Lions Attempted To Trade With Ravens For No. 14 Pick

Not long after the draft was finished, it was reported the Ravens nearly worked out a trade which would have seen them move down the first-round order. Further details on the offer Baltimore considered have emerged.

The latest edition of Ravens Wired (video link) showcases the discussions held by general manager Eric DeCosta and Co. leading up to the 14th overall pick. The Lions attempted to move up from No. 17, offering pick No. 118 and a third-round selection in 2027 to do so. Teams were largely hesitant to part with capital in next year’s draft, one believed to be much stronger than the 2026 edition.

That makes Detroit’s offer a notable one, although it comes as little surprise GM Brad Holmes showed interest in moving up the board. The Lions had long been connected to Kadyn Proctor, and drafting him would have helped stabilize an offensive line which has been in flux this year. Based on the timing of Baltimore’s conversations with Detroit, it appears as though Holmes’ offer was rescinded shortly before the Ravens made their selection.

The Dolphins wound up selecting Proctor at No. 12, taking the Alabama product out of consideration for any Lions deal moving them up the board. As a result, the Ravens remained in place and went the expected route of drafting Penn State guard Vega Ioane. The Lions, meanwhile, still managed to add an offensive tackle by drafting Clemson’s Blake Miller at No. 17. All three O-linemen will be expected to contribute early and often in their careers.

Proctor flashed considerable potential with his combination of size and athleticism during his college career. Concerns related to his playing weight and overall consistency were raised leading up to the draft, but it came as little surprise when he was selected early on Day 1 (albeit to play guard in Miami). Miller’s stock nevertheless rose considerably during the pre-draft process, and his success as a rookie will play a key role in determining the Lions’ play up front as they seek to return to the playoffs in 2026.

Aaron Rodgers Reports To Steelers’ OTAs; Latest On Contract Agreement

News broke over the weekend that Aaron Rodgers and the Steelers had once again agreed to a one-year contract. The timing of the deal was not unexpected, since it allowed Pittsburgh’s returning QB1 to take part in spring practices.

To no surprise, ESPN’s Brooke Pryor notes Rodgers reported to the team facility on Monday morning. Uncertainty loomed after the draft with respect to a deal being finalized in this case, but Pittsburgh elected to keep the door open to a second straight season with Rodgers in the fold. In the wake of his return becoming official, further details on the negotiating process between team and player have emerged.

Aside from ongoing talks between Rodgers and head coach Mike McCarthy, communication was limited in this situation. Nevertheless, Gerry Dulac of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette reports a “ballpark figure” on a new contract was agreed to at least one month ago. Rodgers took a deal containing $22MM guaranteed and a maximum of $25MM via incentives. Those figures represent a raise compared to 2025 but fall well short of the top of the quarterback market.

A bump in compensation was sought out during contract negotiations, Pryor’s colleague Jeremy Fowler reported during a SportsCenter appearance yesterday (h/t Bleacher Report). The UFA tender set a baseline of roughly $15MM for Rodgers to collect in 2026, but his performance during his debut Steelers campaign resulted in a raise relative to that figure. The approach of OTAs represented the latest artificial deadline for a deal to be struck, and Dulac adds the team would have begun to lose patience had Rodgers still not signed in time for today.

Concerns on that front remained relatively low, however. Mark Kaboly of the Pat McAfee Show reports there was never a formal handshake agreement between Rodgers and the Steelers, but he notes there was a general understanding a resolution would be found in time for spring practices. With the 42-year-old in place, the possibility of dividing first-teams reps among some combination of Mason Rudolph, Will Howard and Drew Allar has been eliminated. That was something Pittsburgh planned for as recently as Saturday morning, though, according to SportsBoom’s Jason La Canfora.

News of the Rodgers-Steelers agreement emerged on Saturday night, setting up an official signing for today. The four-time MVP was long expected to face the option of a Pittsburgh deal or retirement, and La Canfora confirms limited interest existed around the rest of the NFL. Nonetheless, this long-running saga arrived at its expected conclusion in time for Rodgers to prepare for his 22nd season and first working with McCarthy since 2018.

