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2026 NFL Free Agency: The Top 100 Players Available and Potential Fits

The Super Bowl is over, but one of the key offseason events that might shape next year’s Super Bowl champion is only a month away. NFL free agency opens on March 9, and players can start officially signing with new teams on March 11. Between now and then, many of these players will come off the market, re-signing with their original teams or getting the franchise tag. Over a billion dollars worth of new contracts will be written by NFL teams in a short amount of time. We don’t want this list to be strictly financial, so we’ve tried to hit on a variety of positions, touching on offense and defense, players old and young. Again, the best players rarely make it to the open market, so talent is hard to find and value is even tougher. You will see teams cut veteran players to get under the salary cap in the next month, including players good enough to crack this list. There’s a slight defensive tilt to our top 100, with 55 players on defense, including 15 edge rushers. Only two teams didn’t get a player on here: the Dolphins and Vikings. The Packers and Seahawks led the way with six each. 100. Von Miller, edge rusher, Commanders Miller, 36, managed to lead Washington with nine sacks in 2025 while playing rotational snaps on an affordable $6 million deal. Can he do it again for Year 16? Of course, he can. He’s the NFL’s active career sack leader with 138.5, a lock for the Pro Football Hall of Fame, and he’s playing for a fraction of what he cost a few years ago. He played in his heyday for Gary Kubiak in Denver, so could he finish his career with Klint in Las Vegas? 99. Alohi Gilman, S, Ravens Gilman, 28, helped turn around the Ravens’ season after he was acquired from the Chargers. He has a history with Jesse Minter from their Chargers days, so he could stay in Baltimore, or follow John Harbaugh to the Giants, or reunite with Brandon Staley and the Saints. He’s active around the ball, with five career forced fumbles and six recoveries, not bad for a defensive back. He just finished a two-year, $10 million contract and should be in line for the same moving forward. 98. Joe Flacco, QB, Bengals Flacco, 41, went 2-8 as a fill-in starter this past season, but it was an exciting 2-8 to be sure. Traded from the Browns, he threw seven touchdowns against zero interceptions in his first three games with Cincinnati, then went off for 470 yards and four touchdowns in a loss to Chicago. He’s inexpensive as stopgap backups go, so if you have a young quarterback who might not be ready, Flacco is an entertaining bridge and still happy to throw it 45 times if you need a pinch-start. 97. Christian Kirk, WR, Texans Kirk, 29, disappeared for much of the 2025 season in Houston, then flashed in the playoffs, with eight catches for 144 yards and a touchdown in a win over the Steelers. He’d totaled 104 yards in the previous nine games, mind you, but some team will think they can bring back 2022 Kirk — 1,108 yards and eight touchdowns with the Jaguars. He’ll likely cost a third of the $18 million a year he got on his last contract, so there’s a chance for value. Perhaps to the Colts if Alec Pierce takes a big payday elsewhere? 96. Tyler Allgeier, RB, Falcons Allgeier, 25, has operated in the shadow of Bijan Robinson the last three years, playing second fiddle after rushing for 1,000-plus yards as a rookie in 2022. He’s averaged a good-not-great 4.3 yards per carry on the way to 719 rushing yards per season, and he’s averaged 155 carries since Robinson’s arrival, so there’s less wear on him as well. Could he land with former Falcons offensive coordinator Zac Robinson in Tampa? His 18 career touchdowns show that coaches can trust him near the goal line. 95. Asante Samuel Jr., CB, Steelers Samuel, 26, is a tempting reclamation project, limited to 10 games over the last two seasons due to a shoulder injury, but a late-season cameo with the Steelers showed promise. Samuel once had three interceptions in one playoff game against the Jaguars, and his first three years in the league netted six interceptions and consistent play. Could he land with the Cowboys and his old Chargers position coach, Derrick Ansley? 94. Reed Blankenship, S, Eagles Blankenship, 26, was undrafted when he first came to the Eagles and has become a three-year starter and a key piece on their 2024 Super Bowl championship team. He had seven interceptions in 2023-24 but took a step back in 2025. Will the Eagles seek change in their secondary or pay to keep him around? He re-signed a year ago for $3.5 million as a restricted free agent but should command double that now on the open market. 93. Quincy Williams, LB, Jets WIlliams, 29, averaged 110 tackles a year in his five seasons with the Jets, having just finished a three-year, $18 million contract. Would a change of scenery help him? There are potential matches in the Titans, where former Jets coach Robert Saleh is now, and the Falcons, where his defensive coordinator, Jeff Ulbrich, returns. Both had him when he was a first-team All-Pro selection in 2023, so it makes sense, given the choice, that he could return to one of them. 92. Nick Cross, S, Colts Cross, still only 24, has had a busy past two years with the Colts, totaling 266 tackles and four interceptions. Indianapolis has bigger free agents to worry about, but Cross had success with two different coordinators and won’t break the bank, drawing $6–8 million a year. If he doesn’t stick in Indy, he’d be a smart play for the Titans, where Gus Bradley knows him well and the front office has ample cap space to rebuild their defense with young potential. 91. Kyle Dugger, S, Steelers Dugger, 29, was jettisoned from the Patriots defense in a pick swap as part of their 2025 turnaround, landing with the Steelers and voiding the last two years of a four-year, $58 million deal. He started nine games in Pittsburgh with two interceptions, one returned for a touchdown, so the question is what fraction of his old salary will he draw on the open market? A new coach in Pittsburgh means there isn’t an obvious landing spot for Dugger, a low-risk rebound signing. 90. C.J. Gardner-Johnson, S, Bears Gardner-Johnson, 28, is such a mixed bag, with six picks each in 2022 and 2024 in Super Bowl seasons with the Eagles, but he bounced from the Texans to the Bears last year, with two picks, three sacks and inconsistent play. Giving him a valuation is difficult — is he the guy who got $9 million a year not that long ago, or the one who was cut in-season and took a league-minimum deal with the Bears? Pairing him with the right coach to get him focused and playing at a high level again is a gamble that could still pay off. 89. Chig Okonkwo, TE, Titans Okonwko, 26, has been good for about 50 catches and 500 yards a year, while having not-so-great quarterbacks throwing to him — Ryan Tannehill, Josh Dobbs, Will Levis, Cam Ward. Tennessee has the cap space to pay him well and keep him, but if he went to the right offense, he could get as many touchdowns in 2026 as he has in his NFL career (8). Affordably priced at around $8 million a year, remember next year that we told you he’d be much improved. 88. Najee Harris, RB, Chargers Harris, 27, is coming off a torn Achilles that ended his season with Los Angeles after only three games. There’s mileage beyond the years, thanks to averaging 278 carries a season in four straight 1,000-yard campaigns for the Steelers. He had a tepid market in free agency last year, taking $5.25 million from the Chargers, and his injury status might take a bit off that total. But if he can stay healthy, he’s a prime bounce-back candidate to return to form in 2026. 87. Greg Newsome, CB, Jaguars Newsome, 25, played on a fifth-year option in 2025 for the Browns and was traded to the Jaguars. He only has four career interceptions in five years in the league, but has inside-outside versatility, having played extensively both outside and in the slot. Jacksonville must decide between him and fellow free agent Montaric Brown or bringing back Jourdan Lewis opposite Travis Hunter. He’s still likely to draw between $8-10 million in free agency. 86. D.J. Reader, DT, Lions Reader, 31, just finished a two-year, $22 million contract with Detroit, starting every game as nose tackle. There’s talk he could return to Cincinnati, where he played from 2020-23, and the Bengals could use his presence up front after finishing dead last against the run and bottom three in points and yards allowed in 2025. In his prime with the Bengals, he was graded as a top-10 defensive lineman, and he’s not that anymore, but could still be a match in the $6 million range. 85. Cam Robinson, OT, Browns Robinson, 30, has played for four teams in the last two seasons, and was twice traded before finishing 2025 in Cleveland. He’s gone from franchise tags to a $12 million contract last year, and he’ll likely take less than that as he searches for some stability. He has 114 career starts, and that kind of experience makes him a known commodity, which is valuable at tackle. Could the Bears, with injury concerns for at least the start of 2026, be a good match? 84. Sheldon Rankins, DT, Texans Rankins, 31, has changed teams in four of the last five offseasons, but he started every game in 2025 for perhaps the best defensive front in football, so there’s a good chance he’s back with Houston. He made $5.25 million last year and should draw more this year with teams eager to poach from a dominant defense. Houston was able to bring back everyone from Demeco Ryans to defensive coordinator Matt Burke and line coach Rod Wright, so you’d think keeping Rankins will be a priority as well. 83. Kingsley Enagbare, edge rusher, Packers Enagbare, 26, has 11.5 sacks in four years as a rotational player in Green Bay. You can see why teams might try to mine the depth of a talented defense, trusting that the player stuck behind Micah Parsons and Rashan Gary might be able to do well in a larger role. He’ll likely draw about $6 million a year, which projects as a team’s third rusher, but the former fifth-round pick has exceeded expectations before — could he follow Jeff Hafley to the Dolphins? 82. Eric Stokes, CB, Raiders Stokes, 26, was a first-round pick of the Packers who never worked out in Green Bay, inconsistent and oft-injured. But he got a fresh start in Las Vegas on a one-year, $4 million prove-it deal and started 16 games, playing well enough to be ranked as the No. 19 corner by Pro Football Focus’ grading. The Raiders have the second-most available cap space, so it’s hard to imagine them letting their best defensive back go, though it’ll likely cost them double what it did a year ago. 81. Keenan Allen, WR, Chargers Allen, 33, returned to the Chargers in 2025 and still found a way to get 81 catches for 777 yards and four touchdowns. He’s easing into WR3 mode, but has a résumé with 1,000-plus catches and 70 career touchdowns, so he’s a good fit for a team looking for a veteran mentor to pair with a young receiver. That could mean staying with the Chargers, but he’d be a nice value match for the Saints, who could use another playmaker and have Kellen Moore, who had him in 2023. 80. Alex Anzalone, LB, Lions Anzalone, 31, has had a productive five-year run in the middle of Detroit’s defense, averaging 14 starts and 98 tackles per year. He’s done it inexpensively, making $6 million a year on his last deal. Could his time with the Lions be up? Seems he could land with Aaron Glenn and the Jets if that is the case — Glenn was with him for four of those years in Detroit and arguably his best. 79. Josh Jobe, CB, Seahawks Jobe, 27, was cut by the Eagles before the 2024 season, landed on Seattle’s practice squad and has quickly ascended to an every-game starter in a talented secondary. He re-signed this season for $2 million, but will be closer to $10 million on his next deal as other teams seek to crib from the NFL’s No. 1 scoring defense. Two Super Bowls in four seasons doesn’t hurt. Seattle has difficult decisions ahead in their secondary in free agency. 78. Jonah Williams, OT, Cardinals Williams, 28, has been limited by knee and shoulder injuries to 15 games over the last two seasons, so his durability is a question mark, but he’s coming off a two-year, $30 million contract and is now probably in the $8-10 million range. He missed only two games in his final three years with the Bengals, so he’s had consistent runs of good health before. A new coach in Arizona means he could be on the move, though the Cardinals have ~$40 million in available cap space. 77. Cam Jordan, DE, Saints Jordan, 36, had a nice bounce-back season in 2025, getting 10.5 sacks after totaling six in the previous two years. He’s a lifelong Saint and likely isn’t going anywhere, but his continued production at an age where most edge rushers are long since retired is enough to put him on this list. He played on a cap-friendly $6 million contract last year and is likely to re-sign for much the same. He’s up to 132 career sacks, so his spot in the Pro Football Hall of Fame is a given. 76. Montaric Brown, CB, Jaguars Brown, 26, is a former seventh-round pick whose role in Jacksonville has increased with each season, such that he was Pro Football Focus’ 26th-rated corner in 2025. The Jaguars have a young secondary, so Brown might be best served by signing elsewhere — he had two interceptions and 12 passes defensed last season. With luck, he’ll make twice as much per season as he’s totaled in his first four years in the league. 75. David Onyemata, DT, Falcons Onyemata, 33, has had a strong three years in Atlanta, with a career-best 62 tackles as part of an improved Falcons defense in 2025. He took a leadership role after Grady Jarrett’s departure and after three years and $35 million, he’ll likely draw less, but only as a factor of being older. This was Pro Football Focus’ No. 8 defensive tackle, and don’t rule out him going to a top contender, with only one conference championship appearance in his 10 years in the league. 74. Cade Otton, TE, Buccaneers Otton, 26, has played a ton for the Bucs, with at least 92% of offensive snaps in each of the last three years. He’s averaged 52 catches and 500 yards in Tampa, but he’s also totaled only 11 touchdowns, getting his lone score of 2025 in the season finale. The Bucs have precious little else at the position, so if they let him walk rather than pay $8 million a year or more, they’d have to invest in a proper replacement, either in free agency with limited options or in the draft. Jacksonville? A Liam Coen reunion might make sense. 73. Trevon Diggs, CB, free agent Diggs, 27, is a wild card on this list, two years removed from making $19 million a year, yet a player who was cut by the Cowboys and Packers at the end of this past season. He has an 11-interception season on his résumé, but went all of 2025 without so much as a pass defensed. He’s worth a shot for a team that doesn’t have to rely on him as an every-down corner, but what kind of contract does that yield? Spotrac has him at $7.5 million, which still seems like a big investment on a prove-it deal. 72. Marcus Mariota, QB, Commanders Mariota, 32, is a good indication of just how slim the quarterback options are in free agency. He went 2-6 this year for Washington and is 9-17 as a starter since 2019, yet he’s the third- or fourth-best passer available. He had 10 touchdowns against seven interceptions in 2025, and the hope is that your backup quarterback can help you go .500 while a starter is out, but he hasn’t been there in a while. He made $8 million this past season and is probably down a tick from that. Maybe he follows Kliff Kingsbury and becomes the Rams’ next backup quarterback? 71. Russell Wilson, QB, Giants Wilson, 37, has fallen hard over the last three years, going from a $40 million starter in Denver to barely playing on a bad Giants team. He went 0-3 as a New York starter, and after making $10 million this past season, he might draw half that. His best scenario is likely a bridge starter who goes to a team with a young starter so they don’t have to rush him. Go back to 2024, he had 16 touchdowns against five interceptions while going 6-5 for the Steelers, and that’s the hope for a team that brings him in as a stopgap. 70. Rachaad White, RB, Buccaneers White, 27, is a versatile back who’s averaged just over 1,000 yards from scrimmage and 50 catches a year in Tampa. He took a backseat to Bucky Irving and won’t be returning, but could be the lesser end of a nice 1-2 punch. The Bucs have lost enough offensive coordinators that he could follow any of them, from Dave Canales in Carolina to Liam Coen in Jacksonville and Josh Grizzard in Philadelphia. Anything over $5 million a year feels like too much — of 35 backs with 500-plus carries since 2022, he ranks 34th in yards/carry, ahead of only Kareem Hunt. 69. Arnold Ebiketie, edge, Falcons Ebiketie, 27, got pushed aside with Atlanta using two first-round picks on rookie edge rushers in 2025. After 12 sacks in 2023-24, he managed just two, even as the Falcons’ defense leaped from 31 sacks to 57 in 2025. That’s not to say he can’t get back to a solid rotational role in a fresh start — could he follow Raheem Morris to San Francisco, or reunite with Ryan Nielsen in Minnesota? A one-year deal in the $6-8 million range would let him reset himself for 2027. 68. Jalen Thompson, S, Cardinals Thompson, 27, is a five-year starter who’s consistently good but rarely great. He has nine interceptions in his career but none in the last two years, two career sacks, but averages 100 tackles a year over those last five seasons. Pro Football Focus has him graded as the No. 35 safety, but that’s enough to get him $8-10 million a year. If he isn’t back with Arizona, he could reunite with former Cardinals defensive coordinator Vance Joseph in Denver. 67. J.K. Dobbins, RB, Broncos Dobbins, 27, seems perpetually limited by injuries. He had rushed for 772 yards in 10 games for Denver when he sustained a season-ending Lisfranc injury in his foot. He had 60+ rushing yards in all but one game, averaging 5.0 yards per carry, so if a team could just get him healthy for a full season, you’d have a Pro Bowl-caliber running back. He cost Denver only $2.75 million last year, and it might take until summer when he can show he’s recovered, but he should land more than that for 2026. 