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One of the most optimistic times of the year for NFL fans has arrived. Free agency has started with a bang, with several huge deals around the league already completed.

We're grading every notable signing and even a few trades as the deals happen. Did your favorite team make smart moves? 

Let's take a look at how we view some of the top signings and trades around the league. 

[NFL Top 100 Free Agents]

Colts re-sign QB Daniel Jones to two-year deal

Ben Arthur: Jones’ deal — a two-year, $88 million contract worth up to $100 million, including $50 million fully guaranteed at signing — is a massive win for the quarterback and a gamble for the Colts. It’s Indianapolis giving him top-half-of-the-league QB1 money off his performance in one partial season. Jones is recovering from a torn Achilles suffered in December and his availability for the start of the 2026 season is in question, though the team is optimistic. 

Let’s be clear: Retaining Jones was the Colts’ most logical move. They were heading that way by placing the transition tag on him, which would have paid him $37.8 million in 2026. A multi-year deal closer to what Sam Darnold received from the Seahawks last season — three years for $100.5 million, including $37.5 million fully guaranteed at signing — made the most sense, though. 

Indianapolis benefits from the short-term commitment with this deal, the largest two-year contract in NFL history, but will see a higher cap number as a result. This is risky for the Colts, no matter how you slice it.  

Grade for Colts: C-

Ravens sign edge Trey Hendrickson to four-year contract

Henry McKenna: Just hours after Baltimore canceled its trade for Maxx Crosby due to a failed physical, the team elected to sign four-time Pro Bowl edge Hendrickson instead. Hendrickson and the Ravens are set to ink a four-year, $120 million deal with $60 million fully guaranteed. 

Trey Hendrickson is a four-time Pro Bowler with 81 career sacks in nine seasons with the Saints and Bengals. (Photo by Brooke Sutton/Getty Images)

Trey Hendrickson is a four-time Pro Bowler with 81 career sacks in nine seasons with the Saints and Bengals. (Photo by Brooke Sutton/Getty Images)

You might hate the process — with Baltimore backing out of a trade with Las Vegas — but you can’t hate the results. Hendrickson might not have as much name recognition as Crosby, but over the past three seasons, Crosby has 32 sacks and Hendrickson has 39. It’s also nice for Baltimore to keep the two first-round picks the team was to send to the Raiders in the deal. The downside is that Hendrickson is 31, three years older than Crosby. And that Hendrickson’s contract likely locks the Ravens into less financial flexibility than if they had taken on Crosby’s contract. 

The Ravens won’t earn a whole lot of respect among league general managers for backing out of their deal with the Raiders. But this does seem to be a savvy value play in a vacuum.

Grade for Ravens: A

QB Malik Willis signs with Dolphins

McKenna: Willis will be the highest-paid QB on the open market, signing a three-year, $67.5 million deal with $45 million guaranteed, per multiple reports. 

The former Packer joins ex-Green Bay defensive coordinator and now Miami head coach Jeff Hafley and Dolphins GM Jon-Eric Sullivan, who also came from Green Bay. The Dolphins will give Willis at least a year to prove himself in an offense that includes good skill players: RB De'Von Achane and WR Jaylen Waddle

Willis will be tasked with doing what he did in Green Bay as a backup. With the Packers, he converted his unique (and raw) gifts into becoming a game manager. Miami will have to turn him into a game-changer.

At the combine, the Dolphins were concerned that Willis’ contract would get bloated beyond what they could accommodate, per a source. But at $22.5 million per year, he lands just north of what the New York Jets gave Justin Fields last year. 

It’ll be fascinating to see how Miami gets under the cap, given they’re about to take on $99 million in dead money from Tua Tagovailoa’s impending release. 

Ultimately, I like this move. I like Willis. The risks are sizable. But this offseason won’t offer much in the way of young QBs with upside. The Dolphins chased their guy and got him.

Grade for Dolphins: A-

Colts re-sign WR Alec Pierce 

Arthur: Pierce’s return is pivotal for a Colts offense that is looking to get back to the explosiveness it displayed at the start of last season. A homegrown talent with plenty of upside, the 25-year-old Pierce had a strong connection with quarterback Daniel Jones, who’s on the transition tag (at least for the time being). 