Urban Meyer Loses Grievance Against Jags

An arbiter ruled the Jaguars will not have to pay former coach Urban Meyer‘s salary balance, On3.com’s Brett McMurphy reports. Meyer sued the Jaguars not long after his December 2021 firing but will not be entitled to a $30MM-plus sum that would have come his way had the arbiter ruled he was not fired for cause.

The Jags were permitted to fire Meyer for cause, according to the arbiter, and will be free of obligation regarding the final four years of the short-lived NFL HC’s contract. Jacksonville gave Meyer control of football operations in January 2021 but fired the successful college HC after 13 games, ending an infamous tenure that brought on-field struggles and a slew of off-field headlines.

At the time of the firing, the Jags cited a “culmination of events” in their decision to fire Meyer for cause and withhold his remaining money. Coaching contracts come guaranteed, and HCs are almost never fired for cause; thus, they collect money owed. Though, offset language regularly protects teams in the event a fired coach lands with another team or college program; Meyer, though, has not coached since his Jaguars firing. This case took more than four years to wrap, but the Jags can finally close the book on arguably the worst decision in franchise history.

Shad Khan hired Meyer after pursuing the former national championship-winning HC in the past, but the partnership drifted off course. In addition to reports indicating a bizarre lack of familiarity with NFL players, Meyer had issues with his staff and the team was fined for failure to comply with NFL offseason workout rules. The former Ohio State and Florida championship leader made the highly unusual decision to not travel back from a Thursday game with his team, only to be seen with a young woman at his restaurant in Columbus soon after. Khan fired Meyer after he started 2-11.

Meyer had previously hired a strength coach (Chris Doyle) who was part of a racial discrimination suit for alleged actions while at Iowa; Doyle resigned from the Jaguars not long after his hire. The U.S. District Court for Iowa’s Southern District subpoenaed Meyer in connection to the Doyle discrimination suit in 2021. Additionally, Meyer and Jaguars were later sued by former Jags kicker Josh Lambo. The veteran NFL specialist accused Meyer of kicking him while he was stretching before a preseason game.

Lambo’s case is still pending, according to ESPN.com, and a trial date in Duval County is set for August 3. Lambo, Jaguars punter Logan Cooke, long snapper Ross Matiscik and ex-GM Trent Baalke were witnesses at the hearing, according to McMurphy. Baalke joined the Jaguars prior to Meyer’s tenure but was elevated to GM while the HC was in charge.

Jacksonville has a 77-152 record during Khan’s ownership tenure. The owner has hired six head coaches (Mike Mularkey, Gus Bradley, Doug Marrone, Meyer, Doug Pederson and Liam Coen). Mularkey joined Meyer in lasting only one season. Meyer, 61, holds a role as a FOX Sports analyst following his brief NFL tenure.

Saints Approaching Decision On RB Alvin Kamara

Alvin Kamara‘s place with the Saints became cloudy after the team shelled out a big contract to Travis Etienne, who received a hefty guarantee to join Kellen Moore‘s roster in March. Kamara drew trade interest soon after Etienne’s commitment, but he remains on New Orleans’ offseason roster.

Mickey Loomis said Kamara does not currently have a decision to make on his contract, which points to the Saints not yet insisting on a pay cut. But uncertainty still exists here. The longtime Saints GM said the team is moving toward a decision on the decorated dual-threat back.

[RELATED: Saints Extend Offer To Cam Jordan; Latest On Taysom Hill]

We’re just trying to see how he’s going to fit in our roster, and obviously there’s a resource management element to it, and we’ll get to that over the next week or two,” Loomis said, via NewOrleans.football.

The 25th-year Saints front office boss said OTAs provides “a little bit” of a deadline but cautioned the voluntary workouts — which Kamara has not attended in years — do not serve as the endpoint for the sides’ latest chapter. New Orleans’ OTAs begin May 27. Kamara would see his base salary reduced by $358K if he does not attend every Saints OTA workout, ESPN.com’s Katherine Terrell notes.

Kamara, 31 in July, is entering the final season of a two-year, $24.5MM extension. He is due a $1.35MM base salary but secured $3MM in guaranteed 2026 compensation in March 2025. Being that this is the Saints, a sizable dead money hit would come if Kamara is traded or released.

