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Rotoworld

  • FA Defensive Back #33
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    Dolphins waived/injured CB Ifo Ekpre-Olomu.
    Ekpre-Olomu tore his ACL during practice over the weekend. Once a top corner prospect, Ekpre-Olomu suffered a gruesome knee injury in December of 2014 while at Oregon and has yet to get on an NFL field. Thankfully this injury is not to the same knee he blew out in college, but it is another massive setback. Ekpre-Olomu will revert to injured reserve once he clears waivers.
  • FA Quarterback #17
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    Chiefs waived QB Shane Buechele.
    Buechele was signed off the Bills practice squad ahead of Week 18 and completed 7-of-14 passes for 88 yards against the Raiders in a game that neither team seemed to want to win. His reward was being waived. The Chiefs also signed LB Kam Arnold, DT Marcus Harris, WR Jimmy Holiday and T Matt Waletzko to reserve/future deals.
    Bet on 'field goal fest' when Eagles host 49ers
    Trysta Krick and Drew Dinsick preview a thrilling postseason battle between the 49ers and Eagles in Philadelphia, outlining how injuries to both teams will impact the matchup and sharing why the under may be a smart bet.
  • CIN Defensive Coordinator
    Bengals HC Zac Taylor said he doesn’t anticipate any changes to his coaching staff in 2026.
    In other words, embattled DC Al Golden has survived. This seemed impossible in November, when the Bengals were putting up numbers that generated WOAT discussion in the field of defensive performance. Things did turn around a bit towards the end of the season. We can’t say we’re surprised that the Bengals retained Golden, because they are reluctant to make major changes to a fault, but it is definitely a bold move by Taylor to attach his coaching future to what happened to this defense in 2025.
  • NYJ Quarterback #7
    Jets coach Aaron Glenn, asked if Justin Fields would be back in 2026, said “he’s under contract.”
    So, probably not then. Fields enters year two of a two-year contract as either a trade possibility or a candidate for release. The trade would save more cap space for the Jets, so we’d expect them to pursue that avenue. Fields would still be a fairly good backup quarterback option for most teams even if he hasn’t delivered great results as a starter. The 2021 first-rounder turns 27 in March.
  • SF Front Office
    Falcons requested permission to interview 49ers director of scouting and football operations Josh Williams for their “president of football” position.
    “President of football” being a very silly term aside, reporters have made it clear that the Falcons want to check the box on this job before they get to their GM and head-coaching vacancies. Williams has already been requested for the Dolphins GM position and was a finalist for the Jaguars GM position last offseason.
  • CIN Cornerback #29
    Bengals CB Cam Taylor-Britt was sentenced to five days in jail after pleading guilty to traffic charges.
    Taylor-Britt, who in late November was placed on injured reserve with a foot injury, pleaded guilty to reckless driving and an unclassified no-license charge stemming from an incident in September, according to media reports. His sentence is expected to start immediately. Taylor-Britt, 26, selected by the Bengals in the second round of the 2022 NFL draft, has seven interceptions over 47 games in the NFL. It’s unclear if the team or the league will take action against him for the 2026 season.
  • DEN Defensive Coordinator
    Broncos defensive coordinator Vance Joseph is expected to interview with the Giants, Raiders, Titans, and Cardinals for those teams’ head coaching vacancies.
    ESPN’s Adam Schefter confirmed these teams’ interest in Joseph after he coached one of the NFL’s most dominant defenses in recent memory. Over the past two seasons the Broncos have allowed the league’s lowest offensive success rate and the third lowest EPA per play. Joseph would look to revamp the defenses of any one of these teams; all of them rank among the NFL’s worst units.
  • ATL Quarterback #18
    ESPN’s Field Yates reports the Falcons and QB Kirk Cousins agreed to a “modified” final two years of Cousins’ contract.
    The adjustments mean Cousins could stick around Atlanta for another year or two depending on what the Falcons want to do at the QB position in 2026 and beyond. Cousins, 37, showed signs of life in the season’s final month after Michael Penix was placed on injured reserve with a knee injury. He had multiple touchdowns in three of his final four games and had two games of more than 230 passing yards in the run-first Falcons offense. The contract modification could also make Cousins a trade candidate if the Falcons choose to stick with Penix as the starter.
  • FA Offensive Coordinator
    NFL insider Jordan Schultz reports the Giants and Titans are expected to interview former Commanders offensive coordinator Kliff Kingsbury for their head coaching vacancies.
    Kingsbury’s work with young quarterbacks is certainly a selling point for both the Giants and Titans after Kingsbury’s success with Jayden Daniels in 2024. Kingsbury’s Washington offense was surprisingly efficient in 2025 despite the team missing Daniels for much of the regular season. Washington’s offense in 2025 was somehow 16th in EPA per play. They were ninth in offensive success rate and 12th in yards per play, ahead of postseason teams like the Broncos, Panthers, Eagles, Chargers, Jaguars, and Steelers. Kingsbury would be a boon for either Jaxson Dart or Cam Ward in 2026 and beyond.
  • FA Defensive Coordinator
    Commanders fired defensive coordinator Joe Whitt, Jr.
    The Commanders also parted ways with offensive coordinator Kliff Kingsbury after a disastrous 2025 season. Whitt, coaching one of the least talented defenses in the NFL, saw his unit get run over on the ground and through the air. Only three defenses gave up more yards per play, and only the Cardinals allowed more first downs in 2025. Washington allowed the second highest EPA per play under Whitt in 2025, and a mere three teams gave up a higher passing success rate. A first-time defensive coordinator in Washington, Whitt is not a sure thing to land another DC job in the offseason.
  • FA Offensive Coordinator
    NFL Network’s Tom Pelissero reports the Commanders and offensive coordinator Kliff Kingsbury mutually parted ways.
    Kingsbury didn’t have much chance of making it to a third season at the head of Washington’s offense after the team collapsed in 2025 with Jayden Daniels missing much of the regular season with multiple injuries. Pelissero claims Kingsbury, the former Cardinals head coach, “has head coaching interest and otherwise will have multiple OC options.” Washington’s offense in 2025 was somehow 16th in EPA per play despite Daniels’ injuries (and his poor play when healthy). They were ninth in offensive success rate and 12th in yards per play, ahead of postseason teams like the Broncos, Panthers, Eagles, Chargers, Jaguars, and Steelers. The Commanders will likely hire an OC with experience getting the most out of duel-threat quarterbacks like Daniels.