
A February report indicated neither Jaylen Waddle nor De’Von Achane were available, deeming both core players in Miami. The Dolphins have since moved Waddle, sending the 1,000-yard wide receiver to the Broncos for a package headlined by a first-round pick. Teams are naturally wondering if the rebuilding team’s stance has changed on Achane.
As of mid-March, it has not. The Dolphins are informing interested teams the fourth-year running back is not available, ESPN’s Adam Schefter notes. One season remains on Achane’s rookie contract, and after the team stripped Malik Willis of his top pass catcher, the new QB will be expected to have the speedy running back complementing him.
Achane, 24, is due a $5.68MM base salary in the final year of a third-round rookie deal. The staffers that brought the Texas A&M alum to Miami — Chris Grier, Mike McDaniel — are gone, and the Dolphins have separated from their Waddle-Tua Tagovailoa–Tyreek Hill troika this offseason. The team also cut Bradley Chubb and traded Minkah Fitzpatrick for a second time. With a second rebuild in seven years in the works, Miami probably will not slam the door on dealing Achane — a valuable piece due to his age and sprinter speed — but it would seemingly take a strong return for a player profiling as an extension candidate.
Before the Dolphins brought in Jeff Hafley and Jon-Eric Sullivan, Achane made it known he was seeking an offseason extension. This year could see pivotal updates on the running back market, with Bijan Robinson and Jahmyr Gibbs now extension-eligible. Both the Falcons and Lions can buy more time — if they choose to — by exercising the former first-rounders’ fifth-year options, pushing their rookie contracts through 2027. The Dolphins have no such luxury, with Achane a former third-round pick.
Even with a new Miami regime in town, the team needs to pay someone to play alongside Willis. Placeholder options (Tutu Atwell, Jalen Tolbert) are positioned at receiver, with the injury-prone Greg Dulcich at tight end. Achane represents the Dolphins’ clear centerpiece on offense.
Sullivan targeted summer extension talks with Achane and select others. Considering the players the Dolphins have dealt, not many extension candidates are on this roster. After finishing the 2024 season with 1,499 scrimmage yards and 12 touchdowns, Achane followed it up with a 1,838-yard, 12-TD 2025. While the latter effort was obscured by Tagovailoa’s descent and steady rumors of staff upheaval, the Dolphins will hope to rely on him — potentially after a big-ticket payday — as Hafley’s HC tenure starts.
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