NFL Free Agency: The Moves That Move the Needle

Hunter Tierney
By Hunter Tierney
March 18, 2026
NFL Free Agency: The Moves That Move the Needle

Free agency always turns into a blur.

Your timeline fills up with graphics, contract numbers start flying around faster than anyone can process them, and before you can even finish reacting to one move, three more have already happened. Within about twenty minutes, half the internet is crowning a new Super Bowl favorite while the other half is convinced some GM just lost his job in real time. That’s just the reality of this week every year. The problem is, once all that noise kicks in, the actual football thinking behind these moves — the why, the fit, the ripple effects — gets buried underneath the chaos.

DJ Moore Traded to Buffalo

This was before the free-agency window really exploded, but the more you step back and look at Buffalo’s approach afterward, the more this move feels like the one that set the tone for everything else. The Bills weren’t a team with a ton of glaring holes. This wasn’t a full rebuild or even a major retool. They had a couple clear needs — help in the secondary and a legit, reliable target for Josh Allen — and they went out and checked both boxes early.

Now, I’m not sure this is the exact direction I would’ve gone. I still think Moore is at his best as a really strong No. 2 rather than a true alpha No. 1 you build everything around. But I do get why Buffalo talked themselves into it. When you’ve got a quarterback like Allen, sometimes it’s less about finding the perfect archetype and more about giving him someone he can actually trust when things break down.

And the Joe Brady connection isn’t just some throwaway note — it matters. Moore had back-to-back 1,100-yard seasons with Brady calling plays in Carolina, and you can see why Buffalo would lean into that familiarity. This is a guy who can separate, win against man, and still threaten down the field — all things that fit what they want to do offensively. He’s not a cure-all, but he doesn’t have to be. He just has to raise the floor of that receiver room and give Allen a real, consistent option.

From Chicago’s side, I’m still not fully buying it. I understand the second-round pick. I understand the cap flexibility. But proven receivers are hard to find — really hard — and betting that Moore off the books plus a pick gets you closer than just keeping him? That’s a gamble, whether they want to admit it or not. Rome Odunze hasn't shown he can be the truly reliable option, and Luther Burden is a completely different style of receiver. 

Tyler Linderbaum to the Raiders

Nov 16, 2025; Cleveland, Ohio, USA; Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson (8) warms-up with center Tyler Linderbaum (64) prior to a game against the Cleveland Browns at Huntington Bank Field.
Credit: Scott Galvin-Imagn Images

If the Raiders were a veteran team with an established quarterback, I’d probably look at this and say it’s a little rich for a center. But with a likely rookie coming in? I actually think it’s one of the smartest things they could’ve done. Linderbaum is exactly the type of center who can take a ton off a young quarterback’s plate right away. He’s handling communication, setting protections, identifying pressure — all the little pre-snap stuff that rookies struggle with early.

And it’s not like they were working from a stable situation up front either. This was a unit that had to shuffle pieces around last year, never really settling in. Bringing in a three-time Pro Bowler at just 25 isn’t just about upgrading talent — it’s about bringing some structure and consistency to the entire operation.

Baltimore, on the other hand, is losing more than people probably realize. Good center play is one of those things you don’t think about until it’s gone, and he was a tone-setter for them.

Trey Hendrickson to the Ravens

This whole thing was wild after the Crosby situation blew up, but once the dust settled, Baltimore still landed one of the very best pass rushers available without giving up the first-round picks. That matters a lot. Hendrickson is not Maxx Crosby. He’s not the same kind of relentless run defender, and he doesn’t wreck games in quite the same all-around way. But if your question is whether Baltimore found a player who still checks both pass-rush and play-strength boxes at a high level, the answer is yes.

That’s why I think this is a good signing. Maybe not the better one in a vacuum compared to Crosby, especially at Hendrickson’s age and coming off his own injury questions, but when you factor in the draft capital Baltimore kept, it gets really hard to complain. Since 2020, only Myles Garrett and T.J. Watt have more sacks than Hendrickson. For a Ravens defense that badly needed more juice off the edge, that’s a real win.

