Broncos Set To Hire Ronald Curry As Wide Receivers Coach

Ronald Curry was on Buffalo’s staff for the last two seasons, but the 46-year-old has spent a major portion of his coaching career with Denver’s Sean Payton. After Curry and Payton worked together in New Orleans from 2016-21, they’re set to reunite next season. Curry is expected to take over as the Broncos’ wide receivers coach, Matt Zenitz of CBS Sports reports.

This would represent a role change for Curry, the Bills’ quarterbacks coach from 2024-25. Josh Allen won an MVP during that span, but it wasn’t enough for the Bills to retain Curry this offseason. A divisional-round loss to the Broncos convinced the Bills to fire head coach Sean McDermott and promote offensive coordinator Joe Brady as his replacement. Curry was on Brady’s offensive staff for both years in Buffalo, and the two were also Saints assistants under Payton 2017-18.

Despite his familiarity with Curry, Brady brought in a new face, Bo Hardegree, as his QBs coach. A few days before that, the Jets and Broncos interviewed Curry for their offensive coordinator jobs. The Jets wound up hiring Frank Reich, while the Broncos made the slam-dunk decision to promote Davis Webb from QBs coach/pass-game coordinator.

The Broncos are now poised to add an experienced Payton assistant and a former NFL receiver to Webb’s offensive staff. Curry, a former basketball player and QB at North Carolina, was a Raiders wideout who hit the 50-catch mark three times from 2002-08.

Curry’s career as an NFL coach began in 2014 as an offensive assistant in San Francisco, where he worked for two years. He went on to wear many hats with the Saints over eight seasons, six of which he spent with Payton. Curry was an offensive assistant for two years, a receivers coach for three, a QBs coach for three and a pass-game coordinator for two.

In rejoining Payton in Denver, Curry will replace fired receivers coach Keary Colbert. He’ll take charge of a group of wideouts featuring Courtland Sutton, Troy Franklin, Pat Bryant and Marvin Mims. That’s a respectable quartet, but as PFR’s Sam Robinson wrote in his Broncos Offseason Outlook, the team could still explore receiver upgrades in the coming months.

Colts Expected To Re-Sign Daniel Jones

After a turbulent six-year run with the Giants, Colts quarterback Daniel Jones resurgence was one of the NFL’s pleasant surprises during last season’s first three months. Jones guided the Colts to an 8-4 record through his first 12 starts, but a torn Achilles in a Week 14 loss to the Jaguars ruined his season and helped sink his team.

Season-ending injuries to Jones and backup Anthony Richardson left the Colts desperate enough to bring 44-year-old Pro Football Hall of Fame finalist Philip Rivers out of retirement. While that made for a fun story, the Colts did not win another game.

Indianapolis was in the catbird seat for a playoff spot for a large portion of 2025, but the team is now reeling from a second straight 8-9 finish. The Colts’ playoff drought climbed to five years during their second-half collapse. To make matters worse, the Colts do not have a first-round pick until 2028 (then 7-2, they traded their next two No. 1s to the Jets for cornerback Sauce Gardner) or an established starting quarterback under contract.

Jones is scheduled to reach the free agent market next month, but there is mutual interest in a second Colts deal. The two sides are expected to commence negotiations soon (if they haven’t already). Among teams chasing quarterbacks, there is “growing consensus” Jones will stay in Indianapolis, Jason La Canfora of SportsBoom reports.

“Jones is going back to the Colts. It makes too much sense not to happen,” one general manager told La Canfora.

The fact that Jones is just two-plus months removed from an Achilles tear increases the likelihood of remaining with the Colts, per La Canfora. The belief is that it would make plenty of sense for Jones to re-up with the Colts and recuperate in a familiar setting. Otherwise, in going elsewhere, he’d add the burdensome task of learning a new offense to an arduous recovery process.

Regardless of whether Jones sticks with the Colts, a substantial raise over last year’s $14MM deal is in order despite an inconsistent career and his recent injury. Considering the Colts and other teams are starved for a starting signal-caller, the 28-year-old is a candidate for the the franchise tag (worth a projected $47.32MM) or another large contract.

With his stock then on the rise in New York, Jones secured a four-year, $160MM extension in March 2023. It was a disastrous decision by the Giants, who went on to cut Jones in November 2024. He finished the season as a Vikings backup before signing with the Colts in free agency. Jones was a buy-low pickup then, but a year later, he likely has more earning potential than any other pending free agent QB.

