Denver Broncos 2026 NFL Season Preview

Quarterback

The Broncos finished last season 14-3, but they benefitted significantly from having the second easiest strength of schedule in the league in terms of opponents’ record and their schedule was even easier than that. When they faced the Bengals, they faced third string Jake Browning. One of the times faced the Chiefs, they faced third string Chris Oladokun, and one of the times they faced the Chargers, the Chargers were resting many of their starters, including quarterback Justin Herbert, with their playoff seed locked up. Despite their easy schedule, they only won by more than eight points three times all season, with two of those games coming against the aforementioned Bengals and Chargers. Games against the Titans, Jets, Giants, Raiders, Commanders and Raiders again resulted in victories by 8 points, 2 points, 1 point, 3 points, 1 point, and 7 points respectively. 

Now going into 2026, they face an above average schedule and they are unlikely to have the same record in close games (11-2 in games decided by 8 points or fewer, after going 1-6 in such games in 2024), so they will have to play better to even come close to winning 14 games again. They did make a big addition to their receiving corps by trading for Jaylen Waddle, but doing so cost them their first round pick and other picks, which they could have used elsewhere. 

Meanwhile, their defense lost some key players and their roster overall is one of the oldest in the league, ranking 6th in snap adjusted age last season and 8th in average age of their roster as of right now. They also were relatively healthy in the regular season last year, ranking 8th best in adjusted games lost to injury and 5th best in total expected points lost to injury, which might not happen again this year, especially given the age of their roster.

Quarterback Bo Nix is relatively young, only going into his age 26 season, but he has ranked 29th out of 36 eligible quarterbacks and 28th out of 33 eligible quarterbacks in yards per attempt over the past two seasons respectively, with a total yards per attempt average of 6.54 in two seasons in the league. It is possible he takes a step forward in year three, but he came into the league relatively experienced and NFL ready, while lacking a high ceiling, so it seems unlikely he will improve drastically. 

Backup Jarrett Stidham hasn’t attempted a regular season pass in two seasons, but he did have to start in the AFC Championship last season when Nix broke his ankle, a game in which he predictably struggled. In six seasons in the league, Stidham has just four regular season starts and his passer rating is 78.3, meaning he is probably a below average backup quarterback, but the Broncos didn’t seem interested in trying to find an upgrade on him this off-season. This is a below average quarterback room overall.

Grade: C+

Offensive Line

The oldest position group on this offense is their offensive line, which has three starters who will be in their age 30 season or older this season. That is a concern, as they have been one of the best offensive lines in the league in recent years, ranking 8th in pass block win rate last season, 4th in run block win rate last season, and 1st in both categories in 2024, while only allowing Bo Nix to be sacked just 46 times in 34 career starts. 

Left tackle Garret Bolles was the best of the bunch last season, playing at a borderline Pro-Bowl level. He’s been a consistently above average starter throughout his career (133 starts in nine seasons in the league) and last season was arguably his best. Unfortunately, he is now going into his age 34 season and, even if he doesn’t decline significantly, which is a possibility, it seems unlikely he will repeat arguably the best season of his career again in 2026.

Right tackle Mike McGlinchey has been a consistently solid starter in his career (115 starts in eight seasons in the league) and has yet to show any signs of decline thus far, but that could change in his age 32 season in 2026, which could cause him to only be a middling starter. Left guard Ben Powers, meanwhile, has only been a middling starter at best in his career (76 starts in seven seasons in the league) and, now going into his age 30 season, it wouldn’t be a surprise at all if he became a liability in 2026.

Right guard Quinn Meinerz is probably their best overall offensive lineman, playing at an above average level since entering the season as a 3rd round pick in 2021 and specifically playing at an All-Pro level in three straight seasons, which is good because he is still very much in his prime in his age 28 season and should continue being a dominant player. He will start next to Luke Wattenberg, another returning starter who rounds out this unit at center. A 5th round pick in 2022, Wattenberg became a starter in 2024 and has been a decent starter in 28 starts over the past two seasons.

Despite all of their aging starters, the Broncos only used a 4th round pick on offensive line depth, adding guard Kage Casey in the 4th round. Along with Casey, reserve options include 2023 undrafted free agent guard Adam Palczewski, who made 10 of his 13 career starts last season in place of an injured Ben Powers and struggled, center Alex Forsyth, a 2023 7th round pick who has been decent in six career starts, and swing tackle Matt Peart, who has mostly struggled in ten starts in six seasons in the league. The Broncos return all five starters from an offensive line that has played well over the past two seasons, but age is a concern, with three of the five on the wrong side of 30 and limited young depth behind them on the depth chart.

Grade: B+

Receiving Corps

As I mentioned, the Dolphins added Jaylen Waddle to their receiving corps this off-season, at the price of a first round pick, among other lesser picks. Originally selected 6th overall in 2021, Waddle has averaged 2.11 yards per route run and a 81/1098/6 slash line per 17 games in his career, while only missing 7 games due to injury in five seasons in the league. Last season, he performed similarly to his career averages, with a 64/910/6 slash line in 16 games and a 2.19 yards per route run average, and he’s only going into his age 28 season, so I don’t expect him to start declining for at least a couple seasons. He’s also produced those numbers despite only getting 119 targets per 17 games in his career, frequently operating as a #2 receiver behind Tyreek Hill.

Waddle might not get significantly more targets than that in his first season with the Broncos though. He will probably operate as the #1 receiver, but the Broncos still have Courtland Sutton, who has operated as the #1 receiver in recent years and will probably be more of a 1b to Waddle’s 1a rather than a true #2 receiver. Over the past seven seasons, Sutton has averaged a 71/971/6 slash line per 17 games and 1.71 yards per route run. He’s never been a true #1 receiver and he is now going into his age 31 season and could start to decline in 2026, so it made sense to add Waddle opposite him, but Sutton will still remain heavily involved in this offense.

Where Waddle will really upgrade this receiving corps is by pushing incumbent #2 wide receiver Troy Franklin into a much smaller role. Franklin received 109 targets last season, but only turned them into a 65/704/6 slash line and 1.45 yards per route run. A 4th round pick in 2024, Franklin also had just a 0.99 yards per route run average as a rookie. He’s still only going into his age 23 season, so he could still have further untapped potential, but a good receiving corps wouldn’t have him any higher than the third wide receiver. 

Franklin might not even be the third wide receiver this season, with 2025 3rd round pick Pat Bryant also in the mix for snaps. Bryant’s 1.22 yards per route run average last season was lower than Franklin’s, but he was much more efficient on a per target basis (7.71 vs. 6.82) and possesses a higher upside than Franklin, so he might be the favorite for the job, which would push Franklin into the #4 receiver job. It is also possible that both receivers see a limited action and rotate with each other. The Broncos also have Marvin Mims, a 2023 2nd round pick who has shown some upside (1.68 yards per route run in his career), but is best as a gadget player and returner, which is what he will be in 2026.

Another reason why Waddle was needed is because the Broncos got very little out of their tight ends last season. Receiving specialist Evan Engram turned 76 targets into a 50/461/1 slash line and 1.27 yards per route run and is now going into his age 32 season, yet another aging starter on this offense. Adam Trautman remains as a blocking specialist. He only had 0.92 yards per route run and a 20/195/1 slash line on 23 targets, in line with his career 0.96 yards per route run average, but because he is a better blocker he actually led all Broncos tight ends with 652 snaps, to 458 for Engram, a split that figures to continue into 2026. Jaylen Waddle upgrades this receiving corps, but they still have some issues in this group.

Grade: B

Running Backs

JK Dobbins led this team in carries with 153, taking them for 772 carries and 4 touchdowns, good for an impressive 5.05 YPC average. That is actually below Dobbins’ 5.20 YPC average for his career and he also has averaged 3.18 yards per carry after contact, a 19.2% missed tackle rate, and a 51.2% carry success rate across 582 career carries. The problem is he has been incredibly injury prone in his career, missing multiple games in all six seasons in the league, with 54 total missed games, including 7 last season. Dobbins received 15.3 carries per game last season when healthy and he played well enough to be re-signed to a 2-year, 16 million dollar deal this off-season, so he could get a similar workload when healthy this season, but he is also likely to miss more time at some point.

With Dobbins out last season, RJ Harvey received 13.7 carries per game, compared to 5.0 carries per game when Dobbins was active. Harvey was not as effective, averaging 3.70 YPC, with 2.66 yards per carry after contact, a 17.1% missed tackle rate, and a 45.2% carry success rate, but he was a 2nd round rookie and could be more effective in year two. He’s also a useful pass catcher, with a 47/356/5 slash line and 1.36 yards per route run, compared to 0.32 yards per route run last season for Dobbins, who only averages 0.58 yards per route run in his career. Even if he takes a step forward as a runner though, I would expect Harvey to only be a change of pace back and passing down complement to Dobbins as long as Dobbins is healthy.

Harvey also might not get as much of a workload as a runner in Dobbins’ likely absence as he did last season, with the Broncos also adding Jonah Coleman in the 4th round of the draft. A decent all-around back, Coleman probably won’t have much of a role as long as Dobbins and Harvey are healthy, but he figures to have a significant role if either one of them gets hurt. This is a decent backfield with good depth, but they are unspectacular overall.

Grade: B-

Interior Defenders

The Broncos had a great defense last season, ranking 2nd in schedule adjusted efficiency, but, as I mentioned earlier, they did lose some players this off-season. The most important departure is interior defender John Franklin-Myers, who excelled as an interior pass rusher last season, totaling 7.5 sacks, 8 hits, and a 10.3% pressure rate, while playing adequate run defense. Fortunately, the Broncos do still at least have Zach Allen, an even better interior pass rusher, who has totaled 20.5 sacks, a league leading 87 hits, and a 11.9% pressure rate in 50 games in the past three seasons combined, though his run defense has been below average. 

In Franklin-Myers absence, additional playing time will be available for veteran holdovers DJ Jones (431 snaps), Eyioma Uwazurike (409 snaps), and Malcolm Roach (402 snaps). The Broncos also used a 3rd round pick on Tyler Onyedim and have last year’s 3rd round pick Sai’vion Jones, who only played 33 snaps as a rookie, but could be involved in a rotational role in year two. DJ Jones has been a solid rotational player in his career, both as a run defender and pass rusher (6.7% pressure rate), while averaging 499 snaps per season in the past 6 seasons, but he is also yet another 30+ year old on this roster, going into his age 31 season in 2026, so it wouldn’t be a surprise if he declined and struggled, especially if forced into a larger role by Franklin-Myers’ departure.

Malcolm Roach is only going into his age 28 season, but he has been marginal at best on 374 snaps per season over the past four seasons. Uwazurike is also only going into his age 28 season, but has struggled across 637 career snaps in four seasons in the league. Unless one of the two unproven young players, Onyedim and Jones, can step up in a big way, the Broncos don’t have anyone on the roster who can come close to replacing what they lost when Franklin-Myers departed. Zach Allen significantly elevates this group by himself, but this group is not as good as they were a year ago, due to the departure of Franklin-Myers, as well as DJ Jones continuing to age.

Grade: B

Edge Defenders

Along with Zach Allen, the Broncos also still have a pair of talented pass rushers on the edge in Nik Bonitto and Jonathon Cooper. Bonitto was one of the best pass rushers in the league last season, totaling 14 sacks, 17 hits, and a 18.3% pressure rate. In total, the 2022 2nd round pick has 35.5 sacks, 41 hits, and a 16.4% pressure rate in 49 games over the past three seasons combined and he’s still in his prime, in his age 27 season. He’s only average against the run, but his efficient pass rush more than makes up for that. That should continue into 2026.

Cooper is not quite as good as a pass rusher, but he has still totaled 27 sacks, 28 hits, and a 12.9% pressure rate in 51 games over the past three seasons combined, while being a little bit better of a run defender than Bonitto. A solid all-around player, the 2021 7th round pick is also still in his prime, going into his age 28 season, and should continue playing at a similar level in 2026. He and Bonitto are one of the best edge defender duos in the league.

The Broncos also have solid depth at the edge rusher position. Jonah Elliss, a 2024 3rd round pick, struggled on 436 snaps as a rookie, but took a big step forward across 319 snaps in his second season in the league in 2025, especially excelling as a pass rusher, with 2.5 sacks, 3 hits, and a 13.2% pressure rate. Dondrea Tillman, an undrafted free agent in 2024, has been solid in both of his two seasons in the league, on snap counts of 243 and 419, providing solid run defense and totaling 9 sacks, 8 hits, and a 12.1% pressure rate. The Broncos also have Que Robinson, a 2025 4th round pick who barely played as a rookie because of the talent ahead of him on the depth chart (151 snaps), but who looked decent and who provides even further depth. This is a deep and loaded position group.

Grade: A

Linebackers

Another player the Broncos lost this off-season is linebacker Dre Greenlaw. Injuries limited him to 324 snaps in 8 games, which is why the Broncos released him to save 9 million this off-season, but he was still by far their best linebacker when healthy and, without him, this linebacking corps is a concern. Making matters worse, both Alex Singleton (1,029 snaps) and Justin Strnad (575 snaps), their top-2 linebackers with Greenlaw gone, are both on the wrong side of 30, going into their age 33 and their age 30 season respectively. Both have been average starters at best in their career, so it wouldn’t be a surprise if one or both declined to a below average level in 2026, given their age.

It is surprising the Broncos didn’t add a young linebacker behind them relatively early in the draft, but they also didn’t have a lot of picks to work with after the Waddle trade. With Greenlaw gone and no significant additions made, the third linebacker job will either go to Jordan Turner, a 2025 undrafted free agent who only played 23 snaps as a rookie, Karene Reid, a 2025 undrafted free agent who only played 4 snaps as a rookie, Drew Sanders, who went in the 3rd round in 2023, but has only played 278 snaps in three seasons in the league due to injury and ineffectiveness, or 7th round rookie Red Murdock. With an underwhelming starting duo and no proven depth, this is a below average position group.

Grade: C+

Secondary

The Broncos’ secondary remains largely the same as a year ago, with their top-7 in terms of snaps played all returning. The star of the group is cornerback Patrick Surtain, who is consistently one of the best players in the league at his position and still only going into his age 26 season. The Broncos also have a talented safety duo in Brandon Jones and Talanoa Hufanga, who both played well above average in 2025. 

The concern with those two safeties is their injury history, as Jones has missed time in every season in the league except his rookie season in 2020, with 17 total games missed in six seasons in the league, while Hufanga missed 17 games between 2023 and 2024 with a torn ACL, though he did play all 17 games in 2025 and didn’t seem to have any negative long-term effects. Going into their age 28 and 27 seasons respectively, both should remain above average as long as they can stay on the field. If either of them miss time, the Broncos would likely turn to Devon Key, who has been marginal at best in the past two seasons across the only 327 snaps of the 2021 undrafted free agent’s career. He would be an obvious downgrade.

Behind Surtain at cornerback, the Broncos have fellow outside cornerback Riley Moss and slot specialist Ja’Quan McMillan, who are both decent, but unspectacular. Moss, a 3rd round pick in 2023, has made 31 starts over the past two seasons, after only playing 25 snaps as a rookie. McMillan, meanwhile, went undrafted in 2022, but has averaged 760 snaps over the past three seasons, 88.0% of which have come on the slot. 

The Broncos also have great depth with 2025 1st round pick Jahdae Barron, who only played 335 snaps as a rookie because he wasn’t really needed. He flashed potential as a rookie and, barring significant injuries ahead of him on the depth chart, will remain an overqualified backup in 2026, before likely taking over as a starter next season, with McMillan and Moss both going into the final year of their contract. This is a well above average secondary overall.

Grade: A

Kickers

Will Lutz was slightly below average as the Broncos’ kicker last season, costing the Broncos 2.74 points compared to an average kicker. He has overall been a slightly above average kicker in his career, accounting for 11.95 points above an average kicker since entering the league in 2016, but he has been a below average kicker in three of the past four seasons, costing his teams 8.78 points compared to an average kicker over that stretch, dating back to his return from a 2021 groin injury that cost him the entire season. The Broncos still believe in him, not adding any competition for him this off-season, but it is very possible he remains below average in his age 32 season in 2026.

Grade: B-

Conclusion

The Broncos went 14 games last season, but they had a very easy schedule and won a lot of close games last season, two things that are unlikely to continue into 2026. They also have one of the oldest rosters in the league, and as a result, several key players could decline, plus they are unlikely to be as durable as a year ago, when they were one of the least injury affected teams in the league. They also lost some talent on defense that they did not replace, a concern for a defense that was the strength of the team last season, which tends to be less consistent year-to-year than offensive performance anyway. They did add Jaylen Waddle via trade, which helps their receiving corps, but all the draft capital they gave up to acquire him hurt their ability to supplement their aging roster with talented young players. Given all of that, I expect a significant drop off in their win total in 2026.

Prediction: 8-9, 3rd in AFC West

Green Bay Packers 2026 NFL Season Preview

Quarterback

After back-to-back post-season appearances in 2023 and 2024, the Packers made an aggressive trade to try to get themselves to the next level, giving away first round picks in 2026 and 2027 to acquire Cowboys edge defender Micah Parsons, one of the best defensive players in the league. The Packers then gave Parsons a 4-year, 186 million dollar extension, making him the highest paid edge defensive player in the league in terms of average annual salary at the time, ahead of what would have been his contract year in 2025.

Things got off to a great start, as the Packers began the season 9-3-1 and were leading the eventual AFC #1 seed Broncos week 15 in Denver, but disaster struck when Parsons suffered a torn ACL midway through that game. The Packers would go on to lose to the Broncos and did not win a game the rest of the season, finishing 9-7-1 and collapsing after building a 21-3 halftime lead in the first round against division rival Chicago. 

Parsons was the most important player the Packers lost to an injury last season, but he wasn’t the only key player that suffered a season ending injury, as tight end Tucker Kraft, their leading receiver at the time of his injury, had his season ended in week 9 by a torn ACL, top interior defender Devonte Wyatt had his season ended in week 13 by a fractured ankle, and top offensive lineman Zach Tom had his season ended in week 15 by a partially torn patellar tendon. Despite all of their injuries, the Packers still finished the season ranked 7th in schedule adjusted efficiency, better than their record would suggest.

It is easy to say the Packers were better than their record last season and will be even better this season when key players return from injury, but it is not that simple for a few reasons. For one, all of those injuries are serious enough that they could cost those players time at the start of the 2026 season and/or limit them upon their return. Secondly, injuries are part of the game and, while the Packers’ injury disproportionately affected their most important players, it is also unreasonable to assume they won’t have any injuries this season. On top of that, the Packers had several key free agent losses and they didn’t have a first round pick to use to replace those departed players. 

Quarterback Jordan Love also missed a couple games down the stretch last season and he is an above average starter when on the field, completing 64.5% of his passes for an average of 7.57 YPA, 80 touchdowns, and 28 interceptions in 47 starts since taking over as the starter at the start of the 2023 season. Last season was probably his best season, as he completed 66.3% of his passes for an average of 7.70 YPA, 23 touchdowns, and 6 interceptions, good for a 101.2 passer rating that ranked 6th in the NFL. However, he wasn’t really missed in the couple games he missed last season because backup Malik Willis completed 85.7% of his passes for an average of 12.06 YPA, 3 touchdowns, and 0 interceptions, while rushing for 5.59 YPC and 2 touchdowns on 22 carries.

Willis signed with the Dolphins as their starting quarterback this off-season, so the Packers will be in a tougher situation if Love misses time this season, something he has now done in two of three seasons as a starter. Veteran Tyrod Taylor was signed to replace Willis this off-season and he has plenty of experience, with 62 career starts, but he hasn’t been a regular starter since 2017 and is now going into his age 37 season, so he figures to be a big downgrade from Love if forced into the lineup. If Love stays healthy though, he has the upside to be one of the better quarterbacks in the league.

Grade: A-

Offensive Line

The unit where the Packers lost the most this off-season is their offensive line, with left tackle Rasheed Walker leaving as a free agent and center Elgton Jenkins being let go in a cost saving move. The Packers also didn’t really do anything to replace them, with their only off-season offensive line addition being 5th round rookie Jager Burton, who is unlikely to make a positive impact in year one. Instead, the Packers will replace Walker and Jenkins with 2024 1st round pick Jordan Morgan and 2025 2nd round pick Anthony Belton.

Both players have obvious upside, given where they were drafted, but neither have shown it yet. Morgan has made 13 starts in two seasons in the league, all but three of which came at guard, and has mostly been a liability. Belton, meanwhile, struggled in seven starts as a rookie in 2025, all but one of which came at guard. Not only will both have to start in 2026, but one of them will have to replace Walker at left tackle, the most important position on the offensive line. Morgan and Belton becoming starters also significantly hurts their offensive line depth, leaving the rookie Burton and Darian Kennard (5 career starts) as their likely top reserve options.

Jenkins will be the easier of the two to replace, not only because he plays a less valuable position at center, but because, while Walker was a solid starter in 16 starts, Jenkins was underwhelming in 9 starts in an injury plagued season. Whichever of Morgan or Belton does not start at left tackle will play right guard, with Sean Rhyan moving from right guard to center. Rhyan has been underwhelming in 28 career starts, 21 at guard, 7 at center, and, while a move to center full-time could benefit him, he could also struggle to adjust. Left guard Aaron Banks is a little better, but he has been average at best across 57 career starts.

The loss of Walker and Jenkins makes the health of Zach Tom even more important because, not only do the Packers lack good depth on the offensive line now, but Tom is also now by far their best offensive lineman. Only a 4th round pick in 2022, Tom had developed into one of the best right tackles in the league over the past two seasons before the injury. He did not miss a game with injury in his first two seasons as a starter in 2023 and 2024, so he isn’t injury prone, but a partially torn patellar tendon is a tough injury to return from and it is very possible Tom is not 100% in his first season back after the injury. He is still the saving grace on an offensive line that is now otherwise very underwhelming.

Grade: B+

Receiving Corps

The Packers also lost wide receiver Romeo Doubs, who led the team in catches (55), yards (724), targets (85), and tied for the team lead in touchdowns (6), while averaging 1.73 yards per route run. Meanwhile, Dontayvion Wicks, who had a 30/332/2 slash line on 46 targets with 1.39 yards per route run, was traded to the Eagles ahead of the final year of his rookie deal. Like on the offensive line, the Packers have a recent high draft pick, 2025 1st round pick Matthew Golden, in line to take over a bigger role in his absence. 

Like on the offensive line, Golden has a lot of upside, but has yet to show it at the NFL level, finishing his rookie season with a 29/361/0 slash line and 1.35 yards per route run on 44 targets. He has the potential to take a big step forward in his second season in the league though. The Packers should also get healthier years out of Christian Watson and Jayden Reed, who were limited to snap counts of 416 and 169 in 10 games and 7 games respectively. Watson, Reed, and Golden should play the vast majority of snaps in three wide receiver sets as long as they are healthy.

Reed, a second round pick in 2023, has averaged 2.09 yards per route run in his career, while Watson, a second round pick in 2022, has averaged 2.14 yards per route in his career. They have only averaged 40.1 snaps per game and 35.8 snaps per game in their careers, leading to their career highs in single season yardage being 620 and 857 respectively, but both should play much bigger roles in a more consolidated receiving corps in 2026 and both have the potential to have very productive seasons, even if they aren’t quite as efficient in larger roles as they were in smaller roles. Watson in particular has a huge upside and his 2.51 yards per route run average in 2025 ranked 5th in the NFL among wide receivers.

With Dontayvion Wicks and Romeo Doubs gone, the top reserve role will likely go to Savion Williams, a 2025 3rd round pick who has potential, but who played just 91 snaps as a rookie and didn’t show much in limited action. He will see an expanded role in his second season in the league, but figures to be a clear 4th on the depth chart, as opposed to recent years when the Packers have had 4-5 receivers they rotated heavily, capping everyone’s potential for production.

With several wide receivers cannibalizing each other’s production, tight end Tucker Kraft was the team leader in receiving last season at the time of his injury, with a 32/489/6 slash line in just 8 games. His 2.33 yards per route run average ranked 2nd in the NFL among tight ends. Kraft, a 2023 3rd round pick, had never played at that level before, with slash lines of 31/355/2 and 50/707/7 on 1.20 yards per route run and 1.61 yards per route run respectively in his first two seasons in the league and, now coming off of a major injury, it is a significant question mark whether or not Kraft can come close to being that efficient over a full season in his first season back from injury, but he has a lot of talent and is only going into his age 26 season, so he at least has a high upside.

