
LOS ANGELES — The 2026 NFL offseason didn’t just open; it kicked the door off the hinges. Before the legal negotiating window officially opens on March 9, general managers across the league decided to skip the pleasantries and start dealing. The highlight? The Los Angeles Rams mortgaging their future once again, sending four draft picks to the Kansas City Chiefs for All-Pro cornerback Trent McDuffie.
ESPN analytics guru Seth Walder is already crunching the numbers, evaluating these massive shifts based on salary cap implications, on-field impact, and Super Bowl probability. We broke down the tape and the data to see who won this week’s arms race.
General Manager Les Snead struck gold with Matthew Stafford in 2021, and he sees another Super Bowl window wide open. The Rams shipped the No. 29 overall pick, a fifth-rounder, a sixth-rounder, and a 2027 third-round selection to Kansas City. In return, they get a 25-year-old lockdown corner.
McDuffie represents an immediate upgrade for a Rams secondary that gave up too many big plays late in 2025. Kansas City needed cap relief, shedding McDuffie’s $13.6 million fifth-year option. The Chiefs secure vital draft capital to build around Patrick Mahomes, while the Rams get a proven star ready to lock down the NFC West.
“We try to use our draft picks on a player that’s going to give us an edge. Trent brings that edge to this version of the Rams.”
— Les Snead, Rams General Manager
You could hear the collective sigh of relief from Orchard Park all the way to Chicago. The Buffalo Bills sent a 2026 second-round pick to the Bears for wide receiver DJ Moore and a fifth-round swap. Buffalo desperately needed a primary target capable of creating pure separation.
Moore posted solid numbers in Chicago’s crowded 2025 offense, but pairing him with Josh Allen’s arm strength elevates Buffalo’s entire offensive ceiling. Chicago clears the runway for their young receivers like Rome Odunze, while Buffalo secures a 28-year-old weapon in his prime. You could almost feel the electricity returning to Bills Mafia the second the news broke.
The Houston Texans made two aggressive moves in a single day. They shipped versatile offensive tackle Tytus Howard to the Cleveland Browns for a fifth-round pick. Hours later, they addressed a glaring hole in their run game.
Houston acquired running back David Montgomery from the Detroit Lions in exchange for offensive lineman Juice Scruggs, a fourth-round pick, and a seventh-round pick. With Joe Mixon missing all of 2025, the Texans relied heavily on a rookie and an aging Nick Chubb. Montgomery brings a gritty, punishing running style that will instantly balance C.J. Stroud’s passing attack. The Lions shed Montgomery’s contract and clear a massive workload for Jahmyr Gibbs.
The frenzy actually started in late February when the New York Jets and Tennessee Titans pulled off a true rarity. New York sent edge rusher Jermaine Johnson II to Tennessee for massive nose tackle T’Vondre Sweat.
Johnson reunites with his former coach Robert Saleh in Tennessee, looking to bounce back from his 2024 Achilles injury. Meanwhile, the Jets gain a 366-pound run-stuffer in Sweat, who ranked as a top-five interior defender against the run in 2025. New York clears roughly $11 million in cap space, a crucial margin for their continued rebuild.
These early moves drastically alter the AFC and NFC power structures. The Rams have positioned themselves as immediate threats to the reigning champion Seattle Seahawks. By solidifying the secondary, Los Angeles forces opposing offenses into a brutal choice: test McDuffie or deal with their fierce defensive front.
In the AFC, the Bills just placed themselves firmly back into the elite tier. Josh Allen finally has a receiver who can consistently beat man coverage on third down, putting immense pressure on rival defensive coordinators. The Chiefs, sitting on a mountain of draft picks, are preparing to reload their roster with cheap, young talent to keep the Mahomes dynasty alive. As free agency officially kicks off next week, expect the remaining contenders to make desperate counter-moves.
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