While the Colts expect Jones to bounce back from his injury by training camp, there is skepticism GM Chris Ballard will tag him by the March 3 deadline.

“Ballard was going to put the (franchise) tag on him if he didn’t get hurt,” another GM informed La Canfora. “Everybody knew that. Now he can keep him without tagging him.”

If that’s the case, Jones’ next Colts pact would “likely” be incentive-laden, according to La Canfora. Should the Colts work something out with Jones before March 3, it may enable them to tag one of his key weapons, wide receiver Alec Pierce, at a lesser cost (a projected $28.82MM).

Jones formed a nice rapport with Pierce, a soon-to-be free agent who has led the league in yards per catch two years in a row. Despite just 47 receptions, the field-stretching Pierce posted his first 1,000-yard season in 2025. If the Colts don’t franchise Pierce in the next two weeks, it would set up the 2022 second-rounder to reel in a much more valuable deal than the four-year rookie contract he just finished.

Raiders Add Travis Smith, Rick Dennison To Coaching Staff

FEBRUARY 19: The Raiders confirmed on Thursday that Dennison’s title will be offensive line coach, to little surprise.

FEBRUARY 16: The Raiders hired Travis Smith to be their defensive line coach under new head coach Klint Kubiak, per a team announcement.

Smith is returning to Las Vegas after three years in Chicago (defensive line coach) and one in Tennessee (defensive run game coordinator). He was announced as the Titans’ senior defensive assistant/pass rush specialist on Robert Saleh‘s staff, but is instead opting to reunite with the Raiders, for whom he coached from 2012 to 2021. He served in a variety of roles on the defensive side of the ball and worked closely with Maxx Crosby at the beginning of his career.

Also joining Kubiak’s staff is Rick Dennison, per CBS Sports’ Matt Zenitz. Dennison, 67, has spent the last three decades coaching in the NFL, primarily working with offensive linemen with coordinator stints in Denver, Houston, and Buffalo. He and Kubiak have worked together since 2016, Dennison’s last year as the Broncos’ OC and Kubiak’s first as an offensive assistant.

The two then overlapped in Minnesota from 2019 to 2021, after which Dennison stepped away from coaching. He returned to the NFL in 2024 to join Kubiak’s offensive staff in New Orleans as a senior assistant and followed him to Seattle last year. Dennison then served as the Seahawks’ run game coordinator/senior offensive advisor in 2025 and will now join the Raiders in a yet-to-be announced role.

Kubiak is still looking to fill the quarterbacks coach position on his staff, and Vikings asst. OC/asst. QBs coach Jordan Traylor is a candidate for the job, per KPRC2’s Aaron Wilson. He previously worked under Kubiak in New Orleans in 2024, on the same staff as Dennison and now-Raiders OC Andrew Janocko.

Bears Approaching Indiana Relocation?

The Bears have looked into a potential relocation to northwest Indiana as they weigh their new stadium options. A move across the border appears to remain a distinct possibility.

On Thursday, an amendment to Senate Bill 27 received unanimous approval in the state during a Ways and Means committee hearing in Indiana. As noted by All CHGO’s Adam Hoge, only a direct agreement between governor Mike Braun and the Bears themselves seems to be in the way of a final step regarding relocation. It was confirmed today the Bears are still willing to commit $2 billion to the construction of a new stadium in Indiana, as they have been for a potential move to Arlington Heights in Illinois.

“We’ve identified a promising site near Wolf Lake in Hammond and established a broad framework for negotiating a final deal,” a statement from Braun reads in part. “If approved, the proposed amendment to Senate Bill 27 puts forward the essential framework to complete this agreement, contingent upon site due diligence proceeding smoothly.”

An Illinois House Finance and Revenue committee hearing was scheduled to take place today, but it was canceled. Hoge reports the megaprojects bill which could have granted the Bears “tax certainty” regarding the Arlington Heights project was on the agenda but was not set to be voted on. The Bears still own a plot in Arlington Heights at this time.

“The passage of SB 27 would mark the most meaningful step forward in our stadium planning efforts to date,” a Bears statement reads in part. “We are committed to finishing the remaining site-specific necessary due diligence to support our vision to build a world-class stadium near the Wolf Lake area in Hammond, Indiana… We value our partnership and look forward to continuing to build our working relationship together.”