Loomis’ timeline seemingly aligns with the pivotal June 1 date. The Saints likely will not act before that point, as making a move after that date would be a more cost-effective solution (with regards to 2026). Parting with Kamara after June 1 would allow the Saints to spread the dead cap charges over the next two years. Cutting him after that date would take away around $900K in cap space, whereas a summer trade would save the Saints approximately $456K.

The Saints would be hit with $24.4MM if they cut Kamara, but making that move after June 1 would allow them to spread that penalty between their 2026 and ’27 payrolls. Four void years being included in this deal represents the primary dead money source if Kamara is jettisoned.

Loomis’ team was in the strange position of not carrying the NFL’s worst cap situation entering the offseason, which deviates from several years of the restructure-crazed franchise’s winter situations. The Saints hold $8.29MM in cap space. Nearly 12 months from the 2027 league year, New Orleans is projected to hold more than $48MM in cap space in 2027. Though, many variables between now and then will change the equation.

Etienne signed a four-year, $48MM deal that includes $24MM guaranteed. The ex-Jaguar’s fully guaranteed figure ranks sixth among running backs, matching Christian McCaffrey‘s 2024 extension. The Saints also have holdovers Kendre Miller and Devin Neal rostered; Neal was drafted to play in Moore’s system while Miller — who is in a contract year — arrived under Dennis Allen. Former Vikings backup Ty Chandler is also on the Saints’ roster.

It would seem the Saints could get by without Kamara, given Etienne’s presence. Kamara’s five-year run of Pro Bowls stopped after the 2021 season — Sean Payton‘s New Orleans finale — and he averaged a career-low 3.6 yards per carry last season. This came after a bounce-back 2024, when the ex-Payton chess piece tallied 1,493 scrimmage yards and eight touchdowns in 14 games. Kamara missed the team’s final six games last season with an MCL sprain. He also missed time to close the ’24 season, battling a groin injury. Altogether, Kamara has missed 19 games since 2021.

Teams will undoubtedly be interested in a free agency agreement if the Saints move on via release. Kamara came out against a trade before last year’s deadline, indicating he would potentially retire rather than be dealt away from New Orleans. With Etienne in the fold, it is worth wondering if the Pro Bowl RB’s stance has changed. We should find out soon, with the June 1 date — even as the A.J. Brown situation overshadows other NFL matters pertaining to the pivotal point on the NFL calendar — will provide some clarity.

Jim Caldwell No Longer On Panthers’ Staff

The Panthers have parted ways with senior advisor/assistant Jim Caldwell, according to Joe Person of The Athletic. He was first hired in 2023 by then-head coach Frank Reich, reuniting the pair after working together in Indianapolis from 2006 to 2011.

Caldwell served as the Colts’ head coach for the last three years of that period and has since spent time with the Ravens, Lions, and Dolphins with a four-year stint in the top job in Detroit.

Caldwell’s successor, Carl Smith, similarly has connections to the Panthers’ current coaching staff. He overlapped with head coach Dave Canales on the Seahawks’ offensive staff from 2011 to 2018. For the first seven years, Smith served as Seattle’s quarterbacks coach with Canales coaching wide receivers. Smith was promoted to associate head coach in their final year together with Canales moving into his vacated role.

Smith is also the father of Tracy Smith, the Panthers’ special teams coordinator. The father and son duo previously worked together in Cleveland (2009-2010), Seattle (2011, 2021-2023), and Houston (2019-2020).

The Panthers are also adding former Bears and Giants assistant Mike Adams to their coaching staff, per KPRC2’s Aaron Wilson. The 45-year-old spent 16 years in the NFL, including two seasons in Carolina, before beginning a coaching career as an assistant defensive backs coach in Chicago. He was not retained in 2022 and made his way to New York the following year as an assistant special teams coach. For the last two years, Adams served as the Giants’ assistant secondary coach. His role in Carolina is not yet known.

Carolina made an addition in their front office as well, promoting football operations intern Joshua Krieger to scouting assistant, per InsideTheLeague’s Neil Stratton. Krieger previously served in recruiting roles at Pitt and Temple.