Pierce is a deep threat with a growing route tree, but he became more expensive than he needed to be. Indianapolis could’ve extended the former second-round pick before last season or earlier this offseason, when he would’ve been significantly cheaper.

Grade for Colts: B-

Colts wide receiver Alec Pierce has led the NFL in yards per catch in each of the past two seasons.  (Photo by Jeffrey Brown/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

Colts wide receiver Alec Pierce has led the NFL in yards per catch in each of the past two seasons.  (Photo by Jeffrey Brown/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

Chiefs sign Kenneth Walker III to three-year deal

Eric D. Williams: Running backs matter. Just ask the Chiefs, who grabbed the top back available at the start of free agency. The Super Bowl MVP for the Seattle Seahawks will not get a chance to defend the Lombardi Trophy next season. Instead, he’ll try to help Patrick Mahomes and Andy Reid chase another ring.

Kansas City needed an upgrade to its running game from the backfield of Isiah Pacheco and Kareem Hunt. The Chiefs averaged just 106.6 rushing yards a contest last year, which was No. 25 in the NFL. And with Mahomes recovering from ACL surgery, the Chiefs now have a bell-cow running back to lean on in Walker.

According to reports, it’s a three-year, $45 million deal with $28.7 million fully guaranteed. That’s a heavy investment to fix the running game for Kansas City for a player who had some injury concerns during his time in Seattle.

Grade for Chiefs: B

Kenneth Walker III joins Kansas City after a Super Bowl MVP performance for the Seahawks. (Thearon W. Henderson/Getty Images)

Kenneth Walker III joins Kansas City after a Super Bowl MVP performance for the Seahawks. (Thearon W. Henderson/Getty Images)

Falcons agree to terms with former Dolphins QB Tua Tagovailoa

Williams: With former first-round pick Michael Penix Jr. still recovering from an ACL tear he suffered in November, the Falcons added some insurance with the signing of veteran quarterback Tagovailoa to a one-year deal. 

While serving as the head coach of the Cleveland Browns, new Atlanta coach Kevin Stefanski drafted a left-handed quarterback in Dillon Gabriel. Stefanski takes over a team with a left-handed quarterback as the team’s projected starter in Penix.

And now Stefanski adds another left-handed quarterback in Tagovailoa to serve as the team’s starter until Penix is healthy enough to return. The Alabama product is a good fit in Stefanski’s system, a West Coast-based scheme that leans on running the football and a precision passer in the play-action game.

Atlanta has a solid offensive line and one of the best groups of offensive weapons in the league, led by running back Bijan Robinson, tight end Kyle Pitts and receiver Drake London. Yes, Tagovailoa is coming off one of his worst seasons as a pro. He got benched for the last three games of the regular season in favor of rookie Quinn Ewers.

Tagovailoa has struggled to stay healthy, missing significant time over his six NFL seasons due to concussion issues in addition to rib fractures, finger fractures and a back injury. However, the Hawaii native has played winning football, posting a 44-32 record, reaching the playoffs once during his time in Miami and making the Pro Bowl in 2023, leading the NFL in passing yards that season.

Grade for Falcons: B+

Commanders agree to terms with OLB Odafe Oweh

Arthur: The guarantees in Oweh’s reported four-year, $100 million deal will be important. His sack numbers show he’s more than worth this kind of money — he has 21.5 sacks over the past two seasons, including playoffs — but he doesn’t put up the pressure numbers of the top-end edge rushers. According to Pro Football Focus, he had 51 pressures in 2025 (including postseason), which ranked 29th among edge defenders. 

The uptick in his numbers after getting traded to the Chargers is notable — after joining Los Angeles in Week 6, he generated the sixth-highest pressure rate in the NFL, per Next Gen Stats. But we don’t have a long-term sample size of the former first-round pick being a consistent, every down game-wrecker. Also, Oweh isn’t a major disruptive force in the run game. 

Grade for Commanders: C+

Panthers sign former Eagles edge Jaelan Phillips

McKenna: Phillips has long been an analytics darling, with a propensity to generate as much pressure as anyone. But there are a few reasons why this deal is a major risk for the Panthers. Phillips’ sack numbers have never hit double digits in a single season. He has been at his best in Vic Fangio’s defense (in Miami and Philly), and he won’t have that luxury in Carolina. Phillips also has a long injury history (torn ACL in 2024, torn Achilles in 2023). 

