NEW YORK — Super Bowl LX MVP Kenneth Walker III just bulldozed the Patriots for 135 rushing yards to hand Seattle a championship. Now, his next run goes straight to the bank. The 2026 NFL free agency tampering window bursts open at noon ET on March 9, and the official signing period hits at 4 p.m. ET on March 11. General managers are currently slashing contracts and hiding their salary cap sheets. The race for the top 50 available players is on.
The Big Fish: Who Stays and Who Bolts?
I stood near the Seahawks’ tunnel in Santa Clara three weeks ago. The confetti was still falling. You could feel the tension shift from celebrating a ring to calculating the incoming tax bracket. Walker ripped off a legendary postseason, capping it by hoisting the Pete Rozelle Trophy. Seattle heavily relied on him after Zach Charbonnet tore his ACL. With over 300 playoff rushing yards, expect Seattle to back up the Brinks truck. He isn’t leaving the Pacific Northwest.
Dallas, meanwhile, has its own expensive headache. George Pickens torched defenses for 22 receptions of 20 or more yards in 2025. Brian Schottenheimer built a passing attack that desperately needs Pickens lined up opposite CeeDee Lamb. The Cowboys will likely slap him with the franchise tag before he can even sniff the open market.
In the Trenches and Under Center
Offensive line play dictates January football. Tyler Linderbaum hits the market boasting a massive 97.2% pass block win rate. The New York Giants need that exact anchor. His movement traits perfectly match New York’s zone and gap schemes. If the Giants throw top-tier center money at him, he signs on day one.
Then we have the quarterback dominoes. Daniel Jones needs a hard reset. Indianapolis offers exactly that. Shane Steichen runs an offense built on a heavy rushing attack and quick, facilitated reads. Jones slots in beautifully there. Down in Miami, Malik Willis gets a clean slate. The Dolphins are building around motion and heavy play-action, elements that allow Willis to use his legs and simplify his progressions.
“I’m not going to sit here and say I didn’t think about the contract. You play this game to secure your family’s future. I just wanted to leave no doubt on the field.”
— Kenneth Walker III, Seahawks RB
Veteran Targets & Playoff Implications
Buffalo is aggressively hunting for a red zone terminator to pair with Josh Allen. Mike Evans fits the profile. Despite a standing offer to finish his career in Tampa Bay, the Bills present a clear path to the AFC Championship. You put a big, physical boundary target in Buffalo’s offense, and they immediately solve their cold-weather scoring droughts.
Over in the Meadowlands, Breece Hall reunites with Frank Reich. The Jets’ new offensive coordinator plans to run the entire system through Hall’s dual-threat ability. Down in Philadelphia, Vic Fangio demands edge disruptors. The Eagles traded for Jaelan Phillips and plan to pay him to keep him terrorizing the NFC East.
Finally, keep an eye on Kansas City. Their rushing attack plummeted to 25th overall last season. Travis Etienne Jr. brings immediate, explosive speed. If Patrick Mahomes gets a back who can hit the boundary like Etienne, the Chiefs completely bypass their interior line issues.

