Vikings’ Kyler Murray, J.J. McCarthy Will Have ‘True Competition’ For Starting Job
The Vikings entered the 2025 season hoping to smoothly transition to J.J. McCarthy as their long-term starting quarterback.
That never came to pass. The former No. 10 pick completed just 57.6% of his passes with more interceptions (12) than touchdowns (11). He also missed time due to three different injuries and, overall, did not show signs of being a franchise QB.
Minnesota then brought in Kyler Murray after he was released by the Cardinals, adding another, more proven passer to their quarterback room. Since Arizona is still paying him $36.8MM this year, the former No. 1 pick was available for a veteran minimum salary, making him a hot commodity on the free agent market. He quickly agreed to a deal with the Vikings, indicating that he would have a chance at their starting quarterback job. But the question remained: would Murray have to take the job from McCarthy, or would the two begin offseason practices on equal footing?
An initial answer has come via NFL Network’s Tom Pelissero, who said on the Rich Eisen Show that the Vikings “envision it being a true competition: Kyler Murray vs. J.J. McCarthy.”
On paper, Murray should have a substantial advantage. He has 87 career starts to McCarthy’s 10 with a significantly better completion percentage and passer rating in 2025. But Murray will be learning a new offense in Minnesota, while McCarthy will be entering his third year in Kevin O’Connell‘s system.
It is worth noting that Pelissero specifically mentioned those two quarterbacks as part of the competition and not Carson Wentz or Max Brosmer, who are also in the team’s quarterback room. Brosmer was abysmal in his two starts last year, but Wentz statistically outperformed McCarthy nearly across the board. In theory, that would make him a worthy competitor for the starting job, but Minnesota moved in Murray’s direction and seems more inclined to keep Wentz as a third-stringer.
‘Soft’ Market For Seahawks Sale
The Seahawks appear to be one of the best-positioned teams in the NFL.
They have a young, proven head coach in Mike Macdonald, an apparent franchise quarterback in Sam Darnold, one of the league’s best wide receivers in Jaxon Smith-Njigba, and a deep, diverse well of talent on defense.
Despite that, the pending sale of the club has a weaker-than-expected market, per ESPN’s Seth Wickersham, with one NFL owner describing it as “soft.” Wickersham adds that there is less interest in the Seahawks than there was in the Broncos and the Commanders, the last two franchises to change hands.
The Walton-Penner family paid $4.65 billion for the Broncos in 2022, and a Josh Harris-led group purchased the Commanders for $6.05 billion in 2023. A commensurate increase three years later would price the Seahawks at $10.25 billion.
The team’s price tag was initially expected to match or exceed that number, but projections have since dropped closer to $9 billion. That would still be the highest sale price of an NFL team, though it falls substantially below the Dolphins’ recent $12.5 billion valuation.
There are a limited number of potential buyers with known interest in the team with tech billionaires Jeff Bezos, Mark Zuckerberg, and Tim Cook already ruled out. Wyc Grousbeck and Vinod Khosla are leading ownership groups preparing for bids, and Canadian billionaire Steve Apostolopoulos has also been mentioned, per Sports Illustrated’s Albert Breer. Apostolopoulos was interested in purchasing the Commanders in 2023, though he told Wickersham that he is “not pursuing the Seahawks.” If there are only two ownership groups vying for the Seahawks, that will limit the potential for a bidding war that could push the sale price into eight digits.
The lack of interest is multifaceted. The number of individuals with enough wealth to lead an ownership group is already small, and league rules mandate a 30% down payment – ranging from $2.7 to upwards of $3 billion – from the new majority owner.
The circumstances of the sale give potential buyers “significant leverage,” Wickersham adds. Longtime Seahawks owner Paul Allen passed away in 2018, leaving behind instructions for the team to be sold with the proceeds donated to charity. His sister, Jody Allen, has initiated that process after eight years. Selling to fulfill a mandate rather than by choice will push down the price. Allen’s estate had the same directive for the NBA’s Portland Trail Blazers, who were sold for $4.2 billion in 2025, significantly lower than the sales of the Boston Celtics and the Los Angeles Lakers in the same year. (The Celtics and the Lakers are substantially more successful franchises with storied histories, but that is still a depreciated price for an asset that is always increasing in value.)