66. Leo Chenal, LB, Chiefs Chenal, 25, isn’t an every-down linebacker, but he’s stout against the run and improving as a pass-rusher. He’s totaled seven sacks in four years under Steve Spagnuolo and averaged 55 tackles a year. Would another defense try to develop his coverage skills to make him someone who doesn’t have to come off the field in nickel or obvious passing situations? He’s had a tackle for loss in three different Super Bowls, so his experience doesn’t hurt if you’re trying to create a playoff culture in the locker room. 65. Kaden Elliss, edge rusher, Falcons Elliss, 30, is a productive linebacker who blitzes well, with 19.5 sacks in the last four years, the last three in Atlanta. He’s always been able to pile up tackles, and has 29 tackles for loss with the Falcons, who brought back defensive coordinator Jeff Ulbrich. He was a smart signing away from the Saints in 2023 for a reasonable $21 million, and probably lands a similar deal whether it’s back to Atlanta, or maybe reunite with Sean Payton in Denver, where he could play with his brother Jonah, an outside linebacker. 64. Ed Ingram, G, Texans Engram, who turns 27 next week, did so much in a contract year to improve his market after being traded from the Vikings to the Texans for a sixth-round pick. After being rated as Pro Football Focus’ 66th-best guard in 2024, he was 12th in their rankings for 2025, with 55 starts in four seasons. That’s good for at least $10 million a year, and knowing the Texans went through a major offensive line rebuild already, they would do well to keep him if possible. 63. Wyatt Teller, G, Browns Teller, 31, has been to three Pro Bowls and just finished a four-year deal paying him $14 million a year. He was rated as the top guard in football when he got that deal, but he’s been closer to average of late: Pro Football Focus had him 40th out of 80 guards in 2025. Cleveland rotated him before putting him on injured reserve, an awkward ending that might keep him from following Kevin Stefanski and Tommy Rees to Atlanta. He was in Cleveland for Todd Monken’s first stint with the Browns, so perhaps that helps him stay another year. 62. Jadeveon Clowney, edge rusher, Cowboys Clowney, turning 33 next week, is a unicorn of a late-bloomer edge rusher, a former No. 1 overall pick who has played for seven teams in the last eight seasons and somehow has more sacks in his last five years (34.5) than he did in his first seven (32). That includes 8.5 sacks this season for Dallas as an absolute bargain, costing them all of $3.45 million. He might cost a little more this time around, but it’s still smart value for any team looking for reliable veteran depth and surprisingly good production. 61. Lavonte David, LB, Buccaneers David, 36, could be retiring, having finished his 14th season tied with Hall of Famer Derrick Brooks for the Bucs’ career tackles lead. This opens a subsection we’ll call “ageless linebackers” — David was a step slower in 2025, but still led the team with 114 tackles, chipping in with 3.5 sacks, two forced fumbles and a pick. He’s had an iconic run in Tampa and is only choosing between retiring and returning. To hear him talk on the podium after his final game, he sounded content to walk away with a prolific, memorable career. 60. Demario Davis, LB, Saints Davis, still going at 37, managed to set a career high with 143 tackles for the Saints in 2025. He’s at an age where linebackers rarely exist, let alone play as actively as he does, and he’s hinted he’ll not only play again but test the free-agent waters. Davis deserves to finish with a contender — 227 career regular-season games but only five in the playoffs, and two wins at that. He’s had six straight seasons with at least 1,000 defensive snaps, a model of durability at a demanding position. 59. Bobby Wagner, LB, Commanders Wagner, 35, is also years past people saying it’s amazing he was still playing. He had 162 tackles for Washington in 2025, with 4.5 sacks and two interceptions, missing Pro Bowl honors (he’s made it 10 times already). A new coordinator for the Commanders could mean Wagner is signing elsewhere, a future Hall of Famer still making plays on a consistent basis. Could he return to the Seahawks or Rams and try to chase a second ring on the way out? 58. Al-Quadin Muhammad, edge rusher, Lions Muhammad, 30, had the most sacks of any impending free agent in 2025 with 11, all off the bench as a productive rotational player in Detroit. He had six sacks for the Colts in 2021, but has otherwise wandered around the league unremarkably. Could he be a double-digit sack guy in another scheme? If he doesn’t go back to Detroit, could he land with Aaron Glenn and the Jets, who have much more cap space to pay him, say, $7-8 million a year? 57. Rico Dowdle, RB, Panthers Dowdle, 27, has had back-to-back 1,000-yard seasons for the Cowboys and Panthers — nearly identical years, within 3 yards and one carry of each other, with the exact same number of catches. He had a lukewarm market a year ago and signed for $2.75 million with Carolina, but doubled his pay by cashing out another $2.75 million in incentives. Carolina leaning on Chuba Hubbard down the stretch could have him signing elsewhere. Would Mike McCarthy like him for a Dallas reunion in Pittsburgh? 56. Dre’Mont Jones, edge rusher, Ravens Jones, 29, split last season between the Titans and Ravens and reset his career high with seven sacks. He’s been a consistent rotational disruptor bouncing through four teams in seven years, averaging just over five sacks a season. With the coaching change, he could land with John Harbaugh and the Giants, could go back to Seattle with Mike Macdonald, and should get a bump from the $8.5 million salary he earned in 2025. 55. Dallas Goedert, TE, Eagles Goedert, 31, probably isn’t going anywhere — he’s played his eight-year career in Philadelphia, and more than doubled his career high with 11 touchdowns in 2025. He’s a reliable target on a team that lacks depth at receiver, so his steady mid-level production (between 40 and 60 catches for the last seven years) is a constant even as the Eagles change offensive coordinators every year. He restructured to a $10 million deal last year and will likely take less to return for 2026. 54. Devin Bush, LB, Browns Bush, 27, found himself this past year in Cleveland, filling up the stat sheet with 125 tackles, three picks (two returned for touchdowns), two sacks and two forced fumbles. Once the 10th overall draft pick with the Steelers, his play there dropped off after a promising rookie year. He made $3.2 million with the Browns and should be a coveted free agent. Pro Football Focus is high on him, ranking him as the No. 8 overall free agent and projecting $12 million a year. 53. Kwity Paye, edge rusher, Colts Paye, 27, had only four sacks in a disappointing 2025 after totaling 16.5 between 2023-24, a former first-round pick who managed to play a career-high in snaps while matching his career lows in sacks and tackles for loss. Will he have a market based on the production he showed in previous seasons? Perhaps. Spotrac has him generously at $17.8 million a year, but he’s not expected back with the Colts — there’s a chance he could reunite with Indy defensive coordinator Gus Bradley with the Titans. 52. Calais Campbell, DT, Cardinals Campbell, 39, is ageless, now with four straight seasons of at least five sacks while playing for four different teams. He’s a living legend, with 119 career sacks and six Pro Bowls. He made it to the Super Bowl as a rookie in 2008 with the Cardinals — 17 years ago — and how cool would it be if he signed on with a top contender and found his way back, turning 40 before the season starts in September? He signed for $5.5 million last year, and if a 40-year-old defensive lineman can make a case for a raise, Campbell can. 51. Jaylinn Hawkins, S, Patriots Hawkins, 28, a surprise success in the New England secondary, signed for a paltry $1.8 million. He had four interceptions — matching his career total in his first five seasons, and had 71 tackles as a reliable presence on the back end. It’s only his second season as a full-time starter, but defenses will want to pluck talent from New England’s Super Bowl roster, so he should be able draw $8-10 million a year, whether he returns or signs elsewhere. 50. Zion Johnson, G, Chargers Johnson, 26, is difficult to assess, a former first-round pick whose fifth-year option was declined a year ago (at a hefty cost of $17.6 million), a solid run blocker who struggled in pass protection. The Chargers played most of 2025 without either of their stellar starting tackles, but before they get them back, they’ll have to decide on whether it’s worth spending to keep interior players like Johnson. Los Angeles has ample cap space, so it could come down to whether new offensive coordinator Mike McDaniel sees him as a fit. 49. Jamel Dean, CB, Buccaneers Dean, 29, had one of the league’s more remarkable seasons, agreeing to an $8 million pay cut to stay in Tampa, then having a huge season with three interceptions and two forced fumbles. Pro Football Focus loves him, rating him as the NFL’s No. 5 cornerback for 2025 and ranking him as the No. 5 overall free agent at any position. He could draw his old Bucs salary of $12 million a year as a free agent, but he’s only played for Todd Bowles in Tampa and likes it there, so there’s no telling what he’ll do. 48. Wan’Dale Robinson, WR, Giants Robinson, 25, is a volume receiver. Only five receivers in the league have more targets in the last two seasons than his 280, and while the other five average 18 touchdown catches in that span, Robinson has just seven. So he’s coming off a 1,014-yard season with 90 catches, but only 42% of those catches resulted in a first down. There are lofty projections out there for Robinson. Spotrac has him getting $15 million a year, but that’s a lot for someone with nine career touchdowns on 389 targets. 47. K’Lavon Chaisson, edge rusher, Patriots Chaisson, 26, is one of the league’s best comeback stories of 2025. A first-round pick by the Jaguars in 2020, he totaled five sacks in four years, got cut by the Panthers before the 2024 season and salvaged five sacks with the Raiders. That got him a one-year, $3 million deal with the Patriots, and he’s came through with 7.5 sacks, 10 tackles for loss and two forced fumbles for a defense good enough to get to the Super Bowl. He wants to stay in New England, and could triple his 2025 salary in doing so. 46. Kamren Curl, S, Rams Curl, 26, was a steal for the Rams two years ago at $4.5 million a year. He finished second on the team with 122 tackles in the regular season and led them in the playoffs with 27. He’s missed two games in the last three years and stands to earn double what he got on his last contract. Los Angeles has enough cap space and not that many free agents, so it should be able to bring him back as an ascending leader on their defense. 45. Joel Bitonio, G, Browns Bitonio, 34, could very well retire. He’s up to 178 career starts over 12 seasons, missing just two games over the last five years. That consistency and durability helped him to seven straight Pro Bowls from 2018-24. Only two career playoff games, no wins, so you’d understand it if he went to a strong contender just to chase a ring at the end of his career. He made $16 million a year on the deal he just finished, but should command less than that now with some inevitable dropoff. Pro Football Focus rated him 21st among guards. 44. Kevin Byard, S, Bears Byard, 32, led the NFL with seven interceptions. He also led the league in 2017, and this year earned him not only his third Pro Bowl but his third first-team All-Pro honor as well. He went to Chicago on a two-year, $15 million deal and probably will get a bit less than that on age, but he set the tone on a defense predicated on takeaways, so keeping him on a one-year deal wouldn’t be bad at all for the Bears, who won’t be able to keep their talented secondary intact. 43. Alontae Taylor, CB, Saints Taylor, 27, will be a good test for whether the Saints, finally out of the salary-cap hell they’ve been stuck in for years, can keep their best homegrown players. Taylor was a second-round pick who held up well once the veterans in the New Orleans secondary moved on — two interceptions in 2025, six sacks over the last two years and at least 10 passes defensed in all four seasons. Was a second-half surge enough to convince Taylor he wants to help the Saints continue their growth? 42. Alijah Vera-Tucker, G, Jets Tucker, 26, missed all of 2025 with a torn triceps muscle, and his injury history — playing 43 of a possible 85 games in five years — makes it hard to project a market for him. Pro Football Focus had him as the league’s No. 11 guard entering 2025, and even coming off the injury, they project him to a four-year deal worth $70 million. That’s $17.5 million a year. It’s reasonable to think he’ll come in short of that, if only because of the injury problems that have ended three of his last four seasons early. 41. Cade Mays, C, Panthers Mays, 26, settled in with 12 starts in 2025, after totaling 15 in his first three years in Carolina. The Panthers are already heavily invested at guard, so if his market gets as high as some are projecting — $10-12 million a year — then Carolina might reset with a rookie at center and focus their limited cap space elsewhere. This year’s center class in free agency has a lot of good-not-great options, so finding the right match in that middle-tier financial range will be important. 40. Javonte Williams, RB, Cowboys Williams, 25, had a breakout year as a free-agent bargain for the Cowboys, rushing for a career-best 1,201 yards and 11 touchdowns and averaging 4.8 yards per carry, a full yard better than the previous year with the Broncos. He went to Dallas on a one-year, $3 million deal, but could get double that this time around, with good pass-catching abilities, averaging 38 receptions per season. Dallas is well over the cap, so it may have a fourth leading rusher in four seasons in 2026. 39. David Njoku, TE, Browns Njoku, 29, is coming off a down year — 33 catches for 293 yards, both his lowest totals in five seasons, with four touchdowns and a mishmash of quarterbacks old and young throwing to him. After nine seasons, it’s fair to ask if he’s a Brown for life — if he chose to sign elsewhere, Cleveland’s offensive staff is now in Atlanta, where he could be seen as a cheaper alternative to paying Kyle Pitts. He made $14 million a year on his last deal with the Browns, but is likely down to the $8-10 million a year range on his next contract. 38. Deebo Samuel, WR, Commanders Samuel, 30, has seen his value decline. After being traded from San Francisco to Washington, he agreed to a lesser deal worth $17 million. His one-year production for the Commanders was lackluster: 72 catches for 727 yards and five touchdowns. The same player who once led the league at 18.2 yards per catch averaged a career-low 10.1 in 2025, and the versatile playmaker who once rushed for 365 yards and eight touchdowns was barely used as a ballcarrier, getting 75 yards and a single score. Can a creative offensive mind get more out of his skill set? Perhaps, but it’s likely he’ll get less this time around, closer to $12-14 million a year. 37. Travis Kelce, TE, Chiefs Kelce, 36, is retiring, right? That’s certainly the presumption. He’s made 11 straight Pro Bowls, even as his production has dropped off — his targets and catches hit 10-year lows in 2025, and he’s totaled 13 touchdowns over the last three seasons. Again, it’s OK — he’s 36 years old, but you really haven’t known Patrick Mahomes without having Kelce to throw to as a core part of their dynastic run over the last decade. 36. John Franklin-Myers, DL, Broncos Franklin-Myers, 29, has reset his career high for sacks in each of two seasons in Denver, getting seven in 2024 and now 7.5 this past season. That’s solid production from a two-year, $15 million deal, and he’ll get more than that this time around as a key cog on a top-five defense that helped the Broncos to the AFC Championship Game. If he doesn’t stay in Denver, keep an eye on Atlanta, where defensive coordinator Jeff Ulbrich had him with the Jets. 35. Boye Mafe, edge rusher, Seahawks Mafe, 27, has seen his sack totals go down sharply in the last two years, from nine in 2023 to six in 2024 and just two in 2025. Seattle’s defense was outstanding, giving up the fewest points in the league, and Mafe is an undervalued part of that front. ESPN has a “pass rush win rate” statistic, and Mafe had the eighth-best pass rush win rate in the NFL, just two spots below the Browns’ Myles Garrett. Seattle has plenty of cap space to bring him back, but if it doesn’t, keep an eye on the Raiders, who are hiring Seahawks offensive coordinator Klint Kubiak. 34. Isaac Seumalo, G, Steelers Seumalo, 32, graded out as Pro Football Focus’ No. 16 guard as he wrapped up a three-year, $24 million deal. He made the Pro Bowl in 2024, so the question is whether he can command more at 32 than he did at 29. Does a coaching change in Pittsburgh impact his likelihood to return there? Mike Tomlin is out of football, and Arthur Smith went to the college ranks, but one option is his line coach, Pat Meyer, who is now in Buffalo and might need a reliable guard if David Edwards signs elsewhere. 33. Riq Woolen, CB, Seahawks Woolen, 26, led the NFL with six interceptions as a rookie in 2022, making the Pro Bowl, and he’s totaled six over the last three seasons in helping the Seahawks to the Super Bowl. Seattle has plenty of cap space but can’t keep them all. Woolen has 10-plus passes defended in each of his four NFL seasons. Projections for his next deal are all over the map. Spotrac has him at $8 million, PFF has him at $15 million and others think he could draw more than that. 32. Nakobe Dean, LB, Eagles Dean, 25, has been limited by injuries throughout four seasons in Philadelphia. His peak was 128 tackles in 2024 in a Super Bowl season for the Eagles, though a knee injury sidelined him for most of the playoffs and through the first month of this season. He can get to the quarterback — seven sacks and 16 tackles for loss in the last two seasons — but his durability is a question mark. The Eagles used a first-round pick on Jihaad Campbell last year, so maybe they’ve already decided on Dean’s future. How much can Dean get as a free agent? There’s a wide range of projections, but he’s likely in the $8 million a year vicinity. 