Free Agency Frenzy: These 8 Players Could Make or Break Your Team’s Cap
The 2026 NFL free agency market is looming, and with teams like the Titans and Raiders swimming in cap space, the temptation to splash cash is massive. But beware—one bad overpay and you’re in cap hell for years. Kevin Patra spotlights eight players who could land deals way out of line with their true value. Some scream overpriced trap, others scream bargain steal. Which ones will spark bidding wars… and which will haunt GMs?
Overpriced Traps: Don’t Get Fooled!
- Malik Willis (QB, Packers): Small-sample magic in Green Bay (85.7% completion, 3 TDs) has desperate teams dreaming of upside. But with a barren QB market, one team might hand him starter guarantees. Risky gamble on limited starts—could be the next big QB bust regret.
- Jamel Dean (CB, Bucs): Career year with 3 INTs and a pay-cut comeback. Turning 30, injury history screams caution. Bidding war incoming, but long-term guarantees could turn ugly fast as play declines.
- David Edwards (OG, Bills): Rock-solid 2025 boosted Buffalo’s run game. But 27 pressures allowed? Solid, not elite. Expecting Thuney-level money would be a massive overpay for a good-not-great guard.
- Kyle Pitts (TE, Falcons): Late-season explosion (469 yards, 4 TDs) revives hope for the former No. 4 pick. But inconsistency and drops plague him. Wrong system, and that big contract becomes an albatross.
Under-the-Radar Steals: Smart Teams Pounce Here
- Kenneth Gainwell (RB, Steelers): Dual-threat beast—537 rush yards, 486 receiving. Deep RB class might bury him, leading to a bargain for a proven receiving back.
- Nakobe Dean (LB, Eagles): Athletic playmaker with 7.5 sacks. Injury woes (21 games missed recently) scare teams off big deals—perfect for a prove-it steal.
- Leo Chenal (LB, Chiefs): Flashed big-time at 25 but never full-time. Untapped upside in expanded role could deliver massive ROI on a modest pact.
- Arnold Ebiketie (Edge, Falcons): 16.5 career sacks, explosive 16.4% pressure rate. Depth chart burial might push him out cheap—pass-rush needy teams get a steal.
These misvaluations could define the 2026 offseason. One team’s panic overpay is another’s golden opportunity. Who wins and who loses when the money starts flying?