In Kraft’s absence last season, the Packers gave an expanded role to Luke Musgrave, who was actually drafted higher than Kraft in the same draft (2nd round), but he continued to underwhelm, finishing with a 24/252/0 slash line on 1.19 yards per route run, after averaging 1.16 yards per route run in 2023 and 2024 combined. He will likely remain the nominal #2 tight end and could still have theoretical upside, but Kraft is an obvious upgrade returning from injury. This is a young group with a high variance of potential outcomes, but there is a lot of upside here.

Grade: B

Running Backs

The Packers also lost running back Emanuel Wilson, which isn’t a huge loss because he was their #2 running back, but he did receive 125 carries last season and 103 carries the season before, which is more than most #2 running backs, and the 2023 undrafted free agent has been pretty effective across 242 career carries, averaging 4.48 YPC, 2.94 yards per carry after contact, a 18.1% missed tackle rate, and a 59.1% carry success rate. With Wilson gone, the Packers’ options for backup running backs are Marshawn Lloyd, a 2024 3rd round pick who came into the league with upside, but who has been limited to 10 total snaps in two seasons in the league due primarily to injuries, and Chris Brooks, a passing down specialist with 82 career carries in three seasons in the league.

Lead back Josh Jacobs is an above average starter who has averaged 17.5 carries per game in 105 career games, while averaging 4.24 YPC, 3.09 yards per carry after contact, a 22.2% missed tackle rate, and a 51.4% carry success rate. However, the Packers are a run heavy team that gives a lot of carries to their running backs, so they will need a #2 running back capable of being used more than the average backup, especially since Jacobs has missed time with injury in five of seven seasons in the league and now is going into his age 28 season, an age where running backs start to decline, especially ones with a history of significant workloads (2,109 touches in seven seasons in the league).

In a best case scenario, Lloyd can stay healthy and prove why he was a third round rookie originally by stepping into Wilson’s old role effectively, leaving Brooks as the passing down specialist, but in a worst case scenario, Brooks will have to step into a role he is probably not equipped for or Jacobs will have to be among the league leaders in carries, which he might not have the durability to do effectively at this stage of his career. Depth is a significant concern at a position group that is headlined by an above average, but aging lead back.

Grade: B+

Edge Defenders

On defense, the Packers lost a pair of edge defenders, Rashan Gary, who was sent to the Cowboys in a move that netted them a mid-round pick and saved them 19.5 million, and Kingley Enagbare, who signed with the Jets as a free agent. Enagbare was mediocre last season across 468 snaps, totaling 2 sacks, 6 hits, and a 9.9% pressure rate, but Gary was solid across 653 snaps, totaling 7.5 sacks, 12 hits, and a 13.0% pressure rate and, with neither being replaced and Parsons coming off of a significant injury that could cost him time at the start of the season, there are reasons for significant concern at the edge defender position.

Fortunately, Parsons is one of the best edge defenders in the league when healthy and has been since his rookie season. His run defense is only average, but he has totaled 65 sacks, 80 hits, and a 18.8% pressure rate in 77 career games, including 12.5 sacks, 15 hits, and a 18.1% pressure rate in 14 games last season, and he is still only going into his age 27 season. Even if he is at less than his best, he would probably be a well above average edge defender and, even if he misses some time at the start of the season, he could still play more than the 14 games he played last season.

With Gary and Enagbare gone and Micah Parsons coming off of a major injury, the Packers will be counting on Lukas Van Ness in a big way. A first round pick in 2023, Van Ness was a disappointment in his first two seasons in the league, playing a total of 793 nondescript snaps, while pressuring the quarterback at just a 8.9% rate. However, Van Ness showed a lot more potential in 2025, albeit across only 263 snaps in 9 games in an injury plagued season. He especially played well as a pass rusher, with 1.5 sacks, 7 hits, and a 15.2% pressure rate, and he played at a solid level against the run as well. 

It was a limited sample size and Van Ness could regress in 2026, but he is still only going into his age 25 season and has always had a lot of talent, so it wouldn’t be a surprise if he was an above average starter. The Packers somewhat surprisingly picked up his 5th year option for 2027 this off-season, guaranteeing him 13.752 million, so they clearly still believe in his potential and they could be rewarded for continuing to take a chance on him. 

Behind Parsons and Van Ness, the Packers have Barryn Sorrell, a 2025 4th round pick who struggled across 178 snaps as a rookie, and Dani Dennis-Sutton, a 4th round pick in this year’s draft who would likely struggle if he had to play a significant rookie year role. This position group has a lot of upside if Parsons and Van Ness both stay healthy and play to their potential, but there is a good chance that doesn’t happen and the Packers’ alternative options are below average.

Grade: B+

Interior Defenders

The one big free agent addition the Packers made this off-season was interior defender Javon Hargrave, who they signed to a 2-year, 23 million dollar deal. Hargrave is going into his age 33 season and isn’t quite as good as he was in his prime, but he still played pretty well in 2025, making up for his below average run defense with 3.5 sacks, 3 hits, and a 10.5% pressure rate as a pass rusher. He could continue declining in 2026, but it wouldn’t be hard for him to be an upgrade at the interior defender position, where every other interior defender struggled other than Devonte Wyatt, whose 2025 season ended prematurely due to a fractured ankle.

The Packers also could get a healthier season out of Wyatt, who was limited to 10 games last season. Wyatt is similar to Hargrave, struggling against the run, but totaling 16 sacks, 12 hits, and a 12.1% pressure rate in 57 career games. Wyatt could struggle to return to form, coming off of a significant injury, and his struggles against the run in his career have limited the 2022 1st round pick to an average of 26.6 snaps per game in his career, but he was averaging 37.9 snaps per game last season before he got hurt and, even if he isn’t 100%, he should be an upgrade over the players who filled in for him down the stretch last season when he was out.

In Wyatt’s absence, the Packers were led in snaps played at the interior defender position by Karl Brooks (618 snaps) and Colby Wooden (587 snaps), who both struggled. Wooden is gone and, while Brooks remains, he should play a smaller role this season. Brooks also has some bounce back potential because, while he has always struggled as a run defender, his pressure rate of 6.4% in 2025 was a career low, as the 2023 6th round pick totaled a 9.2% pressure rate in the first two seasons of his career. The Packers also added further depth at the interior defender position by using a 3rd round pick on Chris McClellan, though he was a reach who is likely to struggle as a rookie. This position group still has some issues, but they should be better than a year ago.

Grade: B

Linebackers

The Packers also didn’t retain linebacker Quay Walker and, while he was mediocre last season, he played 900 snaps in 14 games and his replacement Zaire Franklin figures to be a downgrade. Franklin has played an average of 1,121 snaps per season over the past four seasons, but he was never more than an average linebacker, he struggled mightily in 2025, and now is heading into his age 30 season and is likely to continue struggling.

Fortunately, their other starting linebacker Edgerrin Cooper is one of the best linebackers in the league, playing at an above average level against the run and in coverage across 489 snaps as a second round rookie in 2024 and then continuing to play at a high level across 1,046 snaps in 2025. Still only in his age 25 season, it is possible his best days are still ahead of him and he has the upside to be an All-Pro caliber player. Isaiah McDuffie remains as the third linebacker, a role in which he has played 571 snaps per season over the past three seasons and has mostly struggled. Edgerrin Cooper elevates an otherwise below average group by himself.

Grade: B

Secondary

The Packers’ secondary largely remains the same this season as it was last season. Nate Hobbs was released for cap reasons, but he only played 358 middling snaps in 11 games in an injury plagued 2025 season, so he won’t be missed much, especially since the Packers added Benjamin St. Juste in free agency and Brandon Cisse in the second round of the draft to replace him. St. Juste and Cisse will compete for roles with holdovers Keisian Nixon (1,014 snaps), Carrington Valentine (780 snaps), and Javon Bullard (724 snaps). None of them are above average starters, but the Packers legitimately go five deep with starting caliber cornerbacks, depth that could easily come in handy this season.

Nixon was the de facto #1 cornerback last season, leading the team in cornerback snaps, but he was only a marginal starter. He also played at a similar level across snap counts of 808 and 1,018 in 2023 and 2024 respectively. In a deeper cornerback room this year, he isn’t guaranteed to remain a starter or to play as many snaps. Carrington Valentine was mostly an injury replacement for Nate Hobbs last season, but he was the Packers’ best cornerback, continuing to show the potential he showed across 546 snaps in 2024. The 2023 7th round pick isn’t more than a solid starter, but he has proven he belongs in the starting lineup and should have a good chance to remain there, even in a deeper cornerback room.

Javon Bullard is also probably locked into his job, not because he is more than an average starter, but because he is the best pure slot specialist on the roster. Bullard is also a 2024 2nd round pick who is only going into his age 24 season, so he could have further untapped upside. Benjamin St. Juste comes over from the Chargers, where he only played 356 snaps last season, but the 2021 3rd round pick is pretty experienced, starting 47 of the 70 games he has played in his career and performing about average. St. Juste will compete for a starting role, as will the rookie Cisse, who gives them an outside cornerback with upside that they didn’t have previously, but who might spend his rookie year as a deep reserve.

Things remain the same at safety, which is a good thing. Xavier McKinney is one of the best safeties in the league and has been for three seasons. Still only going into his age 27 season, I would expect that to continue in 2026. Evan Williams is not as good, but the 2024 4th round pick has developed into a solid starter, showing potential across 473 snaps as a rookie and proving that was not a fluke across 903 snaps last season. This is a solid secondary, even if they lack a true #1 cornerback.

Grade: B+

Kicker

The Packers’ kicking game was a weakness in 2025 and pretty much single handedly cost them the game in the first round of the playoffs. Brandon McManus had been a solid kicker for them for years, but he was playing through injury in 2025 and, as a result, was arguably the worst kicker in the league, costing the Packers 12.83 points compared to an average kicker last season. Lucas Havrisik was the kicker for three games last season and he was about league average, but even with last season included, he has cost his teams 0.78 points per game over his career, so he isn’t a good starting option either. 

To remedy this, the Packers used a 6th round pick on kicker Trey Smack and cut McManus, leaving Smack to compete with Havrisik, a job Smack should be considered the heavy favorite to win. It is tough to know what to expect from rookie kickers, but Smack was a good enough college kicker to deserve to be drafted, hitting 82.8% of his field goals in his collegiate career, including 10-13 from 50 yards or more. He should have a good chance to at least be an average kicker as a rookie, which will be a big boost to the Packers, given how terrible their kicking game was last season.

Grade: B

Conclusion

The Packers were better than their record in 2025, despite numerous injuries to key players. This season they should be healthier and it is easy to see how they could be better. However, many of the players who were injured last season suffered significant injuries that could affect them into 2026. The Packers also lost numerous players this off-season and didn’t have a first round pick to use to replace them. The Packers should still be in playoff contention this season, but I wouldn’t call them true Super Bowl contenders.

Prediction: 10-7, 2nd in NFC North

Arizona Cardinals 2026 NFL Season Preview

Quarterback

In 2024, the Cardinals finished at 7-10, but their offense ranked 6th in schedule adjusted efficiency, with their big problem being their defense, which ranked 27th. After numerous off-season additions on defense, the Cardinals went into 2025 as a sleeper team. However, their offense fell to 18th in schedule adjusted efficiency in 2025, largely as a result of injuries, most notably quarterback Kyler Murray, who missed 12 games, and feature back James Conner, who missed 14 games, while their defense failed to improve significantly, ranking 26th in schedule adjusted efficiency, also largely due to injuries. In total, the Cardinals finished the 2025 season with the most adjusted games lost to injury of any team in the league and those injuries largely affected key players on both sides of the ball.

Going into 2026, it is reasonable to expect better injury luck and the Cardinals had some bounce back potential if they played their off-season right. However, the moves they have made have not set them up for success next season. They opted to move on from quarterback Kyler Murray, tired of his consistent injuries. Murray was guaranteed 36.8 million in 2026, which the Cardinals are eating to avoid paying him another 36.335 million in 2027, 19.5 million of which would have guaranteed had he been on their roster in 2026.

Murray’s 2026 guarantees along with other moves the Cardinals made this off-season that left behind dead cap put the Cardinals in a tough salary cap situation this off-season, as they ranked 5th in the NFL with 73.3 million in dead cap on the books, while their active cap spending ranks 4th lowest in the NFL. They did not make significant additions in free agency and are left with a quarterback room of Jacoby Brissett, a veteran journeyman backup who started in Murray’s absence last season, Gardner Minshew, an equally low upside veteran journeyman backup, and 3rd round pick Carson Beck, who at least gives this quarterback room some upside, but who also probably isn’t their long-term solution at the quarterback position. 

James Conner remains on the roster and is set to return from his injury, but, given that he is going into his age 31 season and coming off of a major injury, it is fair to question what the Cardinals can expect from him this season. The Cardinals don’t seem convinced he can return to form, making him cut his salary from 8 million to 3 million to stay on the roster, signing ex-Falcons running back Tyler Allgeier to a 2-year, 12.25 million dollar deal in free agency, one of the few significant signings they made this off-season, and then using the 3rd overall pick on running back Jeremiyah Love. It’s very possible that neither Conner nor Allgeier see much action this season because of the addition of Love, a move I will get more into later.

The Cardinals’ defense should be at least somewhat better this season, due to better health, but they are likely to remain below average. The Cardinals fired head coach Jonathan Gannon, which wasn’t a bad decision in of itself, but the Cardinals were not a hot destination for head coaching candidates, leading to them hiring Mike LaFleur, who was the offensive coordinator for the Rams last season, but did not call plays. LaFleur will call plays in Arizona and his play calling history consists of two very underwhelming seasons with the New York Jets in 2021 and 2022. He also brings in Nathaniel Hackett as his offensive coordinator and, while he won’t call plays, Hackett has been one of the worst offensive coordinators in the league in recent years, most recently holding that title in 2023 and 2024, also with the New York Jets.

Jacoby Brissett is considered the heavy favorite to start at quarterback. He has made 65 career starts in 10 seasons in the league and has largely been unimpressive, completing 61.9% of his passes for an average of 6.57 YPA, 76 touchdowns, and 32 interceptions. Last season, he completed 64.9% of his passes for an average of 6.94 YPA, 23 touchdowns, and 8 interceptions in 12 starts and, while the Cardinals’ problems were not all his fault, he went just 1-11. Now going into his age 34 season, I wouldn’t expect him to suddenly get any better in 2026.

Gardner Minshew is a similar veteran option, making 47 career starts and completing 63.1% of his passes for an average of 6.88 YPA, 68 touchdowns, and 35 interceptions. He is only going into his age 30 season, so he is younger than Brissett, but he has been especially bad over the past few seasons, completing 63.1% of his passes for an average of 6.80 YPA, 27 touchdowns, and 23 interceptions in 25 starts since 2022, and, like Brissett, he is who he is at this stage of his career, which is a backup caliber quarterback. 

Minshew figures to open the year as the backup and it is possible the Cardinals would go to the rookie Beck before Minshew if they want to give Beck a chance to prove what he has in what should be a lost season, before the Cardinals have to make a decision on whether or not to draft a quarterback with what should be another high draft pick in a better quarterback class in 2027. Overall, this is one of the worst quarterback rooms in the league, which is one of the biggest reasons why this is likely to be one of the worst teams in the league.

Grade: C+

Running Backs

As I mentioned, the Cardinals used the 3rd overall pick on running back Jeremiyah Love. The Cardinals were in a tough spot picking 3rd. Their two biggest needs, quarterback and offensive line, would have been reaches at 3, with the next quarterback coming off the board at 13 and no offensive linemen coming off the board until 9. The Cardinals’ best option was probably to draft linebacker Arvell Reese to fill a lesser need, but instead the Cardinals opted to take Love, who some felt was the best player in the draft, but who played a position of relative low value and who didn’t fill a need, with Tyler Allgeier and James Conner already on the roster.

There is one benefit to drafting a running back and that is the fact that running backs tend to be the most NFL ready of any position and can make a big immediate impact as a result. However, they are also the most injury prone position and they have a relatively short career span. On top of that, as a result of their short careers and injury proneness, they tend to be one of the least valued positions from a salary standpoint. Part of the benefit of having a player on a rookie deal is that they are much cheaper than their counterparts would be in free agency and if the Cardinals had taken a linebacker or an offensive lineman at 3, they could have gotten them for much less than a comparable player on the open market. 

The salary of the 3rd overall pick would have ranked 33rd among offensive tackles, 19th among guards, and 12th among linebackers in terms of average annual salary. However, rookie salaries are not based on positional value, so Love is already the 8th highest paid running back in the league in terms of average annual salary, meaning he will have to be an elite running back right away to give the Cardinals any sort of excess value while on his rookie deal. 

Taking a running back would make some sense for a team that is ready to win now, given how short their careers are and how NFL ready they usually are coming out of college, but every other move the Cardinals made this off-season suggests they are taking a long view and rebuilding, so Love does not fit the Cardinals’ overall team building strategy. Also, while Love is an upgrade over what the Cardinals had at running back before and figures to get a heavy workload as a rookie, both as a runner and a receiver, he isn’t so much better than the Cardinals’ other running backs to justify being taken 3rd overall.

Based on their salaries, Allgeier figures to be the favorite for the #2 running back job over Conner. Allgeier has experience backing up a highly drafted running back, rushing for 1,035 yards and 3 touchdowns on 210 carries (4.93 YPC) as a rookie in 2022, only to be replaced by Bijan Robinson and be limited to just 466 carries over the last three seasons combined as a result. Allgeier has averaged 4.25 YPC with 3.27 yards per carry after contact, a 22.5% missed tackle rate, a 51.6% carry success rate, and 1.06 yards per route run in his career and had proven he deserved to be a starter somewhere again, which is probably what he thought he would be when he signed in Arizona, before the Love selection pushed him back into a backup role.

Conner, meanwhile, was actually one of the most effective running backs in the league in 2023 and 2024, averaging 4.81 YPC across 444 carries, with 3.60 yards per carry after contact, a 27.5% missed tackle rate, a 50.7% carry success rate, and 1.23 yards per route run. There is a good chance he wouldn’t be anywhere near that good in 2026, coming off a major injury and going into his age 31 season, but he could have still been effective in tandem with Allgeier. Now it is unclear what, if any, role he will have in this offense unless Love or Allgeier get hurt. It is possible the Cardinals look to trade him before the start of the season, but that trade probably wouldn’t net them much of a return.

The Cardinals also have 2024 3rd round pick Trey Benson, who was originally drafted to potentially replace Conner long-term. Benson only had 63 carries as a rookie behind Conner though and then, when he got a chance to prove himself in Conner’s absence last season, he also got hurt and finished last season with just 29 carries. He has averaged 4.90 YPC on those 92 career carries with 3.41 yards per carry after contact, a 26.1% missed tackle rate, a 44.6% carry success rate, and 1.03 yards per route run, so he has shown potential and between that and his draft position he might get to stay on the roster in 2026 as a 4th back, but he won’t have any role unless multiple backs ahead of him on the depth chart get hurt and it might be in both sides’ interest for the Cardinals to explore a trade for him, though that trade likely wouldn’t net the Cardinals much in return either. This is a deep backfield, but the Cardinals probably committed too much of their limited resources to a relatively low value position.

Grade: B+

Offensive Line

All of the Cardinals’ running backs could be held back from their potential by the Cardinals continued issues at quarterback and on the offensive line. The Cardinals did use their second round pick on an offensive lineman, taking Chase Bisontis, who will probably start right away at right guard and be an upgrade by default over Isaiah Adams, a 2024 3rd round pick who has struggled across 16 career starts, 11 of which came last season, but as a rookie Bisontis alone won’t save this offensive line from having issues and he isn’t even necessarily guaranteed to start as a rookie.

Their biggest issue is right tackle, where the Cardinals only added 7th round pick Jayden Williams through the draft, leaving veteran Elijah Wilkinson as their only real starting option. Wilkinson has mostly been a reserve in his career, starting 62 games in 9 seasons in the league and, while he did start all 17 games for the Falcons last season, it was only because expected right tackle Kaleb McGary got hurt and Wilkinson struggled, as he has as a starter for most of his career. Making matters even worse, Wilkinson is now going into his age 31 season and could be even worse in 2026 as a result. He is unlikely to be an upgrade over Jonah Williams and Kelvin Beachum, even though both of them struggled at right tackle last season.

The Cardinals did add veteran Isaac Seumalo in free agency on a 3-year, 31.5 million dollar deal and he has been a solid starter throughout his career (104 career starts), but he is also on the wrong side of 30, going into his age 33 season, and could decline in 2026, perhaps significantly. He might be an upgrade over departed veteran Evan Brown, who was only a marginal starter in 2025, but that is not a guarantee, given Seumalo’s age.

At center, the Cardinals have another older offensive lineman, Hjalte Froholdt, who is going into his age 30 season. Froholdt was the Cardinals’ second best offensive lineman last season and has been a solid starting center for them for three seasons and he isn’t totally over the hill yet, but any decline from him in 2026 would further hurt an offensive line that is already very questionable, with three starters 30 years of age or older and a rookie second round pick starting.

The Cardinals’ best offensive lineman remains left tackle Paris Johnson, the 6th overall pick in the 2023 NFL Draft, who has developed into an above average starting left tackle over the past two seasons. Still only in his age 25 season, I would expect him to remain at least an above average starter for several more years and he could even improve further. He elevates the overall grade of an otherwise underwhelming offensive line by himself.

Aside from Isaiah Adams, who will likely be benched at right guard for the rookie Bisontis, the Cardinals’ reserve options are Matt Pryor, who has mostly struggled across 40 career starts at guard and tackle and is now heading into his age 32 season, Oli Udoh, a below average swing tackle option who has struggled in 22 career starts, and Jon Gaines, a hybrid guard/center option who went in the 4th round in 2023 and wasn’t too bad in the first 5 starts of his career down the stretch last season. Overall, the Cardinals’ offensive line is likely to be a weakness.

Grade: B-

Receiving Corps

The Cardinals’ receiving corps was the strength of their offense last season. In fact, they were one of just four teams to have two receivers surpass 1000 yards receiving, with tight end Trey McBride and wide receiver Michael Wilson finishing with slash lines of 126/1239/11 and 78/1006/7 respectively. However, a big part of why they were so productive is because this team was so pass heavy last season, ranking 1st in pass attempts with 649, as opposed to last in run attempts with 366. With Jeremiyah Love and Tyler Allegeier being added and James Conner and Trey Benson returning from injury, the Cardinals figure to try to run a lot more this season than they did last season, which should lead to reduced production from both McBride and Wilson.

Last season was a career high for McBride in receiving, but his 1.78 yards per route run average was actually only 6th among tight ends and was behind both his 2.03 yards per route run average in 2023 and his 2.14 yards per route run average in 2024, when he had slash lines of 81/825/3 and 111/1146/2 respectively. McBride also averaged just 7.33 yards per target last season, down from 7.79 between 2023 and 2024. Wilson set a new career high in yards per route run last season with 1.59, but that isn’t that much higher than the 1.22 yards per route run he averaged between 2023 and 2024 and the increase was largely the result of higher usage rather than improved efficiency, as his 7.98 yards per target was down from his 8.63 yards per target between 2023 and 2024.

If McBride and Wilson have similar efficiencies in 2026 as they did in 2025, I would expect both of them to see their production decrease as they are likely to run fewer routes and see fewer targets in 2026. The good news is McBride is still clearly one of the best tight ends in the league and still very much in his prime in his age 27 season, while Wilson is only in his age 26 season and has been a relatively efficient target throughout his three seasons in the league, since being drafted in the 3rd round in 2023.

The Cardinals other outside wide receiver Marvin Harrison had a down year statistically, going from a 62/885/8 slash line in 2024 to a 41/608/4 slash line in 2025, but that was largely because he missed 5 games. His yards per route run was about the same in 2025 (1.58) as it was in 2024 (1.63) and, in games where both he and Wilson played, Harrison had 73 targets to just 58 for Wilson. Harrison was also the more efficient target between him and Wilson, averaging 8.33 yards per target, up from 7.63 in 2024. Harrison was also the 4th overall pick in the 2024 NFL Draft and is still only going into his age 24 season, so it shouldn’t be a surprise if Harrison outproduces Wilson in 2026 like he did in 2024 if both stay healthy like they did in 2024.