31. Jaquan Brisker, S, Bears Brisker, 26, got healthy again in 2025, piling up 93 tackles in a vastly improved Bears secondary. Chicago has major decisions to make on who to keep in that group and who to let go, with Brisker and veteran safety Kevin Byard both free agents. Will teams make a big investment in a player who’s had three concussions? Will the Bears lean into Byard at age 32 because his ball skills fit in better with the nature of their defense? 30. Isaiah Likely, TE, Ravens Likely, 25, had 11 touchdowns between 2023-24 but dropped off this past season, getting 27 catches for 307 yards and a single touchdown. Baltimore opted to extend Mark Andrews, so their investment in the position was there, but Likely has good opportunities if he wants to sign elsewhere. He could follow John Harbaugh to the Giants or former Ravens offensive coordinator Todd Monken to the Browns, and he might want a one-year deal ($8 million or so) for the chance to reset himself as a top-of-market free agent in 2027. 29. Bryan Cook, S, Chiefs Cook, 26, is the model for low-key under-the-radar coverage skills without splash plays. He has three interceptions in four seasons in Kansas City, one sack and zero forced fumbles, but he’s solid and consistent enough as a defender to be Pro Football Focus’ No. 5 safety in 2025. What’s tricky is the Chiefs have the least cap space of any NFL team, so they’re going to have to let talented young players walk and must prioritize which, if any, they’re able to extend. 28. David Edwards, G, Bills Edwards, 28, has been a bargain for the Bills the last two years, starting at guard while making $6 million for two years. He’ll cost significantly more as a free agent, with some projections close to $20 million a year. Does Buffalo promoting Joe Brady to head coach make them more likely to want to keep their offensive line intact? It’ll be expensive to keep them all, so it’s possible they’ll re-sign one of their two free-agent starters and use the draft to replace the other. 27. Jaylen Watson, CB, Chiefs Watson, 27, is a former seventh-round pick who thrived in his first year as a full-time starter in 2025. He had two interceptions after just one in his first three seasons, and finished with 64 tackles. Pro Football Focus has him as their No. 13 corner, one spot behind teammate Trent McDuffie, who is due to make $13 million on his fifth-year option. Could Watson draw a similar salary on a multi-year deal? Kansas City is way over the salary cap, so this is an opportunity to grab a young defender with significant postseason experience, with two picks in 10 career playoff games. 26. Joey Bosa, edge rusher, Bills Bosa, 30, had only five sacks in a healthy first season in Buffalo, but he did lead the NFL with five forced fumbles. He should get a deal similar to the $12.6 million he got a year ago. With two playoff wins in 10 years in the league, might he consider taking less to join his brother Nick with the 49ers and try to make a meaningful postseason push? Buffalo is over the cap as it is, so it might look to go younger rather than bringing Bosa back. 25. Braden Smith, OT, Colts Smith, 29, is about as tenured as you can be without a single Pro Bowl — eight years and 105 career starts in Indianapolis, and he’s just finished a four-year, $70 million deal. Third contracts are rarely as lucrative as second deals are, and Smith has missed 16 games over the last three years, so durability is a concern. If he’s still drawing $12 million a year or more, the Colts could turn to Jalen Travis, a 2025 fourth-round pick who stepped in for Smith at the end of this season. 24. Connor McGovern, C, Bills McGovern, 28, reads much like his linemate Edwards. Buffalo has gotten 51 starts from him in three years for $22 million, total. He made the Pro Bowl in 2024, but now it will cost much more to extend, likely $15 million a year or more. The Bills didn’t draft McGovern or Edwards, but did well enough identifying them on the thrifty second contracts; they got reliable, inexpensive play from them. Replacing one or both with similar value signings won’t be easy. 23. Romeo Doubs, WR, Packers Doubs, 25, has had steady mid-level production in Green Bay, averaging 50 catches, 600 yards and five touchdowns a year in his four seasons there. He stepped up in the playoff loss with eight catches for 124 yards and a score — finding value in a No. 2 receiver can be tough, and he’s likely to come in the $12-15 million range, above the $11 million extension Christian Watson signed for last year. By Pro Football Reference’s “Approximate Value” metric, the top two picks of the 2022 fourth round were both Packers, in Doubs and tackle Zach Tom, already signed to a nice extension. 22. Khalil Mack, edge rusher, Chargers Mack, 34, is another year removed from a 17-sack season in 2023, dropping to six sacks in 2024 and 5.5 this past season, playing 12 games due to an elbow injury. His 12-year career divides neatly into three four-year runs with the Raiders, Bears and Chargers, and it’s impressive he had more sacks with the Chargers than in Chicago. He earned $18 million last year, but that figure should drop as his production has, at an age where few edge rushers are still going. 21. Quay Walker, LB, Packers Walker, 25, does a bit of everything for Green Bay — four straight 100-tackle seasons, including 128 this past year, and he’s active in the opposing backfield with nine career sacks and 29 tackles for loss. The Packers declined his fifth-year option, opting not to pay him $14.7 million in 2026, and he’ll likely get about $10 million a year. Pro Football Focus doesn’t think much of him, ranking him 76th among NFL linebackers, with his pass coverage skills bringing him down. 20. Travis Etienne, RB, Jaguars Etienne, 27, has been a steady run presence in the last four years in Jacksonville, rushing for 1,107 yards and seven touchdowns in 2025. Keeping him will mean a nice raise — let’s say $8 million a year — but the Jaguars were pleased with fourth-round rookie Bhayshul Tuten in limited use this past season. Using the franchise tag at $14.5 million seems too expensive at a position where there isn’t much guaranteed money beyond the first year on many contracts. 19. Kyle Pitts, TE, Falcons Pitts, 25, stepped up in a contract year with 88 catches for 928 yards and five touchdowns — his touchdown total has increased every year — 1-2-3-4-5 in five seasons. Was that success more telling of Atlanta’s absence of any real receiving depth? He’ll be the top tight end available, which should get him $12–14 million a year, though the Falcons could hedge their bet and give him the franchise tag, which is $16 million for one season. Upgrading the receiving talent in Atlanta is a must, with new coach Kevin Stefanski needing more weapons in the pass game. 18. Jauan Jennings, WR, 49ers Jennings, 28, could benefit as San Francisco is expected to move on from Brandon Aiyuk, who missed 2025 recovering from a major knee injury. The 49ers’ receiving corps has underwhelmed — Jennings has 15 touchdown catches over the last two seasons, but he also totaled 643 yards this season on 90 targets, ranking 55th among NFL receivers in yards/target. If he’s getting more than $20 million a year, could he price himself out of San Francisco’s budget? 17. Rasheed Walker, OT, Packers Walker, who turns 26 this week, is a former seventh-round pick who developed into a three-year starter at left tackle for the Packers, protecting Jordan Love’s blind side. He isn’t great — Pro Football Focus rated him as the NFL’s No. 54 tackle last season — but he’s consistent and experienced enough to merit $20 million a year in free agency. It’s possible Green Bay will let him walk and shift 2024 first-round pick Jordan Morgan into his spot. 16. Rashid Shaheed, WR, Seahawks Shaheed, 27, was electric after Seattle acquired him from the Saints at the trade deadline — the only NFL player with a punt return and kickoff return for a touchdown, adding another kickoff touchdown in the playoffs. His receiving skills — 59 catches for 687 yards and two touchdowns — are a nice bonus, and Seattle will have tough decisions on which impending free agents ig can afford to keep. He’s likely to draw $15 million a year from a team that values a return threat and can use him creatively on offense as well. 15. Mike Evans, WR, Buccaneers Evans, 32, has a Hall of Fame résumé already with 108 career touchdown catches, so this is a three-way fork — does he retire at 32, coming off a year when he played only eight games due to hamstring and collarbone injuries? Does he come back and try to help the Bucs to one more playoff berth after a down 2025? Or if the outside offers are compelling enough, does he finish his career elsewhere? He made $20.5 million a year on his last deal, but Spotrac only has him projected to $13 million for 2026. It’s likely he finishes his career with the Bucs, but leave open the slim chance he goes somewhere like Houston, close to his hometown of Galveston, with a strong contender he could help. 14. Coby Bryant, S, Seahawks Bryant, 26, is another part of Seattle’s amazing 2022 draft class, a fourth-rounder who has deftly shifted from corner to safety and has seven interceptions in the last two seasons. Like any Super Bowl team, the Seahawks will be hard-pressed to keep all of their young talents coming off rookie contracts. It might be a choice between Bryant at $12-14 million a year over their young corners. We have Seattle with five free agents in the top 50, and that could increase with success in the Super Bowl. 13. Nahshon Wright, CB, Bears Wright, 27, helped himself in 2025 as much as any player, going to the Bears on a league-minimum $1.1 million contract with one interception and three starts in four NFL seasons. He was a ballhawk on one of the NFL’s best takeaway defenses — five interceptions and two forced fumbles, earning a Pro Bowl nod along the way. Chicago is over the salary cap right now, and Wright could end up the high-dollar corner in this not-particularly-deep class, drawing $16 million a year or more. 12. Aaron Rodgers, QB, Steelers Rodgers, 42, is likely deciding between retiring and returning for a 22nd NFL season, especially with his longtime Packers coach, Mike McCarthy, taking over in Pittsburgh. Rodgers hasn’t made a Pro Bowl in the last four years, but his 2025 numbers (24 touchdowns, seven interceptions) weren’t bad. If he’s willing to come back on a team-friendly deal like the one-year, $14 million deal he played on last season, he’s in a good position to help Pittsburgh compete in a wide-open AFC North in 2026 — with 13 touchdown passes, he’ll pass Peyton Manning for third in NFL history. 11. Breece Hall, RB, Jets Hall, still just 24, has been a solid back on bad Jets teams, rushing for a career-best 1,065 yards in 2025. New York has ample cap space and traded away some of their best players last year in Sauce Gardner and Quinnen Williams — will it be willing to overpay to keep him around? Hall has only 18 rushing touchdowns in four NFL seasons, but as the featured back on a more talented offense, he could get that in two years easily. He’ll challenge Walker for the high-dollar back in this free-agent class, north of $10 million a year. 10. Jaelan Phillips, edge rusher, Eagles Phillips, 26, got traded at the deadline when the Dolphins decided they weren’t going to be able to keep him, but it was an underwhelming 2025 — two sacks in eight games with the Eagles after three sacks in nine games with the Dolphins. He’s had injury concerns in the past and has 28 total sacks in five NFL seasons, peaking with 8.5 as a rookie in 2021. Phillips’ pressure rates were solid and he’s drawn praise from Vic Fangio. Could a one-year, $15 million deal get it done and allow him to reset himself at a higher value in 2027? 9. Malik Willis, QB, Packers Willis, 26, may be the hardest free agent to ballpark in terms of how much money he’ll get. There’s an absolute lack of quality quarterbacks available, combined with a weak QB draft class, so teams without an obvious starter may overpay here. Willis has only six career starts, but his work in Green Bay has been promising — six touchdowns, zero interceptions over the last two years, with a 79%% completion percentage. Could he be a match for former Packers defensive coordinator Jeff Hafley, seeking a reasonably priced answer he can build around in Miami? You’ll see him projected for a Justin Fields-type deal, like two years and $40 million. 8. Alec Pierce, WR, Colts Pierce, 25, is arguably the NFL’s best deep-threat receiver, leading the league in yards per catch in each of the last two seasons. He topped 1,000 receiving yards in 2025, and four touchdowns in the last three games helped his market a bit. The Colts have a handful of top free agents and won’t be able to keep them all. Pierce is likely to command $20 million a year as an underrated player who could be utilized more — Ja’Marr Chase had 101 more targets in 2025 than Pierce did, but only 409 more yards than the Colts wide receiver. 7. Odafe Oweh, edge rusher, Chargers Oweh, 27, benefited from a change in scenery at the trade deadline, stepping up with 7.5 sacks in 12 games after getting dealt from the Ravens to the Chargers. Los Angeles has close to $100 million in cap space, so keeping him shouldn’t be a problem — by coincidence, one potential suitor would be the Ravens, who now have Chargers defensive coordinator Jesse Minter. Nobody has more cap space than the Titans and landing an elite pass rusher should be high on their list, so bidding could get high if Oweh is deemed the best of the under-30 edge options. 6. Kenneth Walker, RB, Seahawks Walker, 25, ramped it up in the playoffs with four touchdowns before running his way to Super Bowl MVP after rushing for 1,027 yards in the regular season. Seattle was a good bet to extend him already, but the injury to Zach Charbonnet should make that more of a priority. Can he clear $10 million a year on a new contract? The Seahawks are a Super Bowl team still somehow ranked in the top five in available cap space for 2026, so it’s hard to imagine them not paying to bring him back as a central part of their offense moving forward. 5. Tyler Linderbaum, C, Ravens Linderbaum, 25, has been to three straight Pro Bowls and was PFF’s No. 4 center in 2025. The Ravens had declined his fifth-year option, pricey at $24 million or so, and while he’s likely the highest-paid offensive lineman in free agency, that should be at less than $20 million a year. The league’s top-paid center right now is the Chiefs’ Creed Humphrey at $18 million a year, so he’ll likely want to trump that. With coaching changes, will he stay in Baltimore, or look at joining John Harbaugh with the Giants or Todd Monken with the Browns? 4. Trey Hendrickson, edge rusher, Bengals Hendrickson, 31, doesn’t have the luster he had a year ago. Instead of coming off back-to-back 17.5-sack seasons and four straight Pro Bowls, he’s now coming off core muscle surgery in December that limited him to four sacks in seven games in 2025. He got a one-year, $29 million deal from the Bengals last year, but isn’t likely to draw as much this time around. ESPN has him as the league’s No. 1 overall free agent, but will he get more than one year guaranteed, and at much more than $20 million a year? He needs 19 sacks to reach 100 for his career and could easily get that in two more healthy seasons. 3. Devin Lloyd, LB, Jaguars Lloyd, 27, broke out as the big-play leader of a ballhawking Jaguars defense, getting five interceptions, including a 99-yard pick-six off Patrick Mahomes. Jacksonville is over the cap as it stands, but he would be an offseason priority — he’s likely to get a deal that will pay him as one of the top five linebackers in the NFL, say at $18 million a year. The Jaguars were able to retain both coordinators after a huge turnaround in Liam Coen’s first season, so keeping their defensive core intact would make sense, even at a decent cost here. 2. Daniel Jones, QB, Colts Jones, 28, was one of the best stories of the first half of 2025, leading the Colts to a 7-2 record before things went downhill — Indianapolis missed the playoffs and Jones sustained a season-ending tear to his Achilles tendon in early December. He had 19 touchdowns against eight interceptions and over 3,000 passing yards before the injury. Indianapolis is committed to him as their quarterback moving forward, but what kind of contract is that? Spotrac projects a four-year, $178 million contract (about $44 million a year), though the injury may make them hesitant to guarantee a substantial portion of that. 1. George Pickens, WR, Cowboys Pickens, still just 24, had a breakout year in 2025, catching 93 passes for 1,429 yards and nine touchdowns after the Cowboys acquired him from the Steelers. He’s due to make $30 million a year or more, but Dallas is already paying CeeDee Lamb $34 million a year — perhaps the franchise tag, at about $28 million for 2026, is a short-term solution if they don’t want to invest more in Pickens. He’s averaged at least 15 yards per catch in each of his four NFL seasons. Out of 56 players with 200-plus catches since the start of 2022, he ranks No. 1 in yards per catch at 16.0. BONUS! TOP 10 RESTRICTED FREE AGENTS The top 100 were all unrestricted free agents, but we want to throw a bone to the restricted free agents, who are tendered by their original teams, allowing other teams to make an offer sheet that the original team can choose to match or sometimes get draft-pick compensation from the new team. That rarely happens, but here are the top 10 RFA talents worth keeping an eye on 10. Chad Ryland, K, Cardinals 9. Jake Browning, QB, Bengals 8. Sean Tucker, RB, Buccaneers 7. Ivan Pace, LB, Vikings 6. Jake Tonges, TE, 49ers 5. Jack Gibbens, LB, Patriots 4. Emanuel Wilson, RB, Packers 3. John Metchie, WR, Jets 2. Ja’Quan McMillian, CB, Broncos 1. Brandon Aubrey, K, Cowboys​Latest Sports News from FOX Sports

