MIAMI — The Miami Dolphins 2026 offseason didn’t just start; it exploded. General Manager Jon-Eric Sullivan took a sledgehammer to the roster on Monday morning, officially cutting ties with wide receiver Tyreek Hill, edge rusher Bradley Chubb, guard James Daniels, and wideout Nick Westbrook-Ikhine. The aggressive house-cleaning wipes out over $56 million in cap space and officially buries the remnants of the Chris Grier and Mike McDaniel era.
Following the Money
The front office isn’t playing games. Releasing these four veterans fundamentally rewrites Miami’s financial future. Here is exactly how the books open up:
- Tyreek Hill: Saves $22.8 million against the 2026 cap.
- Bradley Chubb: Saves up to $20.2 million as a designated post-June 1 release.
- James Daniels: Clears $6.5 million against the 2027 cap.
- Nick Westbrook-Ikhine: Frees up $1.5 million instantly.
The soon-to-be 32-year-old Hill is currently rehabbing from a severe dislocated knee and torn ACL suffered last September against the New York Jets. Miami handed him a massive $120 million extension back in 2022, but Sullivan refused to let nostalgia dictate his checkbook. Chubb faces a similar fate. The defense’s top sack artist from 2025 carries a crushing $31.2 million cap hit, forcing the team to designate him as a post-June 1 cut.
Walking through the Baptist Health Training Complex today, the atmosphere felt noticeably heavier. The flashy swagger of the past few years vanished, replaced by a blue-collar, strictly-business tension. Hill gave fans unforgettable memories, turning routine slant routes into electrifying 80-yard sprints. His departure leaves a massive hole in the hearts of a fanbase desperate for a playoff win, but the new brass prioritizes financial health over sentimentality.
“We’re going one way and it’s going to be the hard way. And if you’re not part of it, if you don’t want to be part of it, it doesn’t make you a bad human being, but you’re going to have to get off the train.”
— Jon-Eric Sullivan, General Manager
Playoff Implications / What’s Next
Miami currently holds a glaring void on both sides of the ball. With Hill gone, the receiving corps loses its most terrifying weapon. Opposing defenses will no longer have to respect the deep threat that dictated coverage shells for the past four years. Quarterback Tua Tagovailoa remains on the roster, but he stands alone as the last surviving pillar of the previous regime. The writing is on the wall. Sullivan is clearing the books to build a physical, trench-heavy roster modeled after his two decades with the Green Bay Packers.
Expect the Dolphins to target aggressive, downhill run-blockers and disciplined defensive backs in free agency. If Miami moves on from Tagovailoa next—either via a blockbuster trade or an outright release—the franchise will possess the financial flexibility to completely draft and develop a brand-new identity. The explosive, track-meet offense is dead. The grit-and-grind era under Jeff Hafley begins now.