The Eagles were able to buy him pretty cheap at the trade deadline. That’s not what the Panthers are doing here. When the dust settles in free agency, Phillips is likely to finish in the top 10 (or near it) among pass-rusher salaries — alongside Josh Hines-Allen ($28.3 million) and Nick Bosa ($34 million per year). Anytime you buy into a guy after a meteoric rise, there’s the possibility of regression. That risk feels even bigger with an oft-injured defender like Phillips.

Grade for Panthers: C+

Raiders agree to terms with C Tyler Linderbaum on historic deal

Williams: Las Vegas significantly upgraded one of its main weaknesses, bringing in an anchor up front to protect the pending addition of quarterback Fernando Mendoza as the No. 1 overall pick. The Raiders signed Ravens free-agent Tyler Linderbaum to a three-year, $81 million deal that includes $60 million in guaranteed money, making him the highest paid center in the league.

Last season, Las Vegas allowed a league-worst 64 sacks and struggled to clear running lanes for rookie running back Ashton Jeanty. Linderbaum should help on both fronts as Las Vegas looks to revamp an offensive line around blindside protector Kolton Miller. Las Vegas entered free agency with more than $100 million in salary cap space — the most in the NFL — and should still have more room to make some splashes in free agency. The addition of Linderbaum fills a major hole, giving the Raiders a cornerstone quarterback-center tandem to build around.

Grade for Raiders: A-

Jets sign former Bears CB Nahshon Wright

Ralph Vacchiano: For just $5.5 million over one year, the Jets may have gotten a huge bargain in this 27-year-old, big (6-foot-4) cornerback. He’s coming off a phenomenal season in Chicago, during which he had five interceptions and went to the Pro Bowl. 

Granted, it took a long time for Wright to bloom into the player the Cowboys thought he’d be when they took him in the third round of the 2021 NFL Draft — and a string of injuries didn’t help. It’s probably why bidders were scared away. But he’s exactly the kind of player the Jets should take an inexpensive shot at. They had zero interceptions last season, so if Wright is the ball-hawk they think he is, they have an ascending young player they can pay next season. If he’s not, they’ve lost absolutely nothing but a little time.

 Grade for Jets: A

Seahawks re-signing WR/KR Rashid Shaheed 

Arthur: It never made sense for the Seahawks to let Shaheed walk. They traded two mid-round picks to the Saints for the Pro Bowl returner midseason, and his playmaking ability in the return game and field-stretching capabilities as a receiver played an integral role in Seattle winning the Super Bowl.

At $17 million AAV on the new three-year deal, Shaheed is firmly in the low end WR2 range. And that makes a lot of sense for Seattle. Establishing contract value is all about projecting what said player can be for your team moving forward. Shaheed’s history in New Orleans demonstrates that he can be a legitimate running mate alongside WR1 Jaxon Smith-Njigba given a full year in the Seahawks’ offense — on top of everything he already does as a returner. Shaheed’s full potential as an offensive weapon is yet to be unlocked. 

Grade for Seahawks:

Saints agree to terms with RB Travis Etienne Jr. 

Arthur: The Saints desperately needed a three-down running back of the future, considering that a declining Alvin Kamara will be out of the picture sooner than later. It’s why Notre Dame’s Jeremiyah Love was widely considered an option for New Orleans with the ninth overall pick.

Instead of the draft, the team earmarks the 27-year-old Etienne — a Louisiana native — as its RB1. At $13 million AAV, the former Jag becomes the NFL’s seventh-highest paid running back. Without a clear picture on guarantees, it appears to be a win for New Orleans on paper. That’s lower than what the Chiefs gave Kenneth Walker, who has one fewer 1,000-yard rushing season. Etienne also has more career receiving yards than the Super Bowl LX MVP. 

A former first-round pick, Etienne looks like a strong running back option to take pressure off second-year quarterback Tyler Shough at a reasonable price. 

Grade for Saints: A-

49ers trade for Cowboys DT Osa Odighizuwa for third-round pick

Arthur: This is a strong deal on both sides. 

The Niners get an above-average starter in Odighizuwa, who fills a position of need in a big way. San Francisco loses its only third-round pick in the trade, but it has four fourth-round selections (Nos. 127, 133, 138 and 139), so it has the ammo to get back into the third round if it wants to. 