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Get to Know a Mid-Major: Big Sky Conference

You know all about the Power 6 conferences in college basketball. You hear about those more than any other, and those groups often dominate the March Madness conversation. There are 31 other conferences out there, however, and our goal is to get you up to speed on the teams, players and fights in the standings to know before the conference tournaments, Selection Sunday and the official start of March Madness. It’s time for you to get to know a mid-major: this time, it’s the Big Sky conference. There are 10 basketball schools in the Big Sky conference, a distinction that has to be made because a couple of affiliate member schools are there for football, specifically, and another for golf. In the fight for Starch Madness, though, we are just talking about 10 schools. And yes, Big Sky will regularly refer to its conference championship tournament as Starch Madness. As the old saying goes, when in Idaho. All 10 full-member basketball teams make it to the conference tournament, so no one has to worry about failure to qualify. However, the six teams atop the conference receive a first-round bye and get to jump right to the quarterfinals, which does mean the last four are basically having a play-in round before the meat of the tourney, with 9 facing 10 and 8 facing 7. The top seed then plays the lowest remaining seed in the quarterfinals, the second-seed faces the winner of the higher-seed first-round matchup, and No. 3 faces No. 6 while No. 4 takes on No. 5. So, there is still a clear incentive to finish at the top of the conference or as close to it as possible, even if there is just the one bye, because a second reward for a quality regular season is what should be an easier quarterfinals opponent. American — Men’s College Basketball Leaders: In each of the last three seasons, the winner of Starch Madness was the lone Big Sky representative in March Madness. And that’s not going to change this year, either, since the current top team in the conference through Feb. 8 is 10-1 Portland State, which also leads the conference in the NCAA Evaluation Too, or NET, as the 120th team. Meaning, the Vikings are at the very back of the first-third of all D-I men’s basketball teams, and about 50 spots outside of the bubble, minimum. Montana State, next up in the conference at 8-4, is 147th in NET, while Northern Colorado — 5-7 in the conference and in eighth — is 154th. Montana, tied for second with Montana State, comes in at 165th in NET, then Idaho (5-6, fifth in Big Sky) is 171st in NET. Weber State might be 6-6 in conference play, but it’s 208th in NET and has lost all of its Quad 1 and Quad 2 games. Idaho State, 3-9 in Big Sky, is 217th in NET, while Eastern Washington is tied for sixth at 5-6, and is 237th in NET. Sacramento State is also 5-6 and barely top-250 in NET while Northern Arizona brings up the rear both in the standings — it’s tied with Idaho State at 3-9 — and in NET at 300th. Portland State’s best trait is its defense, as it ranks 54th in KenPom’s Defensive Rating. However, a not insignificant chunk of that has to do with the teams that the Vikings play: the version of Defensive Rating adjusted for strength of schedule has Portland State 299th. Still, if this is about which team is likely to come out of the conference itself, the Vikings have had the best defense in the Big Sky, especially against other Big Sky opponents. It does, however, have the worst offense of the bunch: Northern Colorado’s Offensive Rating has it at 111.6 points per 100 possessions, 127th in D-I, with Eastern Washington, Idaho State and Weber State all in the top-150 while Portland State comes in at 256th. Defensively, though, the next-best team in the conference — Montana State — allows over six more points per 100 possessions than Portland State. If you can score 80 points, you can probably beat the Vikings. They are holding opponents to under 70 on average, however, so that’s been easier said than done, especially since Portland State has the conference’s leading scorer in 6-foot-8 senior forward Terri Miller, as well as senior guard Javlin Henderson, who is averaging 17.1 points and 6.1 assists per game. Still! Montana is responsible for beating Portland once already, and the two will face off again on Feb. 28. It’s unlikely Portland State drops the top seed in Big Sky before Starch Madness kicks off, but Montana — or whichever team — only needs to beat the Vikings once once that tourney begins to punch a ticket to the NCAA Men’s Basketball Tournament. American — Women’s College Basketball Leaders: Whereas the men’s side of the Big Sky is full of teams that would only make it to March Madness by way of the automatic bid, the women’s side does have a team that’s on the bubble, anyway, and therefore the possibility — however small — that an at-large bid could be granted unlike the last three years. The chance is real small, though, as not winning the tournament might be enough to get the selection committee looking at one of the stacked Power 6 conferences instead to see which team has been left out of the mix, rather than the runner-up in a mid-major. Said bubble team is Montana State, which is 10-2 in conference play, half-a-game behind Idaho, and 67th in NET as well as 68th in Net Rating. It’s 95th in Offensive Rating and 54th in Defensive Rating, both of which sophomore guard Taylee Chirrick can take a lot of credit for. A team effort on both ends, of course, but Chirrick is averaging 18.1 points, 7.3 rebounds, 3.7 assists and 4.2 steals per game this season: the last of those trails only Notre Dame’s Hannah Hidalgo, but Chirrick is tops on the Bobcats in the other three categories, while her 18.1 points per game are also second in Big Sky. Whatever you want to use as a reference — Player Efficiency Rating (PER), win shares, plus/minus, individual offensive or defensive rating — Chirrick is the best player in the conference. She’s second in Offensive Rating behind Idaho’s Debora Reis Dos Santos, but is first in Defensive Rating, as well as the leader in both offensive and defensive win shares as well as offensive and defensive plus/minus. There is no one else in the conference this productive in the conference on both sides of the ball, and that has helped Montana State stick out as more than just the team currently in second in Big Sky. There are games to play, though. Montana State has lost twice in Big Sky play — to Idaho in overtime and to third-place Idaho State by 19 points — so it isn’t invulnerable. Those are also the conference’s top-150 teams by NET, by the way. Northern Colorado (8-4) is in fourth, followed by Sacramento State (5-6), Eastern Washington (5-6), Northern Arizona (4-8), Montana (4-8), Portland State (2-9) and Weber State (1-11). The conference is far more top-heavy than deep, but the drama is going to come from whether or not Montana State can avenge its conference losses in the conference tournament, when it truly matters, or if the Bobcats just aren’t a great matchup for either Idaho or Idaho State, despite the presence of a gamechanger like Chirrick.​Latest Sports News from FOX Sports

