MIAMI GARDENS, Fla. — The Miami Dolphins didn’t just turn the page on Monday; they burned the whole book. In a move that sent shockwaves from South Beach to Orchard Park, the new front office regime of Jeff Hafley and Jon-Eric Sullivan gutted the roster, releasing All-Pro receiver Tyreek Hill, edge rusher Bradley Chubb, and veteran lineman James Daniels. But as the dust settles on the “Monday Massacre,” the league’s eyes have shifted to the last superstar standing: Jaylen Waddle.
The Purge is Real
General Manager Jon-Eric Sullivan arrived from Green Bay with a reputation for cold calculation, and he proved it immediately. By cutting Hill and Chubb, Miami cleared over $56 million in 2026 cap space, signaling a hard reset. This isn’t a retool. It’s a demolition.
The message to the locker room is deafening: nobody is safe. Hill, despite his 11,000+ career yards, was shown the door as he rehabs a major leg injury. Chubb, the team’s defensive anchor, was a casualty of a bloated payroll that Sullivan is ruthlessly trimming.
The “Me Next” Mirage & The Buffalo Threat
Panic hit a fever pitch Tuesday morning when a post from “Adam Ferrell” claimed Waddle marched into the front office demanding a trade with a two-word ultimatum: “Me next.” While the account is a known parody, the anxiety it sparked among Dolfans is very real. Waddle allegedly “liking” the post only poured gasoline on the fire.
Real insiders know the actual threat isn’t a fake tweet—it’s the Buffalo Bills. After trading Stefon Diggs, Buffalo’s offense sputtered down the stretch last season. Josh Allen needs a weapon. Waddle fits the bill perfectly. But would Miami dare trade a prime asset to a division rival?
“Trading Waddle to Buffalo is a fireable offense unless you get a king’s ransom. You don’t hand the division favorites a Lamborghini when you’re driving a used sedan.”
— AFC Scout (via Text)
The Price of Speed
If Miami deals Waddle, it won’t be cheap. ESPN’s Bill Barnwell notes that the Dolphins hold all the leverage. Waddle is entering his prime, and his contract is a masterclass in value. His 2026 cap hit sits at a manageable $11.6 million before spiking in 2027. For a contending team, he is the ultimate rental-to-long-term asset.
Barnwell suggests Miami will demand at least a first-round pick. Cleveland is lurking. The Browns have the draft capital and the desperation to make a splash. A late first-rounder for a guy with back-to-back-to-back 1,000-yard seasons? That’s a phone call Sullivan has to take.
What’s Next: The March to Free Agency
With free agency opening in less than a month, the clock is ticking. Miami has stripped the roster to the studs. If they trade Waddle, they aren’t just punting on 2026; they are tanking for the top of the 2027 draft.
Prediction: Sullivan holds Waddle until the draft. If a team like Cleveland or Washington offers a top-20 pick, Waddle is gone. If not, he becomes the centerpiece of the Hafley era—whether he likes it or not.