The Cowboys, meanwhile, shed necessary salary at the defensive tackle spot (Quinnen Williams has a cap charge of $21.6 million, according to Over The Cap; Kenny Clark is at $12.7 million). Odighizuwa is owed $16.75 million in guaranteed salary in the upcoming season. 

Dallas didn’t previously have a second- or third-round pick in the 2026 draft, and now gets the latter as part of this deal as well. 

Grade for 49ers: A
Grade for Cowboys: A

Bills sign edge rusher Bradley Chubb

Vacchiano: The only thing the Bills needed more than a No. 1 receiver was a No. 1 edge rusher. And considering the price of top-end guys like Trey Hendrickson and Maxx Crosby (at least as of last week), the 28-year-old Chubb is a bargain. 

For less than $15 million per year (three years, $43.5 million), the Bills get a pass rusher who has the potential for double-digit sacks — he had 11 in 2023 before injuring his knee. And that’s huge for a team that had no one with more than seven last year (Greg Rousseau). Chubb, after missing 2024 with a torn ACL, had 8.5 sacks in Miami last season, and more importantly, he proved he’s healthy and still explosive. 

The Bills have a quarterback and an offense that can put up points. Now they’ve got an edge rusher who can disrupt opposing quarterbacks when the game is on the line. Their recent history, especially in the playoffs, shows that matters a lot.

 Grade for Bills: A

Eagles sign ex-Seahawks CB Riq Woolen

Vacchiano: The Eagles seemed to have bigger priorities than their second outside corner, but it’s hard to argue with the value they get in the 26-year-old Woolen on a deal worth "up to" $15 million. He’s a ball-hawk who had six interceptions as a rookie, though it took him three more years to get his next six. And he’ll be an upgrade over Adoree’ Jackson and motivated to prove his worth with eyes on a bigger payday next year. 

With Woolen, Quinyon Mitchell and Cooper DeJean, it’ll be hard to find a better trio of corners anywhere in the NFL. So despite the early free-agent departures, Vic Fangio’s defense isn’t finished yet.

Grade for Eagles: A-

Romeo Doubs agrees to terms with Patriots

McKenna: Did New England OC Josh McDaniels just find his Wes Welker? The Patriots inked the 25-year-old Doubs to a four-year, $70 million deal. At $17.5 million per year, he lands alongside free-agent receivers Wan'Dale Robinson ($17.5M/year) and Rashid Shaheed ($17M/year). 

Doubs, a slot specialist, always seemed like he was just scratching the surface of his potential in Green Bay, in part because of the team's deep cast of receivers. But given the prominence of slot receivers in McDaniels’ offense, Doubs may have a massive role in New England, perhaps for years to come. 

Romeo Doubs caught 202 passes for 2,424 yards and 21 touchdowns in four years with the Packers. (Photo by Michael Owens/Getty Images)

Romeo Doubs caught 202 passes for 2,424 yards and 21 touchdowns in four years with the Packers. (Photo by Michael Owens/Getty Images)

It was (past) time for the Patriots to start investing in QB Drake Maye’s pass-catchers. They were smart to bail on Stefon Diggs and instead focus on someone like Doubs, still very young and with plenty of upside. The next step will likely be drafting a perimeter receiver (if they can’t trade for disgruntled Eagles receiver A.J. Brown).

Grade for Patriots: A

Former Colts OT Braden Smith agrees to terms with Texans

McKenna: With the addition of Smith, the Texans are on their way to rebuilding their offensive line. He is set to sign a two-year, $25-million deal with $13.5M fully guaranteed, per reports. In all likelihood, Smith will replace right tackle Tytus Howard, whom Houston recently traded to the Browns. 

Smith took time away from the game to address obsessive-compulsive disorder, but he returned last year and started 12 games — with mixed results (as was the case for the entire Colts offense.) The Texans have already re-signed tackle Trent Brown and right guard Ed Ingram. I’m just not sure Smith is a sizable upgrade from Howard.

Grade for Texans: C+ 

Cowboys trade for Packers edge rusher Rashan Gary

Vacchiano: The Cowboys needed a pass rusher and Gary cost them a fourth-round pick, which seems like a high price to pay for a player the Packers were prepared to release. Gary, 28, did have 7.5 sacks last season, but they all came in the first seven games of the season. He had zero over the last nine. 

