ASHBURN, VA — The Washington Commanders are throwing money at a problem that only one man can truly fix. After a dismal 5-12 finish in 2025, General Manager Adam Peters spent the opening weeks of the 2026 free agency period handing out checks like they were flyers. The crown jewel? A massive 4-year, $100 million deal for edge rusher Odafe Oweh. But across the league, the verdict is skeptical. One NFL executive recently told The Athletic that these “revolving-door” moves look like a total panic. The consensus is clear: Washington’s survival depends entirely on the right elbow of Jayden Daniels.
Washington entered the spring with holes everywhere and a mandate to get younger. They certainly did that. By snagging Oweh away from the Chargers and adding K’Lavon Chaisson on a $12 million one-year flier, the Commanders completely overhauled a pass rush that vanished last season. They didn’t stop there. The front office added linebacker Leo Chenal and safety Nick Cross to a defense that gave up points in bunches during the 2025 collapse.
Critics argue these are “fringe starters” being paid like superstars. Paying $25 million annually for Oweh—a player with 7.5 sacks last year—is a massive projection. The team is betting on traits over consistent production. If Oweh doesn’t transform into a double-digit sack monster, this defensive rebuild will look like a expensive mistake by mid-October. The stadium atmosphere this morning was tense; fans are tired of the “rebuild” label and want results that show up in the win column, not just the salary cap report.
“They are making a bunch of revolving-door moves this year, which looks like a panic to me. It is going to depend on how the quarterback plays. He can save it all.”
— Anonymous NFL Executive, via The Athletic
The “panic” narrative only exists because Jayden Daniels spent more time in the training room than the end zone last year. Daniels played just 7 games in 2025. A stubborn hamstring issue gave way to a dislocated left elbow that ended his season in Week 14. When he was on the field, the spark was undeniable. He flashed the 2024 Rookie of the Year form that made him a DC hero, but the durability concerns are now a red flag.
Asking a 25-year-old quarterback to mask a roster filled with “rotational pieces” is a dangerous game. The Commanders re-signed Laremy Tunsil to keep Daniels upright, but the surrounding cast still feels thin. If Daniels tries to play “Superman” to justify the front office’s spending spree, he risks the same hits that sidelined him last December. The coaching staff must find a way to let him cook without letting him get burned.
Washington holds the No. 7 overall pick in the upcoming 2026 NFL Draft. The strategy seems obvious: draft a tackle or a blue-chip corner to stabilize the “fringe” roster. This isn’t just about the 2026 standings; it’s about the job security of this entire regime. If the “revolving door” of free agents doesn’t lead to a wildcard berth, the “panic” label will stick. All eyes remain on the practice field to see if Daniels has regained his full range of motion. In the NFC East, there is no room for an “incomplete” grade this year.