Hammond falls within a 75-mile radius of downtown Chicago. As such, the Bears already own marketing rights there in line with NFL rules for all of its teams. As noted by the Indy Star’s Joel A. Erickson, the Colts’ stance on this matter has not changed since a Bears relocation to Indiana became possible. The Colts simply “wish the Bears all the best on their stadium initiative.”

Connor Orr of Sports Illustrated reports a move across the Illinois-Indiana border “feels like an inevitability” at this point. Nothing has been finalized, but this is certainly a situation to watch closely. Interestingly, a move to Hammond would see the Bears play in the same location where George Halas spent time as a player in 1919 (h/t Mark Potash of the Chicago Sun-Times). The manner in which Illinois responds to today’s developments will likely play a key role in determining the Bears’ post-Soldier Field future.

Eagles RT Lane Johnson Will Play In 2026

The Eagles will once again have stability at the right tackle spot next season. Lane Johnson‘s decorated career will continue in 2026.

Johnson informed Jeff McLane of the Philadelphia Inquirer that he will play next year. The All-Pro himself has since provided a confirmation on X. A retirement call will be delayed for at least one more season as a result.

Earlier this month, it was reported Johnson was one of two Eagles O-line starters giving thought to retirement. The other is guard Landon Dickersonwhose situation is based not on age but on his injury history. Johnson missed considerable time in 2025, but McLane notes his rehab from a Lisfranc injury is ongoing. A full campaign in 2026 would be critical for Philadelphia’s offense.

There will be plenty of new faces on the sideline for the Eagles next year. Offensive coordinator Kevin Patullo was dismissed immediately after the Eagles were eliminated in the wild-card round. Not long after, longtime offensive line coach Jeff Stoutland resigned. As a result, the team will have a new O-line coach for the first time since 2013. Johnson’s ability to maintain his Pro Bowl form upon returning to full health will be key in determining the success of the transition along the coaching staff.

In place with the Eagles since being drafted fourth overall in 2013, Johnson has cemented his status as one of the greatest players in franchise history. The 35-year-old has remained a full-time starter throughout his tenure, and that will of course continue next season as well. Johnson is under contract for two more years, although none of his 2026 or ’27 base salaries are guaranteed at this point.

Nevertheless, the two-time Super Bowl winner’s pact calls for a $9MM option bonus to be paid out on September 1. All parties can now proceed knowing there is no longer any uncertainty on that front. Johnson is scheduled to carry a cap charge of $20.3MM next season.

49ers Expected To Maintain High Asking Price In Mac Jones Trade

Teams in need of a new quarterback this spring could attempt to go down the trade route. In that event, Mac Jones would be a coveted passer.

Jones’ impressive showing with the 49ers in 2025 helped rebuild his value. The former first-rounder was unable to duplicate the success of his rookie year in New England, and as of last offseason it was unclear when – or if – he would receive another QB1 opportunity. That time could soon be approaching, with a strong trade market being something to watch for in Jones’ case.

As things stand, the 27-year-old is under contract with San Francisco for 2026. Jones is scheduled to carry a cap charge of only $3.07MM, while his base salary ($1.4MM) would be highly attractive to any number of suitors. Those financial factors are of course among the reasons why San Francisco’s preference would be to retain Jones as affordable Brock Purdy insurance. When trade calls are made, the team is expected to drive a hard bargain.

“It’s a tough market to read this early in the process,” a personnel member whose team is in need of a new quarterback told SportsBoom’s Jason La Canfora“I know that [head coach] Kyle [Shanahan] doesn’t want to lose him. I think they’ll put up a pretty good fight. You’re going to have to knock their socks off.”

Cost-effective passers are of course a highly valuable commodity in the NFL, so it would come as no surprise if the 49ers maintained a high asking price on the Jones front. The Alabama product could be viewed as the latest quarterback to spend time with Shanahan and then thrive elsewhere, not unlike how Sam Darnold‘s career has surged over the past two years. That leads Matt Barrows of The Athletic to write (subscription required) “circumstances are aligning” for San Francisco to receive a trade offer too strong to turn down.