Minor NFL Transactions: 5/18/26

NFL teams are getting their rosters set for voluntary Organized Team Activities that will take place over the next month. Here are the latest minor moves from around the league:

Carolina Panthers

Green Bay Packers

Indianapolis Colts

  • Signed: RB Anderson Castle
  • Waived: RB Jordon Vaughn

Jacksonville Jaguars

  • Placed on reserve/retired: WR Alex Bullock

Pittsburgh Steelers

  • Signed: DB Tamon Lynum

Davis tried out at the Seahawks’ rookie minicamp but did not make the team. His workout in Carolina was more successful, per KPRC2’s Aaron Wilson, and he will take Johnson’s place on the Panthers’ roster.

Jones was a first-team All-Big Sky selection for his standout 2023 season at Eastern Washington, which featured three pick-sixes. He transferred to Vanderbilt in 2024 but missed the season after being diagnosed with cancer. After recovering, Jones appeared in nine games for the Commodores in 2025, and he will now continue his remarkable story in Green Bay.

Steelers Sign Round 2 WR Germie Bernard

NFL teams are signing second-round draft picks at a much faster pace than last year. The latest is new Steelers wide receiver Germie Bernard, who put pen to paper on Monday, per a team announcement.

Pittsburgh traded up six spots to draft Bernard with the 47th overall pick to ensure they would land a desired receiver prospect after narrowly missing out on USC’s Makai Lemon in the first round. They landed a versatile, all-around wideout with good size (6-foot-1, 206 pounds) and a solid athletic profile who should quickly carve out a role in Mike McCarthy‘s new offense.

Bernard started at Alabama for the last two years after a tertiary role at Washington in 2023, all under Kalen DeBoer. His production grew throughout his college career and peaked in his final season with team-highs of 64 receptions and 862 receiving yards, plus nine total touchdowns.

Though he lined up primarily on the outside in 2025, 46.5% of his snaps over the last three years have come out of the slot, which will help him earn playing time in a receiver room that already features boundary stalwarts D.K. Metcalf and Michael Pittman. The 22-year-old can also contribute as a blocker, gadget player, or returner – all roles he held at Alabama – giving the Steelers plenty of ways to deploy him on offense and special teams. 

The Falcons signed No. 48 pick Avieon Terrell to a fully guaranteed contract, which should result in a similar deal for Bernard. He will receive $10.54MM over the next four years ($2.64MM AAV) with a signing bonus over $4MM, per OverTheCap.

The Steelers also signed seventh-round pick (No. 230 overall) Eli Heidenreich to his four-year rookie deal, worth a total of $4.54MM. His only guarantees will be a signing bonus in the range of $150k.

Heidenreich, classified as a running back/wide receiver in Pittsburgh’s announcement, was a dynamic part of Navy’s triple-option offense for the last three years. In 2025, his 941 receiving yards for 55.6% of the Midshipmen’s total passing offense; he also took 77 carries for 499 rushing yards (6.5 yards per attempt). Heidenreich tested extremely well at the Combine, but his unique college scheme and deployment raised questions about his ability to translate to the NFL. The Steelers took a shot on the 22-year-old, who, like Bernard, could factor in the return game or with manufactured touches on offense.

Steelers’ Troy Fautanu Working At LT

A host of teams to draft a tackle in the 2024 first round made immediate position switches from where that player lined up in college.

Joe Alt moved from left to right tackle, while JC Latham slid from the right side to the blind side in Tennessee. Taliese Fuaga shifted from RT at Oregon State to LT with the Saints (both he and Latham were back at RT by 2025). Jordan Morgan saw rookie-year time at guard in Green Bay (but has since moved back to LT post-Rasheed Walker). Graham Barton moved from tackle to center, while Tyler Guyton shuttled from RT to LT to open his Cowboys career. This slew of changes involving ’24 first-round blockers made Troy Fautanu‘s adjustment blend in rather than stand out.

[RELATED: Steelers Officially Re-Sign Aaron Rodgers, Authorizing Significant Raise]

Fautanu primarily played left tackle at Washington, being a starter as the Huskies rallied to the CFP championship game behind left-handed quarterback Michael Penix Jr. The Steelers slotted Fautanu to the right side as a rookie, and while he missed most of that season due to injury, the team kept him at RT while Broderick Jones shifted to LT following Dan Moore Jr.‘s 2025 free agency defection. With Jones struggling and then running into a major injury issue, Fautanu may be headed back to the blind side.