Even with Harrison missing five games last season, the Cardinals didn’t have another wide receiver behind Harrison and Wilson with more than 206 yards (Greg Dortch) and no other wide receivers averaged more than 1.06 yards per route run (Zay Jones). The Cardinals let both Dortch and Jones go this off-season and signed veteran Kendrick Bourne to try to upgrade the #3 receiver spot. Bourne isn’t a massive upgrade or anything, but he has a career 1.49 yards per route run average and averaged 1.53 yards per route run last season. He is going into his age 31 season and, as long as McBride, Wilson, and Harrison are healthy, he figures to not have a big role in this offense, but he is a better insurance policy than they had last season. The Cardinals also used a 5th round pick on Reggie Virgil, although that was more for the long-term and I don’t expect him to be any higher than 4th on the depth chart in year one.

At tight end, the Cardinals have Elijah Higgins, who has been a decent #2 tight end, averaging 1.13 yards per route run, while being a decent blocker. The Cardinals also have Tip Reiman, who the Cardinals brought in with a 3rd round pick in 2024, but he struggled mightily on 451 snaps as a rookie, before missing all but 98 snaps in four games with an ankle injury last season. He will probably never develop into a useful receiver and has averaged just 0.38 yards per route run in his career, but he does have some upside as a blocker if he is past the injury that prematurely ended his 2025 season. This is a pretty impressive group, led by Trey McBride, Michael Wilson, and Marvin Harrison, with better depth options than a year ago.

Grade: B+

Interior Defenders

As I mentioned earlier, the Cardinals’ defense was expected to be better in 2025 than 2024 because they made some off-season additions, but they were not better because of all of the injuries they had. One player who exemplifies both sides of that is interior defender Walter Nolen, whose selection in the first round of the 2025 NFL Draft could have boosted this defense significantly, but he didn’t really because he was limited to 169 snaps in six games. The good news is Nolen showed a lot of promise in his limited action, with a 15.2% pressure rate and decent run defense on top of that. That is a very small sample size and I wouldn’t expect him to be that good over a full season, but he clearly has a huge upside in his second season in the league if he can stay healthy.

The Cardinals also added veteran interior defenders Calais Campbell and Dalvin Tomlinson last off-season. Campbell played well across 524 snaps, but Tomlinson struggled across 555 snaps and neither were brought back this off-season. To replace them, the Cardinals signed veterans Roy Lopez and Andrew Billings, who will compete for roles with holdovers Darius Robinson and Dante Stills. Overall, they are an underwhelming bunch.

Roy Lopez is probably the best of the bunch. He has only played 469 snaps per season over his career, with a maximum of 557 snaps in a season, but he is a decent rotational player who is capable against the run and as a pass rusher (7.0% pressure rate over the past four seasons). Darius Robinson was a first round pick in 2024 and still has upside, but his career is off to a disastrous start, as he was limited to 184 snaps in 6 games as a rookie and then struggled mightily across 507 snaps in 15 games last season. In total, he has just a 3.2% pressure rate in his career, while also struggling mightily against the run. Even if he takes a step forward in year three, he has a long way to go to even be a capable rotational player.

Billings and Stills, meanwhile, figure to be liabilities. Billings was a solid player in his prime, but struggled in 2025, playing below average both as a run stopper and pass rusher (5.4% pressure rate) across 510 snaps, and he is now going into his age 31 season, so he figures to continue struggling. Stills, meanwhile, has been a below average player across snap counts of 533, 532, and 548 in three seasons in the league since being drafted in the 6th round in 2023. The Cardinals have one high upside interior defender in Walter Nolen, but he is still very unproven and the rest of this position group is underwhelming.

Grade: B-

Edge Defenders

One player the Cardinals added last off-season who actually stayed healthy and lived up to expectations was edge defender Josh Sweat, who had 12 sacks, 6 hits, and a 13.2% pressure rate, while providing solid run defense. Sweat has consistently been an above average player in recent years and has totaled 45 sacks, 48 hits, and a 12.4% pressure rate in 82 games over the past five seasons combined, while only missing three games total over that stretch. Still only in his age 29 season, he should continue playing at a similar level in 2026.

Zaven Collins (543 snaps), Baron Browning (519 snaps), and Jordan Burch (504 snaps) all played significant roles for the Cardinals last season at the edge defender position and they should remain in the edge defender rotation, along with BJ Ojulari, who missed 9 games with injury last season, but played 25.5 snaps per game when on the field. Collins was the Cardinals’ second best edge defender, playing at an above average level against the run and adding 1.5 sacks, 7 hits, and a 13.2% pressure rate as a pass rusher. Collins has been above average as an edge defender in each of the past three seasons, averaging 593 snaps per season, while totaling 10 sacks, 13 hits, and a 11.6% pressure rate in 51 games. Still only in his age 27 season, I would expect more of the same from him in 2026.

Baron Browning has been a decent edge defender in each of the past four seasons, averaging 478 snaps per season over that stretch. He is a below average run defender, but has totaled 13.5 sacks, 16 hits, and a 13.3% pressure rate in 52 games as a part-time player in those four seasons. Burch and Ojulari are not as good of options, but both have upside. Burch was a 3rd round pick in 2025 and struggled both against the run and as a pass rusher (6.8% pressure rate), but he could be better in year two. BJ Ojulari went in the 2nd round in 2023, was decent across 409 snaps as a rookie, but then missed a year and a half with a torn ACL and struggled upon his return. However, he is still only going into his age 24 season and could bounce back in 2026, another year removed from his injury. This is a solid, but unspectacular position group overall.

Grade: B

Linebackers

The Cardinals’ linebacking corps was bad last season and is likely to be better this season, but mostly by default. Mack Wilson and Akeem Davis-Gaither began the year as the starters last season and then, after Wilson suffered a season ending injury that limited him to 521 snaps in 8 games, Cody Simon, a 4th round rookie, took over. Davis-Gaither, who was one of the worst linebackers in the league last season, left as a free agent this off-season, which is addition by subtraction. To replace Davis-Gaither, the Cardinals signed Jack Gibbens, who is a solid run stuffer but struggles in coverage. 

Gibbens will probably play a situational role, while Wilson and Simon are likely to be their top-2 linebackers. Wilson is a marginal starter at best, while Simon was mediocre as a rookie, but could be somewhat better in year two. This is still not a good linebacking corps, but Gibbens being added, Wilson coming back from injury, Simon going into his second year in the league, and Akeem Davis-Gaither no longer being on the roster are all positive developments. 

Grade: C+

Secondary

The Cardinals also had a lot of injuries in the secondary. Expected top cornerback Garrett Williams missed five games early in the year, was not the same upon his return, playing at an average level after playing at an above average level in 2024, and then ultimately his 2025 season ended in week 16 due to a torn achilles. Williams, a 3rd round pick in 2023, also missed time as a rookie with a torn ACL, so he has suffered a lot of injuries in a short period of time, which could cause him to not be at his best upon his return, whenever that may be, given how late in the season his achilles tear was.

Will Johnson, who was a second round rookie in 2025, also missed five games due to injury last season and durability concerns were the reason he fell to the second round originally, despite being a top-15 talent. Johnson had his moments as a rookie, but ultimately was just a marginal starter, failing to consistently show why he was a heavily regarded prospect even when he was on the field. He could take a step forward in year two, but that is not a guarantee and he could wind up missing more time too.

With Johnson and Williams missing time, Max Melton (423 snaps) and Denzel Burke (679 snaps) saw bigger than expected roles at cornerback. Melton was a second round pick in 2024, but he has struggled mightily across 988 career snaps. Burke also was below average in 2025, but he was better than Melton by default, despite only being a 5th round rookie. Burke and Melton will compete for the #3 cornerback role with Sean Murphy-Bunting and Starling Thomas, who both suffered season ending injuries before the 2025 season even started.

Both Murphy-Bunting and Starling Thomas were marginal players at best even before their injuries, so I wouldn’t expect much from either in 2026. Melton has the most upside of the bunch, but Burke, who probably has the lowest floor, might be the slight favorite for the #3 job at this point. With Williams likely to miss time with injury this season and Johnson a strong candidate to miss time as well, it is likely that multiple of these cornerbacks will see significant snaps this season, regardless of who actually wins the #3 cornerback job.

The Cardinals’ best defensive back last season was probably Jalen Thompson, but he left in free agency. To replace him, the Cardinals will either promote #3 safety Dadrion Taylor-Demerson and they will start free agent addition Andrew Wingard. Taylor-Demerson, a 4th round pick in 2024, has been decent in limited action thus far in his career, on snap counts of 258 and 452 over the past two seasons respectively, and he could be a decent starter long-term, though he is a projection to a larger role. Wingard, meanwhile, was decent as a reserve earlier in his career, but he struggled mightily across 962 snaps last season and is now going into his age 30 season, so he is probably best as a reserve. 

There is a good chance that whoever starts in place of Thompson is not as good as Thompson was last season. Budda Baker, meanwhile, remains as the other starting safety and he has been a solid starter for most of his career, but he declined a little bit in 2025 and is now going into his age 30 season, so he could easily continue declining, which would further hurt a secondary that already lost its best player from a year ago and that has a questionable cornerback group. Overall, this group looks like they will be a major liability this season.

Grade: C

Kickers

Chad Ryland was a decent kicker in 2024, adding about 1.81 points above an average kicker, but he slipped down to 6.45 points below an average kicker in 2025, 6th worst in the NFL. Ryland was also one of the worst kickers in the league as a rookie in 2023, when he cost his team 15.46 points compared to an average kicker. In total, his 20.10 points below average since entering the league are second worst in the league over that stretch. He is still relatively young, only going into his age 27 season, and he has shown he is capable of being a decent kicker, but it is probably more likely than not that he is below average again in 2026.

Grade: C

Conclusion

The Cardinals should be healthier this season than they were a year ago, when they went 3-14, but they let go of several veteran players this off-season in an attempt to rebuild and, even if they are healthier, they still will have one of the worst rosters in the league, with particular weaknesses at quarterback, on the offensive line, at the interior defender position, in the linebacking corps, and in the secondary. They should be in the mix for the #1 pick in 2027.

Prediction: 4-13, 4th in NFC West

Minnesota Vikings 2026 NFL Season Preview

Quarterback

Two off-seasons ago, the Vikings made the decision not to retain veteran quarterback Kirk Cousins as a free agent. Cousins had been their starting quarterback for six seasons and had a regular season record of 50-37-1, while making three Pro Bowls, but he only won one post-season game over that span. With Cousins going into his age 36 season at the time and coming off of a torn achilles, they felt they had reached their ceiling with Cousins and that it was not worth it to match the 4-year, 180 million dollar deal the Atlanta Falcons gave him, one that guaranteed him 100 million guaranteed.

Instead, the Vikings used the 10th overall pick in the 2024 NFL Draft on quarterback JJ McCarthy. Not re-signing Cousins proved to be the right move in hindsight, but McCarthy ended up missing his whole rookie season with injury. The Vikings’ season seemed doomed, but they shocked everyone by winning 14 games with expected backup quarterback Sam Darnold, who had a breakout season with a 66.2% completion percentage, 7.92 YPA, 35 touchdowns, and 12 interceptions.

Darnold was only on a one-year deal though and, rather than giving Darnold the big contract they avoided paying Cousins, they opted to stay the course with McCarthy coming back off his injury. With the money they saved by not paying Darnold, the Vikings invested in areas of need on the offensive and defensive lines. With a supporting cast that was even better than their supporting cast the year before, it was not hard to see how the Vikings could remain at least a playoff team if McCarthy lived up to the billing as the 10th overall pick.

Instead, McCarthy’s 2025 season went about as disastrously as it could have. Injuries to his ankle, head, and hand cost him a total of seven games and he was so bad when he did play that he wasn’t really missed when injured, even though replacement quarterbacks Carson Wentz and Max Brosmer also struggled. In total, the Vikings’ three quarterbacks combined for a passer rating of 75.3 in 2025, which ranked 30th out of 32 teams. 

Despite that, the Vikings still won 9 games and ranked 18th in schedule adjusted efficiency, as their supporting cast largely lived up to the billing. Their offense ranked just 26th in schedule adjusted efficiency because of their quarterback play, but their defense ranked 5th. It’s not hard to see how the Vikings could have been legitimate contenders in 2025 had they gotten even league average quarterback play and, going into 2026, it was not hard to see how they could have gotten right back into contention with an upgrade at quarterback if they kept the rest of their roster intact.

The Vikings found that upgrade in former Cardinals quarterback Kyler Murray and they got him for the league minimum because the Cardinals were still paying his full salary for 2026, releasing him in order to get out of further guarantees in 2027 that would have triggered had he been on the roster this off-season. That meant the Vikings could have kept the rest of their roster largely intact if they wanted to. Instead, the Vikings opted to shed salary and part with several veterans, which will hurt their post-season chances significantly. 

Murray is an upgrade at the quarterback position and a great value on a minimum salary, but he comes with some risks. The biggest concern with him is durability, as he has missed multiple games in four of the last five seasons, with 30 total games missed over that span. Murray has been an underwhelming passer in the past few seasons, completing 67.4% of his passes for an average of 6.60 YPA, 51 touchdowns, and 26 interceptions, so his success as a quarterback is largely dependent on his rushing ability and his athleticism. 

Murray has averaged 6.00 YPC on 532 carries with 32 touchdowns in 87 games in 7 seasons in the league, but the problem with that is it risks more injuries and the more injuries he suffers the more his athleticism could decline as he gets older. There is a reason why the Cardinals opted to cut ties with him. Murray gives the Vikings a floor at the quarterback position that they didn’t have last season, but it is unclear what kind of ceiling he has.

Both JJ McCarthy and Carson Wentz remain on the roster and will compete for the backup job. McCarthy still is only going into his age 23 season and has theoretical upside, but Wentz was the better quarterback last season, with a 85.8 passer rating to 72.6 for McCarthy. Wentz hasn’t been a full-time starter since 2021 and is now going into his age 34 season, but he is still a decent backup option at this stage of his career and should probably be considered the favorite for the backup job. The addition of Murray upgrades this quarterback room, but they are still below average overall.

Grade: C+

Offensive Line

The majority of the players the Vikings lost this off-season were on defense, which probably will not be as good as it was a year ago. However, their offensive supporting cast does remain mostly the same, as they bring back 13 of their top-15 in terms of snaps played on offense from a year ago. With better quarterback play expected and a similar offensive supporting cast, their offense should be better this season, although if their defense is worse by a similar amount as their offense is better, it wouldn’t necessarily lead to any more wins. 

The bigger of the two losses on offense is center Ryan Kelly. This one was not their choice, as Kelly opted to retire ahead of his age 33 season due to his history of concussions. Kelly’s concussions limited him to just 329 snaps in 8 games last season, so losing him isn’t a huge difference, but Kelly played at an above average level when on the field and they didn’t do anything to replace him, with former backups Blake Brandel and Michael Jurgens expected to compete for the starting role in Kelly’s absence.

Neither would be a good option. Brandel has more experience, starting 31 games in six seasons in the league, including 26 over the past two seasons, seeing action at both guard and center, but he has mostly struggled regardless of where he has played. In his age 29 season in 2026, Brandel is who he is at this stage of his career and figures to be a liability if he starts this season. Jurgens, on the other hand, is younger, only going into his age 26 season and his third season in the league, but he has also struggled across 309 career snaps and he was only a 7th round pick, so he didn’t come into the league with high expectations. Brandel is probably the better option by default, but it is very possible that both options see starts in 2026 and both struggle.

If there is a reason for optimism on this offensive line, it is a potential return to form by left tackle Christian Darrisaw, another year removed from the torn ACL that ended his 2024 season in the middle. Before the injury, Darrisaw consistently played at an All-Pro level, but upon his return in 2025, Darrisaw looked like a shell of himself, only playing at an average level at best and missing another seven games with lingering knee issues. 

It isn’t a guarantee he will be past his injuries in 2026, but if he is, he is still only going into his age 27 season, so he has obvious bounce back potential. If he is even close to his old form, that will be a big boost for this offense compared to a year ago. The Vikings are at least preparing themselves for the possibility that Darrisaw continues to deal with knee issues in 2026, signing Ryan Van Demark from the Bills and using a 3rd round pick on Caleb Tiernan to give them some added depth at the tackle position. 

Van Demark has shown flashes of potential in his career, but he has only made 6 starts and he is a 2022 undrafted free agent who is already going into his age 28 season, so it is far from a guarantee that Van Demark could translate those flashes of potential into a season-long starting role if needed. He is not a bad swing tackle option and Tiernan has potential as well, but Justin Skule, who started 9 games last year and signed elsewhere this off-season, wasn’t a bad swing tackle either and obviously the best case scenario would be for Darrisaw to return to form and neither Van Demark or Tiernan needing to see significant action.

The rest of this offensive line will remain the same from a year ago, at least in terms of personnel. Left guard Donovan Jackson is another reason for optimism on this offensive line, as he was decent in 14 starts as a rookie, but was not as good as you’d expect a first round pick to be, something that could change in 2026, as he has the potential to take a step forward, potentially a big step forward. He could also be healthier, after missing three games as a rookie.

A reason for concern is right tackle Brian O’Neill, who has consistently been an above average player in 120 career starts, but is now heading into his age 31 season. He hasn’t shown any signs of decline yet, but that could change this season, which would hurt this offensive line. The Vikings’ additions of depth at the tackle position could have just as much to do with O’Neill’s age and his expiring contract after the 2026 season as it does about the concerns with Darrisaw’s durability. 

Right guard Will Fries will likely continue playing at a similar level as he did in 2025, when he was a marginal starter. Fries has been a marginal starter in every season since he first became a starter with the Colts in 2022, with the exception being 2024, when he flashed a lot more potential than he ever had, but only in five games before breaking his leg and missing the rest of the season. 

That impressive five game stretch was enough for the Vikings to make Fries one of the highest paid guards in the league with a 5-year, 87.72 million dollar deal as a free agent last off-season, but thus far Fries has shown that five game stretch to be a fluke. It is possible he is better in 2026 another year removed from his injury, but it is also possible that he has never been capable of playing at that level for a full season, injury or not. This offensive line has some uncertainty, but they at least have the potential to be better than a year ago.

Grade: B

Receiving Corps

The less consequential of their two losses on offense this off-season is wide receiver Jalen Nailor, who finished with just a 29/444/4 slash line and 1.06 yards per route run last season. Nailor’s production was probably reduced by the Vikings’ poor quarterback situation, but he still finished a distant third among Vikings wide receivers in both total yardage and per route run yardage. The Vikings also probably upgraded on him by signing Jauan Jennings to a 1-year, 8 million dollar deal with incentives worth up to 13 million. 

A sparingly used wide receiver over the first four seasons of his career, Jennings was forced into a larger role in 2024 when the 49ers had many wide receiver injuries and, in his first significant role, he finished with a 77/975/6 slash line and 2.26 yards per route run, more than doubling his yardage total from his first four seasons combined (963). Jennings was not nearly as good in 2025, with a 55/643/9 slash line and 1.39 yards per route run, but he played through a lot of injuries early in the season and got better as the year went on. 

Jennings overestimated his value as a free agent and had to settle for a 1-year deal after turning down more lucrative multi-year deals earlier in the off-season, which is how the Vikings were able to get him for so cheap. His production will probably be capped by being the third wide receiver on an offense with a below average quarterback room, but he should still be an upgrade over Nailor. 

Justin Jefferson and Jordan Addison remain as the Vikings’ top-2 wide receivers. Both players had disappointing years in 2025 by their standards due to the quarterback situation. Jefferson had a 84/1048/2 slash line on an average of 1.88 yards per route run, after averaging 109/1641/9 per 17 games and 2.64 yards per route run in his first five seasons in the league prior to 2025, while Addison had a 42/610/3 slash line on 1.36 yards per route run, after slash lines of 70/911/10 and 63/875/9 on yards per route run averages of 1.50 and 1.74 in his first two seasons in the league in 2023 and 2024. Jefferson is still in his prime in his age 27 season, while Addison might not have reached his prime yet in his age 24 season. Both could easily have a bounce back season this year, though their quarterback situation is still below average and could keep them from their full statistical potential.

Top receiving tight end TJ Hockenson also had a disappointing year last year, with a 51/438/3 slash line on 1.05 yards per route run. The quarterback situation was part of the problem, but it is also possible Hockenson still was not 100% after a late 2023 torn ACL. Hockenson returned from that injury midway through 2024, but did not look like his old self, averaging 1.52 yards per route run, after averages of 1.60 and 1.89 in the previous two seasons, despite having a good quarterback under center in 2024. Hockenson is another year removed from the injury in 2026 though, and should also benefit from improved quarterback play. It remains to be seen if he will ever reach his old form again, but he is still relatively young in his age 29 season, so he has clear bounce back potential.

Hockenson is backed up by Josh Oliver, one of the best #2 tight ends in the league. An elite blocker, Oliver has also shown potential as a receiver in limited usage over the past three seasons, only catching 59 passes, but averaging 1.41 yards per route run. He will continue playing a similar role to the 473 snaps per season he has averaged since joining the Vikings three seasons ago. Also worth noting is #4 wide receiver Tai Felton, who was mediocre (1.19 yards per route run) while playing 46 snaps last season, but who was a third round pick in 2025 and has some long-term potential. With Jennings replacing Nailor and TJ Hockenson potentially being closer to 100% another year removed from his injury, this receiving corps should be better in 2026 than it was in 2025 and everyone should be more productive with a better quarterback situation.

Grade: A-

Running Backs

The Vikings strongly considered moving on from veteran running back Aaron Jones this off-season, but ultimately brought him back on a 5.56 million dollar salary, negotiated down from his originally scheduled 10 million dollar non-guaranteed salary. Jones was second on this team in carries last season with 132, but that was mostly because he played only 12 games, while Jordan Mason, who led the team with 159 carries, played in 16 games. In games where both played, Jones outcarried Mason 114-85.

Jones is now going into his age 32 season though, while Mason is going into his age 26 season and, with Jones’ salary cut down to about the same as Mason’s (5 million), it seems likely there will be closer to a 50/50 split when both backs are healthy this season. Mason is also the more durable back, missing just 7 games in four seasons in the league, while Jones has missed 23 in nine seasons in the league and, in addition to being significantly younger, Mason was also already by far the better runner last season, with the edge in yards per carry (3.41 vs. 2.67), yards per carry after contact (4.77 vs. 4.15), missed tackle rate (19.5 vs. 8.8%), and carry success rate (56.0% vs. 50.0%). Even with Jones being retained, Mason seems likely to lead this team in carries, yards, and touchdowns again this season.

Where Jones has the big edge is as a receiver, averaging 1.24 yards per route run in his career, compared to 0.46 for Mason, including a 1.07 to 0.32 edge in 2025. That figures to remain the case in 2026 and could lead to Jones having the edge in overall yards from scrimmage. The Vikings also added young depth to their running back room, using a 6th round pick on Demond Claiborne. He will start the season as the third running back at best, but he could see a significant role if Jones or Mason miss time and he could see a significant role in 2027 and beyond with both Jones and Mason set to hit free agency this off-season. This isn’t a bad backfield, but it isn’t a great one either.

Grade: B-

Interior Defenders

As I mentioned earlier, the Vikings lost several key defenders this off-season. In total, four of their top-12 in terms of snaps played last season are gone, without adequate replacements for most of them. The interior defender position was hardest hit, with Jonathan Allen (809 snaps) and Javon Hargrave (537 snaps) both getting released this off-season. Allen and Hargrave were heading into their age 31 and age 33 seasons respectively in 2026, were set to have 8.75 million and 15 million of non-guaranteed money on the books, and both left something to be desired as run defenders last season, but they were also both above average interior pass rushers, with pressure rates of 8.3% and 10.5% respectively, a significant part of why the Vikings’ defense was so effective last season.

The Vikings attempted to replace them in the first round of the draft with Caleb Banks, but that was likely a reach. Banks has great physical tools and a great upside as a result, but his tape frequently doesn’t line up with his measurables and he dealt with numerous injuries in his collegiate career, including a broken foot that will sideline him for at least part of the off-season. As a result of his durability issues and his overall lack of elite performance as a collegiate player, he only played a total of 929 snaps in five seasons at the University of Florida and it seems unlikely that he will be an adequate replacement for either Allen or Hargrave, let alone both, in year one.

