com/HS1J0QDdil

— Scott Abraham (@Scott7news) February 6, 2026



Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/daily-slo...g-and-washigntons-biggest-offseason-decisions
 
Daily Slop: 8 Feb 26 – SUPER BOWL SUNDAY!

imagn-28186666.jpg

Feb 6, 2026; San Francisco, CA, USA; The Super Bowl LX logo is projected on the Ferry Building. Mandatory Credit: Kirby Lee-Imagn Images | Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

Commanders links

Articles​


Commanders Roundtable

Super Bowl LX Preview: Five Potential Free Agents for Washington Fans to Watch


Jaylinn Hawkins, S (Patriots) Age: 28 | Ht/Wt: 6’1″, 208 lbs Projected Market Value (AAV): $2.2M

Jaylinn Hawkins may not be the most sought-after name on the market, but he offers high-IQ play as a rotational piece. In his second season in New England, the former Falcons fourth-round pick truly took the next step.

He ended the 2025-2026 season as the fifth-highest rated safety according to PFF. His 87.1 run-defense grade was the second-highest in the league for the position. While this may typecast Hawkins as a box safety, he offers more versatility than that: he logged 524 snaps at free safety, 201 in the box, and 93 as a slot defender.

He has been a vital component of the Patriots’ eighth-ranked defense. Coming off a career-best four-interception season, Hawkins provides veteran stability to a unit that often looked confused or lost this year. Having thrived in New England’s disciplined environment, he could give Washington a hard-nosed depth piece to help solidify the back end of the defense.



From ESPN:

temp-riggo.jpg



Riggo’s Rag

Former Washington OT Cornelius Lucas faces an uncertain future just one year after Commanders exit


The upturn in consistency was notable, even if the Commanders managed just five wins. As for Lucas? He failed to hit the ground running in a different environment, leaving Bradley Locker of Pro Football Focus to declare the Kansas State product as Cleveland’s worst signing of the 2025 offseason.

“The Browns’ offensive line tied for 30th in PFF pass-blocking grade, with players like [Cornelius] Lucas unable to help right the ship. The former Commander struggled when filling in for injured starters on both sides, posting a 42.7 overall PFF grade and surrendering 29 pressures on 193 pass-blocking snaps.”Bradley Locker

This lack of productivity is a far cry from how Lucas acquitted himself in Washington. Perhaps the proverbial performance cliff has arrived at 34 years old, but the Browns have a relatively easy out on his deal if they choose to end this experiment early.

Much will depend on what new head coach Todd Monken thinks. Cleveland can save $1.83 million on its cap by releasing Lucas, who has one year remaining on his deal. Considering the Browns need every available cent, with quarterback Deshaun Watson’s cap number surging to $80.71 million, every little move matters in easing their financial burden.


Podcasts & videos

UPGRADE: How Washington Commanders LAND Maxx Crosby and Still Secure Top 2026 Draft Talent​


The Raiders’ decision to sideline Maxx Crosby for the regular season’s final two games did not sit well with their star pass rusher.

Crosby remains under contract, but there’s a strong sense in league circles that he could be had in a trade.https://t.co/P4kwbuMPJf pic.twitter.com/9hCFVlNmls

— Dianna Russini (@DMRussini) February 7, 2026

NFC East links


Blogging the Boys

Sources: Cowboys will place franchise tag on George Pickens; here’s what’s next


Considering the Cowboys spent a third-round pick to acquire him and the fact that he has been everything they could have hoped for, this one seems very likely to fall into the placeholder category. While the details of what happens next are still TBD, at the very least, fans can rest easy knowing that for the next year, the only time he’s catching passes in other cities is when the Cowboys are on the road.

The Cowboys can't tag George Pickens for another 10 days. And they have until March 3rd to do it. However, declaring their intention should make fans very happy. The question of whether or not the Cowboys will keep him is finally about to be answered.