The third-year blocker lined up at LT during Steelers OTAs Monday, per the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette’s Ray Fittipaldo. Fautanu said (via ESPN.com’s Brooke Pryor) the prospect of him moving to left tackle on a full-time basis remains “up in the air.” The Steelers are beginning first-round tackle Max Iheanachor at RT. This and Jones’ injury situation would open the door for a mid-contract Fautanu position shift. Fautanu earned All-American acclaim as a left tackle during his final Washington season.

The Steelers are optimistic Jones will be a training camp participant, but he is coming off neck surgery. A setback is believed to have occurred, clouding the fourth-year tackle’s outlook. The Steelers declined Jones’ $19.07MM fifth-year option, and their decision to draft Iheanachor — albeit after being prepared to take Makai Lemon at No. 21 before the Eagles’ seminal trade-up — could lead to the Georgia alum following Moore as a one-contract tackle in Pittsburgh. Two years remain on Fautanu’s rookie deal, and the Steelers can extend that pact through 2028 by exercising his fifth-year option. The team does not need to make that decision until May 2027.

Fautanu said he does not want to shift inside to guard, seemingly making a preemptive strike against a configuration that places Jones and Iheanachor at tackle, but added he believed he could do so if asked. Fautanu saw action in multiple Washington games at guard, but it does not appear the Steelers are interested in exploring that path. Mason McCormick and Spencer Anderson lined up as the team’s first-string guards at OTAs, per Fittipaldo, who adds McCormick switched from right guard to left guard.

McCormick became the Steelers’ James Daniels fill-in in 2024 and the team’s full-time RG starter last season. The former fourth-round pick, however, did see extensive left guard time at South Dakota State. The Steelers lost three-year LG Isaac Seumalo to the Cardinals, who signed him to a three-year, $31.5MM deal. Anderson, a former seventh-round draftee, has made 11 career starts; he mostly worked as Seumalo’s backup over the past two seasons while McCormick handled RG duties. The offseason switch adds some intrigue to Pittsburgh’s front, as Fittipaldo notes the only 2025 Steelers O-line starter who remained in the same spot was center Zach Frazier.

The Steelers added competition at guard by drafting Iowa’s Gennings Dunker in the third round. While Anderson took the first reps at RG Monday, Fittipaldo adds Dunker and FA signee Brock Hoffman will be expected to push him for the role. McCormick, Pro Football Focus’ No. 17 overall guard last season, appears assured of a starting spot in 2026.

Eagles Sign Round 2 TE Eli Stowers

The second tight end to come off the board in this year’s class, Eli Stowers joined an Eagles team that has used similar developmental strategies at the position

Philadelphia re-signed Dallas Goedert in March but looks to have an heir apparent in place. That prospect is now tied to a four-year contract, with the Eagles announcing Monday that Stowers put pen to paper. The No. 54 overall pick will be tied to an $8.89MM deal. Based on agreements for players selected around Stowers, most of this contract will be guaranteed.

With Browns safety Emmanuel McNeil-Warren receiving three fully guaranteed years as the No. 58 overall pick — to go with a partial Year 4 guarantee, per OverTheCap — Stowers will see three fully guaranteed years and a chunk of his 2029 salary locked in at signing. This year’s Nos. 55, 56 and 57 overall draftees have not been signed, but the Colts’ deal for No. 53 overall pick C.J. Allen includes a $639K guarantee on a $2.13MM 2029 base salary. Stowers assuredly secured a comparable guarantee in 2029. For now, he will get to work in a position group fronted by a long-running incumbent.

Under Howie Roseman, the Eagles identified Goedert in Round 2 (2018) while Zach Ertz was still rostered. Ertz and Goedert played together for three-plus seasons, before Ertz extension talks did not yield an agreement; Ertz was then traded to the Cardinals during the 2021 season. The Eagles extended Goedert soon after. The team drafted Ertz in the 2013 second round. Brent Celek remained on Philly’s roster until 2017, but Ertz usurped him as the team’s top tight end by 2014. With Goedert on a one-year deal and entering an age-31 season, it will be interesting to see how long Stowers’ developmental period lasts.