Other local concerns include the potential for an NBA franchise to return to Seattle almost 20 years after the Supersonics departed for Oklahoma City. The city’s MLS team, the Sounders, who share Lumen Field with the Seahawks, are also exploring a new, soccer-specific stadium, according to ESPN’s Jeff Carlisle. Potential Seahawks buyers could be more interested in bringing basketball back to Seattle, and hammering out stadium situations for all three teams could get complicated both politically and financially.
Odell Beckham Jr. Seeking Offensive Role; No Giants Offer Imminent
A reunion between Odell Beckham Jr. and the Giants remains something to watch for. A deal should not be expected until at least the summer, however.
Beckham took part in a visit last month, and his interest in a New York deal has been matched by head coach John Harbaugh. The two overlapped in Baltimore for the 2023 season. Beckham has hardly played since then, but he is aiming for a 2026 deal. It remains to be seen if the Giants will make an offer.
“Talked to Odell a lot, probably three of four times in the last week, [see] where he’s at, where we’re at,” Harbaugh said on Saturday (via ESPN’s Jordan Raanan). “The goal for right now is for him to train and get as ready as he can be. And then we’ll see where we’re at at that time.”
Harbaugh added he is optimistic Beckham, 33, can “make a team in the National Football League right now.” The former Pro Bowler is eyeing the opportunity to contribute as a regular on offense, Harbaugh noted. Fox Sports’ Ralph Vacchiano confirms Beckham’s goal for 2026 is landing with a team which will ensure him a role as opposed to simply operating as a training camp participant. He adds New York’s hesitancy regarding a contract is an indication the team is still unsure if Beckham can serve in that capacity.
The Giants are set to have Malik Nabers back atop the receiver depth chart next season when he returns from an ACL tear. The team also has Darius Slayton in place as a returnee, along with free agent signings Darnell Mooney and Calvin Austin. New York used a third-round pick on Malachi Fields during last month’s draft.
Each of those wideouts can be assured of a roster spot, leaving little room for a Beckham deal if he is seen as a rotational contributor at this point of his career. Harbaugh noted team and player will “play it out” through spring practices and into training camp before a final decision is made. The Giants currently find themselves mid-pack in terms of cap space with roughly $12MM available. The possibility of a low-cost Beckham investment will linger unless he manages to line up a deal with another team over the coming weeks.
Minor NFL Transactions: 5/9/26
Here are Saturday’s minor NFL moves:
Tampa Bay Buccaneers
- Signed: LB Javin Wright
- Waived (with non-football injury designation): RB Michael Wiley
Wright agreed to terms with Tampa Bay shortly after the draft but was not included among the team’s initial undrafted free agent class. The Nebraska product’s arrival required a corresponding roster move, and Wiley has been let go. A former UDFA himself, Wiley finished 2025 on the Buccaneers’ practice squad before signing a futures deal in January.
NFL Draft Pick Signings: 5/9/26
Here are the rookies who inked their four-year deals on Saturday:
New England Patriots
- TE Eli Raridon (third round, Notre Dame)
- EDGE Quintayvious Hutchins (seventh round, Boston College)
Pittsburgh Steelers
- CB Daylen Everett (third round, Georgia)
- G Gennings Dunker (third round, Iowa)
- TE/FB Riley Nowakowski (fifth round, Indiana)
Sean Payton: Bo Nix To Be Limited In June, Full Training Camp Participant
As Bo Nix was recovering from the ankle injury which ended his second season, it appeared as though a return in time for OTAs would be coming. Instead, a follow-up surgery took place last week and resulted in an adjusted recovery timeline.
Nix’s ability to take part in voluntary work this spring is in doubt as he recovers from the second procedure. That surgery did not come as a surprise, however, and missed time in the summer is still not anticipated. Head coach Sean Payton spoke about Nix’s status on Saturday, confirming a clean bill of health will be in place before July.