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2026 Daytona 500: Everything To Know About The Great American Race

The biggest spectacle of the NASCAR season has arrived — welcome to the Daytona 500! How long is the race? What time does it start? Can William Byron make it three straight victories? We’ve got you covered with a guide of everything to know about the 2026 Daytona 500 (Sunday, 2:30 PT on FOX). I assume this race is in Daytona Beach, Florida? Yes! Daytona International Speedway sits about five miles west of the ocean. It is a 2.5-mile tri-oval — mostly an oval shape but with a couple of doglegs with a slight turn between Turn 4 and Turn 1. The trioval is banked 18 degrees, while the turns are banked 31 degrees and the backstretch is banked 3 degrees. Daytona International Speedway, which opened in 1959 and was last repaved in 2010, seats 101,500. How many cars will compete? The field will be 41 cars. [DAYTONA 500 COUNTDOWN: 20 Most Memorable Moments in Race History] How do drivers get in? There are 37 drivers who are locked in and eight drivers are expected to vie for the final four sports. Two will get in through single-car qualifying Wednesday, which also sets the Daytona 500 front row. Two drivers not locked in also will get in through the duels Thursday, which set the lineup for the Daytona 500. For more detailed description of how a driver gets in, this story has all the info: How The Daytona 500 Lineup Is Set. What time does the Daytona 500 start? The listed start time is 2:30 p.m. ET. Coverage on FOX begins at 12:30 p.m. ET.  The green flag is scheduled to drop at 3:13 p.m. ET. What is the forecast? FOX Weather predicts (as of Tuesday morning) temperatures in the high-70s with a 60 percent chance of rain. How long is the race? The race is 200 laps (500 miles). NASCAR races are split into stages. The first stage will be 65 laps. The second stage will be 65 laps. The final stage will be 70 laps. Which drivers are the favorites? Well, William Byron has won the last two Daytona 500s, so he is a favorite, but the odds of winning three consecutive Daytona 500s are remote — no driver has ever won three in a row. In fact, eight of the last 11 winners won the Daytona 500 for the first time. Typically, you look at drivers who are good at the high-banked drafting tracks — Daytona, Talladega and now Atlanta that provides a shorter version (1.5-mile track) of the style of racing where drivers are packed up because of the need to limit horsepower in order to keep the cars on the ground. The last 11 drafting-track races since Byron’s 2024 Daytona 500 win have had 11 different winners: Daniel Suarez, Tyler Reddick, Harrison Burton (no longer in Cup), Joey Logano, Ricky Stenhouse Jr., William Byron, Christopher Bell, Austin Cindric, Chase Elliott, Ryan Blaney and Chase Briscoe. Most of those would be considered somewhat favorites, in addition to three-time Daytona 500 winner Denny Hamlin. Who are the dark horses? Chris Buescher, Michael McDowell, Ross Chastain, Austin Dillon and Bubba Wallace all have wins at Daytona or Talladega in the last five years and shouldn’t be counted out. Who are the sentimental favorites? Former Cup champions Brad Keselowski and Kyle Busch have never won the Daytona 500. Busch is making his 21st start and has led 342 laps in the race during his career. Keselowski is making his 17th start. Three other active Cup champions don’t have a Daytona 500 win — reigning Cup Series champion Kyle Larson (13th start), 2023 Cup champion Ryan Blaney (12th) and 2020 Cup champion Chase Elliott (11th). Also, while Denny Hamlin has won three Daytona 500s, after coming up gut-wrenchingly short on another championship run and a tragic offseason with the death of his father, many fans would feel the emotion of his win. Is Jimmie Johnson still racing? Yes. Johnson stopped racing full-time in the Cup Series following the 2020 season but has run the Daytona 500 the last three seasons. The seven-time Cup champion will race again this year and also plans to race the Cup event at Naval Base Coronado, near his hometown of El Cajon near San Diego. Is Dale Earnhardt Jr. still racing? No. But he will own a car attempting to make the Daytona 500. JR Motorsports, an organization that fields several cars in what is now the O’Reilly Series (formerly Xfinity), made the race last year with Justin Allgaier and is attempting to make it again this year. Is there anything new for 2026? There isn’t much new about the Daytona 500. But the big change is how NASCAR determines its champion. Instead of win-and-in eligibility to make the postseason this season, NASCAR will just take the top-16 drivers in the point standings after the 26th race. And then, instead of elimination rounds with four drivers eligible for the title in the final race, the championship round is the full 10-race postseason, and whichever driver finishes with the most points is the champion. Wins are worth 55 points instead of 40 under the new format (second place remains 35). The 16 drivers who make the “Chase” will have their points reset to 2100 for the regular-season champion, 2075 for second, 2065 for third, 2060 for fourth, 2055 for fifth and decreasing in five-point increments through 2000 for 16th. [MORE NASCAR: With Lawsuit in Rearview, What Does it Mean for Drivers?] Who is doing the prerace concert? Country star Miranda Lambert will perform on the stage prior to the race. Who is giving the command to start engines? Comedian Nate Bargatze will give the command to start engines. Who is waving the green flag? The honorary starter of the race is still to be announced. Who is singing the national anthem? The national anthem singer is still to be announced. Who is driving the pace car? The celebrity pace-car driver prior to the race is legendary actor Kurt Russell.​Latest Sports News from FOX Sports

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Inside The Garage: With NASCAR Lawsuit in Rearview, What Does it Mean for Drivers?