The Vikings will also give bigger roles to Levi Drake Rodriguez, a 2024 7th round pick who was underwhelming across 461 snaps in the first significant action of his career last season, and Tyrion Ingram-Dawkins, a 2025 5th round pick who was underwhelming across 250 snaps as a rookie last season. Both could have untapped potential that they haven’t shown yet, but neither was a high draft pick, so they didn’t come into the league with high expectations or upside and have yet to do anything to show that they were drafted too low.

The one piece of good news at the interior defender position for the Vikings is they still have Jalen Redmond, who was arguably their best interior defender a year ago, playing 793 snaps, totaling 6 sacks, 3 hits, and a 9.5% pressure rate, and playing at an above average level against the run as well. Redmond went undrafted in 2023 and didn’t play a snap as a rookie, but he flashed a lot of potential across 208 snaps in 2024 and translated that to a larger role in 2025. He is a one-year wonder as an every down player and, already in his age 27 season, he may have reached his ceiling, but he could easily remain at least a solid every down interior defender for another season. He is the saving grace of an overall underwhelming position group.

Grade: B-

Edge Defenders

The Vikings also moved on from Jonathan Greenard via trade with the Eagles this off-season, saving 19 million and picking up a pair of third round picks in the process. Greenard ranked third among Vikings’ edge defenders in snaps played last season, but that was mostly because he missed five games with injury and, despite that, he still led the team with 47 total pressures, finishing the year with 3 sacks, 9 hits, and a 17.4% pressure rate. 

With the Vikings doing nothing to replace him, he leaves behind an edge defender room that has a solid starting duo of Dallas Turner and Andrew Van Ginkel, but that completely lacks depth behind them. Turner and Van Ginkel are heading in opposite directions career wise. Turner was a first round pick in 2024, showed promise across 302 snaps as a reserve during his rookie season, and then took a step forward in a larger role (702 snaps) in year two, totaling 8 sacks, 7 hits, and a 14.6% pressure rate with adequate run defense to boot. Still only in his age 23 season in 2026, Turner could just be scratching the surface on his talent and could easily continue improving in year three. He will likely be the Vikings’ top edge defender in 2026.

Van Ginkel, on the other hand, is going into his age 31 season and has shown signs of decline recently. He still had 7 sacks, 8 hits, and a 14.5% pressure rate in 2025, but he missed five games with injury and was a liability as a run defender. He could easily decline further in 2026, but will be needed to play a huge snap count with Greenard gone. No other pure edge defender had over 100 snaps last season outside of their top-3 guys and, while Jalen Redmond lined up on the edge on occasion last season when injuries hit, he was better on the interior and will be needed there even more this season with Allen and Hargrave gone.

Reserve options at edge defender for the Vikings include 2024 undrafted free agent Bo Richter, who has played 83 career snaps, Tyler Batty, a 2025 undrafted free agent who played 42 snaps as a rookie, and Chaz Chambliss, a 2025 undrafted free agent who played 25 snaps as a rookie. In limited action, those three combined for one total pressure in 2025. The Vikings also used a second round pick on Jake Golday, who played some edge defender in college and could be a little bit of a hybrid for them, but he is undersized for an edge player at 240 pounds and only rushed the passer 354 times in five seasons in his collegiate career. The Vikings’ lack of depth brings down their overall grade at the edge defender position significantly.

Grade: B-

Linebackers

Things remain the same at the linebacker position, with the exception of the addition of Jake Golday, who will likely play sparingly as a rookie, barring injuries, because this position group is already pretty deep. Blake Cashman was an above average every down linebacker for the third straight season in 2025, playing at his best against the run, but holding up in coverage as well. The concerns with Cashman are his age and his injury history, as he is going into his age 30 season and has never played every game in a season, including 10 games missed over the past three seasons combined. There is a strong likelihood that he either misses more time with injury this season and/or declines somewhat due to his age. 

Fellow starter Eric Wilson’s age is an even bigger concern, set to go into his age 32 season. Wilson was decent across 965 snaps last season, most among Vikings linebackers, but previously was a backup who played 1,013 total snaps from 2021-2024 and, given his age, it seems unlikely he will repeat his most productive season in recent years. Ivan Pace, the expected third linebacker, is younger, only going into his age 26 season, and he is a good option as far as #3 linebackers go. He will probably hold off Golday for the #3 job, even with Golday being a relatively high draft pick. This is a deep position group, but one with significant concerns.

Grade: B

Secondary

The other player the Vikings lost on defense last off-season was Harrison Smith, although that wasn’t their fault, as Smith is expected to retire ahead of what would have been his age 37 season in 2026. Smith was arguably still their best safety last season though, providing average to above average play both in coverage and against the run while playing 793 total snaps in 15 games. The Vikings have replacement options with upside, 2023 4th round pick Jay Ward, who has flashed potential across 314 career snaps, and 3rd round rookie Jakobe Thomas, but it is very possible that both are downgrades from Smith. Theo Jackson, a 2022 6th round pick who was decent across a career high 529 snaps last season, will also likely play a bigger role in Smith’s absence.

The Vikings like to play with three safeties on the field frequently in sub packages. Josh Mettelus, led Vikings safeties with 867 snaps last season, despite missing three games due to injury, and was decent. He was also decent across 1,063 snaps in 2023 and 990 in 2024 and, in his age 28 season in 2026, I would expect more of the same from him. He and Jackson will likely start together in base packages, with Ward and Thomas competing for sub package roles. 

The Vikings also added cornerback depth in free agency with the addition of James Pierre, after their nominal #3 cornerback Fabian Moreau played just 198 snaps last season. Pierre’s presence and Smith’s departure could lead to the Vikings playing fewer three safety sets and more three cornerback sets in sub packages. Pierre is heading into his age 30 season and has never played more than 415 snaps in a season in his career, but he excelled across 377 snaps last season, allowing just 14 catches on 33 targets with 9 pass deflections. That kind of came out of nowhere, as he had 7 pass deflections across 89 targets in his career prior to last season, and it seems unlikely he will continue playing at that level in 2026, especially given his age, but he could still be a useful player in a part-time role.

Byron Murphy and Isaiah Rodgers remain as the two starters at cornerback. A 2nd round pick in 2019, Murphy has started 96 of 104 games played in his career and has mostly been at least an average starter, but he has really come into his own with the Vikings over the past two seasons, with back-to-back above average seasons. Still only in his age 28 season, I would expect more of the same from him in 2026. Rodgers, meanwhile, was also an above average starter across a career high 963 snaps in 2025, after previously showing a lot of potential across snap counts of 525, 434, and 329 in 2021, 2022, and 2024 respectively (he missed 2023 due to a gambling suspension). He is still a one-year wonder as a full-time starter, but he could easily remain a solid starting option, also still only in his age 28 season. The Vikings’ secondary is the strength of their defense.

Grade: B+

Kicker

After a decent rookie year in which he was a league average kicker, Will Reichard, a 2024 6th round pick, had a great year in 2025, leading the league with 12.99 points added above average, hitting all 31 extra points, all 22 field goals less than 40 yards, and hitting 11 of 13 from 50+, tying for the league lead in 50+ yard field goals made, including a 62-yarder. Kickers are inconsistent and Reichard is a one-year wonder in terms of playing at that level, but he could easily have another very good season in 2026 and for years to come.

Grade: A

Conclusion

The Vikings’ offense should be better in 2026 due to an upgrade at quarterback, but their defense, which was the strength of the team in 2025, seems unlikely to be as good after losing several key contributors this off-season. Overall, the Vikings appear to have a below average roster. They are well coached on both sides of the ball, with head coach Kevin O’Connell in charge of the offense and defensive coordinator Brian Flores, a former head coach in his own right, in charge of the defense, but that might not be enough for this team to increase their win total from nine and get into the post-season.

Prediction: 9-8, 4th in NFC North

Chicago Bears 2026 NFL Season Preview

Quarterback

The Bears went 11-6 last season, but they had two things go their way that are unlikely to continue in 2026, a league best +22 turnover margin, a statistic that tends to be very inconsistent year-to-year, and a 7-4 record in games decided by 7 points or fewer, another statistic that tends to be very inconsistent year-to-year. In terms of schedule adjusted efficiency, which is much more predictive, the Bears ranked just 19th in the league last year at -0.91. Additionally, the Bears lost some key players on both sides of the ball this off-season, without adequately replacing some of them. 

Things aren’t all bad for the Bears going into 2026, however. For one, the Bears had one of the youngest offenses in the league, ranking 7th in snap weighted average age, and got better on that side of the ball as the season went on. On top of that, they should be healthier on defense, where they had the 7th most adjusted games lost to injury in the league last season, which seemed to disproportionately affect their best players. With talented players coming of age on offense and better health on defense, the Bears could easily finish better in schedule adjusted efficiency in 2026 than they did in 2025, though possibly not by a wide enough margin for them to match or exceed last season’s win total.

The most important young player on the Bears roster is quarterback Caleb Williams, the #1 overall pick in the 2024 NFL Draft. Williams struggled as a rookie, completing 62.5% of his passes for 6.30 YPA, 20 touchdowns, and 6 interceptions, while rushing for 6.04 YPC and no touchdowns on 81 carries, but he took a step forward in his second season in the league with an improved supporting cast and a new offensive minded head coach in Ben Johnson, completing 58.1% of his passes for 6.94 YPA, 27 touchdowns, and 7 interceptions, while rushing for 5.04 YPC and 3 touchdowns on 77 carries. 

Most importantly, Williams went from being sacked 68 times in 2024 to 24 times in 2025, partially due to an improved offensive line, but in large part due to significantly improved pocket presence. Williams still has room for improvement, especially when it comes to accuracy, as he had the 2nd lowest completion percentage over expected last season, but he is still only going into his age 25 season and could easily take another step forward in his third season in the league in 2026.

Williams will continue being backed up by Tyson Bagent, a 2023 undrafted free agent who has mostly struggled in limited action (4 starts, 149 pass attempts), completing 66.4% of his passes for an average of 6.15 YPA, 3 touchdowns, and 6 interceptions. Bagent is well liked by the coaching staff because of his football intelligence, but he is very limited, even for a backup. He would be a major liability for this offense if he had to play significant action in 2026.

Grade: B

Offensive Line

The biggest off-season loss for the Bears was center Drew Dalman, who shockingly retired ahead of what would have been only his age 28 season in 2026, after playing at an All-Pro level in 2025. To replace him, the Bears traded for veteran Garrett Bradbury and used a second round pick on Logan Jones, both of whom figure to be a massive downgrade from Dalman. Bradbury has started 105 games in seven seasons in the league, but has been marginal at best, while Jones has the upside to be a starter long-term, but was a bit of a reach in the second round and would likely be a liability if he started in year one. 

Further complicating things is the fact that left tackle Ozzy Trapilo, a 2025 2nd round pick who impressed in 6 starts down the stretch as a rookie, suffered a torn patellar tendon in the post-season and is likely to miss at least a big chunk of the regular season in 2026. In his absence, the Bears have several options, all of whom would be significant downgrades. Braxton Jones, who was the Bears starting left tackle before Trapilo, is probably the favorite for the job, but he has mostly been a liability in his career as a starter.

Theo Benedet also made starts last season, in between when Braxton Jones got hurt and when Trapilo took over the job, but the 2024 undrafted free agent was a liability in 8 starts, after not playing a snap as a rookie. Kiran Amegadjie was a 2024 3rd round pick, but he has only played 126 snaps in two seasons in the league and has struggled when on the field. The Bears also took a flyer on Jedrick Wills, a free agent signing who started 57 games at left tackle for the Browns after being selected by them in the first round in 2020. However, he was middling at best as a starter in Cleveland and frequently injured towards the end of his tenure, leading to him being out of the league entirely in 2025, after only playing 13 starts total in 2023 and 2024 combined. Whoever starts until Trapilo returns is almost definitely going to be a downgrade.

On top of that, left guard Joe Thuney is going into his age 34 season. Thuney has not shown any signs of decline yet and remained one of the best guards in the league in 2025, but there is no guarantee that continues. He would likely remain at least an above average guard even if he does decline this season, but any decline from him would just be another area of concern for a Bears offensive line that is unlikely to be as good as last year even if Thuney continues playing at the same level. 

Right guard Jonah Jackson remains, but he was the weak link on this offensive line last season, only playing at about a league average level. That is par for the course for Jackson, who has been about a league average starter across 78 starts in six seasons in the league. With Dalman gone, Trapilo hurt, and Thuney getting older, right tackle Darnell Wright could easily be the Bears’ top offensive lineman in 2026. 

The 10th overall pick in the 2023 NFL Draft, Wright has been an above average starter since entering the league and has also improved in every season in the league, culminating in a 2025 season in which he was one of the best right tackles in the league. Still only in his age 25 season, Wright should remain one of the best right tackles in the league for years to come. This offensive line is unlikely to be as good as it was last season, when they ranked 5th in run block win rate and 1st in pass block win rate, but this is still not a bad offensive line at the very least.

Grade: B

Receiving Corps

The Bears also lost DJ Moore this off-season, but they got a second round pick in return for him, got out of his 24.5 million dollar salary, and his absence will allow younger, more efficient receivers to take on bigger roles in this offense. Moore used to be a consistent 1000+ yard receiver, but he never had good chemistry in Caleb Williams and was starting to be phased out of the offense down the stretch last season, finishing the season with just a 50/682/6 slash line and 1.22 yards per route run on 85 targets. 

The two pass catchers with the highest upside are a pair of second year players, 2025 1st round pick Colston Loveland and 2025 2nd round pick Luther Burden. Loveland led the team in receiving last season with a 58/713/6 slash line, despite not playing the majority of the snaps until midway through the season and only receiving 82 targets. In the final 10 games of the season, Loveland had 47 catches for 597 yards and 6 touchdowns, which extrapolates to a 80/1015/8 slash line over 17 games, and his 1.86 yards per route run average ranked 5th among tight ends. Loveland could easily be one of the most productive tight ends in the league in 2026, in his second season in the league and first full season playing a majority of the snaps.

Burden, meanwhile, only played 402 snaps last season, but he saw his playing time increase as the season went on and finished with a 47/652/2 slash line on just 60 targets, while averaging 2.69 yards per route run, 3rd among wide receivers, only behind Puka Nacua and Jaxon Smith-Njigba. In the final 8 games of the season, when he still only played 36.4 snaps per game, he had 34 catches for 481 yards and 1 touchdown on just 45 targets, which extrapolates to a 72/1022/2 slash line over 17 games. With Moore gone, Burden has a clear path to an every down role and, while he might not be quite as efficient in a larger role, he has a huge upside and could easily end up leading this team in receiving. 

Burden will start opposite another young receiver Rome Odunze, the 9th overall pick in the 2024 NFL Draft. Odunze has not been as impressive in his career as Loveland and Burden, putting up a 54/734/3 slash line and 1.18 yards per route run on 101 targets in 2024 and a 44/661/6 slash line and 1.61 yards per route run on 90 targets in 2025, and he is likely to be the third option in this offense in 2026, but he is still only going into his age 24 season and has the talent to take a step forward in his third season in the league. Between Odunze, Loveland, and Burden, the Bears’ top-3 pass catching options are all 24 or younger with huge upsides.

The third wide receiver job could go to another young pass catcher too, as veteran free agent addition Kalif Raymond is set to compete with 3rd round rookie Zavion Williams and 2025 undrafted free agent Jahdae Walker. Williams and Walker have upside, but Williams was a reach in the third round and is very raw, while Walker only played 86 snaps as a rookie. Raymond is probably the favorite for the job, but he has never exceeded 616 receiving yards in 10 seasons in the league and now he is going into his age 32 season and coming off seasons of 17/215/2 and 24/289/1 in 2024 and 2025 respectively. Whoever wins the job will likely be a liability and it is possible all three players see action in limited roles.

The Bears could run more two and three tight end sets this season to mask their lack of depth at wide receiver. Cole Kmet is an experienced former starter, which is the reason why Loveland did not play much early last season. His career 1.19 yards per route run average is a bit underwhelming, but he is a solid #2 tight end. The Bears also used a third round pick on tight end Sam Roush to give them even more depth at the tight end position. This is a bit of a top heavy position group and it lacks experience, but they have a lot of upside.

Grade: B+

Running Backs

Another rookie who contributed on this offense in 2025 was running back Kyle Monangai, a 7th round pick who played sparingly early in the season, but earned close to a 50/50 split with lead back D’Andre Swift down the stretch, with 101 carries to 123 for Swift in the final nine games of the season. Their effectiveness levels were pretty similar too, as Monangai averaged 4.63 YPC, 2.95 yards per carry after contact, a 14.8% missed tackle rate, and a 50.9% carry success rate, while Swift averaged 4.87 YPC, 3.01 yards per carry after contact, a 17.5% missed tackle rate, and a 54.7% carry success rate. With Monangai going into his second season in the league, it wouldn’t be a surprise to see this being even closer to a 50/50 split in 2026.

Swift has mostly been a marginal starting running back in his career, averaging 4.47 YPC on 1,069 carries in six seasons in the league, which isn’t bad, but he has also consistently played behind good offensive lines and has only averaged 2.61 yards per carry after contact and a 16.3% missed tackle rate in his career. That being said, he forms a decent duo with Monangai, though both could be less efficient this season with the offensive line unlikely to be as effective.

Regardless of how the carry split breaks out, Swift will remain the primary passing down back, after having a 34/299/1 slash line and 1.02 yards per route run on 48 targets last season, while Monangai had a 18/164/0 slash line and 0.75 yards per route run on 30 targets. Swift has averaged 1.23 yards per route run in his career, while Monangai has no history of success in the passing game, with just 38 catches in his entire collegiate career. This is an underwhelming backfield, but Swift and Monangai are not a bad duo and help keep each other fresh on an offense built around the running game.

Grade: C+

Interior Defenders

As I mentioned earlier, the Bears defense should be better than they were last season because they should have better health, but they ranked 28th in schedule adjusted efficiency on defense last season, so, even if they are better this season, they still have a lot of concerns. The interior defender position was a position of weakness for them in 2025 and they didn’t do anything substantial to upgrade the position this off-season.

Gervon Dexter was their best interior defender and he had a solid season, struggling as a run defender, but making up for it by totaling 6 sacks, 7 hits, and a 9.6% pressure rate. A second round pick in 2023, Dexter has been a similar player throughout his career, with 13.5 sacks, 32 hits, and a 10.1% pressure rate in 49 career games, while consistently playing below average as a run defender. Still only going into his age 25 season, there is still time for Dexter to get better against the run, but that is not a guarantee.

Grady Jarrett struggled as the starter next to Dexter in 2025, both as a run defender and a pass rusher (5.2% pressure rate). Jarrett used to be an above average interior defender in his prime, but now going into his age 33 season, his best days are clearly behind him. He figures to continue to struggle, but because the Bears lack a better option, he is likely to continue seeing around the 610 snaps he played last season. 

The Bears did add veterans Neville Gallimore and Kentavius Street in free agency to give them some new reserve options, but both are unlikely to be upgrades and will likely be liabilities. Gallimore was a third round pick in 2020, but he has averaged just 333 snaps per season in six seasons in the league with the 467 snaps he played last season being a career high. He has also struggled throughout his career, especially struggling against the run, but also only managing just a career 5.8% pressure rate. 

Street has had a similar career, struggling across an average of 256 snaps per season in eight seasons in the league, with snap counts of 267, 280, and 216 over the past three seasons. The Bears do have Shemar Turner, a hybrid interior/edge player who they selected in the 2nd round of the 2025 NFL Draft, but he only managed to get on the field for 74 snaps as a rookie, which is a bad sign, considering how much the Bears needed defensive line help. He also didn’t get a single pressure as a rookie and struggled against the run. He could take a step forward in year two, but I wouldn’t count on him suddenly developing into a starting caliber player. Outside of Gervon Dexter, this is a very underwhelming position group and Dexter isn’t nearly good enough to save this group by himself.

Grade: C+

Edge Defenders

Things aren’t much better at the edge defender position, where the Bears also didn’t do anything substantial to upgrade this off-season. Montez Sweat is a solid all-around player, totaling 57 sacks, 72 hits, and a 11.8% pressure rate in 109 career games, while holding up as a run defender as well, but he is going into his age 30 season now and could start to decline. Austin Booker started opposite Sweat last season when healthy, playing 52.0 snaps per game in 10 games, but he managed just 4.5 sacks, 8 hits, and a 9.0% pressure rate and wasn’t much better against the run. A 5th round pick in 2024, Booker was even worse across 283 snaps as a rookie and, while he could still have some untapped potential, it is not a guarantee he is any better in 2026.

The Bears are expected to get Dayo Odeyingbo back from a torn achilles that ended his 2025 season after 369 snaps in 8 games and the Bears gave him a 3-year, 48 million dollar deal last off-season expecting him to start opposite Sweat, but that was an overpay at the time and it is unlikely Odeyingbo will be improved in his first season back from a major injury. A second round pick in 2021, Odeyingbo has shown flashes and is still only going into his age 27 season, but he has managed just 17.5 sacks, 33 hits, and a 8.2% pressure rate in 69 career games while playing inconsistently against the run. I would expect him to be a liability coming off of an injury.

Shemar Turner is also expected to have a role on the edge situationally, in addition to seeing some snaps on the interior, but he would have to improve significantly to be an asset at either position after a tough rookie year. Daniel Hardy is another deep reserve option, but the 2022 7th round pick has shown very little across 126 career snaps. With minimal improvements made to a position group that was a weakness last season, this position group figures to remain a weakness in 2026.

Grade: C+

Linebackers

The Bears’ linebacking corps was one of the units hit hard by injury last season, with starters TJ Edwards and Tremaine Edmunds limited to 568 snaps in 10 games and 813 snaps in 13 games respectively. Edwards should be healthier in 2026 and, while Edmunds was let go for salary reasons, the Bears arguably upgraded on him by signing Devin Bush to replace him in free agency. Edwards has been an above average linebacker both in coverage and against the run in his career and, outside of last season, he doesn’t really have an injury history, playing in every game from 2022-2024. The concern is he is now going into his age 30 season, but even if he declines a little bit, he should remain at least a solid linebacker and even at slightly less than his best it will be better to have him for all or most of the season in 2026 than only having him for about half the season in 2025.

Bush, meanwhile, was a disappointment early in his career as a 2019 1st round pick, but injuries were a big part of the reason for his early career struggles and he has broken out as an above average starter over the past two seasons, playing well both in coverage and against the run, while only missing one game between the two seasons. Still only going into his age 28 season, he should remain at least a solid linebacker in 2026, which makes him better than Edmunds, who was only about a league average starter even when healthy last season.

With Edwards and Edmunds missing time in 2025, reserves Noah Sewell (408 snaps) and D’Marco Jackson (260 snaps). Sewell was a major liability, but Jackson surprisingly played very well in limited action. It came in a very limited sample size and, in total, the 2022 5th round pick has played just 336 total snaps in his career, so he is a projection to a larger role, but he has at least earned the third linebacker and top reserve spot over Sewell and he deserves the 2-year, 7.5 million dollar deal the Bears gave him to stick around this off-season. As far as third linebackers go, he has more upside than most and, overall, I would call this an above average linebacking corps.

Grade: A-

Secondary

Cornerback is another position where the Bears were significantly hurt by injury. Expected top-2 cornerbacks Jaylon Johnson and Kyler Gordon played just 282 snaps in 7 games and 117 snaps in 3 games respectively due to injury. Johnson was one of the best cornerbacks in the league in 2023 and 2024 and, still only in his age 27 season, he could easily return to form in 2026. Gordon, meanwhile, is a solid slot cornerback who is also only going into his age 27 season.

Johnson and Gordon will play in three cornerback sets with Tyrique Stevenson, who was below average across 588 snaps last season, after the 2023 2nd round pick was below average across snap counts of 830 and 810 in the first two seasons of his career. Stevenson is still only going into his age 26 season and could still get better, but he could also easily remain below average this season. In the absence of Johnson and Gordon last season, Stevenson mostly played alongside Nahshon Wright (1,040 snaps) on the outside with CJ Gardner-Johnson (565 snaps) on the slot.  

