
Ian Hartitz goes position by position to look at potential cut candidates based on salary cap savings in the 2026 NFL offseason.

Recently, I overheard some of America's youth discussing the NFL salary cap and players who, for a variety of mostly performance- and contract-related reasons, could be released this offseason.
Well, whenever I need to know anything about NFL-related contracts and the league salary cap, I go to Over The Cap! And lo and behold, they published their top 100 possible cut candidates earlier this year—and the list included 29 total QBs, RBs, WRs and TEs.
This brings us to today's goal to, you know, support America's youth and all that: Looking at how potential cap casualty dominoes might fall and accordingly change the way we collectively live our lives (or at least think about the upcoming fantasy football season).
Below is a note on how much each team would inherit in dead money (bad!) vs. save against the cap (good!) in their best-case pre- or (almost always) post-June 1 cut (not trade) scenario of these potential cap casualties. These are ordered from the most cap savings to the least after a possible release. Cool? Cool.
As always: It's a great day to be great.
Each of the first five will seemingly be more personal team decisions that don't need to be made due to a mixture of readily available cap space (Jets, Cardinals, Broncos), along with reasonable backup-level deals to the most exciting quarterback alive and Jameis Winston.
And then there's Watson … who might be a legit candidate to start for the Browns in 2026? Maybe I was a victim of the moment, but I felt like I had seen Watson play his last NFL snap when he tore his Achilles in Cleveland on October 20, 2024. And yet, ESPN's Adam Schefter reported in December that Watson is expected to be on the team's 2026 roster.
Bad news for Browns fans aside: None of these potential casualties really move the needle and look like realistic Week 1 starters—or at least ones that a fanbase would be happy about having under center (again, with the obvious exception of Andy Dalton).
All that said, there are a couple of prime trade candidates:
Assuming the three Week 1 starters listed above are indeed on their way out, the top-six QB-needy teams sure seem to be the Raiders, Jets, Steelers, Browns, Cardinals and Dolphins. We will wait and see how these cookies crumble!
That's seven starting running backs potentially entering a free agency class that is already pretty fooking stacked with guys like Kenneth Walker, Breece Hall, Travis Etienne, Javonte Williams and more!
Now, the Jacobs move would be pretty surprising considering his raw counting numbers (2,882 total yards, 30 TDs) during the past two seasons, although some of the involved advanced metrics don't paint as pretty a picture. With backups Emanuel Wilson and Chris Brooks both restricted free agents, moving on from the soon-to-be 28-year-old veteran would prompt a massive change inside the Green Bay backfield.
Elsewhere, there could be a clearer successor capable of immediately providing newfound fantasy excellence in several of these situations should these releases come to fruition:
Most inevitable: Hill's release. The 31-year-old veteran dislocated his knee and tore multiple ligaments last September and was already making a habit of voicing his displeasure with the organization the previous offseason. Throw in a new coaching staff and the reality that the Dolphins have the league's fourth-fewest cap space to work with, and the Cheetah should be on the prowl in free agency sooner rather than later.
Could stick around, but probably not: Maybe Ridley hangs with the Titans for another year, given Tennessee has the league's most available cap space, but it's also possible (and probably likely) the new coaching staff and general manager don't view the 31-year-old veteran as a key component of this new-look offense.
Should be good to go: Rams head coach Sean McVay has already said he "absolutely" expects Adams to return to the Rams next season. And why not? The 33-year-old longtime baller caught 14 TDs in 14 regular-season games during his first year in Los Angeles.
We shall see: Mooney was pretty awesome during his first season with the Falcons (64-992-5 in 16 games), but a broken collarbone in late July and later hamstring injury largely made the ex-Bear a shell of himself in 2025 (32-443-1 in 15 games). At his best, Mooney is a quality No. 2 or No. 3 WR capable of creating separation and big plays on the outside, but it's not a given that Kevin Stefanski and company view the 28-year-old receiver as a staple of their new-look offense. We'll also throw Demarcus Robinson in this category—the 31-year-old veteran is just one season removed from a quietly solid 31-505-7 campaign with the Rams, to be fair.
Otherwise, there seem to be three potential big trade candidates at the position.
A lot is going on here in our busiest group. I've accordingly bucketed our analysis into three groups …
Potential newfound starting roles? (T.J. Hockenson, Dalton Schultz, Hunter Henry, Evan Engram, Tommy Tremble): The Patriots, Broncos, and Panthers have enough cap space to presumably keep their incumbent lead tight ends; none are exactly "must cut" players when looking at the dead money and savings involved anyway.
A similar sentiment can't quite be said for Hockenson and the Vikings (second-least cap space), as well as Schultz and the Texans (11th-least cap space):
Oh, this could be GOOD for that other guy currently splitting snaps (Dawson Knox, Cole Kmet, Colby Parkinson): The Bills and Bears are both in the red when it comes to current 2026 cap space, which could perhaps compel them to part ways with their veteran tight ends and lean into the Dalton Kincaid and Colston Loveland experiences at more of a full-time level. Both worked among the league's most efficient pass catchers at the position last year and would vie for top-5 fantasy treatment with a secured full-time role (Loveland will probably be ranked that high regardless).

And then there's Parkinson, who came alive down the stretch of last season with a whopping 9 TDs across his final 12 games. The massive human (6-foot-7, 266 pounds) was a key part of the Rams' multi-TE-heavy scheme and just turned 27 in January. With Tyler Higbee entering free agency and the league's eighth-most available cap space, it doesn't really make much sense for the Rams to release Parkinson … but, oh buddy, would the Terrance Ferguson hype train reach another level if they did!
Respectfully, whatever (Charlie Woerner, Will Dissly): Respectfully, whatever.