“He’ll be well ahead of time for training camp,” Payton said (via ESPN’s Jeff Legwold). “We’re going to be the ones kind of holding him back if you will… You’ll see him probably in [the mandatory] minicamp — probably. He’ll be full speed throwing, everything, in July before we get back here. He’s doing good.”
Denver’s OTAs are scheduled for June 2-4 and 8-11. They will be followed by mandatory minicamp from June 16-18. Nix will continue rehabbing over the coming weeks, but Payton insisted a full workload once padded practices begin during training camp will be in store. A limited level of participation next month could also be an option. The Broncos will no doubt proceed with caution on that front, though.
Nix logged a full season as a rookie, taking part in Denver’s wild-card loss. He again played 17 games in 2025, helping lead the Broncos to the AFC title game. The ankle injury prevented him from taking part in that contest, however, and a strong showing upon returning to action will be key for a team facing high expectations next year.
Jarrett Stidham and Sam Ehlinger remain in place as the Broncos’ depth quarterback options. They are in line to handle an increase in reps for the time being, but a lengthy practice absence in Nix’s case should not be expected.
Aaron Rodgers Expected To Visit Steelers, Finalize 2026 Deal
MAY 9: According to Gerry Dulac of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, Rodgers has been in Pittsburgh over the last few days, but he, personally, has not been meeting with the Steelers. While the team’s three-day rookie minicamp is taking place, Rodgers has stayed away from the team facilities, and his agent has been tasked with negotiating with Pittsburgh’s front office.
Dulac claimed it’s possible Rodgers may finally meet with the team “in the next day or two,” if the two sides are able to work out terms for an agreement, before quickly running through the list of misleading headlines that have hinted at forward progress throughout the offseason. With Rodgers finally at least in the same city, it does still look like things are coming to a conclusion, but if the Steelers can’t secure a commitment from Rodgers by the start of OTAs on May 18, as Dulac put it, “the team’s patience with him could grow thin.”
MAY 7: Finality on the Aaron Rodgers front may be imminent. His second Steelers contract has yet to be signed, but that could change over the coming days.
Rodgers is set to visit Pittsburgh ahead of signing a deal this weekend, as first reported by 93.7 The Fan (video link). Mark Kaboly of the Pat McAfee Show cautions the Steelers themselves have not yet been informed of this news, although he adds an agreement is still widely expected to be finalized.
Rodgers is set to visit beginning tomorrow, Ian Rapoport of NFL Network adds. He confirms a Steelers agreement for 2026 remains the expectation for all involved. The rarely-used UFA tender came into play last week, but Rapoport notes that is viewed as a placeholder. Rodgers would collect roughly $15MM if he were to play on the one-year tender in 2026, though the upcoming summit will allow for a more traditional contract to be worked out.
When Rodgers signed with Pittsburgh last spring, it appeared as though 2025 would be his final NFL season. Over time, though, it became increasingly clear he would be open to playing a 22nd campaign and that the Steelers would welcome him back. Mike Tomlin resigned after the team’s exit in the wild-card round, but the decision to replace him with Mike McCarthy means Rodgers will have a familiar coach in place once his second Pittsburgh pact is finalized. McCarthy and Rodgers overlapped during their Super Bowl-winning time together in Green Bay.
The UFA tender decision did not appear to lead to a change regarding Rodgers’ stance, and the latest reporting on this situation indicated finances were not a major sticking point. It will be interesting to see if upcoming contract talks go smoothly and result in a pact being finalized in short order. Rodgers collected $10MM guaranteed on his 2025 deal, one which paid out roughly $14MM in total.
The four-time MVP started 16 games during the regular season along with Pittsburgh’s wild-card contest in 2025. Rodgers offered a higher floor than the Steelers’ other post-Ben Roethlisberger quarterbacks, something which will be expected to remain the case next year. His age leaves the matter of a long-term plan at QB unclear, however, and after selecting Will Howard in the sixth round last spring Pittsburgh added Drew Allar in the third round of this year’s draft.