He's hanging around. pic.twitter.com/0HGQfH7B6y

— Dan Rogers (@DannyPhantom24) February 8, 2026

From ESPN:

“I’m talking to George all the time by virtue of my excitement for him,” Jones told the Cowboys website. “He’s better than, as far as what he contributed to our team, showing the potential that he could contribute. I’m looking forward to getting things worked out so George can be a Cowboy a long time.”

Pickens is coming off a breakout season in which he caught 90 passes for 1,409 yards and nine touchdowns — all career bests.

The Cowboys are scheduled to have 15 unrestricted free agents this offseason, including Pickens, running back Javonte Williams and defensive end Jadeveon Clowney.



Big Blue View

NY Giants 2026 NFL Draft scouting report: Sam Roush, TE, Stanford


Sam Roush projects as a classic “Y” tight end at the NFL level. Whether or not he has starting upside or is regarded as a very good blocking TE2 with pass catching upside will likely depend on the needs of the team evaluating him, as well as his athletic testing.

Teams looking for a hybrid tight end will want to look elsewhere. Likewise, 11-personnel teams that want a big, athletic “matchup nightmare” might move down their boards as well. That said, Roush should become a good, reliable option, with the upside to start for whichever team selects him.

Final Word: A Day 2 value who could slip to Day 3


#Giants QB Jaxson Dart and Cam Skattebo are shown the Lombardi Trophy:

“We’ll see it soon. … We’ll get it. We’ll touch it when we earn it.”

(🎥 @UpAndAdamsShow)

pic.twitter.com/pde8lrnaFI

— Ari Meirov (@MySportsUpdate) February 6, 2026

NFL league links

Articles​


ESPN

Sources: Falcons expected to cut Kirk Cousins before new league year


Atlanta Falcons quarterback Kirk Cousins is expected to be released before the start of the new league year in March, allowing him to choose where or if he wants to play in 2026, league sources told ESPN.

The Falcons recently restructured Cousins’ contract with the idea that it would be easier for both sides if the four-time Pro Bowler was released sooner rather than later, giving Cousins the optionality that he wanted and adding financial flexibility for Atlanta.

Cousins and the Falcons modified the final two years in his contract, changing his 2026 base salary from $35 million to $2.1 million but adding the leftover $32.9 million to his 2027 base salary to now make it $67.9 million. That $67.9 million would become guaranteed if Cousins remains on the Falcons roster at the start of the league year in mid-March.

Few players have fared better in free agency than Cousins, who has landed deals from both the Falcons and Minnesota Vikings in recent years that are virtually fully guaranteed.

Cousins would like to play next season but also has dabbled in television, appearing on CBS’ pregame show during the postseason. TV is expected to be an option for Cousins, as is retirement. But he also will be fully open to finding the right opportunity with another NFL team in need of quarterback help.

Releasing Cousins would further open up the quarterback position in 2026 for the Falcons, whose new regime has not yet committed to Michael Penix Jr. as the starter.

Penix is recovering from surgery to repair a torn left ACL, which he suffered in November, and is expected to be out nine to 12 months.



Pro Football Talk

Ryan Pace out in Atlanta


The Falcons and Pace have parted ways, according to Tom Pelissero of NFL Network.

Pace had spent the last four years with the Falcons, and his most recent title was vice president of football operations and player personnel. But in an offseason when Matt Ryan has taken over the front office and General Manager Terry Fontenot was fired, Pace no longer has a place in the front office.

The 48-year-old Pace is best known for working as GM of the Bears from 2015 to 2021. Before that he spent 14 years with the Saints.



NFL.com

Bears promoting passing game coordinator Press Taylor to offensive coordinator


Chicago is promoting passing game coordinator Press Taylor to offensive coordinator, NFL Network Insiders Ian Rapoport, Tom Pelissero and Mike Garafolo reported on Sunday morning.

Taylor, hired on by Ben Johnson when the coach was putting together his staff last year, will replace Declan Doyle, gone to serve as the Ravens OC.