Both were largely underwhelming, with Wright intercepting 5 passes, but getting beat deep frequently and Gardner-Johnson also frequently getting beat in coverage. However, their loss this off-season does thin out their depth, which would be a problem if one of their top-3 cornerbacks got hurt again. The Bears’ top reserve cornerback options are 4th round rookie Malik Muhammad and Terell Smith, a 2023 5th round pick who flashed potential across 584 snaps over the first two seasons of his career, before missing all of 2025 with a torn patellar tendon, missing his chance to show what he can do in a larger role.

The Bears also lost both starting safeties Kevin Byard and Jaquan Brisker this off-season, but they did do a decent job of replacing them. Byard was a solid starter, but he will be replaced by Dillon Thieneman, who was a steal with the 25th overall pick. Thieneman might not be as good as Byard was right away, but he also has the upside to be better than Byard was. Brisker, meanwhile, was underwhelming last season and will be replaced by another underwhelming veteran in Coby Bryant. With Jaylon Johnson and Kyler Gordon returning from injuries, the Bears’ secondary should go from a liability to at least a decent unit this season.

Grade: B

Kicker

Cairo Santos will be the Bears’ kicker for the 7th straight season and Santos’ 13th straight season in the league. Santos has largely been a league average kicker in his career, adding just 9.21 points above average across 154 career games. His age is becoming a bit of a concern, going into his age 34 season, but kickers often age pretty well, so he could easily remain an average starting kicker in 2026.

Grade: B

Conclusion

The Bears are unlikely to win as many close games or have as much success in the turnover margin in 2026 as they did in 2025 and they lost some key players this off-season, most notably center Drew Dalman, but they have a lot of young talent on offense that could take a step forward this season, while their defense should be healthier this season than it was last season. They could still struggle to win as many games as they did last season though and they are not a guarantee to make it back to the post-season.

Prediction: 9-8, 3rd in NFC North

Seattle Seahawks 2026 NFL Season Preview

Quarterback

In 2024, the Seahawks finished at 10-7 and missed out of the playoffs entirely, while ranking 14th in schedule adjusted efficiency. In 2025, the Seahawks won the Super Bowl after being one of the best teams in the league all season, finishing 14-3 and ranking 2nd in schedule adjusted efficiency. The reasons why they improved are numerous and they improved more on defense (12th in schedule adjusted efficiency to 1st) than on offense (15th in schedule adjusted efficiency to 8th), but we need to start by talking about their decision at the quarterback position. 

Geno Smith had been the Seahawks’ starting quarterback from 2022-2024 and had been decent, but he was in his mid-30s and wanted an expensive extension, ahead of the final year of his contract in 2025. Rather than giving them that extension, the Seahawks sent him to the Raiders for a third round pick and used some of the money they saved by not extending him to sign free agent Sam Darnold to a 3-year, 100.5 million dollar deal.

It was a risky decision at the time, as they were going from a known commodity to a quarterback with a wide range of potential outcomes. Darnold had a season in 2024 that was better than any season Geno Smith had ever had, completing 66.2% of his passes for an average of 7.92 YPA, 35 touchdowns, and 12 interceptions, but Darnold had never been anywhere near that good in the past, completing 59.7% of his passes for an average of 6.66 YPA, 63 touchdowns, and 56 interceptions in 56 career starts in the first six seasons of his career prior to 2024. Darnold was the 3rd overall pick in the 2018 NFL Draft and had always had talent, but it was unclear after the 2024 season if he was a true late bloomer or if 2024 would prove to be a flash in the pan.

Darnold wasn’t quite as good statistically in 2025 as he was in 2024, completing 67.7% of his passes for an average of 8.49 YPA, 25 touchdowns, and 14 interceptions (99.1 passer rating, as opposed to 102.5 in 2024), but he was good enough to win the Super Bowl with a team that improved in many areas from the year before. Most importantly, he was significantly younger and also a little cheaper than Geno Smith, who showed his age and dropped off in a big way in his first season with the Raiders. Essentially, the Seahawks swapped an older, declining, more expensive quarterback for a cheaper, younger quarterback and got a third round pick in the process.

Darnold and this whole offense also benefited from the Seahawks’ decision to change offensive coordinators from Ryan Grubb to Klint Kubiak, whose scheme helped the Seahawks get the most out of their offense. Kubiak parlayed last season’s success into a head coaching job with the Raiders this off-season, which is a blow to this offense. His departure is one of several reasons why the Seahawks might not be quite as good in 2026 as they were in 2025, but they still have one of the best rosters in the league and should be among the best teams in the league again.

If Darnold gets hurt, the Seahawks would be in some trouble, not just because Darnold is an important part of this team, but because Drew Lock is an underwhelming backup option. Lock was a second round pick in 2019, but never really developed, completing 59.6% of his passes for an average of 6.57 YPA, 34 touchdowns, and 28 interceptions across 28 career starts. He could be pushed for the backup job by 2025 3rd round pick Jalen Milroe, but Milroe was a boom or bust prospect who did not play a meaningful snap as a rookie, so it seems unlikely he will overtake Lock this season.

Grade: B+

Receiving Corps

While Sam Darnold played well enough for this team to win the Super Bowl, this was much more of a complete team than it was a quarterback led one. Another big reason for the Seahawks’ improvement from 2024 to 2025 was the improvement of wide receiver Jaxon Smith-Njigba, a 2023 1st round pick who was in his third season in the league in 2025. Wide receiver was a bit of a position of concern going into the 2025 season because the Seahawks traded away DK Metcalf for a second round pick and he had been a consistently solid receiver for them for years, including a 66/992/5 slash line and 1.81 yards per route run on 108 targets. 

However, trading Metcalf away, as well as the switch to Klint Kubiak at offensive coordinator, allowed the Seahawks to become a more run heavy team and to focus their passing game around Jaxon Smith-Njigba, who went from 137 targets in 2024 to 163 targets in 2025, despite the Seahawks going from 593 pass attempts to 481 pass attempts. In terms of target share, Jaxon Smith-Njigba led the league last season with 33.9% and, breaking out in his third season in the league, Smith-Njigba turned those targets into a 119/1793/10 slash line and 3.62 yards per route run, up from 100/1130/6 and 1.81 yards per route run in 2024.

With Kubiak gone, there is some concern that Smith-Njigba won’t be as effective or won’t get as high of a target share in 2026, especially since his production declined down the stretch last season, as teams focused more on taking him away. He went from an average of 119 yards per game on 9.7 targets per game in the first 11 games of the season to 80 yards per game on 9.3 targets per game in the final 6 games of the season. To counter that, the Seahawks could easily spread the ball around more in 2026.

Rashid Shaheed was acquired at the trade deadline last season to give the Seahawks another weapon at wide receiver and, while he struggled to get acclimated to the offense mid-season, only managing a 15/188/0 slash line on 26 targets in 9 games, the Seahawks still kept him on a 3-year, 51 million dollar deal as a free agent this off-season, suggesting they have bigger plans for him after a full off-season with the team. Shaheed has always shown potential in his career, averaging a 56/832/5 slash line per 17 games and 1.89 yards per route run prior to being traded last season, with his biggest concern being injuries, as he has played just 51 games in four seasons in the league. However, as long as he is healthy, he could easily be a capable #2 option opposite Smith-Njigba in his first full season with the team. 

The Seahawks could also get second year tight end Elijah Arroyo more involved in the offense. Arroyo only had a 15/179/1 slash line with a 1.13 yards per route run average on 26 targets as a rookie, but he could take a step forward in year two. The Seahawks still have AJ Barner, who was decent as the starting tight end last season, with a 52/519/6 slash line and 1.44 yards per route run on 68 targets, after a 30/245/4 slash line and 1.13 yards per route run on 38 targets as a rookie in 4th round rookie in 2024. Also an above average blocker, Barner is likely to remain the starting tight end this season, but the Seahawks could use more two tight end sets in passing situations this season to get Arroyo more involved in the offense.

Cooper Kupp also remains on the roster, although he is mostly a run blocker and veteran leader at this stage of his career. He managed just a 47/593/2 slash line with 1.40 yards per route run on 70 targets last season, far below peak for a receiver with a career 2.15 yards per route run average and a receiving triple crown under his belt. Going into his age 33 season in 2026, Kupp is unlikely to improve and could decline further. Even if Jaxon Smith-Njigba’s usage goes down in 2026 compared to 2025, I don’t expect it to translate to more targets for Kupp.

Second year wide receiver Tory Horton could also be more involved in the offense, after missing 9 games with injury last season. He had a 13/161/5 slash line with 1.17 yards per route run on 22 targets in 8 games last season, although that was before the addition of Rashid Shaheed. With Shaheed still on the roster, Horton is the clear 4th receiver, but could still take on a situational role and see more targets than he did in 2025 if he stays healthy. Durability is a question for him going back to his collegiate days though, a big part of why he fell to the 5th round, so he could end up missing more time in 2026. 

The Seahawks also have Jake Bobo, who has a career 0.96 yards per route run average in limited action, and 6th round rookie Emmanuel Henderson as depth options. This group is significantly elevated by the presence of Jaxon Smith-Njigba and with Rashid Shaheed and Elijah Arroyo going into their second year with the team, the Seahawks could have more complementary receiving options than they did a year ago, when Cooper Kupp and AJ Barner were second and third on the team in targets.

Grade: B+

Offensive Line

Another reason why the Seahawks were better in 2025 than 2024 was their improved offensive line. The Seahawks used their first round pick on Grey Zabel, who was immediately an above average starter as a rookie, while right tackle Abraham Lucas stayed healthy after missing 21 total games in 2023 and 2024 combined and was also an above average starter. Zabel could be even better in year two in 2025, while Lucas remains an injury risk, but has been an above average starter in both healthy seasons in the league, since going in the 3rd round in 2022. Lucas will likely continue playing at that level unless he gets hurt.

Left tackle Charles Cross was their best offensive lineman in 2025, as he had been in recent years. The 9th overall pick in the 2022 NFL Draft, Cross has been an above average starter across 62 starts in four seasons in the league and, only going into his age 26 season, he should continue playing at a similar level in 2026. The rest of this offensive line is still a liability though. Jalen Sundell took over as the starting center in 2025, after playing just 57 snaps as an undrafted rookie in 2024, and he was marginal at best. Right guard Anthony Bradford was a liability, as he has been throughout his career, starting 38 games since going in the 4th round in 2023, including all 17 last season.

Both Sundell and Bradford are likely to remain the starters though, due to a lack of other good options. At guard, their alternatives are Christian Haynes, a 2024 3rd round pick who has struggled mightily across 199 career snaps, and Beau Stephens, a 5th round rookie who is unlikely to be a starting caliber player in year one. At center, their alternative is Olusegun Oluwatimi, a 2023 5th round pick who has been mediocre across 875 career snaps (13 starts). The Seahawks do have at least one good reserve, swing tackle Josh Jones, who has 27 career starts in 6 seasons in the league and has mostly held his own when forced into action. This offensive line still has concerns, but they should play at a similar level to 2025, when they were an overall solid unit.

Grade: B

Running Backs

The Seahawks’ running backs in 2025 stayed the same as they were in 2023 and 2024, with Kenneth Walker and Zach Charbonnet as their top-2 backs, but the Seahawks ran the ball more in 2025 than they did in previous years and they had more talent around them, especially on the offensive line, which allowed both to have productive seasons. Unfortunately, Walker left as a free agent this off-season, while Charbonnet tore his ACL in the playoffs, which will keep him out for much of the 2026 season, leaving this backfield very much in flux, which will likely hurt this offense.

The Seahawks did use their first round pick on a running back, Jadarian Price, but even the Seahawks didn’t seem to feel he was worth a first round pick, desperately trying to trade back into the second round and taking him there. Price has a high upside, but it is tough to know what to expect from him, given that he backed up fellow first round pick Jeremiyah Love in college, leading to Price only seeing 395 total touches in three collegiate seasons. Price will almost definitely see an expanded role in his first year in the NFL compared to how much he played at Notre Dame and it is fair to wonder how he will perform in that role.

The first running back the Seahawks signed after losing Walker is former Packers backup Emanuel Wilson and he could be involved more than people expect. The Seahawks like to split carries pretty evenly between multiple running backs and may not be ready to fully hand over the backfield to a rookie. Wilson only has 242 career carries, but he has shown promise averaging 4.48 YPC, 2.94 yards per carry after contact, a 18.1% missed tackle rate, and a 59.1% carry success rate. 

Charbonnet is likely to be back down the stretch, but it is unclear how good he can be coming off the injury. Charbonnet was not that explosive of a player even before the injury, averaging just 4.12 YPC with 19 carries of 15+ yards across 427 career carries, but he is a good short yardage back who keeps the offense on schedule, with a 48.2% career carry success rate and 21 career rushing touchdowns, and the Seahawks trust him in obvious passing situations as a blocker. He will at least have a role as a short yardage back and a pass protector upon his return.

The Seahawks also have George Holani, a 2024 undrafted free agent who was the #2 back after Charbonnet got hurt last season, and Kenny McIntosh, a 2023 7th round pick who missed all of 2025 with injury, but showed promise in limited action in 2023 and 2024. They only have 28 career touches and 34 career touches respectively in their careers though, so they probably won’t be heavily involved unless one of Wilson or Price misses time when Charbonnet remains out, and they are not locks for the final roster. Between a downgraded running back room and the loss of Klint Kubiak, there is at least some concern that this offense won’t be as good in 2026 as they were in 2025. 

Grade: B-

Edge Defenders

As I mentioned, the Seahawks’ biggest improvement between 2024 and 2025 was on defense, where they went from 12th in schedule adjusted efficiency in 2024 to 1st last season. Part of the reason for their improvement was the addition of DeMarcus Lawrence in free agency. Lawrence was a risky signing because he was on the wrong side of 30 and coming off of an injury that limited him to just 167 snaps in 4 games in 2024, but Lawrence turned back the clock in 2025, playing at an above average level as a run defender and a pass rusher, totaling 6 sacks, 14 hits, and a 13.2% pressure rate. 

That is the kind of player Lawrence has been throughout his career, consistently playing at a high level against the run and totaling 49.5 sacks, 61 hits, and a 13.6% pressure rate across 105 games from 2017 to 2023. The age and injury concerns still remain for him though, as he is now going into his age 34 season and has missed 24 games over the past five seasons combined, so there is a good chance Lawrence doesn’t play as well or as much as he did a year ago. However, even if he doesn’t, he would have to decline significantly or miss significant time to not be an asset for this defense.

The Seahawks also lost Boye Mafe, who played 559 snaps last season, and, while Mafe was only decent across those snaps, his replacement Dante Fowler is likely to be a downgrade. Fowler’s biggest issue is his age, going into his age 32 season and, while he has remained a solid pass rusher, with his 12.1% pressure rate in 2025 actually being higher than his career rate of 11.6%, his run defense has fallen off since his prime and, between his age and his lack of ability to stop the run, he has been limited to just 384 snaps per season over the past four seasons. It is also possible that his pass rush ability also falls off this season, though there is a good chance he remains at least a decent situational pass rusher.

Uchenna Nwosu (581 snaps) and Derick Hall (419 snaps) remain on the roster and, with Lawrence getting older and Mafe gone, one or both of them would have to play a bigger role. The problem is Nwosu is also on the wrong side of 30, going into his age 30 season. Nwosu has been a solid player throughout his career, holding up against the run and adding 34.5 sacks, 64 hits, and a 12.2% pressure rate in 107 career games, but it wouldn’t be a surprise to see him decline somewhat in 2025. 

Injuries have also been an issue for Nwosu in the past, particularly in 2023 and 2024, when he was limited to 473 snaps in 12 total games. He seemed to be his old self in 2025 when he returned from those injuries, totaling 7 sacks, 7 hits, and a 12.7% pressure rate, while providing decent run defense, but between his age and his somewhat recent injury history, there are reasons why he might not be a strong candidate for an expanded role.

Hall is a better candidate for an expanded role, only going into his age 25 season. He also has experience playing a bigger role, playing 673 snaps in 2024. However, the reason his snaps were cut in 2025 were that he struggled mightily as a run defender. A 2023 2nd round pick, Hall is a great pass rusher, with 10 sacks, 25 hits, and a 13.7% pressure rate in 31 games over the past two seasons, and he was better against the run in a much smaller role in 2025. 

Given his age, it wouldn’t be a surprise if he continued his solid run defense into a bigger role against the run in 2026, but that is not a guarantee. With three of their top-4 edge defenders on the wrong side of 30 and Derick Hall potentially being a liability against the run, there are reasons for concern with this edge defender group, but, even if they aren’t as good as they were a year ago, it is unlikely this would be a bad position group and there is definitely upside here if enough things go right.

Grade: B+

Interior Defenders

Another reason why the Seahawks’ defense was significantly better in 2025 than 2024 was the emergence of 2024 1st round pick Byron Murphy at the interior defender position. Murphy was decent across 457 snaps as a rookie, but he took it to another level in 2025, seeing his snap count jump to 783 and playing at an above average level both against the run and as a pass rusher, where he totaled 7 sacks, 5 hits, and a 10.1% pressure rate. Murphy is technically a one-year wonder in terms of playing at the level he played at last season, but he has always had the upside to be an above average all-around player, so he likely has permanently turned a corner and could even get better going forward, still only going into his age 24 season. 

The Seahawks also bring back the other interior defenders who played significant snaps last season. The concern is that Leonard Williams (810 snaps) and Jarran Reed (397 snaps) are both on the wrong side of 30, going into their age 32 and age 34 season respectively. Williams hasn’t shown any signs of decline yet, continuing to play at an above average level against the run and as a pass rusher. Last season, he had 7 sacks, 15 hits, and a 10.8% pressure rate and, in his career, he has 61.5 sacks, 170 hits, and a 10.3% pressure rate in 175 career games. 

Williams has also been very durable in his career, only missing 6 games due to injury in 11 seasons in the league, while playing 51.0 snaps per game, which should be a sign that he will age better than most. That being said, it wouldn’t be a surprise if he declined at least somewhat this season. Reed, meanwhile, is still a solid pass rusher, as his 8.2% pressure rate in 2025 is in line with his career 8.0% pressure rate, but his run defense has dipped to below average and it wouldn’t be a surprise at all if he declined as a pass rusher and/or further declined as a run defender this season, given his age.

The Seahawks’ deep reserve options behind their top-3 are pretty uninspiring. Rylie Mills, a 5th round pick in 2025, probably has the most upside by default of their options, but he struggled on 48 snaps as a rookie. Other options include Brandon Pili, a 2023 undrafted free agent who has shown very little across 248 career snaps, and Mike Morris, a 2023 5th round pick who has shown very little across 260 career snaps. One of those three could end up playing a bigger role this season if one of their top-3 interior defenders misses significant time with injury or, in the case of Williams or Reed, if they decline significantly. This should still be an above average group, but they might not be quite as good as a year ago.

Grade: A-

Linebackers

Another big reason for the Seahawks’ defensive improvement from 2024 to 2025 was the addition of linebacker Ernest Jones. Jones was actually acquired midway through the 2024 season, but he immediately made their defense better and that continued in 2025. Jones has been an above average every down linebacker in each of the last three seasons (943 snaps per season), but 2025 was his best season, as he played at an All-Pro level. It is possible he isn’t quite as good again in 2026, but he should at least remain an above average every down player for several more seasons, as he is very much in his prime, going into his age 27 season.

The Seahawks also got mini breakout years from a pair of young linebackers, Drake Thomas and Tyrice Knight, who were both above average. Knight’s breakout year wasn’t a huge surprise, as he was decent across 550 snaps as a rookie and the 2024 4th round pick has always had upside, but Knight was noticeably better in 2025 than 2024, albeit across a smaller snap count (307) as the third linebacker. Thomas’ breakout, on the other hand, came out of nowhere, as the 2023 undrafted free agent played just 42 total snaps in the first two seasons of his career, before playing at an above average level across 761 snaps last season. 

Because Knight’s breakout was less surprising, it is also more likely to continue, while Thomas is a potential regression candidate. Perhaps Knight can play a larger role in 2026 to offset any potential regression from Thomas, though it is possible that Knight would not be as good in a larger role. Even if both regress somewhat, this still looks like one of the best linebacking corps in the league, headlined by the All-Pro caliber Ernest Jones.

Grade: A

Secondary

The addition of Defensive Rookie of the Year Nick Emmanwori in the second round of the 2025 NFL Draft was also a huge reason why this defense was so much better in 2025 than 2024. Emmanwori immediately played at a borderline All-Pro level and looks likely to be one of the best safeties in the league for years to come, even if his development is not linear and he regresses somewhat in 2026. The Seahawks did lose a pair of free agent defensive backs who played significant snaps last season, Coby Bryant (974 snaps) and Tariq Woolen (817 snaps), but both were middling players and shouldn’t be that hard to replace. The Seahawks used second and third round picks on Bud Clark and Julian Neal, who both could play roles as rookies in place of Bryant and Woolen.

Emmanwori, Julian Love, and Devon Witherspoon remain as the Seahawks top-3 defensive backs. Love, a solid starter since joining the Seahawks before the 2023 season, missed 9 games due to injury last season and should be healthier this season, having only missed two total games in the first six seasons of his career prior to last season. Love and Emmanwori will start together at safety in base packages. Witherspoon, meanwhile, is their top cornerback. Last season, when he played at an All-Pro level, was a breakout year for the 2023 5th overall pick, who was solid, but unspectacular in his first two seasons in the league. It is possible he regresses somewhat, but he has always had a huge ceiling and is still only going into his age 26 season, so he could easily remain one of the best cornerbacks in the league for years to come.

The rookie Bud Clark will compete with Ty Okada for the third safety spot behind Love and Emmanwori, a role that is close to a full-time role in this defense, given how often this defense uses sub packages and how often they use three safeties together in sub packages. The Seahawks also frequently use four safeties together in some sub packages, so whoever doesn’t win 3rd safety job could still see significant snaps. Okada went undrafted in 2023 and only played 33 snaps total in his first two seasons in the league combined, but he played 739 snaps last season, mostly as an injury replacement for Love and he was decent. He will probably remain decent in whatever role he ends up in for the 2026 season, while Clark could have some growing pains as a rookie, but ultimately has a much higher upside than Okada.

The one weakness in this secondary is the other outside cornerback spot opposite Devon Witherspoon, which will likely be occupied full-time by Josh Jobe, with Tariq Woolen gone. Jobe played 817 snaps last season, but he was a liability and he figures to see that snap count increase in 2026. A 2022 undrafted free agent, Jobe also struggled across snap counts of 240 and 443 in 2023 and 2024 respectively. He could be pushed for his job by the rookie Julian Neal later in the season, but it is unlikely that Neal would be a significant upgrade in year one. It’s a lone weak spot in a secondary that is otherwise one of the best in the league.

Grade: A-

Kickers

Jason Myers was the Seahawks’ kicker last season and had an above average season for the fourth time in six seasons, accounting for 4.97 points above an average kicker, giving him a total of 21.69 points added above average over the past six seasons combined. Myers is going into his age 35 season and has a bit of an inconsistent history, both of which are minor concerns, but there is a good chance he is at least an average kicker again, even if he isn’t quite as good as he was in 2025 again in 2026.

Grade: B+

Conclusion

There are some reasons to think that the Seahawks might not be quite as good in 2026 as they were in 2024. They lost offensive coordinator Klint Kubiak. Their running back room isn’t as good as it was a year ago. Their defense lost a few players who played significant snaps for them last season, while other key players are on the wrong side of 30. However, they are starting from such a high base point that, even if they aren’t quite as good as they were a year ago, there is still a strong chance they are among the best teams in the league and that they once again compete for a Super Bowl.

Prediction: 12-5, 2nd in NFC West

Cincinnati Bengals 2026 NFL Season Preview

Quarterback

The Bengals were dealt a crippling blow to their playoff chances in week 2 of last season when Joe Burrow suffered a foot injury that would require surgery and keep him out months. Even with Burrow, one of the best quarterbacks in the league, the Bengals were not a guarantee to make the post-season in 2025 because of their awful defense and, without Burrow for an extended period of time, their playoff chances completely disappeared. They immediately turned to backup Jake Browning, but he fared so badly that they traded for Joe Flacco, who was surprisingly decent, but still managed to go just 1-5 in his six starts because of the Bengals’ terrible defense that finished 31st in the NFL in schedule adjusted efficiency.