Those two will be seen as developmental options, while veteran Mason Rudolph is also in the fold at this time. A fourth signal-caller could very well be in place very soon, as a Rodgers agreement would set him up to handle first-team reps for spring practices. The Steelers’ OTAs begin on May 18, and an answer to the question of whether or not Rodgers will be under contract by that point should soon emerge.
Texans’ Second-Round DT Kayden McDonald Signs Rookie Deal
After the first round of the 2026 NFL Draft came to a close, rumors claimed that multiple teams were attempting to work their way up closer to the top of the second round. Houston was the first team to successfully do so, and today, they landed the signature of the player they drafted after trading up. According to Aaron Wilson of KPRC 2, Ohio State defensive tackle Kayden McDonald has signed his fully guaranteed four-year, $12.9MM rookie deal.
After essentially redshirting in his first year with the Buckeyes, McDonald held a rotational role off the bench in the team’s 2024 championship run. 2025 was McDonald’s first and only season as a full-time starter, but the All-American defender showed enough in 14 games to prove he was NFL ready. The disruptive, explosive defensive tackle made plays all over the field for Ohio State, notching 65 total tackles, three sacks, and nine tackles for loss. He showed good production in the pass rush, but he really excelled as a run stopper.
McDonald was widely expected to be the class’s only first-round interior defender. He even attended the draft in person just to slip into Day 2 while watching Florida’s Caleb Banks and Clemson’s Peter Woods hear their names called in the first round. Sitting atop the board of best remaining players for hours, he clearly was seen as a priority for a few clubs. Houston’s efforts to move up came with an intention to get ahead of the Giants, who they thought might take McDonald as a replacement for Dexter Lawrence.
Stepping into one of the NFL’s top defenses last year, McDonald should have a chance to earn a big role on a defensive line that returns Sheldon Rankins and Tommy Togiai but lost Tim Settle to free agency. McDonald should be able to slot right in as the first interior defensive lineman off the bench and could find himself in a starting role if free agency takes another body away next year.
By landing McDonald’s signature, Houston has just cracked the seal on signing its rookie draft class. Here’s a look at the work that remains to be done:
- Round 1, No. 26 (from Bills): Keylan Rutledge (G, Georgia Tech)
- Round 2, No. 36 (from Raiders): Kayden McDonald (DT, Ohio State) (signed)
- Round 2, No. 59: Marlin Klein (TE, Michigan)
- Round 4, No. 106 (from Commanders): Febechi Nwaiwu (G, Oklahoma)
- Round 4, No. 123 (from Chargers): Wade Woodaz (LB, Clemson)
- Round 5, No. 141 (from Raiders via Browns): Kamari Ramsey (S, USC)
- Round 6, No. 204 (from Chargers): Lewis Bond (WR, Boston College)
- Round 7, No. 243 (from 49ers): Aiden Fisher (LB, Indiana)
New England Announces 12-Man UDFA Class
After a mostly routine first two days of the draft, a busy Day 3 gave the Patriots six of their nine draft picks. New England announced their undrafted free agent class yesterday, and the group-mix followed close with the team’s approach in the draft, with the exception of a handful of receivers joining in after the event. Here’s a look at the Patriots’ 12 undrafted signings:
- Tanner Arkin, TE (Illinois)
- David Blay Jr., DT (Miami)
- Channing Canada, CB (TCU)
- Nick DeGennaro, WR (James Madison)
- Kyle Dixon, WR (Culver-Stockton)
- Cameron Dorner, WR (North Texas)
- Kenneth Harris, CB (Oklahoma State)
- Khalil Jacobs, LB (Missouri)
- Jimmy Kibble, WR (Georgetown)
- Myles Montgomery, RB (UCF)
- JonDarius Morgan, G (UAB)
- Jacob Rizy, OL (Florida State)
From the reports we saw, the biggest UDFA guarantees went to the player from the smallest school. Out of the small NAIA school in Missouri, Dixon has reportedly signed a deal that includes $252.5K in guaranteed money, per Tom Pelissero of NFL Network. Dixon entered college as a pitcher at Southern Illinois and Georgia-Gwinnet College before transitioning to football and transferring to join the Wildcats.