Here’s what’s happening this week Inside The Garage: That 23XI Racing and Front Row Motorsports will field an extra car to attempt to make the Daytona 500 this week is just a subtle sign of what it meant to get through their lawsuit against NASCAR before the start of the 2026 season. Both organizations had told employees they would have jobs in 2026 even if they lost their lawsuit and didn’t have guaranteed spots for any of their cars in the field. But whether they would field three full-time cars, let alone a fourth car on occasion, appeared optimistic at best. And for them to be around in 2027 was doubtful. Now the drivers and crew members have nothing to worry about. The organizations have their charters and appear on much more solid footing for the future. “I look at it from the people that showed up to work each and every day knowing that there was something of that magnitude looming, and they still gave their effort to build us the fastest race cars to the best of their abilities and they didn’t let that affect them,” 23XI Racing driver Bubba Wallace told me. “But we’re not naive to the fact that are we shutting doors? Who knows? The big unknown there. And they were able to put that aside. Now, with all that going away, I can only imagine there’s a massive sigh of relief for them, they can continue to do what they do, show up and give their best effort.” [MORE NASCAR: 20 Most Memorable Moments in Daytona 500 History] After eight days of testimony in December in the antitrust case, the sides settled with 23XI and FRM getting most of what they wanted as far as various ancillary revenues and, most importantly, evergreen charters and more collective bargaining for the teams with NASCAR. “I really was never super worried, but when the trial time came, it definitely ramped up the nerves a little bit I’m sure for everybody in the whole company” FRM driver Todd Gilliland told me. “And I think one of the coolest things is you probably had one or two people leave over the offseason. “Just to see how many people stuck as a team with Front Row Motorsports, and then now to be past it and through it to the other side. I think there’s a lot of excitement. Same drivers, a lot of the same team members, and no black cloud kind of lingering over us.” The drivers pretty much were free agents once the teams lost their charters during the summer. Driver contracts typically are written requiring they race a chartered car. None of them bolted. “I haven’t really changed anything,” 23XI Racing driver Tyler Reddick told reporters in mid-January. “As a driver, I feel like I do my part to be one of the best, and hopefully again, regardless of the outcome, I still get asked [to do that].” Reddick said he felt everyone just focused on their jobs. For team members, it is something they know they can’t control and the racing industry is one of constant change — it’s sports and a performance-based business with decisions not always done with empathy. But especially for employees with families, the uncertainty of a race team can cause a great deal of angst. “It is nice that it’s behind us,” Reddick said last week in a media conference call prior to the Clash. “It’s done, and it’s in the past.” For 23XI Racing, an organization that entered the sport in 2021 with NBA great Michael Jordan as a co-owner with driver Denny Hamlin, their leadership has often portrayed the organization as one seeking to change the way people look at the sport. “What we said from Day 1 about this team is we want to be different,” Wallace said. “We want to push for change in a positive way, and if we have to ruffle some feathers then so be it. But I stand 100 percent behind my team and thankful for the opportunity.” No More Roval NASCAR and Charlotte Motor Speedway decided that they will no longer compete on the Charlotte road course, opting for an oval race in the Chase. The Cup race will be 400 miles, the O’Reilly race will be 300 miles and the truck race will be 201 miles. With the improvement in the racing on the 1.5-mile tracks with the Next Gen car and the return of the Chase (meaning it won’t be an elimination race) made officials feel like this would be a good time to make the change. “As the Chase returns, we are putting a spotlight on performance while honoring the tracks and traditions that have defined championship moments,” NASCAR President Steve O’Donnell said in a news release. “Charlotte Motor Speedway’s historic oval has played a central role in some of the sport’s most memorable races, so bringing the Chase back to the 1.5-mile configuration for our fans simply felt right.” The elimination of the Charlotte road course means there won’t be a road course in the 10-race postseason. News & Notes –Brad Keselowski has been cleared to race after an on-track test today (Feb. 9) at Charlotte Motor Speedway. A Jan. 30 x-ray on his broken right leg showed enough healing that doctors approved him getting back in the car, but he still needed to get in and out of the car and show he could work the pedals before determining whether he could race in the Daytona 500. Keselowski: “Getting cleared was a huge moment for me. You put in the work, you trust the process, but until you hear that final ‘yes,’ nothing is guaranteed.” –Three-time Indianapolis 500 winner and four-time INDYCAR champion Dario Franchitti will compete in the NASCAR truck race Feb. 28 at St. Petersburg. Franchitti has returned to racing in the last year for the first time since a crash in 2013 ended his INDYCAR career. Franchitti ran 10 Cup races for Chip Ganassi Racing in 2008 as well as 18 races in O’Reilly in 2007-08 before ending his attempt to transition to NASCAR. He will drive the Tricon No. 1 truck at St. Pete with sponsorship from Dollar Tree through a partnership with Franchitti good friend Jimmie Johnson and Legacy Motor Club. [MORE INDYCAR: Mick Schumacher Takes First Oval Test at Homestead] –The truck race at Daytona this weekend will feature several notable drivers who don’t race regularly in the series. Former Cup champion Tony Stewart is driving for Kaulig as part of Ram’s entry into the sport. Travis Pastrana is driving for Niece Motorsports, as is YouTube personality and racer Cleetus McFarland. Also in the field will be current Cup drivers Michael McDowell, Carson Hocevar, John Hunter Nemeche and Ricky Stenhouse Jr. as well as Corey LaJoie. –23XI Racing announced that Corey Heim will compete in 12 Cup races this year, starting with the Daytona 500. Bootie Barker will be the crew chief. –Two big INDYCAR tests await in the next couple of weeks. Several teams are taking a driver to Sebring for a test today and Tuesday (Feb. 9-10) to work on road-course setups. The first oval test of the year is Feb. 17-10 at Phoenix, where they will race just a few weeks later. –NASCAR announced that seeding for its in-season tournament will be by point standings following the 14th race of the year at Pocono. That keeps the race at Naval Base Coronado (a first-time event) from having an impact on the seedings. The five races for the challenge are again the TNT races: Sonoma, Chicagoland, Atlanta, North Wilkesboro and Indianapolis. –In other in-season special-event news: The O’Reilly Dash 4 Cash races will be Bristol, Kansas, Talladega and Texas; the triple-truck challenge races will be Darlington, Rockingham and Bristol. Why The Call? Why did NASCAR allow teams to re-fuel in the Clash when they could have started on fuel and been OK? “It’s the first time we’ve run that [750hp] engine at an actual race with a higher horsepower, for one, so was our data totally accurate that we went into? We believe it is,” NASCAR Cup Series Director Brad Moran said during a media briefing the day after the Clash to go over 2026 rules. “What we were managing from our side is that we had way more cautions than we’ve ever had, we don’t really have a pit road that you could just allow fuel anytime, we don’t have our fire protection in every [area]. … With nobody gaining or losing spots on pit road, we felt the best decision at that point was to let them top off and come back out.” Some teams felt those who gambled on fuel — so they could have a weight advantage — should have paid the price. But Moran said with the race already going so long and the potential of more cautions happening because of drivers running out of fuel that “we didn’t want that to be the entire story on how the race ended.” Sweet Rides We will post some of our favorite paint schemes here. How about these liveries introduced by Arrow McLaren for the 2026 INDYCAR season? Stat Of The Week No driver has won his first Daytona 500 after his 20th start (that was Dale Earnhardt in 1998). Kyle Busch will be making his 21st start. They Said It “Yeah, a non-points race, but winning at this level is not freaking easy. So I’m proud.” —Ryan Preece after winning the Clash to open the 2026 NASCAR season. In Inside The Garage, Bob Pockrass takes us behind the scenes of the motorsports world the way only he can.​Latest Sports News from FOX Sports

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Joel Klatt’s 2026 NFL Mock Draft 1.0: Cowboys Get a Future All-Pro?

Super Bowl LX is in the books, so you know what that means: We’re now officially in draft season, and what better way to enter draft season than with a mock draft? That’s right, it’s time for me to unveil my first mock draft ahead of the 2026 NFL Draft. We all know some of the stars in this draft class, but this year’s draft seems pretty unpredictable. So, let’s dive right in and start finding some new homes for the top prospects in the 2026 NFL Draft. 1. Las Vegas Raiders: Indiana QB Fernando Mendoza We all know where they’re going here with this pick. Nothing went right in Pete Carroll’s only year as head coach, and this was one of the worst scoring offenses in a long time. Geno Smith didn’t work out at quarterback, so they need a quarterback. We know this is going to be Fernando Mendoza. He had a remarkable year at Indiana. I was always impressed with him in the few times I got to speak with Mendoza. Everyone loves his postgame interviews, and rightfully so. This guy’s a football nerd in the best possible sense. Mendoza was accurate and Indiana utilized a lot of NFL and college concepts with its offense. What I love the most about Mendoza, though, was that when his best was needed, he was great. Every single time, whether it was on the road or in the national championship, when Indiana needed a play, Mendoza delivered with his arm or legs. If the Raiders want to get to where they want to be, they need a guy like Mendoza at quarterback. 2. New York Jets: Ohio State OLB Arvell Reese The draft suddenly gets interesting at No. 2. The Jets have a big quarterback need, and they could use Ty Simpson. But this roster needs a lot of help after trading away all its stars. So, the Jets take quite possibly the best player in the draft. Reese is a versatile defender. I think he’s best when he’s on the ball — he’s explosive, flexible and can bend. All of those things are going to pay off in a big way for Reese at the next level. He reminds me so much of Micah Parsons, who flashed some of his pass-rushing ability in college before majoring as a pass rusher in the NFL. Reese can blitz up the middle and can tackle, too. 3. Arizona Cardinals: Miami (Fla.) OT Francis Mauigoa New Cardinals head coach Mike LaFleur needs to figure out what to do at quarterback. But they’ve got to fix the offensive line, too. They were bottom-five in the league in sacks allowed and rushing. So, the Cardinals should take Mauigoa, who is my top offensive lineman in this draft. He didn’t just dominate lesser opponents, but Mauigoa also stood out over the course of the CFP. That offensive line dominated in the CFP against some pretty stout defensive lines, with Mauigoa allowing just one quarterback hit. 4. Tennessee Titans: Miami (Fla.) EDGE Rueben Bain Jr. I’m a big believer that you have to try and give your young quarterback some help. They could certainly use some help upfront. But Robert Saleh comes in and I believe that Bain is the type of player that the Titans’ new head coach can rely on. I loved watching Bain. He has an elite motor and talent. There will be a lot made about his arm length, but I’m not concerned about that. Just watch the tape. Watch the production. He’s an absolute gamewrecker. 5. New York Giants: Ohio State WR Carnell Tate John Harbaugh has a really specific blueprint and the Giants have some really pressing needs on their roster. However, I think they’ll make a vanity pick here. They can give Jaxson Dart some help as wide receiver Malik Nabers makes his way back from an ACL tear. I think Dart is at his best when he’s pushing the ball down the field, and no wide receiver in this draft was better at making contested grabs. Tate is so good and was largely overshadowed because of Jeremiah Smith. But he was incredible down the field this past season, constantly getting open and creating space. 6. Cleveland Browns: Utah OT Spencer Fano This offense needs some talent. They struggled to throw and run the ball, ranking second in scoring offense this past season. So, you could probably get better with a good offensive lineman. I think there will be several good offensive linemen picked in the first 15 to 20 selections, and Fano fits that bill. Fano might be the best offensive lineman in the draft after playing left and right tackle at Utah. Cleveland can play him on either side, and maybe Shedeur Sanders, or whoever is at quarterback, can have a respectable 2026 season. 7. Washington Commanders: LSU CB Mansoor Delane The Commanders gave up the most passing yards in the league last season, so they have to address that side of the ball. Delane’s my top corner in this draft. So, a natural fit here. 8. New Orleans Saints: USC WR Makai Lemon This is an interesting pick here. I think the Saints will look to build around Tyler Shough, who I thought showed flashes as a rookie quarterback. Because of that, I think Jeremiyah Love should be an option for the Saints here. But I went with Lemon, who is an outstanding wide receiver. The way he operates in space and over the middle shows how he has such a strong feel for the game. He knows how to attack the grass thanks to the offense he played in at USC. 9. Kansas City Chiefs: Notre Dame RB Jeremiyah Love This guy’s phenomenal. I actually got to meet him at the Doak Walker Award Show and he told me about his Hall of Fame aspirations. Well, getting paired with Patrick Mahomes would help that. I think about what the Chiefs’ offense could be if they had someone with Love’s ability to run and catch the ball. The Chiefs also need some running back help with Isiah Pacheco and Kareem Hunt hitting free agency. But I really love the idea of giving Mahomes his Jahmyr Gibbs or Christian McCaffrey. 10. Cincinnati Bengals: Texas Tech EDGE David Bailey Cincinnati would be ecstatic if the draft played out this way. If the Bengals saw Bailey on the board here, they’d jump right up and make this pick. It sounds like edge rusher Trey Hendrickson might move on in free agency this offseason, but the Bengals had one of the worst defenses in the league again this past season. So, they need defensive help, regardless. 11. Miami Dolphins: Tennessee CB Jermod McCoy I can’t wait to see what first-year head coach Jeff Hafley does with the Dolphins. The former Packers defensive coordinator takes over a Dolphins pass defense that needs help, allowing opposing quarterbacks to complete 72% of their passes last season. McCoy might have been my top corner had he not torn his ACL last January. When he’s on the field, he’s outstanding. And what I know about Hafley is that when he was at Ohio State, he built his defense around having three great cover corners. So, I think he’d appreciate McCoy. 12. Dallas Cowboys: Ohio State S Caleb Downs The Cowboys were a disaster on defense, if only they could’ve had one of the league’s best pass rushers. Oh well, they have to live with that mistake. But they can address their defensive needs by getting the player who I feel is the safest pick waiting to happen. Caleb Downs is an All-Pro waiting in the wings. He’s the smartest defender I’ve ever covered in college football. He can do everything. We called him the Swiss Army Knife because of that. He is incredible over the middle of the field. He can rush the passer. He’s excellent in the run fit. He’s tremendous in the slot. Downs should get picked higher than this, but the positional value might hurt him a bit. 13. Los Angeles Rams (from Atlanta Falcons): Penn State OG Vega Ioane The Rams might feel tempted to go after another weapon on offense. If Makai Lemon were still available, he’d be a no-brainer pick for them. So, the next best thing they can do to help Matthew Stafford out would be to get him some protection. I love Ioane. He didn’t allow a sack in the last two years, and he might be the best interior offensive lineman in the draft. 14. Baltimore Ravens: Texas A&M EDGE Cashius Howell I got to know new Ravens head coach Jesse Minter when he was Michigan’s defensive coordinator for a couple of seasons, and the principles of that defense start with hard edges. The Ravens also have a need for some pass rush help, ranking in the bottom-five in sacks. Howell was one of the better pass rushers in the country this past season, getting 11.5 sacks in 13 games. 15. Tampa Bay Buccaneers: Ohio State LB Sonny Styles Lavonte David is 36 and a free agent. So, the Buccaneers are probably looking at replacing this offseason or sometime soon. Styles is the best inside linebacker in the draft, showing he can do it all at Ohio State this past season. He actually started his college career at safety, but they moved him to linebacker because of his massive 6-foot-5 frame. He’s also got three years of starting experience and he’s still just 21 years old. 16. New York Jets (from Indianapolis Colts): Tennessee CB Colton Hood I don’t think it makes a ton of sense for the Jets to take a swing at wide receiver here, and we still don’t know who their quarterback will be. They’ve got so many holes to address and I think they might be smart to wait until next offseason to be aggressive in getting a quarterback. But this was the first team in NFL history to not get an interception in a season. So, they need someone who can help in the secondary. Hood’s a really good player. 17. Detroit Lions: Miami (Fla.) EDGE Akheem Mesidor Aidan Hutchinson draws too many double teams, so it’d be wise for the Lions to get another edge rusher to pair opposite him. Edge rusher Al-Quadin Muhammad might also cash in on his 11-sack year in free agency this year. Mesidor is massive, weighing 280 pounds. He is older, though, as he’ll be 25 when he’s drafted in April. 18. Minnesota Vikings: Toledo S Emmanuel McNeil-Warren This is a weird spot for the Vikings as they recently fired their general manager. But Harrison Smith seems likely to retire, so the Vikings need some safety help. McNeil-Warren was probably the top non-power conference player this season, logging nine forced fumbles and five interceptions in his career. 19. Carolina Panthers: Alabama OT Kadyn Proctor Offensive tackle Ikem Ekwonu seems set to miss a lot of time after rupturing his patellar tendon in the Panthers’ playoff to the Rams, so Carolina needs some offensive line help. Proctor would certainly fit the bill. He’s massive and was pretty highly-touted coming out of high school. 20. Dallas Cowboys (from Green Bay Packers): Auburn EDGE Keldric Faulk The Cowboys could afford to double up on defense with their two first-round picks. The trade of Micah Parsons left a sizable hole in terms of pass rush. Faulk is versatile and explosive, so I think he could get the job done. These two picks might turn Dallas’ defense around. 21. Pittsburgh Steelers: Alabama QB Ty Simpson We wondered if the Steelers would pick a quarterback early on last year. They didn’t do that, opting to sign Aaron Rodgers instead. Well, the Steelers are in need of a quarterback, and I really like Simpson. I know Simpson doesn’t have tremendous size, but he can make all the throws. He can make anticipatory and leverage throws. He’s accurate on the outside. I know Indiana was able to get to Simpson in the Rose Bowl, but he was the reason why Alabama defeated Georgia in Athens this past season. 22. Los Angeles Chargers: Texas Tech DT Lee Hunter As I mentioned with Minter earlier, Jim Harbaugh still believes in that defensive philosophy of being big upfront and creating a run wall. Hunter fits the bill. He’s very good in the interior and was a big winner at the Senior Bowl following his All-American season. 23. Philadelphia Eagles: Oregon TE Kenyon Sadiq Jalen Hurts and the Eagles threw for 17 touchdowns in the red zone this past season. Tight end Dallas Goedert had 10 of them, and he’s a free agent this offseason. I’m a huge proponent of getting a great tight end, and Sadiq is the best at his position in this draft class. This would also allow the Eagles to reallocate some resources and get more athletic. Sadiq is outstanding, showing great pass-catching skills for a tight end and is strong as a run blocker. 24. Cleveland Browns (from Jacksonville Jaguars): Arizona State WR Jordyn Tyson Just like the Cowboys, the Browns need to double-dip on one side of the ball in the first round of the draft. Tyson would not only provide much-needed wide receiver help. It would also create an interesting fit with Sheduer Sanders. Tyson spent his freshman season at Colorado, but transferred when Deion Sanders became the head coach. Tyson actually apologized to Deion for the way things went when he left Colorado. That shows maturity. But Tyson would give Sanders a strong option on the outside. 25. Chicago Bears: Ohio State DT Kayden McDonald The Bears went heavy on drafting skill players over the last couple of drafts, which paid off. Now, they need to address their defensive interior, especially as they can’t rely on turnover luck to carry over from last year. McDonald was terrific in the interior for Ohio State, and it allowed the Buckeyes to play that odd defense. He plays with great effort and force. 26. Buffalo Bills: Washington WR Denzel Boston The Bills need to improve their run defense, but they also need more playmakers on the outside offensively. We all saw what owner Terry Pegula said about the team’s decision to draft wide receiver Keion Coleman, which was pretty wild. Boston is a tremendous player and I was impressed with him when I watched him on tape. He’s got solid body control and athleticism, giving Josh Allen a potential strong target on the outside. 27. San Francisco 49ers: Utah OT Caleb Lomu Life after Trent Williams is coming sooner rather than later. We know he’s coming back for 2026, but he’ll be 38. And you always need some depth along the offensive line. Lomu could be a potential successor to Williams. He played a lot of left tackle at Utah, making him a solid fit for the 49ers. 28. Houston Texans: Clemson OT Blake Miller Houston’s defense is elite, so it needs to keep building on the offensive side of the ball. The Texans’ offensive line was better this past season, but it can still improve. Miller started all 54 games in his career and is reliable. 29. Los Angeles Rams: Clemson CB Avieon Terrell The Rams have a few corners that are set to be free agents this offseason. So, why not bring in an All-American corner? Yes, I know it’s another Clemson player going in the first round after its underwhelming season. That doesn’t mean some of the Tigers’ top players aren’t NFL-caliber, though. Terrell is one of those guys and can play on the outside. 30. Denver Broncos: Georgia LB CJ Allen As we get later into the first round, teams will seemingly prioritize need. For the Broncos, that’s linebacker. Allen is another experienced guy, starting 29 games. He’s also a talented player, earning an All-American nod and being named a finalist for the Butkus Award this past season. What we know about Georgia defensive players is that they’re going to be ready to succeed in the NFL. 31. New England Patriots: Clemson EDGE T.J. Parker The Patriots could use some more firepower at wide receiver, but they need some pass-rushing help, too. Parker was considered to be a candidate to be a top-10 pick at the start of the season. He disappointed a bit, although the upside with Parker is still strong. 32. Seattle Seahawks: South Carolina CB Brandon Cisse The Seahawks’ secondary seems set to lose multiple players in free agency. So, addressing the secondary would be smart. Cisse is a really good player and is explosive. Mike Macdonald can refine him a bit and make him a contributor to that already strong defense.​Latest Sports News from FOX Sports