Taylor will not be called upon to call plays in Chicago.

Still considered a bright, young NFL mind at 38, he’ll assist play-caller Ben Johnson install the game plan and keep an offense coming off its most points scored since 2013 rolling.


He’s joked about it and alluded to it. Teams are serious about it, though. Derek Carr has, and will continue to, receive inquiries from QB-needy clubs about a return in 2026. Why he might entertain it. From The Insiders: https://t.co/g7TNAD9O2h

— Mike Garafolo (@MikeGarafolo) February 8, 2026
I think Maxx Crosby just shut down all the trade rumors today 🤝🏴‍☠️ pic.twitter.com/bFx6XUWF7c

— Raiders Report Mitchell Renz (@MitchellRenz365) February 6, 2026

Super Bowl

Super Bowl Sunday will be a super struggle for these current and former NFL figures https://t.co/cLCcweJSyJ

— Global News Report (@robinsnewswire) February 8, 2026
As part of #NFL’s support of America250, one of the most iconic medals in American history, the Libertas Americana, will be used in the #SBLX coin toss. Originally commissioned by Benjamin Franklin in 1782, the medal celebrates America’s victory in the Revolutionary War. pic.twitter.com/kHtmkqVnwH

— Brian McCarthy (@NFLprguy) February 7, 2026

aBit o’Twitter

Sonny could drop it in the bucket. pic.twitter.com/JFPZUr5zOb

— Grant Paulsen (@granthpaulsen) February 7, 2026
"I think you have to look at Sonny as one of the greatest that ever played the position"

I spoke to former Washington quarterbacks Joe Theismann and Mark Rypien today about the legacy of Sonny Jurgensen. More here: https://t.co/bpbKC8NTcy pic.twitter.com/uEg1ixyzcf

— John Doran (@JohnDoranTV) February 6, 2026

As trade buzz builds, #Raiders star Maxx Crosby is rehabbing from a meniscus repair that could mean any trade would happen before the NFL Draft or later.

My story on what’s next for Crosby: https://t.co/BzZ4udVs0lhttps://t.co/BzZ4udVs0l

— Ian Rapoport (@RapSheet) February 8, 2026
Sad news. Former Redskins defensive back Barry Wilburn has died at 62 due to a house fire, per @WMCActionNews5. https://t.co/fVHPcgaPy6

— Jake Russell (@_JakeRussell) February 8, 2026
You either love Bill Withers or you’re wrong pic.twitter.com/xcz01xtuPi

— Melodies & Masterpieces (@SVG__Collection) February 6, 2026


Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/daily-slop/400612/daily-slop-8-feb-26-super-bowl-sunday
 
Super Bowl LXI Odds: Where do the Washington Commanders stand going into 2026?

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LANDOVER, MARYLAND - NOVEMBER 02: Jayden Daniels #5 of the Washington Commanders throws a pass against the Seattle Seahawks at Northwest Stadium on November 02, 2025 in Landover, Maryland. (Photo by G Fiume/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Super Bowl is over and the Seattle Seahawks are the latest team to hoist the Lombardi trophy. They dominated the New England Patriots, and made Drake Maye look like a rookie again. This was year two of Mike Macdonald as head coach and Sam Darnold’s first season in Seattle. They look like a team that can reload for next season and be right back in the title fight.

The Washington Commanders were on the other end of the spectrum this season, finishing 5-12 and picking #7 in April’s draft. They’re going into the new season with two new coordinators, and a lot riding on Dan Quinn’s third season. Jayden Daniels dealt with multiple injuries in 2025, and is looking to bounce back with new OC David Blough guiding him.

The Commanders have the 19th-best odds to win next year’s Super Bowl. They have the third-best odds in the NFC East, and those odds match how the teams finished this season. Where do you see Washington finishing next season?

Super Bowl Odds

Washington Commanders: -4500

Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/washingto...e-washington-commanders-stand-going-into-2026
 
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