Rashan Gary averaged 7.5 sacks over the past six seasons with the Packers. (Photo by Rich Graessle/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

Rashan Gary averaged 7.5 sacks over the past six seasons with the Packers. (Photo by Rich Graessle/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

Still, the Cowboys are banking on the fact that he’s averaged 7.5 sacks over the past six seasons. They're also willing to take on the two years and $42 million left on his contract because they knew the edge market was going to be more expensive, for far less accomplished players. 

It’s an expensive risk, but less expensive and less risky than what Dallas expected to find in free agency.

Grade for Cowboys: B

Colts trade WR Michael Pittman Jr. to Steelers

Arthur: The Steelers desperately needed wide receiver help alongside DK Metcalf and got that in Pittman, a two-time 1,000-yard receiver. The former second-round pick is a physical receiver and a yards-after-the-catch threat, so he fits the profile of Pittsburgh’s offense. 

The 28-year-old Pittman has missed just three games since 2021, making him hugely reliable. 

The three-year, $59 million contract the Steelers are giving Pittman and the draft compensation involved in the trade — late-round pick swap — are very palpable for someone who projects to be Pittsburgh’s WR2. This is a strong move overall for the Steelers and new head coach Mike McCarthy. 

Grade for Steelers: A 

 Jets trade for Dolphins S Minkah Fitzpatrick

Vacchiano: The 29-year-old Fitzpatrick had a down season in Miami last year after three straight Pro Bowl years in Pittsburgh, but he’s still a perfect fit for the Jets. He’s not the dominant player he was a few years ago, but he’s low-risk, coming at the cost of a seventh-round pick and a three-year, $40 million deal. 

Embattled Jets head coach Aaron Glenn is taking over the defense and wants smart veterans who can run it. Fitzpatrick fits that profile. He also has much-needed ball-hawk skills, even though he had just two interceptions over the past three seasons. (The Jets had zero interceptions last season, so they’ll take any help they can get in that department.) He’ll help stabilize a secondary that was mostly awful last season, especially after the trade of cornerback Sauce Gardner to the Colts.

Grade for Jets: B+

49ers set to sign veteran Bucs WR Mike Evans

McKenna: It’s hard not to love this one. The 49ers offense continues to be a hotspot for the best skill players in the NFL — albeit those at an advanced age. Evans is 32 and not in the same league with Justin Jefferson or Ja’Marr Chase anymore, but he has 11 career 1,000-yard seasons and six with double-digit touchdowns. 

He’s perfect for this offense. He should return to dominant form in this offense, in part because of how much help he’ll get. It starts with coach Kyle Shanahan, but it extends to quarterback Brock Purdy and running back Christian McCaffrey

At first glance, it’s a big price for the aging star — a three-year, $60.4 million deal — but it’s a deal that’s comparable to what the Rams are paying Davante Adams. The 49ers should plug Evans into their offense in a comparable way.

Grade for 49ers: A

Mike Evans has 11 career 1,000-yard receiving seasons, all with the Buccaneers. Can he get one with the 49ers? (Photo by Cliff Welch/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

Mike Evans has 11 career 1,000-yard receiving seasons, all with the Buccaneers. Can he get one with the 49ers? (Photo by Cliff Welch/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

Travis Kelce re-signing with Chiefs for 14th NFL season

Arthur: Kelce returning to Kansas City on a one-year deal, reported to be worth up to $15 million ($12 million base value), is a win for the Chiefs. The future Hall of Fame tight end is 36 years old and has been declining for a few years, but he's still a productive player in Andy Reid’s offense — as evident last season by his team-leading 851 receiving yards and five receiving touchdowns (tied for the team-high). 

A $12 million base value puts Kelce’s deal in the top 12 for AAV among tight ends, which is a good rate for Kansas City given the stage of his career, the value to its offense and the interest he surely generated from other teams. An 11-time Pro Bowler, Kelce is positioned to officially retire after the upcoming season. 

Grade for Chiefs: A- 

Bears upgrade secondary by signing S Coby Bryant

Williams: Chicago adds a defensive playmaker with a Super Bowl pedigree by signing free agent Coby Bryant. Terms of the deal have not been disclosed. Selected in fourth round of the 2022 draft by the Seahawks, Bryant arrived in the NFL as a cornerback but successfully converted to safety in 2024. Over the past two seasons, he started 26 games for Seattle, totaling seven interceptions and 139 combined tackles over the period.

