Skip navigation
Favorites
Sign up to follow your favorites on all your devices.
Sign up
Odds by

NFL Player News

Rotoworld

  • LAC Guard #62
    Personalize your Rotoworld feed by favoriting players
    Chargers signed Mississippi State G Ben Beckwith.
    Beckwith (6'4/317) walked on at Mississippi State and went on to start 25 games, earning third-team All-American honors as a senior. Beckwith’s athleticism is limited, but he has experience at both guard and center and adequate to above-average playing strength, which could make Beckwith a useful interior “swing” reserve. Turning 24 late in his rookie season, Beckwith doesn’t offer a plus-starter ceiling.
  • NO Quarterback #0
    Personalize your Rotoworld feed by favoriting players
    Saints signed QB Zach Wilson, formerly of the Dolphins, to a one-year contract.
    Wilson spent last season with the Dolphins, attempting 11 passes as the backup to both Tua Tagovailoa and Quinn Ewers. He joins a quarterback room that is likely to start Tyler Shough with Spencer Rattler in the mix as backup. Wilson is only a month older than Shough, but will be the “journeyman” presence heading into training camp. The former Jets first-rounder is only worth rostering in the deepest of Superflex leagues if injuries give him a starting chance.
    Does Simpson have skills to be an NFL starting QB?
    Patrick Daugherty and Denny Carter analyze the reports of Alabama's Ty Simpson being evaluated as a first round pick ahead of the 2026 NFL Draft, discussing if he has what it takes to be a starter in the pros.
  • LV Coaching Staff
    Raiders hired former Steelers offensive assistant Mike Sullivan as their quarterbacks coach.
    Sullivan will be quarterbacks coach for his fourth team, spending time with the Steelers, Giants, and Broncos under the same role. The Raiders add the 59-year-old ahead of a potential Fernando Mendoza pick in the 2026 NFL Draft. Klint Kubiak is rounding out his offensive staff as a rookie quarterback awaits; Sullivan brings over 20 years of NFL coaching experience to the team.
  • PHI Wide Receiver #81
    Eagles signed WR Elijah Moore to a one-year contract.
    Moore spent the majority of the 2025 season with the Bills, catching nine passes for 112 yards. The 25-year-old was released in November and later signed to the Broncos’ practice squad, catching one pass for four yards in the postseason for Denver. Initially drafted by the Jets, Moore tallied over 100 targets in back-to-back seasons with the Browns from 2023-2024. He will come in to compete for depth snaps in Philly. Moore is mostly off fantasy radars for 2026.
  • PHI Tackle #74
    Eagles re-signed OL Fred Johnson to a one-year contract.
    Johnson returns to the Eagles after starting eight games for them in 2025. The 28-year-old swing tackle has spent each of the last three seasons in Philly, developing as a valuable piece on the offensive line. Though he did not find a starting job elsewhere, Johnson has the opportunity to contribute to the Eagles’ blocking under a new offensive line coach in 2026.
  • CIN Quarterback #16
    Bengals re-signed QB Joe Flacco to a one-year, $6 million contract.
    Elder millenial legend Flacco will enter his age-41 season as Joe Burrow’s backup. It appears that a market did not appear for his services as a starter. Given how often Burrow has been hurt and the acumen he displayed in “simply throwing the ball in Ja’Marr Chase’s general direction,” it’s as good a landing spot as a backup as any for Flacco.
  • FA Quarterback #18
    The Athletic’s Matt Schneidman believes the “idea of adding a proven veteran like [Kirk] Cousins ... might entice head coach Matt LaFleur.”
    Cousins’ free agency has been dead quiet since it was reported the Raiders could have interest in him as the legal tampering window ended. If a role as Fernando Mendoza’s bridge quarterback isn’t enticing to Cousins, it’s perhaps on the table that he’ll simply wait and see what injuries accumulate at quarterback over the offseason and preseason before picking a landing spot. He certainly hasn’t been in any rush to sign on to a backup role so far.
  • DEN Wide Receiver #19
    The Athletic’s Nick Kosmider reports the Broncos “aren’t in any hurry to make a trade to thin” the wideout room.
    He does concede that teams in need of wide receiver help could call between now and the NFL Draft. Between Courtland Sutton, Jaylen Waddle, Troy Franklin, Pat Bryant, and Marvin Mims, Mims is by far the least-accomplished player and would presumably (our interpretation) be the most available. The Broncos were hampered by injuries to their wideouts down the stretch, and that was what enabled Mims to get major run in the playoffs. It wouldn’t be surprising if a wideout-needy team like the Jets were in touch with the Broncos.
  • NYG Long Snapper #45
    Giants signed LS Zach Triner, formerly of the Commanders.
    A long-time Buccaneers staple, Triner’s career as a snapper of balls that travel more than the normal amount of distance in a snap has dwindled of late. He played in 77 games from 2019-2023, but just 10 the last two years between Tampa, Miami, and the Commanders. He’ll look to revive his career prospects — one of the few classes of NFL player that can say this at age 35 — in New Jersey.
  • FA Wide Receiver #15
    ESPN’s John Keim believes the Commanders are “going to go a different direction” than Jauan Jennings.
    We surprisingly haven’t seen much on Jauan Jennings in free agency to this point, Keim has connected the dots to Jennings as a potential option for the Commanders before, but it doesn’t seem like that will happen. It’s possible that Jennings’ agents have simply misread his market and he’ll have to settle for a one-year deal somewhere, but there are plenty of teams that could use a big-bodied possession receiver like Jennings still.
  • FA Wide Receiver #8
    NFL Network’s Tom Pelissero believes Stefon Diggs “may have to wait a little bit” in free agency.
    Diggs is perhaps the biggest-name player still available in free agency, and Pelissero groups him with Deebo Samuel, DeAndre Hopkins, and Keenan Allen as wideouts who are waiting on the outskirts and probably can’t do better than a one-year, $5 million-type contract at this point. Pelissero points to the compensatory picks formula and notes that interest in these players may pick up closer to the draft.