Alec Pierce Stays With the Colts

This is one of the moves I just can’t rubber-stamp the way a lot of people seem ready to. I get the argument. Pierce just had a breakout year with 47 catches for 1,003 yards and six touchdowns. He developed real chemistry with Daniel Jones, and his vertical element is harder to replace than a typical chain-mover. All true. But there’s a point where the value still has to match the player, and four years for $116 million feels like they paid for the absolute best possible version of Alec Pierce and then some.

That’s where I struggle with it. Pierce is explosive, and there’s real value in a receiver who can swing field position with one play. But when you move on from Michael Pittman Jr. and then pay Pierce like this, you’re putting a lot of pressure on a role-specific weapon to become something more than he’s consistently been. ESPN’s Colts tracker said they ā€œneeded him more than ever,ā€ and maybe that’s the part I don’t fully buy. Needed him? Maybe. Needed him at that number? I’m not there. There were other ways to add speed. There were other ways to keep the offense dangerous.

I get the thinking behind it. I just can’t shake the feeling that this might age poorly and wind up seeming like a bit of a reach.

Michael Pittman Jr. Traded to the Steelers

Jan 4, 2026; Houston, Texas, USA; Indianapolis Colts wide receiver Michael Pittman Jr. (11) breaks Houston Texans cornerback Alijah Huzzie (36) tackle and dives for the end zone in the second half half at NRG Stadium.
Credit: Thomas Shea-Imagn Images

I really like this move for Pittsburgh. It just feels like one of those clean, obvious fits when you step back and look at it. Pittman is the kind of receiver who makes life easier on whoever ends up under center. Last year he still caught 80 passes, even in a season that didn’t really feel like his best, and that tells you a lot about the type of player he is. He’s a quarterback-friendly receiver in every sense — physical, dependable, and willing to do the dirty work when things aren’t perfect.

And let’s be honest, things haven’t been perfect for the Steelers' offense in a while. When drives stall out, and everything tightens up, you need someone who can win those ugly reps — the contested catches, the quick hitters over the middle, the plays where the quarterback just needs to trust a guy and let it go. That was supposed to be D.K. Metcalf, but that’s exactly who Pittman has been. He’s not flashy, but he’s the type of player offenses lean on when things start to break down.

Pittsburgh may not suddenly turn into a contender because of this move alone, but it raises their floor in a very real way. It gives their offense some stability. Indianapolis cleared cap space and made a bet on a different type of receiver.

Isaiah Likely to the Giants

This one, I love. It just feels like a classic ā€œthere’s more in there, we just need to unlock itā€ type of move. Likely never fully owned a role in Baltimore because you’re sharing a room with Mark Andrews, and that’s always going to cap your volume a bit. But every time his workload ticked up, you saw flashes of what it could look like if he were actually featured. He leaves Baltimore with 135 catches, 1,568 yards, and 15 touchdowns over four seasons — solid numbers, but more importantly, numbers that hint there’s still another level if you give him the keys.

And the landing spot matters here. Going to New York with a coach who already knows him, already trusts him, and clearly believes he can handle more isn’t a small thing. That relationship can fast-track everything. Instead of spending half a season proving you belong in a bigger role, you walk in with that trust already built.

My one real football question here is the run-blocking piece. I think Likely is a really good player as a receiver, but I do wonder how the Giants handle heavier personnel looks. He’s not really that in-line, tone-setting blocker, so I wouldn’t be surprised if they pair him with a beefier tight end in certain situations. But if they can balance that out, there’s a real path here for him to finally be the guy instead of the ā€œreally talented No. 2.ā€

Jaelan Phillips to the Panthers

Phillips is one of those players where I get the talent bet, I really do — I just don’t totally love the timing of it for Carolina. He’s a good player. There’s real juice there. He had 73 pressures last season, which was top 10 in the league, and honestly his impact was better than the sack numbers even show. And he’s still young enough that you can convince yourself there’s another jump coming. All of that is fair. I just keep coming back to whether this is the move you make right now if you’re the Panthers.