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10 Burning Questions That Will Define the NFL Offseason

After about 40 minutes of Super Bowl LX, it was fair to begin thinking about the NFL offseason. The Seattle Seahawks had total control of the game, beating the New England Patriots 29-13 in Santa Clara on Sunday. It wasn’t competitive, not even when Drake Maye racked up garbage-time yards in the fourth quarter. As much of a slog as the Super Bowl was, the offseason should be exciting. So let’s start thinking about what comes next. We may have to wait until September for another game, but the NFL never sleeps. Here are 10 burning questions that will define the 2026 offseason. 1. Given they’re both almost definitely going to land with the Raiders, how will Fernando Mendoza click with Klint Kubiak? Let’s not stray too far from the Super Bowl to start. Kubiak, Seattle’s offensive coordinator, is leaving to become head coach of the Las Vegas Raiders, he confirmed on the field postgame. And it’s awfully likely that Mendoza, the Indiana quarterback and Heisman Trophy winner, is as well, as the No. 1 pick in the draft. Mendoza is a pro-style pocket passer whose upside might be Joe Burrow or Jared Goff, depending upon whom you ask. And that’s fine. Mobility isn’t a necessity for Kubiak’s system. The question is how Kubiak will handle Mendoza’s development. As we noticed with Vikings coach Kevin O’Connell, there’s a difference between maximizing a veteran QB (like Sam Darnold) and developing a young QB (like J.J. McCarthy). Throughout his career, Kubiak’s developmental QB projects included Paxton Lynch (2016-17), Brock Purdy (2023) and Spencer Rattler (2024). 2. Where can a needy team find a quality QB? For the teams desperately looking for a signal-caller, it’s a bad offseason. Mendoza will be a good solution for the Raiders, even if he’s not the elite prospect we’re accustomed to seeing at No. 1. But it gets bleak after him in the draft. In free agency, there’s Daniel Jones, who is coming off an Achilles injury and a broken fibula. There’s also Malik Willis, who looked great for a two-game span with the Packers — but so did Matt Flynn. (And if you can’t remember him, that’s the point.) There’s Mac Jones, who could cost a second-round pick to pry him from the 49ers. And maybe the Falcons will finally trade Kirk Cousins — maybe. That’s about it. 3. Will the Patriots stock up on pass-catchers? The Patriots should have their entire core returning on offense, which is great for continuity. But it should not stop them from finding a truly dominant force in the passing game for Maye. George Pickens would be pricey (in trade assets and dollars), but he’d be perfect for Maye, who excels throwing the deep ball. I totally understand this could be fool’s gold given his uneven pro performance, but Falcons tight end Kyle Pitts would be a compelling player in McDaniels’ system. “The show goes on. We gotta get back to work,” Patriots coach Mike Vrabel told reporters after the Super Bowl. 4. Can the Seahawks put themselves into position to repeat? Leading into the Super Bowl, Seattle was the odds-on favorite to win the title next season. But like any good team, opponents will come for their talent. Kubiak’s departure will hurt. The Seahawks have pending free agents: CB Tariq Woolen, RB Kenneth Walker, safety Coby Bryant, WR Rashid Shaheed and DE Boye Mafe, among others. But they also have an impressive $75 million in cap space. GM John Schneider will have his work cut out for him, because as we saw, this team will have to make up for Darnold. 5. Can Patrick Mahomes get healthy from his ACL tear by Week 1? The Chiefs QB wants to be on the field for the season-opener, but it’s hard to imagine he’ll be 100 percent. And he’ll have to be, if he and OC Eric Bieniemy want to have a more competent passing attack in 2026. 6. How different will the Eagles’ offense look? The Eagles won a Super Bowl a year ago, and I’m here wondering just how much they’ll blow up their offensive core. What a difference a year makes, huh? It feels just about inevitable that the Eagles will trade receiver A.J. Brown, who spoke openly about his discontent with his offensive usage. That would leave them with a gaping hole at receiver, which I’m not sure DeVonta Smith can fill alone. But receiver might not be GM Howie Roseman’s top priority, given how much the offensive line regressed this season. Can Roseman fix that, too? Just to add to the uncertainty, the Eagles hired OC Sean Mannion, who has just two years of coaching experience (and was a backup QB as recently as 2023). So, yeah, it’s a little chaotic in Philly right now. 7. What will Jerry Jones do next? Among other considerations, the Cowboys owner/GM will have to figure out 1) how to re-sign Pickens, the consensus top free agent who the team reportedly plans to franchise tag and 2) what to do with the draft haul that Dallas got from the Micah Parsons trade. Dallas picks at Nos. 12 and 20 in Round 1. If talks with Pickens don’t come together and he lands elsewhere, there’s a very strong draft class of wide receivers. 8. Who will rule the NFC North? The Bears famously promised to never give the division back. But the Green Bay Packers should only get better around maturing quarterback Jordan Love. The Detroit Lions did what they could to fight regression, bringing in new offensive coordinator Drew Petzing. The Vikings are likely to bring in a veteran QB who will probably be able to steer Kevin O’Connell’s system in a competent way. The division will be extremely competitive in 2026. Look out, Chicago. 9. What’s next for QB Jayden Daniels? No team disappointed quite like the Washington Commanders this season. They missed the playoffs after making the NFC Championship Game last season. That’s in large part due to Daniels’ injuries. With a new offensive coordinator in David Blough, it would be a delight to see Daniels get right — and not go the way of Robert Griffin III. 10. Which team will surprise like the Patriots and Seahawks? These two Super Bowl teams have three things in common: 1) A new and talented coach, 2) A new and talented quarterback and 3) An organization with a history of success. So who’s next? How about: the New York Giants.​Latest Sports News from FOX Sports

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Men’s College Basketball Rankings: Purdue, Kansas, UNC Moving Up in Top 25