Burrow did return late in the season and seemed like his usual self, finishing the year with 66.8% completion, 6.98 YPA, 17 touchdowns, and 5 interceptions, while actually leading the Bengals to a 5-3 record in 8 starts. Durability has been an issue for Burrow throughout his career, costing him at least six games in three of six seasons in the league, but when healthy he has played at a high level in his career, completing 69.0% of his passes for an average of 7.54 YPA, 144 touchdowns, and 46 interceptions over the past five seasons. In his last fully healthy season in 2024, the Bengals ranked 8th in schedule adjusted efficiency on offense, but missed the post-season because their defense ranked 30th.

Burrow has a higher than average chance of missing more time with injury this season, but he is still likely to play significantly more games than he did a year ago and, if he does miss time, the Bengals prioritized re-signing Flacco as the backup this off-season. Flacco’s play didn’t lead to a lot of wins last season, but he completed 61.7% of his passes for an average of 6.50 YPA, 13 touchdowns, and 4 interceptions. His age is a major concern, now heading into his age 41 season, but he has still shown the ability to be a solid spot starter over the past few seasons, completing 61.8% of his passes for an average of 6.75 YPA, 40 touchdowns, and 25 interceptions in 21 starts since 2023. Unless he completely drops off this season, which is a possibility, he should remain a solid backup option, although the Bengals obviously hope he doesn’t have to play.

The Bengals also prioritized upgrading their defense this off-season. It is still not a good unit, but even going from terrible to mediocre would be a boost for this team, given how good their offense is when Burrow is healthy. The Bengals did not retain Trey Hendrickson as a free agent and he had been their best defensive player in recent years, but he only played seven games due to injury last season anyway and they added several upgrades across the defense, which should more than offset the loss of Hendrickson. If the Burrow can stay relatively healthy and their defense can be noticeably better, the Bengals should have a good chance to return to the post-season in 2026.

Grade: A

Receiving Corps

Burrow isn’t the only reason why the Bengals have an elite offense when healthy, as they have arguably the best wide receiver in the league in JaMarr Chase and, opposite him, they have one of the best #2 wide receivers in the league in Tee Higgins. Despite Burrow missing half of the season in 2025, Chase still had a 125/1412/8 slash line in 16 games, while averaging 2.23 yards per route run. 

In 2024, when Burrow was healthy all year, Chase led the league in receptions, receiving yards, and receiving touchdowns with a 127/1708/17 slash line, while averaging 2.41 yards per route run. In total, Chase has averaged a 113/1490/12 slash line per 17 games in his career with an average of 2.25 yards per route run and he has been pretty durable, only missing time with injury in one of five seasons in the league. Still very much in his prime in only his age 26 season, Chase should continue playing at an elite level in 2026 and should be considered one of the favorites to lead the league in receiving yardage.

Higgins isn’t as good, but he is very good as far as #2 receivers go. Last season, he had a 59/846/11 slash line on 98 targets with 1.62 yards per route run and, in his career, he has averaged a 78/1088/9 slash line on 122 targets per 17 games, while averaging 1.89 yards per route run. He is good enough to be the #1 receiver for a lot of teams and, if he received as many targets as a #1 receiver, he could be one of the most productive wide receivers in the league. Also still very much in his prime in his age 27 season, Higgins should continue playing at a similar level in 2026. His one concern is durability, as he has missed 15 total games in six seasons in the league, with at least two games missed in four of those seasons.

The vast majority of the targets in this passing game go to Chase or Higgins. Running back Chase Brown finished third on the team with 88 targets, 4th in the NFL among running backs, but he only had 34 in 8 games with Burrow and, in 2024 when Burrow was healthy all season, he only had 65. Brown also was not very efficient on his targets last season, only managing a 69/437/5 slash line, good for just 4.97 yards per target. With Burrow likely to play more games this season, I would expect fewer low efficiency targets to running backs and more targets downfield to Chase or Higgins.

Andrei Iosivas is nominally the Bengals third receiver, but he doesn’t contribute much, with slash lines of 36/479/6 and 33/435/2 on 0.84 yards per route run and 0.77 yards per route run respectively over the past two seasons. He could face competition for his job from 4th round rookie Colbie Young, but regardless of who wins that job, they are unlikely to have a big role in this offense. Mike Gesicki and Noah Fant split time as the primary receiving tight end last season, finishing with a 28/307/2 slash line on 1.22 yards per route run and a 34/288/3 slash line on 1.35 yards per route run respectively.

Gesicki had a 65/665/2 slash line with 1.58 yards per route run as the primary receiving tight end in 2024 when Burrow was healthy and Fant wasn’t on the roster, so he could bounce back a somewhat statistically in 2026 with Fant now gone, but Gesicki is also heading into his age 31 season, so his best days are probably behind him and he could face some competition for routes from Erick All, a 2024 4th round pick who showed promise as a rookie (1.48 yards per route run), before missing a year and a half with a brutal knee injury. 

All has a significant injury history dating back to his collegiate days, part of why he fell to the 4th round, and he is a complete question mark coming off yet another serious injury, but it is possible he is able to return somewhat to form and contribute as a pass catcher in this offense. The Bengals also have Drew Sample at tight end, but he is a blocking specialist who has averaged just 0.68 yards per route run in his career, with 115 catches in 95 career games. This is a top heavy receiving corps, but they have arguably the best wide receiver duo in the league.

Grade: A-

Running Backs

In addition to his involvement in the passing game, Chase Brown is also the Bengals’ lead back by far, totaling 232 carries in 2025, to 84 for backup Samaje Perine. Brown also had 229 carries in this role in 2024. Brown is a decent, but unspectacular runner, averaging 4.36 yards per carry over the past two seasons, with 3.07 yards per carry after contact, a 19.7% missed tackle rate, and a 52.3% carry success rate. The Bengals could probably upgrade on him as a runner if they tried, but they like his all-around solid game.

He will continue being backed up by Samaje Perine, who is a pure backup on both early downs and passing downs. He hasn’t exceeded 95 carries in a season since his rookie year in 2017, he only has averaged 4.13 yards per carry on 558 career carries, and he is now going into his age 31 season, but he is a solid pass blocker and pass catcher (career 1.27 yards per route run) who the Bengals trust when Brown needs a breather. The Bengals also have Tahj Brooks, a 2025 6th round pick, who might be a more explosive runner than Perine, but he would have to prove himself in the passing game to earn more than the 47 snaps as he played as a rookie. This is a decent, but unspectacular backfield.

Grade: B-

Offensive Line

As disappointing of a season as the Bengals had in 2025, the one bright spot was that their offensive line was noticeably better compared to 2024, when it was actually a bit of a weakness. Guards Dylan Fairchild and Dalton Risner were added in the third round of the draft and free agency respectively last off-season and, while both were only marginal starters, that was still a significant upgrade from the year before. Meanwhile, at tackle, right tackle Amarius Mims, who struggled as a rookie in 2024, took a big step forward in year two, showing why he was a first round pick, while veteran left tackle Orlando Brown played all 17 games, after missing six games the prior year.

Going into 2026, the Bengals return the same starting five offensive linemen from a year ago. Risner, who has consistently been a decent starter across 92 starts in seven seasons in the league, is now going into his age 31 season and could start to decline, but any potential decline from him could be offset by potential improvement from Fairchild in his second season in the league. The tackle position is a similar situation. Brown, who has mostly been an average to above average starter in his career, is now going into his age 30 season, but Mims is only going into his age 24 season and could take another step forward in year three, after going from a below average starter to an average starter between 2024 and 2025.

The two biggest concerns on this offensive line are the center position, where Ted Karras is also on the wrong side of 30, going into his age 33 season, and depth, which could be needed more this season than last season, when three of the Bengals’ five starters all made every start and only five total games were missed across the five starters. Karras has mostly been a decent starter throughout his career, but if he declines in 2026, he could be a liability. The Bengals used a 4th round pick on Connor Lew to potentially replace him long-term, but I am not sure he would be an upgrade in the short term. 

Other depth options include 6th round rookie guard Brian Parker, who is unlikely to contribute in a significant positive way in year one, 2025 5th round pick Jalen Rivers, who was a disaster across 476 snaps (7 starts) as a rookie, and Cody Ford, a veteran who has made 42 starts in his seven seasons in the league, seeing action at both tackle and guard, but who also has been a liability whenever he has had to start and is now heading into his age 30 season. This is still not a good offensive line and they might take a little bit of a step back in 2026 compared to 2025, with three starters on the wrong side of 30, but they are likely to be better than they were in 2024, when this unit was overall a liability.

Grade: B-

Interior Defenders

The biggest addition the Bengals made on defense this off-season is interior defender Dexter Lawrence, who the Bengals acquired in exchange for the 10th pick in the draft. Lawrence had a down year last year, but he was not as bad as his sack total of 0.5 suggests, as he added 7 hits and a 7.1% pressure rate, while playing solid run defense. Both his run defense and his pass rush were a drop off from the previous three seasons though, when he totaled 21 sacks, 45 hits, and a 12.7% pressure rate across 44 games, while playing at a high level against the run. 

Lawrence is only going into his age 29 season, so he is young enough to bounce back in 2026, especially since his relative struggles last season are likely the result of coming off of an elbow injury that ended his 2024 season early, an injury he is now another year removed from. I would expect him to at least be a little better than he was last season, with his best case scenario being a return to All-Pro form. Even at his worst, he is still an above average interior defender and even that would be a big boost to this defense.

The Bengals also added veteran Jonathan Allen in free agency on a 2-year, 25 million dollar deal. Allen is going into his age 31 season and is a below average run defender at this stage of his career, but he still had 3.5 sacks, 8 hits, and a 8.3% pressure rate last season, which isn’t far off of his career 9.7% pressure rate. Allen could decline further in 2026, but he should still be an upgrade for a team where the majority of their interior defenders struggled last season.

Fellow veteran BJ Hill is the only Bengals interior defender who was at least average last season and he returns this season to a much better position group. Hill has been a solid every down player for the Bengals over the past four seasons, averaging 743 snaps per season and playing at an average level both as a run defender and a pass rusher, totaling 14.5 sacks, 37 hits, and a 7.7% pressure rate in 65 games over that stretch. He is also going into his age 31 season and could decline this season, but the Bengals won’t need as much from him with more talent around him. 

TJ Slaton (582 snaps) and Kris Jenkins (498 snaps) finished second and third among Bengals interior defenders in snaps played last season behind Hill and still remain on the roster. Both were liabilities last season and figure to remain liabilities this season, but I don’t expect them to play nearly as many snaps. Jenkins at least has upside, as a 2024 2nd round pick who is still only going into his age 25 season, but Slaton is going into his age 29 season and has mostly struggled in five seasons in the league, across an average of 445 snaps per season. 

The Bengals also have 2024 3rd round pick McKinnley Jackson, who could theoretically have upside, although he has shown next to nothing across just 377 snaps in two seasons in the league. He is likely on his last chance and could easily be left off the final roster. With Lawrence and Allen being added, this is no longer a position of weakness anymore and could be a position of strength if Lawrence bounces back from a down year and Jonathan Allen and BJ Hill both avoid decline in their age 31 season.

Grade: B+

Edge Defenders

As I mentioned, Trey Hendrickson was the Bengals’ best player and he left as a free agent this off-season, but he only played seven games last season, totaling 4 sacks, 5 hits, and a 13.0% pressure rate, so he won’t be missed as much as he would have been if he was healthy all season last year. The Bengals signed Boye Mafe to a 3-year, 60 million dollar deal in free agency to replace him. He is a downgrade, but should at least play more games than Henrickson did last season. A second round pick in 2022, Mafe played an average of 599 snaps per season in four seasons in the league and has been an all-around decent player, holding up against the run and adding 20 sacks, 15 hits, and a 11.8% pressure rate in 65 career games. He should continue playing at a similar level in 2026, now in his age 28 season.

Joseph Ossai, who was decent across 616 snaps last season, also left as a free agent this off-season, and without him the rest of this position group consists of recent high draft picks with upside, but also significant downsides. Myles Murphy is the most proven of the bunch. The 2023 1st round pick struggled in the first two seasons of his league, but made strides in year three, totaling 5.5 sacks, 4 hits, and a 10.5% pressure rate while overall playing at an average level across 682 snaps. Murphy is still only going into his age 24 season, so he could have even better days ahead of him.

Shemar Stewart was the Bengals’ first round pick in 2025, but his rookie year was disastrous, as injuries limited him to just 280 snaps in 8 games and he was awful when on the field, struggling against the run and only managing a 7.2% pressure rate as pass rusher. Stewart could be better in year two, but he has a long way to go to even be an average player. Considered a boom or bust prospect coming out of college, Stewart looks a lot closer to bust than boom now, but he still has time to turn it around. The Bengals also further added to this position group in this year’s draft, taking Cashius Howell, who could have been a first round pick, in the second round. This group has a lot of upside, but also a lot of downside.

Grade: B-

Linebackers

Linebacker was the Bengals’ biggest weakness on defense last season, as starters Demetrius Knight (798 snaps) and Barrett Carter (792 snaps) were both among the worst starting linebackers in the league. The Bengals opted not to upgrade the position at all, but both Knight and Carter were rookies, selected in the 2nd and 3rd round of the 2025 NFL Draft respectively, so both could be better this season. However, both have a long way to go to even be an average starter and chances are at least one of them will never develop into a capable starter.

Oren Burks remains as the third linebacker and he was just as bad across 340 snaps last season. Burks has mostly been a backup and special teamer in his career, starting just 26 of 125 career games, and he has mostly struggled when forced into action. Burks is now going into his age 31 season and, regardless of how the Bengals feel about their young starting linebackers, it was a mistake to not add another veteran option behind them aside from Burks. This looks likely to be one of the worst linebacking corps in the league again this season, even if the young starters do improve in their second season in the league.

Grade: C-

Secondary

The Bengals did add a pair of safeties this off-season. Bryan Cook, signed to a 3-year, 40.25 million dollar deal, will immediately upgrade a position where both starters (Jordan Battle and Geno Stone) struggled last season. Cook, a 2nd round pick in 2022, was an above average starter in 2025. Previously he had only been an average starter, so there is some concern he could regress in 2026, but it is also possible he has permanently turned a corner and, even if he is only an average starter, it would still be a boost for this defense.

The other safety the Bengals added, Kyle Dugger, will compete with Jordan Battle for the other safety spot, with Geno Stone not being retained this off-season. Dugger is probably the favorite for the job. He is going into his age 30 season and is not what he was in his prime with the Patriots, which is why the Patriots benched and eventually traded him to the Steelers for a late round pick last season, but Dugger was not bad across 559 snaps in 9 games with the Steelers. Unless he continues declining, he should be a better option than Battle, who showed promise across 524 snaps as a 3rd round rookie in 2023, but has struggled over the past two seasons.

One of the few bright spots of this defense last season was cornerback DJ Turner, a 2023 2nd round pick who broke out as an above average starter, after struggling across 827 snaps as a rookie and only being average across 508 snaps in an injury shortened second season in the league in 2024. He is still a one-year wonder in terms of playing at the level he did last season and he could regress somewhat, but it is also possible he has permanently turned a corner and will remain an above average starter.

Turner will continue starting opposite Dax Hill, a former first round pick who has not lived up to the billing. Hill began his career as a safety, played sparingly as a rookie (130 snaps), struggled across 1,089 snaps in his second season, moved to cornerback in 2024, showed improvement before tearing his ACL, and then was decent, but unspectacular across 1,012 snaps in 2025. He could still have further untapped potential, only going into his age 26 season, but there is no guarantee he is any better than average.

Cam Taylor-Britt was the third cornerback last season, but was underwhelming across 348 snaps before getting hurt. Jalen Davis took over for Taylor-Britt and was decent across 270 snaps, but he never played more than 100 snaps in a season prior to last season and is now going into his age 30 season, so he isn’t a reliable option. With Taylor-Britt leaving as a free agent, Davis will compete for the #3 cornerback job with 2024 5th round pick Josh Newton, who has been mediocre across 779 snaps in two seasons in the league, and 3rd round rookie Tacario Davis, both of whom are underwhelming options. This secondary should be better than last year due to the upgrades at safety, but this group still has some issues.

Grade: B

Kickers

Evan McPherson, who the Bengals added in the 5th round of the 2021 NFL Draft, has been inconsistent throughout his career, finishing below average compared to an average kicker in two of five seasons in the league (2022 and 2024), but overall he has added 9.43 points above average in 84 career games. It is tough to know what to expect from him in 2026, but he at least averages out to be an above average kicker.

Grade: B+

Conclusion

The Bengals have missed the post-season in three straight seasons, but in two of those three seasons Joe Burrow missed significant time with injury and their defense has struggled in all three of those seasons. This season, their defense looks at least slightly improved and, while Burrow remains an injury risk, he could easily be healthier this season than he was in 2023 or 2025. Overall, it looks like there is a good chance the Bengals get back to the post-season in 2026, but there are still things that could go wrong and cause them to miss the post-season.

Prediction: 10-7, 2nd in AFC North

Tampa Bay Buccaneers 2026 NFL Season Preview

Quarterback

The Buccaneers’ record in 2024 and their record in 2025 weren’t that different, as they went 10-7 in 2024 and 8-9 in 2025, but there was a drastic difference between their performance in the two seasons, as they ranked 4th in schedule adjusted efficiency in 2024 and 24th in 2025. The big difference was on offense, where they went from 3rd in schedule adjusted efficiency in 2024 to 23rd in 2025. In 2024, they averaged 6.21 yards per play and a 35.02% first down rate and, in 2025, those dropped to 5.10 yards per play and a 29.88% first down rate.

A big part of the reason for their offensive decline was the loss of offensive coordinator Liam Coen, who took over the Jaguars’ head coaching job and instantly improved their offense. Coen was only the Buccaneers’ offensive coordinator for one year and, the year before in 2023, the Buccaneers averaged 5.08 yards per play and a had a 27.78% first down rate with largely the same personnel as 2024, so it isn’t a surprise that the Buccaneers’ offense dropped off significantly in 2025 without Coen. The Buccaneers fired Josh Grizzard, their 2025 offensive coordinator, but their replacement Zac Robinson is still not nearly as good as Coen, so it seems unlikely the Buccaneers will reach their 2024 levels of offensive performance again in 2026.

That being said, another big part of the reason for their offensive decline was injuries, which should be better in 2026. Left tackle Tristan Wirfs, right tackle Luke Goedeke, and right guard Cody Mauch were their three best offensive linemen in 2024 and they were limited to 12 games, 11 games, and 2 games respectively in 2025. Mike Evans, Chris Godwin, and Bucky Irving were their three best skill position players in 2024 and they were limited to 8 games, 9 games, and 10 games respectively in 2025 and were not the same as they were in 2024 even when on the field. Quarterback Baker Mayfield and wide receiver Emeka Egbuka did not miss any time, but suffered injuries midway through the season and did not seem like themselves the rest of the season. Mike Evans is gone, but the rest of those players remain on the roster and should be healthier in 2026.

Baker Mayfield looked like an MVP candidate through the first six games of the season in 2025, completing 66.2% of his passes for an average of 7.89 YPA, 12 touchdowns, and 1 interception, but in his final eleven games he completed 61.5% of his passes for an average of 6.19 YPA, 14 touchdowns, and 10 interceptions. Injuries were likely somewhat to blame, but Mayfield has been inconsistent throughout his career. His best year was 2024, when he completed 71.4% of his passes for an average of 7.89 YPA, 41 touchdowns, and 16 interceptions, but he will probably never be that good again for a full season without Liam Coen. He figures to be better in 2026 than he was in 2025, but he will probably be closer to his 2023 season, when he completed 64.3% of his passes for an average of 7.14 YPA, 28 touchdowns, and 10 interceptions, than his 2024 season.

Mayfield has played through injuries on multiple occasions in his career, but he hasn’t missed a start due to injury since 2021. If he does miss time in 2026, the Buccaneers would turn to Jake Browning, an underwhelming backup who the Bengals let go of this off-season. Browning’s statistics don’t look bad, as he has completed 68.5% of his passes for an average of 7.36 YPA, 18 touchdowns, and 15 interceptions in 10 career starts, but his numbers look better than he has played because he played with a strong offensive supporting cast. The Buccaneers would be in trouble if he had to start for an extended period of time.

Grade: B

Receiving Corps

As I mentioned, the Buccaneers’ receiving corps had a lot of injuries last season. Mike Evans, who had a 74/1004/11 slash line with 2.41 yards per route run on 110 targets in 14 games in 2024, was limited to a 30/368/3 slash line with 1.62 yards per route run on 61 targets in 8 games in 2025. Chris Godwin actually played more games in 2025 than he did in 2024, but he was not nearly as effective due to complications from the broken ankle that ended his 2024 season and, as a result, he had significant less production even though he played more games, going from a 50/576/5 slash line on 62 targets with 2.36 yards per route run in 7 games in 2024 to a 33/360/2 slash line on 51 targets with 1.36 yards per route run in 9 games in 2025. 

A 3rd round pick in 2024, Jalen McMillan wasn’t as good of a player as Evans and Godwin were in 2024, but he was limited to just a 12/178/0 slash line in 4 games in 2025, after a 37/461/8 slash line in 13 games as a rookie. With all of these players missing significant time with injury, first round rookie Emeka Egbuka led the team with a 63/938/6 slash line and 1.75 yards per route run, but even he had an injury that seemed to limit him in the second half of the season, as he went from a 40/677/6 slash line in his first 9 games, a 76/1279/11 pace extrapolated over 17 games, to a 23/261/0 slash line in his final 8 games.

Evans wasn’t retained this off-season, but Egbuka has the upside to be a legitimate #1 wide receiver in his second season in the league if he can find his early 2025 form and play at that level for the whole season, while Chris Godwin has significant bounce back potential, another year removed from his injury. Godwin is going into his age 30 season and might never be the same as he was before his injury, but he has a career 1.93 yards per route run average and an average 87/1080/6 slash line per 17 games in his career, so if he can even come close to being his old self, he should be at least a useful #2 wide receiver behind Egbuka and, at the very least, he should be better than he was a year ago.

McMillan only has averaged 1.35 yards per route run in two seasons in the league, but he went from 1.18 yards per route run as a rookie to 2.14 last season and, while that was a very small sample size, he at least has the upside to be a good #3 wide receiver. The Buccaneers also have good depth in case their top-3 receivers get hurt again or don’t live up to expectations. Tez Johnson was only a 7th round rookie last season, but he flashed potential with a 28/322/5 slash line and 1.08 yards per route run, while Ted Hurst was selected in the 3rd round of this year’s draft to give them even more depth. The Buccaneers have a lot of uncertainty at the wide receiver position, but this group is deep and has a lot of upside.

Things are not as good as tight end, where Cade Otton was retained as a free agent on a 3-year, 30 million dollar deal this off-season, despite only managing slash lines of 59/600/4 on 1.30 yards per route run and 59/572/1 on 1.08 yards per route run over the past two seasons, even with all of the Buccaneers’ wide receiver injuries giving him an opportunity to produce more. He will be backed up by Payne Durham, a 2023 5th round pick and blocking specialist who has only averaged 0.68 yards per route run as a receiver in his career. The Buccaneers’ tight end group is below average and their wide receiver room has a lot of uncertainty, but they at least have upside at wide receiver.

Grade: B-

Offensive Line

The Buccaneers’ offensive line was equally injury plagued last season, with their top-3 offensive linemen from 2024 all missing significant time with injury in 2025. The Buccaneers bring back the same starting five offensive linemen in 2026 as they had in 2025 and 2024 and they should be healthier, like they were in 2024. Left tackle Tristan Wirfs, who missed 5 games last season, is the best of the bunch, playing at an All-Pro level throughout his career, since being drafted in the first round in the 2020 NFL Draft. Prior to last season, he had only missed four games in five seasons due to injury in his career, so he isn’t an injury prone player. Having him on the field for more games in 2026 should be a big boost for this offensive line.

Luke Goedeke, a 2022 2nd round pick, has developed into an above average starter at right tackle over the past two seasons. Durability is a bit of a continued concern for him, as he also missed four games in 2024, in addition to the six he missed last season, but there is still a good chance he is on the field for more games in 2026 than he was in 2025. Right guard Cody Mauch is the biggest concern because, not only did he miss the most time last season, going down for the year in week 2, but his above average 2024 season is the only such season of his 3-year career at this point, between last year’s injury shortened campaign and a rookie season in 2023 in which he struggled mightily. It is possible his rookie struggles are well behind him and that he will also put 2025’s injury behind him as well, but his success has come in a limited sample size thus far.