Because this feels more like something a Buffalo or a Baltimore does — a team that’s one pass rush away, one key stop away from making a real run. Carolina’s just not there yet, at least not in my eyes. Now, they needed help, no doubt about that. They were near the bottom of the league in sacks, so it’s not like this came out of nowhere. I just think there’s a difference between fixing a hole and paying for that fix like they're the missing piece. Phillips could absolutely make me look dumb here — he’s got that kind of ability. I just don’t know if this is the right stage for Carolina to be making this kind of swing.

Devin Lloyd to the Panthers

Jacksonville Jaguars linebacker Devin Lloyd (0) reacts to a fumble recovery next to cornerback Montaric Brown (30) during the second quarter of an NFL football AFC Wild Card playoff matchup, Sunday, Jan. 11, 2026, in Jacksonville, Fla. The Bills defeated the Jaguars 27-24.
Credit: Corey Perrine/Florida Times-Union

This, on the other hand, is the Panthers' move I’m all the way in on. This one is a lot more straightforward to me — Lloyd already showed you what he is. He was everywhere for Jacksonville last year — 81 tackles, five picks, seven pass breakups, 10 QB hits — but more than anything, he just felt like he was involved in everything they were doing.

That’s why this feels like a real statement move for Carolina. Lloyd is the type of linebacker you appreciate more the more you actually watch the game. It’s not always loud, but it shows up in how a defense functions — spacing, communication, closing on the ball, being in the right place at the right time. Jacksonville is going to feel that loss, I really believe that. So yeah, Carolina was aggressive here, but this one feels less like a gamble and more like adding a guy who can be the quarterback of the defense for years to come.

Romeo Doubs to the Patriots

I don’t love this one the way some people seem to, but I also don’t think this is anywhere close to the final version of New England’s receiver room. Doubs is a good complementary piece — that’s really where I land. He had a career-best 724 yards and six touchdowns last year, he’s still young, and he absolutely gives Drake Maye another real option, which they desperately needed. But I just don’t see him as a true No. 1 you build around. He feels more like a solid No. 2 you can move around and scheme touches for, not the guy defenses are losing sleep over every week. That’s why I’d be surprised if the Patriots are done here. This feels like a step in the plan, not the plan itself, and I’d expect them to keep pushing for another real difference-maker. Because if they roll into the season with Doubs as their true WR1, I think you’re setting yourself up to be pretty disappointed with how this offense looks.

Travis Etienne to the Saints

I still think Etienne has juice — last season showed that. He went for over 1,100 yards, caught passes, scored, and looked like a real weapon again. This isn’t about doubting the player, it’s about doubting the situation. He benefited from competent quarterback play in Jacksonville, and I just don’t feel that same level of confidence in what New Orleans is rolling out under center. Even if a young guy pops, this roster still has a lot of holes, and running back wouldn’t be the first place I’d start if I’m trying to actually move this thing forward. It has that ā€œwe had money and needed to do somethingā€ vibe, especially with all the Kamara uncertainty, and while I get wanting to fix a run game that was near the bottom of the league, I’m not sure this really changes much. Good player, real talent — just a strange fit for where this team is right now.

Rashan Gary Traded to the Cowboys

By Dallas standards, I actually think this was a pretty smart move. And part of that is because they didn’t chase the emotional overcorrection of it. It would’ve been really easy for them to overcorrect after the Micah Parsons situation and go all-in on Maxx Crosby just because it felt like a makeup move. That’s how teams get themselves in trouble. Instead, they stayed a little more measured and landed Gary at a much cheaper price — a guy who still gives you real pass-rush production without acting like one player suddenly fixes everything.

To me, the bigger takeaway is Dallas getting better, not Green Bay losing some irreplaceable game-wrecker. Gary has real production — 46.5 career sacks and 111 quarterback hits — but playing across from a force like Micah is going to make life easier on whoever lines up there. That spot is always going to look good. Green Bay can live with that and shift resources elsewhere. Dallas, though, needed help all over that defense, and they found a way to upgrade without blowing up the whole plan to do it. That’s progress… at least by Cowboys' standards.