Viewed as a player who drew some first-round buzz, Stowers went through the draft with a knee concern that impacted some teams’ interest. As our Connor Byrne noted, Stowers tore his left PCL and meniscus in 2019 while working as a high school quarterback. The Vanderbilt product bounced back nicely from that injury, but it is interesting some teams still viewed it as an issue.

Stowers was a unanimous All-American and the John Mackey Award winner (given to the best college tight end) in 2025. Stowers weighed 239 pounds and clocked a 4.51-second 40-yard dash at the Combine. He profiles as a receiving tight end, whereas Goedert has been one of the league’s best all-around TEs for much of his career, and finished his final Commodores season with 62 catches for 769 yards. That came after a 49/638/5 line in 2024.

The Eagles will now begin their latest TE developmental program, after spending years without a Goedert successor option. Goedert is tied to a one-year, $7MM contract; that checks in lower than the pay-cut agreement the eight-year veteran signed in 2025 (one year, $10MM). Only one Eagles draftee — third-round tackle Markel Bellremains unsigned.

Saints Extend Offer To Cameron Jordan; No Taysom Hill Proposal On Table

Linked to edge rushers in Round 1, the Saints made it through the draft without addressing this position. Though, the team did send the Raiders a fifth-round selection for Tyree Wilson in a pick-swap trade. Wilson joins a New Orleans edge-rushing group headlined by Chase Young and Carl Granderson.

Another deal with Cameron Jordan, however, remains in play. Twenty-fifth-year GM Mickey Loomis said Monday (via NewOrleans.football’s Mike Triplett) the Saints have an offer out to the accomplished sack artist. As for Taysom Hill, Loomis responded in the negative when asked if the team has made an offer to the versatile veteran.

Jordan, 37 in July, accepted a pay cut to return to the Saints last year. He finished out a one-year deal worth $6.1MM, outplaying the revised contract. Jordan’s 10.5 sacks were his most since the 2021 season — his most recent Pro Bowl slate — and his 15 tackles for loss matched his most since the 2018 campaign.

The 15-year veteran will assuredly have options beyond New Orleans, but he is interested in staying. Jordan has missed just two career games, offering nearly unmatched durability, but he only combined for six sacks and 10 TFLs from 2023-24.

While Rickey Jackson‘s rookie year came before sacks were deemed official, the Hall of Famer has been retroactively credited with eight in that 1981 season. That places his career total (136) four ahead of Jordan. The latter’s 2025 season gave him the lead in official Saints sacks, but the former first-round pick would have a great chance to become the franchise’s undisputed sack kingpin by returning for a 16th season.

Likely waiting on a better offer from the Saints, Jordan has earned just more than $147MM in his career. The Bears, who employ ex-Saints HC Dennis Allen as DC, may not be a true suitor. That being the case would be a blow to Jordan’s ability to push the Saints for better terms. A number of proven vets are available as well. Jordan joins Von Miller — who would also be set for an age-37 season if/when he lands with a team — along with Leonard Floyd, Joey Bosa, Haason Reddick, Jadeveon Clowney, Kyle Van Noy and A.J. Epenesa among notable unsigned edge defenders.

Hill is set to turn 36 in August. The long-running jack-of-all-trades presence has played 10 Saints seasons. His ACL rehab concluded early last season, and the BYU product/perennial fantasy nuisance totaled 205 scrimmage yards on 63 touches. The Saints let Foster Moreau walk in free agency but used a third-round pick on Georgia tight end Oscar Delp and signed former first-rounder Noah Fant. The duo joins Juwan Johnson, who is coming off a career-best season, in New Orleans’ tight end room.

Although Hill is certainly more than just a tight end, the additions of Fant and Delp to go with Johnson — who is coming off a 77-catch, 889-yard season (both numbers smashed his previous career-high marks) — presents a crowded depth chart.

While it would be odd to see Hill in another uniform, he may need to depart Louisiana to continue his career. Prominent ex-Saints staffers are present in Denver and Buffalo, presenting potential landing spots. Hill indicated uncertainty when discussing his Saints future late last season.

Hill played out a four-year, $40MM contract; he will be unlikely to closely approach that value this year. Hill, however, has 45 career touchdowns to go with 12 career TD passes. The historically unique talent profiles as an interesting free agent as teams assess their rosters during spring workouts.