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The Bears are signing veteran defensive end Kentavius Street, according to Jordan Schultz of The Schultz Report.

Street, who turns 30 in May, played under Bears defensive coordinator Dennis Allen in 2022 with the Saints.

He has spent parts of the past three seasons with the Falcons. In 2025, Street joined the Falcons on Nov. 14 and played seven games, totaling 21 tackles and two sacks.

Street entered the league as a fourth-round pick of the 49ers in 2018, and he has also spent time with the Eagles.

In his career, Street has recorded 125 tackles, 10.5 sacks, 17 quarterback hits, two passes defensed and a forced fumble.


Linebacker Kaden Elliss is heading back to the Big Easy.

According to multiple reports, Elliss has agreed to a three-year, $33 million contract with the Saints. Elliss began his NFL career with the team in 2019 and has spent the last three seasons with their NFC South rivals in Atlanta.

Elliss was a 2019 seventh-round pick in New Orleans and progressed from a special teamer to having a role on defense before leaving for the Falcons. He started every game for the last three seasons and compiled 380 tackles, 12.5 sacks, two interceptions, two forced fumbles and a fumble recovery in that action.

The Saints will be hoping to see a similar impact on their defense once Elliss is able to officially sign with the team.


Plenty of veteran quarterbacks are and will be available. The Steelers are sitting at the window, waiting for quarterback Aaron Rodgers to come home.

But as they press a collective nose against the glass, they’re also reportedly “nosing around” the quarterback market.

Mike Garafolo used that term during a Monday appearance on NFL Network in explaining that the Steelers know they need to have a “contingency plan” in place, if Rodgers decides to play for someone else — or to not play at all.

Either way, the clock is ticking. And potential options will be disappearing.

Kirk Cousins. Geno Smith. Joe Flacco. Just to name a few. Will any of them wait to see what Rodgers will do?

The Steelers shouldn’t be waiting. All due respect to the future first-ballot Hall of Famer, but Rodgers is a long way from the guy who won four MVP awards.

Really, who else is pursuing him? Last year, Rodgers was the Plan B if Matthew Stafford left the Rams. That’s it.

This year, the Cardinals make sense, but for the fact that they can just go ahead and renovate the basement of the NFC West.


The Dolphins have found a new kicker.

Zane Gonzalez has agreed to a one-year deal with Miami, according to agent Mike McCartney.

Gonzalez, 30, spent the latter half of last season kicking for the Falcons. He connected on 19-of-22 field goals and 17-of-18 extra points in nine games.

Gonzalez started his pro career as a Browns seventh-round pick in 2017. He then kicked for the Cardinals for a couple of years before missing the 2022 season with a quad injury and the 2023 season with another injury.

After 2021, he again appeared in a regular season game with Washington in 2024.

The Dolphins released former kicker Jason Sanders earlier this month after he missed the 2025 season due to injury.


The Cardinals will be cutting quarterback Kyler Murray, who’ll be available to any other team. The Cardinals, meanwhile, will need an available quarterback.

They have Jacoby Brissett under contract for 2026, at a base package of $5.44 million. They agreed to terms on Monday with Gardner Minshew, on a one-year, $8 million deal. (More on that coming in a bit.)

Brissett is generally expected to be gone. Minshew surely isn’t expected to be the starter. So what will the Cardinals do?

The answer could be Kirk Cousins.

New coach Mike LaFleur comes from the McVay-Shanahan hive. And they love them some Kirk Cousins.

He will be cut on Wednesday. He will be available to any team. And as LaFleur tries to install his offense, he’ll want a quarterback who can run it.

It would be interesting to see Cousins in the same division as McVay and Shanahan, playing both of them twice per year.

Cousins needs a landing spot. He needs a place where he’ll be the starter. In Arizona, he would be.

Money will be an issue. Cousins has perfected the art of getting paid. He’ll command more than the $10 million the Falcons owe him for 2026.

Look around. Where else would he be QB1? While the Steelers would be wise to drop the Aaron Rodgers torch and pivot to Cousins, they apparently won’t. The Jets are a possibility, especially with Cousins emerging as a potential media presence.

Still, the Cardinals have a clear vacancy at the top of the depth chart. Cousins would be an obvious choice to fill it.