Purdy’s $53MM-per-year pact runs through the 2030 season. The value and upside Jones provides will be accounted for as the 49ers plan their offseason approach under center. Whether or not they set the price of a trade too high for a swap to take place will be interesting to monitor over the coming weeks.

Cardinals Undecided On QB Kyler Murray’s Future

New Cardinals head coach Mike LaFleur is in the process of finalizing his coaching staff. He and the rest of the team’s decision-makers also have to arrive at a decision shortly on Arizona’s approach at the quarterback spot.

Kyler Murray is already guaranteed $36.8MM in compensation for the coming season. He is scheduled to see $19.5MM vest in the form of his 2027 base salary on the fifth day of the new league year, a point which is fast approaching. Clarity on Murray’s status will no doubt emerge before then, but for now the Cardinals are still weighing their options.

“Just like everything else on the roster, open conversations in this building,” LaFleur said when speaking to the media about Murray’s situation (via team reporter Darren Urban). “No timeframe on that.”

Keeping Murray in the fold for 2026 has been mentioned as a possibility, but a parting of ways would not come as a surprise to many. Arizona is expected to pursue a trade of the former No. 1 pick. Of course, the list of suitors willing to take on the remainder of his contract could prove to be rather short. The Cardinals could then decide to cut Murray and allow him to find his next team via free agency.

The most recent reporting on the matter pointed to a release being the likeliest outcome. Cutting Murray with a post-June 1 designation would create over $5MM in cap space but still leave the Cardinals with a massive dead money charge to be split between the next two seasons. With most of his 2026 earnings already accounted for, Murray would represent an attractive option for suitors on the open market. The 28-year-old could be added on a low-cost deal while looking to rebuild his stock in a new setting.

With free agency lacking in clear-cut QB1 candidates and this year’s draft class not held in high regard, Murray could generate a notable market in the event his seven-year Cardinals career were to come to an end shortly. Jacoby Brissett is on the books for next season, but Arizona would be required to add at least one passer this offseason if a Murray departure were to take place. As free agency draws nearer, the Cardinals will remain a team to watch closely.

Raiders’ No. 1 Pick ‘Virtually Unattainable’

Since the NFL/AFL merger in 1967, 13 teams have traded out of the No. 1 overall pick in the draft. The Raiders, owners of the No. 1 choice this year, will not add to the total. To no surprise, the Raiders plan on using the pick, which is “virtually unattainable,” per Jason La Canfora of SportsBoom.

The Silver and Black prevailed over the Giants in a late-season chess match to finish last. The Raiders secured the selection after shutting down their two best players, defensive end Maxx Crosby and tight end Brock Browers, ahead of a Week 17 matchup with the Giants. While it didn’t go over well with Crosby, now the subject of ongoing trade rumors, the Raiders locked up last place with a 34-10 loss.

Had the Giants fallen to the Raiders and ended the season 32nd, a trade involving the No. 1 pick may have been more realistic. After all, the Giants are optimistic they have an answer at quarterback in 2025 first-rounder Jaxson Dart.

With Dart in tow, the Giants would have been in prime position to receive a haul for No. 1 overall. The same is true of the Raiders, but unlike the Giants, they are in dire need of a prized young quarterback. They are certain to take Indiana Heisman Trophy winner and national champion Fernando Mendoza with their pick.

If this year’s class featured other high-end QB prospects, perhaps the Raiders would entertain moving down. But there is no surefire first-round passer available beyond Mendoza. Arch Manning returning to Texas and Dante Moore staying at Oregon no doubt crushed some QB-starved teams’ hopes.

With Manning and Moore putting off the NFL for another year, Raiders part-owner Tom Brady – arguably the greatest QB of all-time – is dead set on Mendoza.

“You aren’t getting that pick from Brady,” a GM in the market for QB help told La Canfora.

In 2020, with LSU’s Joe Burrow looking like a generational prospect, the Dolphins reportedly offered the Bengals four first-rounders for No. 1. That wasn’t enough for the Bengals to pass on Burrow, who has lived up to the hype when healthy.

On the possibility of a similar offer for Mendoza, a GM said to La Canfora: “Is somebody going to throw three ones (first-round picks) at them to draft the kid from Indiana? That’s not going to happen. They’re drafting the quarterback.”

Mendoza is a strong prospect, but he isn’t on the level Burrow was when the latter was on his way to the pros. With that in mind, it’s unlikely another team would mortgage the future for Mendoza in the way the Dolphins would have for Burrow.