The men’s college basketball season keeps on delivering. A thriller between Duke and North Carolina, a Gonzaga loss to a WCC team not named Saint Mary’s, and Arizona continues to demolish everything in its path: It’s been a wild week in men’s college hoops. February is the month when players and coaches realize they are running out of time to pick up those signature wins needed to boost their résumé. Some teams are rising to the occasion, while others are struggling. Without further ado, here’s the latest edition of my men’s college basketball rankings, as of Feb. 8. *Note: Miami (Ohio) is 24-0, but its strength of schedule is 332nd in the country. The RedHawks are a great story, but I’m not sure that I’ll rank them at all this year. Being undefeated is cool and all, but you have to put it into context. If you thought I was going to rank Miami (Ohio) for the first time, I want you to imagine the RedHawks playing Alabama on a neutral floor. Who do you think wins that game? The Vols had their four-game winning streak snapped against Kentucky despite freshman forward Nate Ament’s 29 points and eight rebounds. Tennessee shot just 37% from inside the arc in the game. The Hogs only had one game this week, a dominant 20-point road win against Mississippi State. Freshman point guard Darius Acuff Jr. put up 24 points, eight assists and five rebounds, which is just another example of why he is a top-10 player in college basketball. Four straight losses for the Cougars isn’t great, but take a closer look, and you’ll see that their schedule has been rough. I’m confident BYU is still a top-25 team, but it’s also clear that the Cougars’ defense isn’t good enough to put them among the elite. Clemson swept Stanford and Cal this past week in California. The Tigers own the 13th-ranked defense in the country and that travels. However, this team’s offense is hit or miss. Saint Louis keeps winning, but it’s hard to move this team up because of the quality of its opponents in the A-10. The Billikens are 23-1 with their lone loss coming at the buzzer to Stanford. It has been a wild ride for this Kentucky team, but get ready for the dark-horse conversation. The Wildcats have won eight of their last nine games, including a three-point win over Tennessee on Saturday. What a fun Friday night at the Garden! St. John’s finally secured its signature win of the year, beating UConn convincingly. Senior forward Zuby Ejifor locked down the Big East Player of the Year award a month early, and senior forward Dillon Mitchell looked like the best athlete in the sport. The Commodores haven’t looked great (6-4) in a very balanced SEC, and they were controlled for most of the game in a home loss to Oklahoma. Their résumé is still excellent, though, and they rank in the top 20 on offense and defense. Since their loss to North Carolina, the Cavaliers have won four straight against ACC opponents that they should beat. Head Coach Ryan Odum has a true nine-man rotation, and Virginia’s offense is very balanced. Wins against Maryland and Oregon barely move the needle, especially when the Boilermakers struggled for 37 minutes against the Ducks. However, Purdue guard Fletcher Loyer broke out of a slump and has hit 10 triples in his last two games. [MEN’S HOOPS SPOTLIGHT: The 5-Team Big Ten Title Race] Texas Tech couldn’t close out a game against Kansas at home, but it was without guard Christian Anderson due to illness. He returned on Sunday, and the Red Raiders beat a pesky West Virginia squad in Morgantown. North Carolina guard Seth Trimble made “the perfect shot by the perfect player,” according to Tar Heels coach Hubert Davis, to beat Duke. A four-year senior helped Carolina get another massive win that has me forgetting its California road trip last month. I did feel that the absence of second leading scorer forward Braden Huff (knee injury) would bite the Bulldogs at some point, but not against a Portland team that ranks 183 in KenPom. The Zags are 23-2 with losses to Michigan and Portland. Strange résumé. If you are still concerned about the Gators’ six total losses (against good teams), I don’t know what to tell you. This team looks like the 11th-best team in the land and absolutely destroyed Texas A&M on the road on Saturday. They have a top-three front line in the nation, along with Arizona and Michigan. What a wild week for point guard Jeremy Fears Jr. He was criticized (justifiably) for his “immature” antics against Michigan and Minnesota, but he responded with 26 points and 15 assists in an overtime win against Illinois on Saturday. Big Time. The Jayhawks are not a deep team, but their starting five is getting better every week. Freshman guard Darryn Peterson’s dunk against Utah was great, but center Flory Bidunga’s defense (seven blocks) is the reason they are top 10 in the nation on that end. Nebraska only played one game this past week and beat a struggling Rutgers team on the road by 12 points. The most important thing is the Cornhuskers’ senior leader, forward Rienk Mast, has finally shaken off an illness and had 26 points. Next up: Purdue at home on Tuesday. The Illini are staying put this week at No. 7 after losing in overtime at Michigan State. Guard Keaton Wagler looked pedestrian (2-of-16 from the field), but Illinois hung in there with toughness and timely shot-making. The Blue Devils lost an epic battle against their rivals, the North Carolina Tar Heels, on Saturday, but we all benefited from watching one of the best games of the season. The Blue Devils are still a top-five team by nearly every metric. [NCAA BRACKET PROJECTIONS: Can the Big Ten Get 10 Teams In?] After 18 straight wins, UConn fell to St. John’s in an entertaining battle Friday night at MSG. The Huskies shot 55% from the field, but 15 turnovers and just 5-for-12 from the free-throw line weren’t enough. The rematch with the Red Storm on February 25 will decide the Big East regular-season title. I will be courtside for the Iowa State’s game at TCU on Tuesday. I’m excited to see the Cyclones in person. Forward Milan Momcilovic is the best shooter in the land, making 90 triples on a 53% clip. The Cougars have what it takes to win it all, even if they are the second-best team in the Big 12. They picked up a massive road win at BYU this weekend, and their only losses are to Tennessee on a neutral court and Texas Tech on the road. The Wolverines’ performance on Sunday at Ohio State was a great example of what this team can do. Their big trio of center Aday Mara, forward Yaxel Lendeborg and forward Morez Johnson Jr. combined for 49 points and 30 rebounds. This is the best front line in the nation. This is the most fascinating team in the country. On Saturday, Arizona went 2-of-14 from the 3-point line, and BLEW OUT a good Oklahoma State team by 37 points. The Wildcats are the most physical team in the nation.​Latest Sports News from FOX Sports

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2026 NFL Power Rankings: Way-Too-Early Look At How Every Team Stacks Up

For the Seattle Seahawks, the party is just getting started. For everyone else, there is no party at all. There is only misery and the bitter memory of a disappointing 2025 season. So, to borrow a phrase from a should-be-Hall-of-Fame coach, “We’re on to 2026.” And who will be the best and worst teams next season? No need to wait for the draft, free agency or training camp to find out. Our (Way-Too-Early) Power Rankings are already here. They still have no quarterback, no path to getting one, and Aaron Glenn is on the hottest of hot seats after firing most of his staff. Jets fans are already hoping Woody Johnson can lure Mike Tomlin out of retirement and land Arch Manning with the top pick of the 2027 draft. Dare to dream. They are in Quarterback Hell for the foreseeable future, unless new coach Mike LaFleur can magically revive Kyler Murray. And if not, who replaces him? The search for a successor might have to wait another year, at least. They are a mess from top to bottom, but at least the No. 1 pick in the draft gives them hope. Even if QB Fernando Mendoza is a star, though, the rebuilding here will take a couple of years. If anybody can fix their quarterback mess, it’s probably new coach Todd Monken. But with Shedeur Sanders, Dillon Gabriel and Deshaun Watson as the options, there may be no winner in this game of quarterback roulette. Jeff Hafley might be the strong, disciplined leader the Dolphins need, but QB Tua Tagovailoa isn’t. They’re either stuck with him or his massive cap hit if they cut him. Either way, it’s not good. Robert Saleh and Brian Daboll, his new offensive coordinator, are terrific guys. But is it really a wise strategy to put the franchise quarterback and the franchise’s future in the hands of two failed New York head coaches? Kellen Moore and QB Tyler Shough generated a lot of excitement about their future with a four-game winning streak in December. One look at who they played in that stretch, though, shows they’ve still got a long way to go. If you believe Daniel Jones will be back in Indy, healthy, and the same player in 2026, then the Colts should be higher. But that takes a big leap of faith. Also, Indy has defensive issues to fix. There’s no doubt QB Bryce Young made progress last year, but it wasn’t a lot and not nearly enough to get the Panthers above mediocrity. The odds seem to be against a necessary big leap in Year 4. Mike McCarthy is a good coach, but the quarterback situation will be their downfall. Do they really want to bet on squeezing more out of Aaron Rodgers at age 42? It’s time to rebuild around someone younger. But whom? Don’t be fooled by their season-ending, five-game winning streak. J.J. McCarthy still has to prove he’s a winning quarterback. The good news is while he may be in Year 3, he’s still only 10 starts into his career. Their offense is so good, but their defense is so, so bad. And it’s not like they’re going to have the cap space to fix it this offseason. What you saw might be what you’ll get next season, too. Better health would mean a lot to this team, but only if new OC Zac Robinson can do better with the Bucs than he did with the Falcons last year. Otherwise, expect more Todd Bowles-inspired mediocrity. If they’re right about QB Jaxson Dart, then it’s a short leap for them to at least respectability. Because they have talent that has underachieved. And now, with John Harbaugh, they finally have a capable head coach. Kevin Stefanski is going to have a huge impact on the Falcons and their offense. But unless QB Michael Penix Jr. is fully recovered by September and an improved player, the impact might not happen right away. A healthy Jayden Daniels will be a big boost for this team, but now he’ll have to succeed without OC Kliff Kingsbury. Also, his injuries weren’t the only problem in D.C. The defense needs a big offseason overhaul, too. A healthy Joe Burrow would make them instantly dangerous, but they still have so much work to do on defense. That’s especially true if they lose Trey Hendrickson, which they likely will. They found success in the middle of what sure looks like a rebuilding effort, which is impressive. But they have a lot of holes to fill, especially on defense, and losing DC Robert Saleh won’t help. A healthy Micah Parsons and some new cornerbacks will help the defense, but it’s really their offense that failed them at key times. They need to get better at receiver and especially along the offensive line to help QB Jordan Love become a star. They have enough offensive talent to survive their post-Ben Johnson era, but the defense has never been good under Dan Campbell. They need help at edge rusher and cornerback. If they can find that with limited cap space, they’ll vault back into the top 10. They have the defense to be ranked a lot higher than this, but do they have the quarterback? If C.J. Stroud can be what he’s supposed to be, consider them a legitimate Super Bowl contender. What, you thought they were dead? Underestimate Andy Reid and a healthy Patrick Mahomes at your own peril. But remember, they were 1-7 in one-score games last year, including 0-6 against playoff teams. They’re the object in your rearview mirror that is closer than it appears. The strain on Caleb Williams and that dangerous offense is going to be too much if the Bears trot out the same bad defense. They’re still a playoff threat, but if they develop a pass rush and fix their secondary, they could be a Super Bowl contender. They have all the pieces in place to be a contender except one: the offensive line. If they can fix that, and stay healthy, and keep QB Justin Herbert in one piece, there’s no reason they won’t be a top team in the AFC. Jesse Minter inherited a gold mine from John Harbaugh. If Lamar Jackson can stay healthy, this team is still good enough to immediately become a Super Bowl contender again. They’ve been a sleeping and underachieving giant for years, and Liam Coen’s rookie year is only the beginning. Even if they don’t get 13 wins again, they’re not going to fade away anytime soon. As long as they have Josh Allen, they should be considered a top-10 team, no matter how inexperienced and young their head coach is. Get Allen a true No. 1 WR in the offseason, though, and look out above! Well, they are on an every-other-year plan with the Super Bowl. They’re also still talented enough to be the class of their division. Beyond that, it depends on whether someone can fix Saquon Barkley and their dysfunctional offense in time for the playoffs. They have an MVP-caliber QB, a great coach, and a strong defense. But it’s hard to ignore their pillow-soft schedule and the breaks they got in the playoffs. They’re not going away, but odds are their road next season will be much tougher. Is Sam Darnold elite enough for the Seahawks to repeat their title season? It’s hard to doubt him at this point. They do have some key free agents to deal with (RB Kenneth Walker, CB Riq Woolen, WR Rashid Shaheed), but they’ve got the cap space to keep the band together. They are loaded for one final run at a ring with QB Matthew Stafford, if they can convince him to return. They were the NFC’s second-best team this year, but stuck in the wrong division. With two first-round picks and plenty of cap space, they have the ammunition to close any gap. Let’s be honest: The Patriots don’t get to the Super Bowl if QB Bo Nix doesn’t fracture his ankle one week earlier. He’ll be back with the NFL’s best coach (Sean Payton), a punishing defense, hopefully another receiver, and a battle-tested team that should be hard to beat.​Latest Sports News from FOX Sports

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Catch or No Catch? Cooper Kupp’s Bobbling Grab Helps Give Seahawks Early Super Bowl Lead

The Seattle Seahawks were able to take a 3-0 lead on the opening drive of Super Bowl LX, but their biggest play of the drive might have been one that shouldn’t have counted. On the fourth play of the opening drive, Seahawks quarterback Sam Darnold completed a pass to wide receiver Cooper Kupp along the sideline for a 23-yard gain over New England Patriots cornerback Marcus Jones. However, on a second look, it appeared that Kupp might have bobbled the ball and didn’t have full possession as he went out of bounds. The Patriots didn’t challenge the play, though, and the replay assist didn’t buzz in. So, the catch stood, and the Seahawks were able to set themselves up at the Patriots’ 17-yard line. Seattle’s opening drive didn’t progress much after that. Darnold threw an errant pass on first down. Following a three-yard carry by Kenneth Walker III on second down, the Patriots were able to force the Seahawks off the field as Darnold’s third-down pass to wide receiver Rashid Shaheed fell incomplete. The Seahawks settled for a 33-yard field goal, with kicker Jason Myers’ kick giving them a 3-0 lead just over three minutes in.​Latest Sports News from FOX Sports

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Celebrities at Super Bowl LX: Travis Scott, Adam Sandler, Justin Bieber, More

It’s Super Bowl Sunday! It’s set to be a star-studded full house at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, California, and we’re keeping track of the biggest and most notable names in attendance. We already know a few big-name celebrities that will make an appearance. Fresh off his three-win night at the 68th Grammy Awards last weekend, Puerto Rican artist Bad Bunny is headlining this year’s halftime performance. [SUPER BOWL ODDS: Bad Bunny Props for Super Bowl Halftime Show: What to Know] What’s more, American rock band Green Day, R&B singer-songwriter Coco Jones, 11-time Grammy winner Brandi Carlile and Billboard chart-topper Charlie Puth all performed at the Super Bowl LX pregame show. Follow along to see the other celebrities in attendance at Super Bowl LX:​Latest Sports News from FOX Sports