Blay arrived in Coral Gables after notching 6.5 sacks and 10.5 tackles for loss at Louisiana Tech, his second school after transferring from West Chester. Though he wasn’t able to produce the same results, Blay started nine games for the Hurricanes as a nose tackle and a dependable run defender. Jacobs only spent two years in Columbia and didn’t establish a full-time role in his time with the Tigers, but his effort and passion helped him stand out as a leader and team captain on Mizzou’s defense, regardless.
Rizy is a really interesting addition here, considering he only started two of 11 game appearances for the Seminoles this year. After redshirting his first year in Tallahassee, Rizy started 10 games as a redshirt freshman at right tackle before swapping sides to start 10 games at left tackle the next year. Starting the year on the bench in 2024, Rizy knocked out the other three positions on the line, starting a game apiece at left guard and center before notching three starts at right guard to close the year.
FSU used Rizy as a sixth man along their OL all throughout 2025. His two starts were at right tackle and left guard, and he played significant snaps off the bench at center for one game, right guard for four games, and left guard for two more. Jaguars guard Patrick Mekari found a similar path to the NFL as an undrafted free agent out of California, and it will be interesting to see if Rizy can find a similar outcome in New England.
Saints Sign Second-Round DT Christen Miller, Complete Class Signings
This morning, the Saints secured the signature of Georgia defensive tackle Christen Miller, per Nick Underhill of NewOrleans.Football. In signing their second-round pick, New Orleans has completed the signing process for its rookies from the 2026 NFL Draft.
Miller arrived at Georgia during a time of transition for the Bulldogs defensive line. Travon Walker and Devonte Wyatt had just departed as first-round picks, and Nolan Smith, Jalen Carter, and Jordan Davis were close on their heels. Miller redshirted as a true freshman, appearing in just four games behind the remaining trio. He wasn’t quite able to to seize one of the starting opportunities following their departures as Zion Logue and Nazir Stackhouse assumed the top roles and Warren Brinson held the DT3 role in what is usually a very active defensive line rotation in Athens.
In Year 3, Miller replaced the NFL-bound Logue in the starting group next to Stackhouse, but his first-team honors were offset a bit as Brinson outpaced him in play time and production off the bench. After Logue and Brinson entered the NFL as late-Day 3 picks and Stackhouse went undrafted, it seemed Georgia’s domination in DL production had come to an end, but Miller’s resurgence in his final year shows they’re not quite done yet. The Bulldogs moved Miller around on the line, but he excels in run defense. The stout, big-bodied defender is deceptively athletic, but his potential to play all three downs will depend on his coaching staff’s ability to develop his pass rush and his own ability to climb the depth chart.
New Orleans returns three starters along the defensive line in Bryan Bresee, Davon Godchaux, and Nathan Shepherd, and the team should return last year’s third-round pick Vernon Broughton after he missed nearly all of his rookie season with a hip injury. With so much depth and experience in place, Miller won’t be asked to shoulder a bigger burden than necessary as a rookie, but considering the play of the returning group left much to be desired last year, he should get every opportunity to earn a bigger role.
All that will develop over the next several months, but for now, here’s a final look at the Saints 2026 rookie draft class:
- Round 1, No. 8: Jordyn Tyson (WR, Arizona State) (signed)
- Round 2, No. 42: Christen Miller (DT, Georgia) (signed)
- Round 3, No. 73: Oscar Delp (TE, Georgia) (signed)
- Round 4, No. 132 (from Seahawks): Jeremiah Wright (G, Auburn) (signed)
- Round 4, No. 136*: Bryce Lance (WR, North Dakota State) (signed)
- Round 5, No. 172 (from Seahawks): Lorenzo Styles (S, Ohio State) (signed)
- Round 6, No. 190: Barion Brown (WR, LSU) (signed)
- Round 7, No. 219 (from Raiders): TJ Hall (CB, Iowa) (signed)