Devin Bush to the Bears

Nov 16, 2025; Cleveland, Ohio, USA; Cleveland Browns linebacker Devin Bush (30) celebrates with safety Ronnie Hickman Jr. (33) after returning an interception for a touchdown during the second quarter against the Baltimore Ravens at Huntington Bank Field.
Credit: Ken Blaze-Imagn Images

I’m in on this one. I like Bush’s game, and I think there’s real value in linebackers who play fast, trust what they see, and actually get around the football. The production last year backs that up — over 120 tackles, multiple takeaways, even finding the end zone a couple times — and when you watch him, it lines up with those numbers. He plays with some edge, and that fits exactly what Chicago leaned into defensively: speed, aggression, and chaos. There’s always a little risk when a guy bounces back, and you’re trying to figure out if that’s the new normal, but this just makes too much sense stylistically for me to overthink it. If they wanted more juice at the second level, they got it.

Isiah Pacheco to the Lions

This one’s interesting because Pacheco doesn’t really look like David Montgomery, and he doesn’t run exactly like him either, but the impact can end up being pretty similar. He’s a hard runner, he’s comfortable between the tackles, and he gives Detroit that physical presence, so everything doesn’t fall on Gibbs being the finesse piece. After seeing how well that pairing worked, it makes sense they’d try to recreate it in a cheaper way. I do think his role shrinks a bit compared to other spots — this is still a Goff-and-Gibbs offense — but that doesn’t make it a small move. They needed someone to bring that edge to the run game, and Pacheco can do that, even if it’s a slight step down from Montgomery.

Kwity Paye to the Raiders

I liked this move even when it looked like the Raiders might lose Maxx Crosby, and I like it even more now that he’s still there. A lot of people saw Paye as some kind of consolation prize, but I never really viewed it that way. He’s a strong run defender, a solid edge piece, and the kind of player who benefits a ton from lining up next to someone offenses actually have to game-plan around. That’s where this gets fun — Crosby creates chaos, and Paye can clean things up when quarterbacks try to escape. Add in those Georgia linebackers (Nakobe Dean and Quay Walker) behind them, and this front seven starts to look pretty annoying to deal with. It’s not flashy, but it’s smart roster building, and it makes even more sense now with Crosby still in the picture.

Bradley Chubb to Buffalo

Chubb is one of those moves where I get exactly why they did it, but I think they just took a bet on the wrong player. The injury history is real, and there’s definitely a world where this doesn’t pan out. But if he’s on the field, the talent is still there — and Buffalo clearly needed help getting after the quarterback. That part wasn’t a secret. When you look at how they’re approaching this window, it makes sense: they’re not trying to rebuild anything, they’re just looking for a few game-changing plays in big moments. Chubb can still be that guy when healthy. Doesn’t mean it’s guaranteed to work, but it’s the kind of swing a team like this is supposed to take.

Reed Blankenship to the Texans

Nov 23, 2025; Arlington, Texas, USA; Philadelphia Eagles safety Reed Blankenship (32) celebrates after an interception in the second quarter at AT&T Stadium.
Credit: Kevin Jairaj-Imagn Images

This is one I think casual fans are going to underrate, and I’m probably higher on it than most. Blankenship isn’t flashy or overly explosive, but he just knows how to play — he tackles, gets people lined up, and brings a steady presence to a defense that was already really good. That’s what makes this so interesting. He fits perfectly into a secondary that already has real talent, and it lines up with how I view Houston as a whole right now. I’m higher on them than most; I’m not buying into all the C.J. Stroud panic, and I think this roster is in a better spot than people realize. From Philly’s side, though, I do think this is a bigger loss than it’s being treated. If their defense had issues, pass defense was part of it, and losing a steady, captain-type safety who helped calm things down doesn’t make that better — even if they try to patch it.