Chicago has four safeties expected to hit free agency — NFL interceptions leader Kevin Byard, Jaquan Brisker, Elijah Hicks and Jonathan Owens. Bryant provides a versatile defensive playmaker who improves a team expected to contend for the Super Bowl under second-year head coach Ben Johnson.

Grade for Bears: A

Rams add another CB, sign Jaylen Watson

Williams: The Rams have taken a sledgehammer this offseason to the team's main weaknesses: the defensive secondary. After giving up four picks — including a first-round selection — in a trade with the Kansas City Chiefs for Southern California native Trent McDuffie and signing him to the richest cornerback contract in league history, Los Angeles then grabbed his teammate, Jaylen Watson, in free agency.

According to reports, the Rams signed Watson to a three-year, $51 million deal that includes $34 million guaranteed. Los Angeles has four free-agent cornerbacks in Cobie Durant, Derion Kendrick, Ahkello Witherspoon and Roger McCreary. The team has found replacements to upgrade that position group in McDuffie and Watson. 

However, after allocating money to outside free agents, the Rams might need to turn their attention to star receiver Puka Nacua, who is eligible for a new deal as he enters the final year of his rookie contract.

Grade for Rams: B+

Giants sign former Ravens TE Isaiah Likely

Vacchiano: With WR Malik Nabers recovering from a torn ACL and Wan’Dale Robinson headed to free agency, the Giants needed weapons for QB Jaxson Dart

Likely, a 6-foot-4, 245-pounder, has plenty of untapped potential, and no one knows that better than new Giants coach John Harbaugh. Likely’s production was always capped in Baltimore, mostly because of the prominence of Ravens TE Mark Andrews. But in limited opportunities, Likely always showed he had reliable hands and could stretch the field. 

He might have to split the job with TE Theo Johnson. Likely also could see time as a "big slot receiver." Either way, he didn’t cost a ton (three years, $40 million) and he quickly emerges as Dart’s No. 2 target.

 Grade for Giants: A-

Titans sign former Giants WR Wan’Dale Robinson

Vacchiano: Brian Daboll loved the 5-foot-8 Robinson in New York, so it always seemed inevitable that once he landed as the Titans' OC that he’d bring his favorite slot receiver with him. And the price (four years, $70 million) wasn’t going to stop Daboll, even though Robinson had just one good season in New York. 

The truth is he’s little more than a slot receiver. He can be a high-volume receiver, but he’s never been the slippery, yards-after-catch guy that Daboll envisioned. And his numbers only went up last season (315 more yards on one fewer catch than in 2024) because No. 1 receiver Malik Nabers got hurt. Robinson will help QB Cam Ward for sure, but it’s hard to imagine he’s worth that money, even if it is a reasonable rate in an unreasonable free-agent market.

 Grade for Titans: C+

Lions set to sign former Panthers C Cade Mays

McKenna: The Lions lost Frank Ragnow before the 2025 season and never quite replaced him — until now. This year, Mays took over the Panthers’ starting center job after an injury to Austin Corbett in Week 3. Mays played well in relief of Corbett, helping the Panthers engineer a run-first identity for Rico Dowdle and Chuba Hubbard. Mays also didn’t allow a sack, per PFF. 

Mays is 26 years old, and has 52 games of experience. On a three-year, $25-million deal, these should be his prime years of production for an ascending player.

Grade for Lions: B+

Patriots agree to terms with guard Alijah Vera-Tucker

McKenna: In many ways, this resembles the Panthers’ signing of Jaelan Phillips. New England addressed a position of need by signing a 26-year-old player who was the best available in free agency. Vera-Tucker’s only downside (like Phillips) is his injury history. He has torn his Achilles (2023) and his triceps (2022 and again in 2025). The thing I like about this move is the way the Patriots mitigated costs. Vera-Tucker's $14 million AAV ranks 19th among guards, behind Browns guard Wyatt Teller

The move also allows the Patriots to break up their inexperienced offensive linemen. Last season, rookies Will Campbell and Jared Wilson lined up next to each other. Wilson now moves to center, and left tackle Campbell should have the luxury of working beside an All-Pro talent at left guard. It’s an incredible idea — it’s also hard to trust that Vera-Tucker will make it through the entire season healthy.

