Free Agency News and Notes, per Gemini

    1024 576 Ravenous128

    Gemini’s got jokes and is here all week…and  maybe next week.  Enjoy.


    Welcome to the 2026 NFL Free Agency period, or as it’s known in front offices, “The Great Cap-Space Bonfire.” This year, the league set a record by handing out $5.83 billion in contracts in just the first four days. With the salary cap soaring to $301.2 million per team, GMs are treating hundred-million-dollar deals like they’re ordering a side of fries.
    The Quarterback Musical Chairs: Minnesota and Miami Edition
    If you blinked, you probably missed three starting quarterbacks changing zip codes.
    • The Minnesota Vikings pulled off the heist of the century by signing Kyler Murray for a measly $1.3 million. Since the Cardinals are still on the hook for his $36.8 million in guarantees, Minnesota is essentially letting Arizona pay for their new starter’s lunch while they wait for J.J. McCarthy to find his rhythm.
    • The Miami Dolphins decided to go “all-in” on upside, signing Malik Willis to a three-year, $67.5 million deal with $45 million guaranteed. It’s a classic “marriage of convenience” for a team that has more dead money than a pirate’s chest but still refuses to say the word “rebuilding”.
    “Linderbaum Leap” and the Center of the Universe
    In a move that reset a market so hard it nearly broke the scale, the Las Vegas Raiders signed center Tyler Linderbaum to a three-year, $81 million deal. At $27 million per year, Linderbaum is now making 50% more than the previous highest-paid center. We’re officially entering an era where the guy snapping the ball might be out-earning the guy he’s snapping it to.
    Advanced Accounting: The Art of the “Void Year”
    For teams like the Kansas City Chiefs, who are operating with a cap situation that looks like a late-game Tetris screen, the “Void Year” is the ultimate magic trick.
    • The Logic: By adding fake years to the end of a contract, teams can spread out signing bonuses, pushing the “dead money” problem into a future where, hopefully, the cap is $500 million and we’re all living on Mars.
    • The Mike Evans Deal: The 49ers secured the legendary WR on a three-year, $60.4 million deal, but with only $16.3 million guaranteed. It’s basically a high-stakes “one-year trial” disguised as a long-term commitment—the NFL equivalent of a Netflix subscription you plan to cancel after the free month.
    The Big Spenders and the Bargain Bin
    • The Raiders and Titans entered the week as the richest kids on the playground, with over $100 million in projected space. They spent it quickly, while the Dallas Cowboys were seen checking their couch cushions with only $222,896 in available room.
    • The Ravens salvaged their pride after a trade for Maxx Crosby fell through by giving Trey Hendrickson a four-year, $112 million deal ($60M guaranteed). It turns out that when you can’t trade for a star, you just back a Brinks truck up to a different one’s driveway.
    As free agency slows down, one thing is clear: in the 2026 NFL, “guaranteed money” is the only language anyone speaks, and “cap casualties” are just the friends we made along the way to $300 million.
    AUTHOR

    Ravenous128

    All stories by: Ravenous128