Kendrick Bourne to the Cardinals

I didn’t need Arizona to go chase a big-name receiver, because I don’t think that would’ve changed much anyway. This roster just isn’t in a good place right now, even with a couple solid offensive line moves, and they’re trying to navigate that in one of the toughest divisions in football. So when I look at Bourne, it’s less about fit and more about what the plan even is here. He’s fine — reliable, steady— and I get the idea of adding a veteran WR2-type presence. But this doesn’t move the needle in terms of winning. It feels more like adding a body the fan base won’t complain about than someone who actually raises the ceiling, and with Minshew and Brissett as your quarterback options, it’s just hard to get excited about any of these supporting moves right now.

Riq Woolen to the Eagles

Love this for Philly. It’s such a Howie Roseman move it almost writes itself — former high-end talent, real traits, a little inconsistency baked in, and the Eagles saying, ā€œwe’ll take that bet.ā€ Woolen wasn’t perfect in Seattle, but 12 pass breakups and the kind of length and speed he has don’t just disappear, and getting that upside on a one-year deal is exactly how good teams operate. From Seattle’s side, I get it — too many guys to pay, eventually you have to trust your pipeline — but for Philly, this is a really talented playmaker in an area where they needed some.

Jaylen Watson to the Rams

I like this one because it feels like the Rams clearly identifying a weakness and just going and fixing it without overthinking it. Watson’s not a star, but he’s a real, playable corner who gives them another solid option on the outside for a defense that’s already starting to feel like it’s pushing chips in. They already traded for Trent McDuffie, Watson's former teammate and an All-Pro in Kansas City.  That’s the bigger takeaway for me — this is a team that knows its window is open and is acting like it by checking off specific needs instead of chasing splash moves. Kansas City will be fine — they’ve earned that trust at this position — but this matters a lot more for the Rams, who needed another reliable body back there and got one.

Bryan Cook & Jonathan Allen to the Bengals

Dec 21, 2025; Nashville, Tennessee, USA; Kansas City Chiefs safety Bryan Cook (6) warms up before a game against the Tennessee Titans at Nissan Stadium.
Credit: Steve Roberts-Imagn Images

I do like that Cincinnati is finally allocating real resources to the defense — that’s been a problem for a couple years now, and at some point you have to actually address it instead of just talking about it. Bryan Cook fits that idea perfectly. He’s physical, reliable, and feels like the kind of player who can be there for a while and raise the floor of the secondary right away. That part makes sense to me. It’s the Jonathan Allen piece where I start to lose it a bit. I just don’t see the value or the fit the same way, especially for a team that needed real pass-rush help even before losing Hendrickson. If you’re going to take a swing, that’s the spot you had to go big at.

Maybe they shock me and go get a legit edge guy early in the draft, and this all looks a lot better in a month. But based on how they’ve operated, I’m not counting on that.

Jaquan Brisker & Rico Dowdle to the Steelers

This feels very Steelers to me — not in the flashy, headline-grabbing way, but in the identity sense. Brisker fits exactly what that defense is known for: physical, active, experienced, and reliable. He’s coming off a really solid year in Chicago and gives them a starting-caliber presence without locking themselves into anything long-term. And when you pair that with what they did at running back, it starts to paint a clearer picture of what Pittsburgh is trying to be. Dowdle brings that same kind of tone offensively — downhill, physical, productive without needing perfect conditions. Over 1,000 yards last year, real receiving ability, and the kind of runner who can keep an offense on schedule. He feels like the type of back they were hoping Najee Harris would develop into when they drafted him. 

Put together, both moves just feel like Pittsburgh leaning back into what they do best. Brisker gives the defense some edge and stability as they reshape that secondary, while Dowdle gives the offense a more reliable, no-nonsense run game presence after losing Gainwell’s receiving role. Neither move is going to blow you away on its own, but both fit the identity of the team and the city. Chicago’s going to feel losing Brisker more than people think, but for Pittsburgh, they've clearly decided they aren't going for a reset year and want talented players on their roster — and both of these guys check that box.

All stats courtesy of NFL Pro.

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