Grade for Patriots: B+

Jets trade for Raiders QB Geno Smith

Vacchiano: In fairness to the Jets, they were in an impossible spot. They desperately need a quarterback, are picking second in a one-QB draft, and aren’t exactly a destination spot for free agents with options. Add in the fact that they want to win, but don’t want to ruin their chances at a high pick in the 2027 draft and … well, that’s how they landed on Smith. 

Geno Smith started his career with the Jets before having a few good years in Seattle. But his lone season with the Raiders was a disaster as he led the NFL in interceptions. (Photo by Ian Maule/Getty Images)

Geno Smith started his career with the Jets before having a few good years in Seattle. But his lone season with the Raiders was a disaster as he led the NFL in interceptions. (Photo by Ian Maule/Getty Images)

Once an abject failure for them from 2013-16, he’s a better, more mature player now. But he’s also about to turn 36, and he’s thrown 32 interceptions over the past two seasons (and averaged 13 over the past four). What makes the Jets think he’ll be more successful with them? Well, they probably don’t think that. But what other choices did they have? At least he only cost them a sixth-round pick and the Raiders are paying most of his salary — and they can cut him after the season when they’ll be ready to draft a quarterback who can actually help.

Grade for Jets: D

Giants sign LB Tremaine Edmunds

Vacchiano: If there was one position the Giants were desperate to upgrade on defense, it was linebacker. And when they cut veteran Bobby Okereke, it was clear they wanted to get younger, too. 

The 27-year-old Edmunds fills that need and gives the Giants a strong leader in the middle, who still has the sideline-to-sideline speed to help against the run. He may not be a Pro Bowler anymore, but he’s topped 100 tackles in each of his eight NFL seasons. Also, at three years and $36 million, he’s affordable and came cheaper than he would have in a trade.

 Grade for Giants: B

Bengals agree to terms with former Ravens edge Boye Mafe

McKenna: Former All-Pro edge Trey Hendrickson said goodbye to Cincinnati earlier this offseason, so the Bengals are investing in the 27-year-old Mafe. He and the Bengals have agreed to a three-year, $60 million deal that’ll pay him similar to the BillsGregory Rousseau ($20 million/year) and the CardinalsJosh Sweat ($19 million/year). 

For quarterback Joe Burrow’s sake, hopefully this is the first of multiple pieces that fall into place — on both sides of the ball — for Cincy. He spent four seasons with the Seahawks, hitting a career-high nine sacks in 2023. The risk is that Mike Macdonald is probably the best defensive coach in football. If he couldn’t get double-digit sacks out of Mafe, then who will? But relative to Mafe's age, past production and the market, the deal makes a lot of sense for the Begnals.

Grade for Bengals: A-

Patriots QB Drake Maye is pressured by Boye Mafe during the second quarter of Super Bowl LX in February. (Photo by Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images)

Patriots QB Drake Maye is pressured by Boye Mafe during the second quarter of Super Bowl LX in February. (Photo by Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images)

Titans reach terms with CBs Cor’Dale Flott and Alontae Taylor, DL John Franklin-Myers

Arthur: In the first several hours of free agency, the Titans remade their defense in the image of Robert Saleh.

Franklin-Myers, a key part of the Broncos’ defensive line success over the past couple seasons, rejoins his former Jets head coach to give All-Pro Jeffery Simmons legitimate help in the pass-rush department. And Tennessee gets two new starting cornerbacks in Flott and Taylor.

With 14.5 sacks since the start of 2024, Franklin-Myers was going to land big money. So $21 million AAV is fair market rate for the former fourth-round pick, who can play multiple spots on the D-line. Saleh’s history indicates a reluctance to blitzing — he wants to generate pressure with the front four — so Franklin-Myers fits that vision perfectly. 

According to NFL Network, Tennessee committed $74 million fully guaranteed between Flott and Taylor. That’s doable for the Titans, who entered free agency with over $90 million in cap space, but it's still a hefty price tag. That says a lot about how bad the outlook was for the Titans’ cornerback room — the L’Jarius Sneed deal a couple years ago was a disaster — and how the team views the CBs in this year’s draft. 

Grade for Titans: B