Left guard Ben Bredeson also missed 6 games with injury last season, although he was a below average starter, so he wasn’t really missed. He has started 44 games over the past three seasons and will remain the Buccaneers’ starting left guard this season, but he has consistently been a liability and figures to continue struggling in 2026. Graham Barton, meanwhile, remains at center, where he has been a solid starter over the past two seasons, although he is a 2024 1st round pick who is only going into his age 24 season, so he could have further untapped potential and could have his best year yet in 2026.

With Wirfs and Goedeke missing time last season, Charlie Heck made 6 starts, but he was a major liability. He has been replaced as the swing tackle by free agent addition Justin Skule, who figures to be a noticeable upgrade, providing average tackle play in 26 starts as an injury replacement over the past 6 seasons. Depth is still suspect at guard though, where Dan Feeney (10 starts) and Michael Jordan (9 starts) were below average as the fill-ins last season. Feeney, who has mostly struggled in 75 career starts and who is now going into his age 32 season, will likely be the top reserve guard again, with only 5th round rookie Billy Schrauth being added as competition. This should be a healthier and overall much better offensive line than a year ago though.

Grade: A-

Running Backs

Lead back Bucky Irving also missed significant time with injury last season though, missing seven games, and he wasn’t nearly as good in 2025 as he was in 2024 even when on the field, dropping from 5.42 YPC to a 3.40 YPC. Irving also saw his yards per carry after contact drop from 4.03 to 2.33, his missed tackle rate drop from 25.6% to 17.9%, and his carry success rate drop from 55.1% to 41.6%. Injuries are probably partially to blame, but Irving only averaged 3.34 YPC even before missing time with injury, so Irving was probably also significantly hurt by the scheme change. Irving should be healthier in 2026 and has some bounce back potential, but he was only a 4th round pick in 2024 and it is very possible he never recaptures his rookie year magic.

Irving still led the team in carries and rushing yards, as he averaged 17.3 carries per game when on the field, up from 12.2 as a rookie. In the seven games he missed, backups Rachaad White and Sean Tucker split carries 81 and 62 and, on the season, they finished with 132 carries and 86 carries respectively. White was also heavily involved as a pass catcher, leading Buccaneers running backs with 45 targets, although he only turned them into a 40/218/0 slash line and 0.72 yards per route run.

White was not retained as a free agent this off-season, but they brought in Kenneth Gainwell to replace him, which isn’t a huge difference. Gainwell has only had 394 carries in 5 seasons in the league, but he had a career high 114 last season and averaged 4.71 YPC, up from 4.23 YPC in his first four seasons in the league. Like White, Gainwell will be heavily involved as a receiver, where he has averaged 1.15 yards per route run in his career, including 1.47 yards per route run last season. Irving has also been a solid receiver thus far in his career, with a 47/392/0 slash line with 1.63 yards per route run as a rookie and a 30/277/3 slash line with 1.49 yards per route run last season.

Sean Tucker remains as the #3 back and would likely split time with Gainwell if Irving missed more time with injury this season. Tucker went undrafted in 2023, but has averaged 4.31 YPC on 151 carries in three seasons in the league, with 2.60 yards per carry after contact, a 12.6% missed tackle rate, a 48.3% carry success rate, and a 1.33 yards per route run average. This isn’t a bad backfield, but so much of their projection is based on whether or not Bucky Irving can bounce back, which is a significant uncertainty.

Grade: B+

Edge Defenders

While the Buccaneers’ offense should be better due to better health, the Buccaneers’ defense is likely to be about the same as last season, when they ranked 21st in schedule adjusted efficiency. They are better in some areas, but worse in others. One of those areas they are better at is the edge defender position, primarily because of Reuben Bain, who was a steal with the 15th overall pick. Not only did Bain have the talent to be a top-10 or even top-5 pick, but he also fills the Buccaneers’ biggest need at the edge defender position. He might not have a massive upside, but he was very NFL ready and should have an instant impact. 

Bain will start immediately opposite Yaya Diaby, the Buccaneers’ only above average edge defender last season. Diaby led this team with 7 sacks and added 12 hits and a 13.7% pressure rate as well as solid run defense. A 3rd round pick in 2023, Diaby played similarly in a breakout year in 2024, with 4.5 sacks, 14 hits, and a 14.6% pressure rate, while again providing solid run defense. He should continue playing at a similar level in 2026.

The Buccaneers also added Al-Quadin Muhammad in free agency, Muhammad had a very impressive 2025 season, totaling 11 sacks, 10 hits, and a 15.0% pressure rate, but that came out of nowhere, as he had just 15 sacks, 25 hits, and a 7.8% pressure rate in 93 career games prior to last season and was out of the league completely in 2023, before only playing 254 snaps in 2024. Muhammad is now heading into his age 31 season, so it seems highly unlikely he will come close to repeating his career best 2025 campaign, but he could still be a solid rotational player for the Buccaneers.

Anthony Nelson and Chris Braswell also remain on the roster as holdovers. Nelson has never been more than an average rotational player and has averaged just 405 snaps per season in seven seasons in the league, but as far as #4 edge defenders go, you could do a lot worse. Braswell, meanwhile, has shown next to nothing on 611 career snaps in two seasons in the league, but he is a 2024 2nd round pick who is still only going into his age 25 season, so he could still have untapped upside. This is a solid position group with good depth.

Grade: B

Interior Defenders

The Buccaneers lost interior defender Logan Hall this off-season, after he was a solid all-around interior defender across 611 snaps last season, playing decently against the run and pressuring the quarterback at a 8.9% rate. To replace him, the Buccaneers signed veteran A’Shawn Robinson. Robinson had a similar season in 2025 to Hall, playing 658 snaps, playing decently against the run and pressuring the quarterback at a 8.9% rate, but he is going into his age 31 season and last season was one of the best in his career, with his 31 total pressures being a career high, so it seems unlikely he will be as good in 2026 as he was in 2025.

The Buccaneers are at least getting Calijah Kancey back from a torn pectoral that cost him most of last season, when he played just 97 snaps in 3 games. Kancey is a below average run defender, but he has totaled 11.5 sacks, 19 hits, and a 9.8% pressure rate in 29 career games and the 2023 1st round pick is still only going into his age 25 season and still has time to improve as a run defender. He has had durability issues through his career, missing at least three games in all three seasons in the league, but he will almost definitely play more games in 2026 than 2025.

Vita Vea is the Buccaneers’ best interior defender and has been for years, playing at an above average level against the run and as a pass rusher throughout his career. In total, he has 35 career sacks, with 44 hits and a 10.1% pressure rate in 112 career games. The concern is he is going into his age 31 season and, while he has yet to start declining, he could easily decline at least somewhat this season, which would hurt the Buccaneers’ defense.

Elijah Roberts, a 2025 5th round pick, also will continue playing a significant role, after playing a significant role as a rookie (506 snaps). Roberts was at his best as a pass rusher, with a 8.3% pressure rate, while struggling against the run. He could take a step forward in year two, but he didn’t come into the league with a high upside so he might max out as a solid rotational player. This is a decent, but unspectacular position group overall, especially if Vita Vea starts to decline this season.

Grade: B

Linebackers

The Buccaneers also did well with their second round draft pick, getting a good value in Josiah Trotter, who also filled a huge need at linebacker. Linebacker was a big weakness of this defense last season and that weakness only got worse when Lavonte David retired this off-season, after being the Buccaneers’ best linebacker by default last season, despite being washed up. Trotter and Anzalone will only be upgrades by default though, as Trotter could struggle through growing pains as a rookie, while Anzalone is a consistently average and experienced starter (93 career starts in 111 games), but is now heading into his age 32 season.

Sir’Vocea Dennis, who was one of the worst starting linebackers in the league last season as the other starter opposite Lavonte David, is still on the roster, but will be no higher than third on the depth chart and he could be outside of the top-3 entirely, with Christian Rozeboom also being added this off-season. Rozeboom has been below average on snap counts of 522, 828, and 823 over the past three seasons respectively, but was still better by default than Dennis was in the only full season as a starter in his career last season. This is still an underwhelming linebacking corps, but they should be better than last season by default.

Grade: C+

Secondary

The Buccaneers’ biggest loss on defense this off-season is top cornerback Jamel Dean, who was above average across 661 snaps in 14 games last season. The Buccaneers didn’t really replace him, only using a 4th round pick on Keionte Scott, who was a great value, but is still highly unlikely to be able to replace Dean in year one. Instead, the Buccaneers will be counting on a pair of second year cornerbacks taking a step forward, 2025 2nd round pick Benjamin Morrison and 2025 3rd round pick Jacob Parrish. 

Parrish was actually the better of the two as a rookie, playing at a slightly above average level across 747 snaps, and it wouldn’t be a surprise at all if he took a step forward in year two and became an above average starter. Morrison, meanwhile, actually struggled as a rookie across 360 snaps and, even if he does improve in year two, he has a long way to go to even be an average starter. He will likely be the #3 cornerback behind Parrish and Zyon McCollum, a decent, but unspectacular starter across 30 starts over the past two seasons. If Morrison continues to struggle or if one of their top-3 cornerbacks get hurt, the rookie Scott would likely take over.

The Buccaneers are better at safety, where Antoine Winfield and Tykee Smith remain as the starters. Winfield is an above average starter in his prime in his age 28 season. Meanwhile, Smith is a solid starter in his own right and, still only in his age 25 season, the 2024 3rd round pick could still get better going forward. This is a solid secondary overall, but they figure to be hurt by the loss of their top cornerback Jamel Dean in free agency.

Grade: B+

Kickers

Chase McLaughlin had a bit of a down year in 2025, only contributing about 0.49 points above an average kicker, after contributing 19.53 points above an above kicker from 2022-2024. In 2024, he ranked third in the league with 9.64 points added above average. Kickers tend to be inconsistent though and McLaughlin should still be in his prime in his age 30 season, so he has obvious bounce back potential in 2026. He probably isn’t one of the best kickers in the league, but he is at least an above average option.

Grade: B+

Conclusion

The Buccaneers should be better in 2026 than 2025, particularly on offense, where they should have better health. However, they were a little worse than their 8-9 record suggested in 2026, only winning by more than 3 points twice all season, so, even if they are better in 2026, they might not necessarily win more games and get back into the post-season. The good news is they play in arguably the worst division in the league, so a division title is within reach even if they aren’t that good.

Prediction: 8-9, 1st in NFC South

Los Angeles Chargers 2026 NFL Season Preview

Quarterback

The Chargers had high expectations going into the 2025 season after a surprise playoff appearance in new head coach Jim Harbaugh’s first season with the team in 2024. However, disaster struck before the season even began, as talented left tackle Rashawn Slater tore his patellar tendon in training camp and missed the whole season. Things went from bad to worse when the equally talented Joe Alt, who moved from right tackle to left tackle in Slater’s absence, suffered an ankle injury and subsequent re-aggravation that limited him to just 312 snaps in 6 games.

The loss of their two tackles, arguably the best tackle duo in the league when healthy, exposed the weak interior of their offensive line and, without good backup options at tackle, the Chargers had arguably the worst offensive line in the league last season, ranking 32nd in team pass block win rate and 31st in team run block win rate. Alt and Slater weren’t the only significant injuries the Chargers dealt with last season, as they had the 6th most adjusted games lost to injury overall. Despite that, the Chargers actually still managed to win 11 games and make the playoffs, but they finished just 17th in schedule adjusted efficiency and their offensive line issues could not be overcome in the post-season, when they managed just 3 points in a first round loss to the eventual AFC Champion New England Patriots.

This year, the Chargers will get Slater and Alt back and they made moves to try to improve the interior of their offensive line as well. They also changed offensive coordinators, going from Greg Roman, whose outdated schemes held back this offense, to Mike McDaniel, former head coach of the Dolphins who was arguably the best available offensive coordinator option this off-season. Those additions and re-additions should help an offense that ranked just 24th in schedule adjusted efficiency last season. 

Quarterback Justin Herbert was basically the sole reason why this offense was not one of the worst in the league last season, playing at a borderline MVP level. His passing statistics don’t quite show his value, as he completed 66.4% of his passes for an average of 7.28 YPA, 26 touchdowns, and 13 interceptions, but considering the circumstances, that was very impressive. He also added 6.00 YPC and 2 touchdowns on 83 carries, despite playing through a broken non-throwing hand for much of the second half of the season. 

Herbert has been one of the better quarterbacks in the league since being drafted 6th overall in 2020 and you could argue last season was his best performance all things considered. He hasn’t had the success in terms of wins and losses that you would expect him an elite quarterback yet, with a 52-43 regular season record and a 0-3 playoff record, but a lot of that could be blamed on his supporting cast, whether his lack of offensive line help last season, his lack of receiving help the year before that, or his lack of defensive support early in his career. Herbert isn’t a true top level quarterback, but I think he is just a tier below and, with more help around him, the Chargers have the potential to be one of the best teams in the league in 2026 if enough things go right.

One issue with Herbert is that he does tend to suffer injuries more than the average quarterback, as his playing style leads to him taking more hits than normal. He’s only missed six games in six seasons in the league, but he has been limited by injuries that he has played through on several occasions. The Chargers are hoping that improved pass protection will help keep him healthy, but Herbert also has averaged 63 carries per season in his career, so he takes a significant amount of hits even if he has good pass protection. 

Making this even more of a concern is the fact that his backup is Trey Lance, who has a mediocre 71.9 passer rating in six career starts. Most teams with high level quarterbacks would be in big trouble if they lost their quarterback for an extended period of time, but some teams can survive the loss of their quarterback for a shorter period of time because they have a good backup quarterback. The Chargers are not one of those teams, so Herbert’s health is a bigger factor for them than most teams. 

Grade: A-

Offensive Line

As I mentioned, the return of Rashawn Slater and Joe Alt will be a massive upgrade for this offense, as they are one of the best offensive tackle duos in the league when healthy. Slater, a first round pick in 2021, was one of the better left tackles in the league in 2023 and 2024 before his injury and is still only in his age 27 season, while Alt, a first round pick in 2024 who is only going into his age 23, was one of the better right tackles in the league as a rookie and was on his way to an even better season in 2025 at left tackle before getting hurt. 

There is some concern that Slater might not return to form or suffer another injury, given that he has now missed most or all of two of his five seasons in the league and given that the patellar tendon he suffered last year is one of the most difficult injuries to return to form after, but Alt doesn’t have an injury history and, at the very least, he should be able to return to form or possibly be even better, now in his third season in the league. It is possible the Chargers leave Alt at left tackle and let Slater play on the right side, which is generally easier, but it remains to be seen if they will make that move. Either way, even with some injury concerns, this is still one of the best tackle duos in the league, a big difference from last year, when Bobby Hart, Trey Pipkins, Jamaree Salyer, and Austin Deculus all made multiple starts at tackle and all struggled.

The Chargers also should be better on the interior of the offense line this season. They signed center Tyler Biadasz to a 3-year, 30 million dollar deal in free agency. He is not as good of a player as Alt or Slater, but he is a solid starter with 80 starts in the past five seasons and he should be a massive upgrade over Bradley Bozeman, who started 16 of 17 games for the Chargers at center last season, despite being one of the worst starting centers in the league.

The additions the Chargers made at guard are not as impressive and guard figures to still be a position of weakness in 2026, but it would still be hard for the Chargers to have worse guard play than last season. Right now, Trevor Penning and Cole Strange are penciled in as the starters. Both were first round picks in 2022, by the Saints and Patriots respectively, but have largely struggled throughout their careers. Penning has made 33 career starts, 26 at tackle and 7 at guard, including 3 at tackle and 1 at guard for the Chargers last season, after being acquired in a mid-season trade from New Orleans, while Strange has made 43 career starts, 41 at guard and 2 at center, with the Patriots and most recently the Dolphins. Going into their age 27 season and age 28 season respectively, they both have theoretical upside, but it is likely they will continue struggling. 

The Chargers also used a second round pick in this year’s draft on Jake Slaughter, a collegiate center who could theoretically make the switch to guard, but it is unlikely he would be a significant upgrade as a rookie. Fellow rookie, 4th round pick Travis Burke, will compete with Trey Pipkins, who has mostly struggled across 66 starts in 7 seasons in the league, for the swing tackle job. Their expected poor guard play holds back their overall grade, but compared to last year’s league worst group, this is a much improved offensive line, thanks to the returns of Joe Alt and Rashawn Slater from injury and the addition of Tyler Biadasz at center. 

Grade: B

Running Backs

In addition to their offensive line injuries, the Chargers also had their expected top-2 running backs Omarion Hampton and Najee Harris miss significant time with injury, with Hampton limited to 384 snaps in 9 games by an ankle injury and Harris having his season ended after 43 snaps in 3 games by a torn Achilles tendon. As a result, expected third string running back Kimani Vidal led the team in carries (155) and rushing yards (643). 

Vidal wasn’t bad, considering the state of the Chargers’ blocking, averaging 4.15 YPC, with 3.00 YPC after contact, a 18.7% missed tackle rate, and a 47.1% carry success rate, but Hampton was clearly better runner, averaging 4.40 YPC on 124 carries, with 3.35 YPC after contact, a 25.8% missed tackle rate, and a 46.8% carry success rate. Hampton also averaged 1.04 yards per route run as a receiver, to just 0.63 for Vidal. Hampton was the Chargers’ first round pick in 2025 and has a massive upside long-term, so, if he stays healthy, he could have a big second season in the league in 2026. 

Harris was not retained this off-season, leaving Vidal to compete with free agent addition Keaton Mitchell for the primary backup job. Mitchell was signed for 9.25 million over 2 years this off-season, which suggests they view him as having a role, and he has an impressive 6.34 YPC average in his career, but that has been on just 121 carries in three seasons in the league and the former undrafted free agent is very undersized at 5-8 191, so it is unlikely he will be more than a change of pace back, even if Hampton misses time with injury. Vidal, who showed himself to be a decent backup option last season, after only playing 169 snaps as a rookie, may be the nominal #3 back, but I would expect him to get the bulk of the carries if Hampton gets hurt. As long as Hampton is healthy though, I would expect him to be the clear feature back, both in the passing game and as a runner.

Grade: B

Receiving Corps

The Chargers receiving corps last season was not bad, but it wasn’t particularly good either and it is unlikely to be significantly better this season. Ladd McConkey led the team in receiving for the second straight season, but his 66/789/6 slash line was a significant drop off from the year before, when he had a 82/1149/7 slash line, despite receiving a similar target total in 2025 (112) as he did in 2024 (106). A 2nd round pick in 2024, McConkey could see his production bounce back at least somewhat in 2026 if the offense is better overall, but, despite his yardage total as a rookie, McConkey’s skill set is more in line with a #2 receiver than a true #1 receiver.

Quentin Johnston has the skill set of a #1 receiver, but the 2023 1st round pick hasn’t put it together consistently. His slash lines of 55/711/8 and 51/735/8 over the past two seasons aren’t bad, but they are not #1 receiver numbers and he has benefitted significantly from playing with a high level quarterback. Still only in his age 25 season, Johnston still has time to make good on his potential, but it is not a guarantee that he takes a step forward in 2026.

Veteran Keenan Allen actually led the team in targets last season, but he was the most inefficient of the three options, turning just 122 targets into a 81/777/4 slash line. Ahead of what would have been his age 34 season, Allen was not retained this off-season and the majority of his routes will likely go to 2025 2nd round pick Tre Harris. Harris didn’t show much in a part-time role as a rookie, playing 554 snaps and averaging just 1.10 yards per route run, with a slash line of 30/324/1 on 43 targets, but he has the upside to take a step forward in a bigger role in his second season in the league. With Harris moving into the #3 wide receiver role, the #4 wide receiver role will go to either 4th round rookie Brenen Thompson or 2025 5th round pick KeAndre Lambert-Smith, who was underwhelming in 123 snaps as a rookie.

While Harris played sparingly and struggled when on the field, another 2025 draft pick, tight end Oronde Gadsden, made a much more immediate impact, finishing the season with a 49/664/3 slash line on 69 targets and a team leading 1.66 yards per route run average as the Chargers’ primary receiving tight end, despite only being a 5th round draft pick. A converted wide receiver, Gadsden struggled mightily as a blocker, but is a matchup problem in the passing game and will continue being a significant part of this passing game.

The Chargers signed tight end Charlie Kolar to a 3-year, 24.3 million dollar deal in free agency, but he isn’t really a threat for Gadsden’s receiving role, being signed because he is one of the best run blocking tight ends in the league. He only has 30 catches in four seasons in the league, but he might have some untapped receiving upside if given the chance, as he has averaged 1.76 yards per route run in the very limited route running opportunities he has gotten in his career. He won’t have a big enough receiving role to significantly cut into Gadsden’s target share, but the Chargers’ backup tight ends last season had 30 targets total and none of them were retained, so Kolar could have a bigger receiving role with the Chargers than he ever did with the Ravens, when he maxed out at 15 targets in a season. This is an overall underwhelming receiving corps.

Grade: C+

Edge Defenders

While the Chargers offense almost definitely will be significantly better this season, there is some concern that the Chargers’ defense might not be quite as good, after ranking 8th in schedule adjusted efficiency last season. The biggest reason for that concern is that their defensive coordinator Jesse Minter left for the Ravens’ head coaching job and. The good news is that the personnel is largely the same. In fact, the Chargers’ top-11 in terms of defensive snaps played last season and 14 of their top-15 all remain on the roster.

The Chargers did not retain edge defender Odafe Oweh, who did not rank in the top-15 in terms of snaps played because he was acquired mid-season via trade, but still managed to finish second on the team with 7.5 sacks and third with 35 total pressures. Oweh will be missed, despite his relatively limited playing time last season, but the good news is the Chargers used their first round pick on edge defender Akheem Mesidor, who has a good chance to at least adequately replace Oweh’s production. 

Mesidor’s addition is especially needed because Khalil Mack, who still played at a high level last season, is now going into his age 35 season. Mack is not what he was in his prime, but the future Hall of Famer still had 5.5 sacks, 5 hits, and a 14.8% pressure rate in 12 games last season, while playing at a high level against the run. He may decline in 2026, perhaps significantly so, which would hurt this defense significantly, but he could also remain an above average player for another season.

Tuli Tuipulotu was the Chargers’ top edge defender last season and should remain their top edge defender in 2026, still only in his age 24 season. Tuipulotu ranked 6th in the league with 13 sacks last season and added 13 hits and a 16.7% pressure rate. He is a one-year wonder in terms of producing at that level, averaging 6.5 sacks, 9.5 hits, and a 10.8% pressure rate in his first two seasons in the league in 2023 and 2024, but the former 2nd round pick likely has permanently turned a corner and he seems as likely to continue improving even further as he does to regress to his pre-2025 form. 

Tuipulotu, Mesidor, and Mack figure to play the lion’s share of the edge defender snaps for the Chargers in 2026, but, if one of them misses time with injury, an expanded role would likely go to Bud Dupree, who played 392 snaps last season. Dupree is largely a liability though, as his last season above 10% pressure was in 2020 and he is now going into his age 33 season. Dupree will remain their #4 edge defender due to lack of a better option, but the Chargers at least have a strong top-3 at the position.

Grade: A-

Interior Defenders

The one player who finished in the top-15 in snaps played on the Chargers’ defense last season who is no longer with the team is interior defender Da’Shawn Hand, but he still only played 451 snaps and was marginal at best, so he won’t be hard to replace. Veteran Dalvin Tomlinson was signed in free agency to take Hand’s spot in the defensive tackle rotation, which includes holdovers Teair Tart, Jamaree Caldwell, and Justin Eboigbe.

Tart was the best of the bunch, excelling against the run and adding a 5.7% pressure rate as a pass rusher, while playing 499 snaps total. That is largely in line with how he has played in recent years and, with Tart still being relatively young, in his age 29 season in 2026, I would expect more of the same from him in 2025. Caldwell was a similar player, playing at his best against the run and adding a 5.2% pressure rate, while playing 487 total snaps, most among Chargers interior defenders. Tart was a little better, both as a run defender and pass rusher, but Caldwell was only a 3rd round rookie and it wouldn’t be a surprise to see him take a step forward in year two in 2026.

Eboigbe was the best pass rusher of the bunch, totaling 6 sacks, 4 hits, and a 9.1% pressure rate, but he struggled against the run. Last season was the first significant action of Eboigbe’s career, as the 2024 4th round pick played just 26 snaps as a rookie. It is possible he gets better in 2026, but, at the very least, he should remain a useful pass rusher as part of their defensive tackle rotation. Tomlinson, meanwhile, is likely to be the worst of the bunch. 