When Mendoza’s move to Las Vegas becomes official in April, he’ll form an enticing duo with rookie head coach Klint Kubiak. The Raiders are understandably eager to pair Mendoza with Kubiak, whom they hired after he won Super Bowl LX as the Seahawks’ offensive coordinator last season.

Offseason Outlook: Miami Dolphins

During an offseason in which several head coaches were held responsible for organizational shortcomings while general managers retained their jobs, the Dolphins were the rare team to start fresh. Despite initially giving Mike McDaniel some input in the team's GM search, the Dolphins canned their four-year HC and will reboot around Packers staffers.

Miami brought in Green Bay exec Jon-Eric Sullivan, who hired two-year Packers defensive coordinator Jeff Hafley to succeed McDaniel. Sullivan inherits a quarterback quandary, thanks to ousted GM Chris Grier's ill-advised Tua Tagovailoa extension. The Dolphins are staring at a record-setting dead money number. Were the team to keep Tagovailoa for one more season, a 2027 breakup would be much easier. As it stands, a 2026 separation looks like where this is headed. And it will overshadow Miami's first Sullivan-Hafley offseason.

Coaching/front office:

Reporting shifted in the wake of Grier's Halloween firing. McDaniel appeared to have done enough to retain his job for a fifth season. The Dolphins won four straight games to reach 6-7 and the fringes of the wild-card race. This included an upset win over the Bills. But an ugly showing in Pittsburgh on a Monday night brought big-picture changes.

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Chiefs’ Rashee Rice Accused Of Domestic Violence In Civil Suit

Domestic violence allegations against Chiefs wide receiver Rashee Rice surfaced in early January. A month and a half later, accuser Dacoda Jones – Rice’s ex-girlfriend – filed a civil lawsuit against him in a Dallas court on Monday, Jonathan Jones of CBS Sports reports. She is seeking more than $1MM from Rice.

According to the alleged victim, Rice repeatedly assaulted her between December 2023 and July 2025. Last month, she displayed photos of injuries that Rice allegedly inflicted on her. Jones, who has two children with Rice, claims most of the alleged abuse occurred when she was pregnant. Accusations first emerged last month.

“Rice has grabbed, choked, strangled, pushed, thrown, scratched, hit, and headbutted Ms. Jones, as well as hit her with inanimate objects,” the lawsuit says (via Michael Rothstein and Nate Taylor of ESPN).

In response, Rice’s attorney Sean Lindsay stated (via Adam Schefter of ESPN): “On October 9th, 2025, well after the parties’ relationship had ended, Ms. Jones stated under penalty of perjury in a sworn Affidavit for a Non-Prosecution that ‘Mr. Rice and I had a verbal argument, but he did not punch me.’ We will allow the legal process to run its course and have no further comment at this time.”

In a statement of their own, the Chiefs said, “The club is aware [of the lawsuit] and remains in communication with the National Football League.”

The NFL, which began investigating Jones’ claims last month, said Wednesday that “the matter remains under review.” It’s unclear if the league will discipline Rice in this instance, but it has already handed him one suspension in his three-year career. Rice served a six-game ban to open last season stemming from a hit-and-run crash in Dallas in March 2024. Rice, then facing eight felony counts, turned himself in a week and a half later.

After pleading guilty to felony collision involving serious bodily injury and racing on a highway causing bodily injury, Rice was sentenced to 30 days in jail and five years’ probation. He was also ordered to pay $115K to the injured victims.

In May 2024, mere weeks after Rice’s street-racing incident, he was the subject of an investigation for alleged assault on a photographer. The accuser did not press charges, but it continued a disturbing trend of off-field problems dating to Rice’s time at SMU.

During the 2023 pre-draft process, NFL teams became aware of an alleged incident in which Rice or a member of his party fired multiple shots into an empty car belonging to a member of SMU’s basketball team. It wasn’t enough to prevent the Chiefs from using the 55th pick in the draft on Rice, who has been an important cog in their offense when available.

Rice played a 16-game rookie season and helped the Chiefs to a Super Bowl title, but he has combined for just 12 appearances since then. An LCL tear limited Rice to four games in 2024, and he had nine absences last season as a result of his suspension and a concussion. He’s on track to play the final year of his rookie contract in 2026.