Tomlinson was a consistently above average interior defender in his prime, but he has declined significantly in each of the past two seasons, to the point where he was a liability against the run and a pass rusher last season (4.5% pressure rate) and, now going into his age 32 season, it is unlikely he bounces back. It is possible he is pushed for playing time down the stretch by 5th round rookie Nick Barrett. This is not a bad position group, but it is not a particularly good one either.

Grade: B-

Linebackers

At linebacker, the Chargers bring back all their key players from a year ago. Daiyan Henley played an every down role (930 snaps in 16 games) and was a solid, if unspectacular player. It was a slight step back from his above average performance in 2024, his first year in an every down role after playing sparingly as a rookie in 2023, but he could easily bounce back in 2026 and, even if he doesn’t, the former 3rd round pick should remain a solid every starter at the very least.

Troy Dye (473 snaps) and Denzel Perryman (298 snaps) split snaps next to Perryman. Neither one was particularly good and both are getting up there in age, with Dye going into his age 30 season and Perryman going into his age 34 season, so I wouldn’t expect more than decent play at best from either one in 2026. A younger option the Chargers have is Junior Colston, a 3rd round pick in 2024, but he struggled mightily across 218 snaps as a rookie, before missing all of last season due to a shoulder injury, so it seems unlikely he would be an upgrade over Dye or Perryman if he were to play a significant role. Henley elevates the overall grade for this position group, but this is an average at best position group, given their other linebacker options.

Grade: B

Secondary

The Chargers do mask their lack of linebacker depth by frequently using three or four safeties on the field at the same time. Derwin James is by far the best of the bunch and one of the best safeties in the entire NFL. He unsurprisingly plays an every down role, frequently moving around the formation to both linebacker and nickel cornerback. His age is a minor concern, going into his age 30 season, but he hasn’t shown any signs of decline yet and, even if he does decline somewhat in 2026, he should still remain a well above average safety.

Elijah Molden finished second on the team in snaps played by a safety with 538 in 12 games. He is a capable starter, but injuries are consistently a concern for him, as he has missed time with injury in all five seasons in the league, while never playing more than 761 snaps in a season. Veteran Tony Jefferson was third on the team with 492 snaps played last season. He was also a capable, if unspectacular player, but he is now going into his age 34 season and hasn’t been an every down player since 2018, so he should be the third safety at best.

Molden and Jefferson will likely face competition for playing time from 2025 5th round pick RJ Mickens, who flashed potential across 328 snaps as a rookie, and Genesis Smith, a 4th round pick in this year’s draft who was a good value and could contribute in a part-time role immediately. The Chargers figure to mix and match and frequently play 3-4 safeties at the same time in a position group that you could argue legitimately goes five deep if everything goes right.

The Chargers’ safety depth helps mask the Chargers’ lack of cornerback depth too, but the Chargers do at least have three cornerback options that are mostly capable. Tarheeb Still is the best of the bunch and the Chargers’ nominal #1 cornerback. Despite only being a 5th round pick in 2025, Still has started 25 of the 29 games he has played in over the past two seasons and has generally been a solid cornerback, even if he is not a true #1. 

Donte Jackson and Cam Hart are the Chargers’ other cornerback options. Jackson has made 106 starts in 112 games in eight seasons in the league and has generally been a capable cornerback starter, though his age is becoming a concern, going into his age 31 season. Cam Hart, meanwhile, was also a 5th round pick in 2024 and has provided mostly mediocre play across 1,100 snaps in two seasons in the league. The Chargers’ safeties elevate the overall position grade of their secondary, most notably led by Derwin James, who is one of the best safeties in the league.

Grade: B+

Kicker

Chargers kicker Cameron Dicker entered the league as an undrafted free agent in 2022 and leads the league in points above expected at the kicker position since entering the league, with a total of 31.7 points added in those four seasons. He is also very consistent, surpassing 0.3 points per game added in all four seasons. Between his reliability and his ability to hit from deep, Dicker is likely to lead to the Chargers winning at least one game that they would not have otherwise won with an average kicker in 2026.

Grade: A

Conclusion

The Chargers’ offense should be much improved this season, due to the returns of tackles Joe Alt and Rashawn Slater, likely better health and a potential breakout year from running back Omarion Hampton, the addition of center Tyler Biadasz, and the addition of offensive coordinator Mike McDaniel. Their defense could be worse, due to the loss of defensive coordinator Jesse Minter, the loss of Odafe Oweh, and a pair of stars, Khalil Mack and Derwin James, being on the wrong side of 30, but, overall, I would expect this team to be better this year than last year. They might not be true Super Bowl contenders, but they should at least be a playoff team and they should be more competitive once they get to the playoffs than they were a year ago.

Prediction: 11-6, 2nd in AFC West

Detroit Lions 2026 NFL Season Preview

Quarterback

The Lions were one of the most disappointing teams in the league in 2025, going from a 15-2 record and the NFC’s #1 seed the prior year to a 9-8 record and missing the playoffs completely. The Lions were not as good as they were in 2024, when they ranked second in the NFL in schedule adjusted efficiency at +7.87, but they were still a lot better than their record suggests, finishing 5th at +4.17. The reason their record was not as good as their schedule adjusted efficiency would suggest is they struggled in close games, winning five games by 14 points or more, tied for 4th most in the NFL, but going just 2-5 in one-score games.

That wasn’t the only bad luck the Lions had last season, as they also had the second most adjusted games lost to injury in the league. The Lions consistently have more injuries than average, but I wouldn’t expect them to have quite as bad of injury luck in 2026 as they had in 2025 and they should be better in close games too. I don’t expect this team to be as good in 2026 as they were in 2024, but they should win more games than 2025, perhaps significantly more, and should be considered not just a playoff team, but a Super Bowl contender.

Quarterback Jared Goff is not the biggest reason the Lions should be considered a Super Bowl contender, but he has shown the ability to produce at a high level with a strong supporting cast. He declined in terms of completion percentage (72.4% to 68.0%), YPA (8.59 to 7.90), and touchdowns (37 to 34) from 2024 to 2025, but his 105.5 passer rating still ranked third in the NFL last season. With a similar caliber supporting cast around him on offense this season, I would expect a similar level of production in 2026.

Backup quarterback is a position of concern, as that position would currently go to Teddy Bridgewater, who is going into his age 34 season and hasn’t made a start since 2022. Fortunately, Goff is one of the more durable quarterbacks in the league, missing time with injury in just two of ten seasons in the league, while making all 68 possible starts over the past four seasons. Goff is going into his age 32 season, but pocket passers with minimal injury history usually age pretty well, so I wouldn’t expect him to drop off significantly any time soon. 

Grade: B+

Offensive Line

The biggest reason this offense is no longer as good as they were in 2024 is their offensive line, which was arguably the best in the league that season. Now just two years later, four of the five starters from that offensive line are no longer with the team. However, the situation is not as bad as that sounds, for a few reasons. For one, that one offensive lineman who remains, Penei Sewell, is arguably the best offensive lineman in the league and is still very much in his prime in his age 26 season.

On top of that, two of the four offensive linemen who are no longer with the team, Taylor Decker and Kevin Zeitler, were replaced by high draft picks, guard Tate Ratledge, who was an above average starter as a second round rookie in 2025, and tackle Blake Miller, who the Lions selected in the first round in this year’s draft. A third offensive lineman who is no longer with the team, Graham Glasgow, was marginal at best in 2024 and isn’t really missed. He has been replaced by Christian Mahogany, a 2024 6th round pick who was unspectacular, but who also wasn’t really a significant downgrade from Glasgow.

The biggest loss from their 2024 offensive line is center Frank Ragnow, who was arguably the best center in the league before surprisingly retiring last off-season. In his absence, Glasgow moved to center, where he struggled. Glasgow was not retained this off-season and instead the Lions will start free agent addition Cade Mays. Mays is an unspectacular starter and an obvious downgrade from Ragnow, but it wouldn’t be hard for him to be an upgrade over Glasgow. Mahogany and Rutledge will remain the starters at guard for the second straight year and they’re both young enough that they could take a step forward in 2025, especially Ratledge, who entered the league with a high upside. 

At tackle, the Lions will likely move Sewell from right tackle to left tackle to replace Decker and then plug in the rookie Miller at right tackle. Decker was an above average left tackle in his prime, but his play slipped in 2025, so Miller replacing him in the starting lineup shouldn’t be a downgrade and he could possibly be an upgrade if the rookie is ahead of schedule. Sewell, meanwhile, is learning a new position on the left side and might not be as good there as he has been at right tackle, but it also is usually a smart idea to put your best offensive lineman at left tackle and, even if he isn’t as good as he has been at right tackle, he could still be one of the best left tackles in the league.

If Miller isn’t ready to start week one, the right tackle job would go to either Giovanni Manu, a 2024 4th round pick who has played 69 career snaps, or Larry Borom, a veteran with 38 career starts in five seasons in the league who has mostly struggled when he has been a starter. Miller should be considered the heavy favorite to start week one. On the interior, the top reserve is likely to be Juice Scruggs, a bust of a 2023 second round pick by the Texans who the Lions took a flier on this off-season. This offensive line isn’t what it was a couple years ago, but this is still a talented group who is significantly elevated by Penei Sewell.

Grade: B+

Running Backs

Another player the Lions lost this off-season is running back David Montgomery, who was traded to the Texans for some mid-round draft picks and backup offensive lineman Juice Scruggs in a cost savings move. Montgomery was arguably the best #2 running back in the league last season, rushing for 4.53 YPC and 8 touchdowns on 158 carries last season, but the Lions are well-equipped to be able to deal with Montgomery’s absence, as they will give a bigger role to lead back Jahmyr Gibbs, who has proven he deserves it, while also adding Isiah Pacheco to be the new #2 running back.

Gibbs has averaged 5.34 YPC in three seasons in the league and, while his carry totals of 250 and 243 over the past two seasons have ranked 11th in the league in each of the past two seasons, he has definitely proven he deserves a bigger role. He might not be quite as efficient in an expanded role, but he has the upside to lead the league in rushing, still only in his age 24 season. He also should remain heavily involved in the passing game, after slash lines of 52/517/4 and 77/616/5 over the past two seasons respectively, on an average of 1.67 yards per route run. 

Pacheco will be more of a true #2 running back than the 1b to Gibbs’ 1a that Montgomery was, but Pacheco will still be involved in a change of pace role. Only a 7th round pick in 2022, Pacheco was impressive in his first two seasons in the league, rushing for 4.71 YPC on 375 carries in 2022 and 2023 combined, but he suffered a broken leg early in 2024 and has not been the same since, rushing for 3.84 YPC on 201 carries in 2024 and 2025 combined. Another year removed from the injury, Pacheco could easily be better in 2026, but it is very possible he never returns to his old form. Still, he could easily be a solid #2 running back on early downs. With an elite feature back in Gibbs and Pacheco as the backup, this is a great backfield.

Grade: A

Receiving Corps

The biggest injury the Lions had on offense last season was tight end Sam LaPorta’s back injury, which cost him the final eight games of the season. LaPorta finished 4th among tight ends with 2.00 yards per route run and, aside from him, no other Lions tight end averaged more than 0.86 yards per route run, so it is not surprising that the Lions went from averaging 6.05 yards per play and a 32.74% first down rate in nine games with him to 5.88 yards per play and a 31.27% first down rate in the eight games he missed. 

LaPorta’s back injury was serious and could limit him into 2026, but I would still expect him to contribute more to the Lions offense this season than he did last season. His 2.00 yards per route run average last season was the highest of his 3-year career, but it isn’t significantly higher than his career average of 1.75 yards per route run and, only in his age 25 season in 2026, it wouldn’t be a surprise if LaPorta’s best football was still ahead of him if he can stay healthy.

When LaPorta is healthy, the Lions have one of the best top-3 in the receiving corps of any team in the league. Their top-2 wide receivers, Amon-Ra St. Brown and Jameson Williams, have surpassed 1,000 yards receiving in each of the past two seasons, making them the only wide receiver duo in the league to do so. St. Brown has actually surpassed the 1,000 yard mark in four straight seasons, including three straight seasons above 1,200 yards receiving, and, overall, he has averaged 2.45 yards per route run over the past four seasons combined. Williams, meanwhile, has posted slash lines of 58/1001/7 and 65/1117/7 on a combined 1.96 yards per route run over the past two seasons. Only in their age 27 season and age 25 season respectively, St. Brown and Williams should continue producing at similar levels in 2026.

With St. Brown, Williams, and LaPorta as their top-3 receivers and Jahmyr Gibbs featured prominently in the passing game out of the backfield, there aren’t a lot of targets left for anyone else. Isaac TeSlaa, a 2025 3rd round pick, is the favorite to be the #3 receiver, after splitting that role with departed veteran Kalif Raymond last season. Raymond was the more effective of the two, averaging 1.33 yards per route run to 0.81 for TeSlaa, but TeSlaa has a higher upside. He would need at least an injury ahead of him on the depth chart to have a meaningful role in this passing game, but he is not bad insurance to have. His primary competitors for the #3 receiver job are veteran free agent addition Greg Dortch, a slot specialist with a career 1.17 yards per route run average, and 5th round rookie Kendrick Law. 

Behind LaPorta at tight end, the Lions have Brock Wright, a blocking specialist with a career 0.91 yards per route run average, who was their primary tight end in LaPorta’s absence last season, and veteran free agent addition Tyler Conklin, who was likely brought in to provide insurance as a receiver in case LaPorta misses more time. Conklin is a better receiver than Wright, but largely by default, as his career 1.12 yards per route run average is still a steep drop off from what the Lions would likely get from LaPorta if he is healthy. Conklin is also going into his age 31 season, so his best days could easily be behind him at this point. A lack of depth is a bit of a concern, but this still has the potential to be one of the best receiving corps in the league if LaPorta can be relatively close to his best.

Grade: A

Interior Defenders

While the Lions’ offense was definitely the better of the two sides of the ball, ranking 7th in schedule adjusted efficiency, their defense wasn’t bad, ranking 16th in schedule adjusted efficiency. That is despite the fact that they had many more injuries on that side of the ball, leading the league in adjusted games lost to injury on defense. One key player who missed significant time was interior defender Alim McNeill, who missed seven games, including the first six games of the season recovering from a torn ACL suffered late in 2025. 

McNeill was also not his usual self even when on the field, dropping from 8.5 sacks, 8 hits, and a 10.0% pressure rate in 27 games between 2023 and 2024 to 1 sack, 1 hit, and a 7.2% pressure rate in 10 games in 2025, while also struggling against the run. McNeill is only going into his age 26 season in 2026 though, so he is an obvious bounce back candidate another year removed from his injury, which would be a big boost to this defense.

On top of McNeill missing time and being limited upon his return, the Lions were also without Levi Onwuzurike for the whole season due to a torn ACL suffered in the off-season. Onwuzurike excelled as a situational pass rusher in 2023 and 2024, with 2.5 sacks, 15 hits, and a 10.9% pressure rate in 26 games, but he has a pretty significant injury history, also missing all of 2022 with injury and it is very possible he misses more time in 2026 and/or is not the same in his first year back from a major injury. Still, he should be able to at least give them something in a situational role, which is more than he gave them last year. 

With McNeill and Onwuzurike missing significant time last season, DJ Reader (583 snaps), Tyleik Williams (446 snaps), and Roy Lopez (425 snaps) all played significant roles and all three were solid rotational players. Reader and Lopez were not retained this off-season, but Williams was a first round pick in 2025 and is likely ready for a bigger role. With Onwuzurike likely to return as a rotational reserve, Williams figures to start next to McNeill. He was at least average as both a run stopper and pass rusher (8.4% pressure rate) as a rookie and has the upside to take a big step forward in year two. Even if he doesn’t, he should at least be a capable starter.

Aside from Onwuzurike, the Lions depth at the interior defender position is very questionable, with Mehki Wingo, a 2024 6th round pick who has played 236 mediocre snaps in his career, and Skyler Gill-Howard, a 6th round rookie, expect to compete for deep reserve roles, which would be an even bigger concern if one of their top-3 misses time with injury. However, with McNeill and Onwuzurike likely to be healthier and Williams potentially improving significantly in his second season in the league, this group could easily be better in 2026 than it was in 2025 if enough things go right.

Grade: B+

Edge Defenders

Edge defender Aidan Hutchinson was the Lions’ best defensive player last season, performing among the best players in the league at his position both as a run defender and a pass rusher, with 14.5 sacks, 21 hits, and a 16.1% pressure rate. Almost never coming off the field, Hutchinson led all edge defenders with 1,005 snaps played and 100 total pressures. Hutchinson missed most of the 2024 season with a broken leg, but has otherwise never missed a game, while consistently playing a high snap count and performing at a high level. In four seasons in the league, the 2022 2nd overall pick has played 57.6 snaps per game, while totaling 43 sacks, 59 hits, and a 14.9% pressure rate in 56 career games. Still very much in his prime in his age 26 season, I would expect more of the same from him in 2026.

The rest of the Lions’ edge defender group is a concern though. Al-Quadin Muhammad played pretty well as the primary edge defender opposite Hutchinson last season, but he was not retained this off-season. Instead, the Lions may be counting on second round rookie Derrick Moore as the primary edge defender opposite Hutchinson, a role that could prove to be too much for him in year two. His primary competition for playing time is veteran free agent addition DJ Wonnum, who has played 659 snaps per season in six seasons in the league, but has mostly struggled. In total, he has 30 sacks, 26 hits, and a 8.4% pressure rate in 86 career games and he isn’t any better as a run defender. 

The Lions also took a flyer on former first round pick bust Payton Turner, who has played just 675 career snaps in five seasons in the league, and they drafted Tyre West in the 7th round. They will compete for deep reserve roles with Tyler Lacy, who joins Hutchinson as the only notable holdover edge defender from last season, when he struggled across 237 snaps, particularly struggling as a pass rusher (5.3% rate). A 4th round pick in 2023, Lacy has mostly struggled across 722 career snaps. Hutchinson elevates this position group significantly by himself, but the rest of the group is a concern.

Grade: B+

Linebackers

Linebacker Jack Campbell is another very talented player on this defense. A first round pick in 2023, Campbell only had a decent rookie year, but he broke out as an above average every down player in his second season in the league and then improved further in his third season in the league in 2025, playing at an All-Pro level. Still only in his age 26 season, Campbell is likely to continue playing at a high level for years to come, even if he doesn’t become a perennial All-Pro. 

Alex Anzalone ranked second among Lions linebackers with 1,003 snaps played last season, played at a decent level, and was not retained this off-season, but the Lions are pretty well-equipped to deal with his absence. Derrick Barnes was the third linebacker last season, but the Lions used three linebacker sets more than any team in the league, so that was close to an every down role (939 snaps), a role he played decently in. That was a career high in snaps for him, but he was also decent across 704 snaps in 2023 and I think he will be an adequate replacement for Anzalone.

Meanwhile, Malcolm Rodriguez, who missed most of last season recovering from a torn ACL, is set to be the third linebacker. He has flashed some potential in limited action (1,121 career snaps in four seasons in the league) and the Lions may use fewer three linebacker sets to take some of the pressure off of him. It is also possible Rodriguez faces competition from 4th round rookie Jimmy Rolder and veteran free agent addition Damone Clark, a 2022 5th round pick who was mediocre across snap counts of 398 and 782 in his first two seasons in the league and has subsequently been limited to just 265 total snaps over the past two seasons combined. Given the alternates, Rodriguez is probably the heavy favorite for the job. This is an above average linebacking corps whose overall grade is significantly elevated by Jack Campbell.

Grade: A-

Secondary

The Lions’ secondary was their most injury plagued unit last season. DJ Reed, signed as a free agent to be their #1 cornerback, but he missed six games due to injury and did not seem to be the same upon his return. Reed is an above average cornerback when healthy and he had only missed eight games over the previous four seasons, so he has bounce back potential, but he is going into his age 30 season in 2026, which is a minor concern. However, I do expect him to give the Lions more this season than he did in his injury plagued 2025 campaign. 

Terrion Arnold, a first round pick by the Lions in 2024, also missed significant time due to injury, playing just 312 snaps in 8 games. Arnold struggled as a rookie, but he was better in 2025 when on the field and still has a lot of upside, only going into his age 23 season. He has been overall disappointing thus far in his career and there is no guarantee he turns it around, but it wouldn’t be a surprise at all if he was at least a decent starter in 2026. 

With Reed and Arnold missing significant time last season, Amik Robertson led all Lions cornerbacks in snaps played with 842 and he was one of the worst starting cornerbacks in the league. He wasn’t retained this off-season though, which is addition by subtraction, and he was replaced by free agent addition Roger McCreary, who the Lions surprisingly were able to sign to one-year deal for barely more than the league minimum. 

A second round pick in 2022, McCreary started 38 of the 55 games he played for the Titans in three and a half seasons in the team and was a capable if unspectacular starter, but the rebuilding Titans opted to trade him during the middle of last season to the Rams, who viewed him as an insurance policy more than anything, leading to him playing just 39 snaps with the team, which could have contributed to his depressed free agent market. He should prove to be a great value and a significant upgrade over Amik Robertson. At the very least, he should be one of the Lions’ top-3 cornerbacks, even if Reed and Arnold are both healthy.

Expected to be the #4 cornerback at best going into last season, veteran Rock Ya-Sin ended up playing 611 snaps for the Lions last season due to the injuries to Reed and Arnold, after playing just 342 snaps in 2023 and 2024 combined with the Ravens and 49ers. Ya-Sin unsurprisingly struggled, but he played well enough for the Lions to bring him back as a depth option. Along with Ya-Sin, the Lions also have 5th round rookie Keith Abney, who was a great value, and 2024 2nd round pick Ennis Rakestraw, who has played just 46 snaps in his career due to injury, but who could still have significant upside if he can stay healthy, only going into his age 24 season.

At safety, Brian Branch and Kerby Joseph are one of the best safety duos in the league when healthy, but were limited to 12 games and 6 games respectively last season due to injury. Branch’s injury was a torn achilles that was suffered late enough in the season that it could easily cost him the start of the 2026 season and/or limit him upon his return, but he has been an above average safety since entering the league as a 2nd round pick in 2023 and, even at less than his best, he should still be an asset for this defense when he returns. Joseph, meanwhile, should be past his knee injury by the start of the 2026 season and had only missed 2 games with injury prior to last season, so he isn’t injury prone. Only in their age 25 and age 26 seasons respectively, they still have the potential to be one of the best safety duos in the league if they are healthy.

The Lions also have good reserve options at safety. Thomas Harper, who played 482 snaps as an injury fill-in last season, was decent, after the 2024 undrafted free agent also flashed some potential across 191 snaps as a rookie. Veteran Avonte Maddox was also decent as an injury fill-in last season across 342 snaps and, while he is a low upside option in his age 30 season, he also has plenty of experience, starting 44 of 95 games played in eight seasons in the league, while averaging 448 snaps per season. The Lions also further added to their depth this off-season by signing Chuck Clark, who is also low upside and on the wrong side of 30, but has started 80 of 123 games played in nine seasons in the league, while averaging 598 snaps per season. There are still injury concerns in this secondary, but I would expect them to be healthier than they were a year ago and, even if they aren’t, they have better depth this time around.

Grade: B+

Kicker

Jake Bates had an impressive rookie season in 2024, ranking 11th in the league with 5.97 points added above expected, but he was far less effective in 2025, dropping from a field goal percentage of 89.7% to 79.4% and costing the Lions 5.01 points compared to an average kicker. He has the potential to bounce back in 2026, but a lot of kickers prove to be inconsistent and Bates could easily be an inconsistent player throughout his career.

Grade: B

Conclusion

The Lions had a disappointing season in 2025, but they played a lot better than their 9-8 final record suggested, finishing 5th in schedule adjusted efficiency. That was despite having among the most injuries in the league, especially on defense. If they have fewer injuries and have better luck in close games, the Lions could easily see a big jump in wins in 2026 and they still have overall one of the most talented rosters in the league. The Lions also have one of the worst schedules in the league. I still wouldn’t expect them to match their 15-2 season from 2024, but they should be on the short list for contenders in the NFC.

Prediction: 14-3, 1st in NFC North