Cowboys' George Pickens joins Eagles' AJ Brown and Steelers' Aaron Rodgers atop the NFL's top unfinished business
Cowboys' George Pickens joins Eagles' AJ Brown and Steelers' Aaron Rodgers atop the NFL's top unfinished business
Charles RobinsonMon, April 27, 2026 at 10:57 PM UTC
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Move over, A.J. Brown and Aaron Rodgers. George Pickens has just joined you atop the NFLās pile of unfinished offseason business.
With the rest of the league readying to shore up remaining roster holes following last weekās draft, Pickens news barged into the cycle on Monday ā thanks to multiple reports that he has not signed his franchise tag. This despite multiple prior reports heading into the first day of the draft, which indicated that the Dallas Cowboys wideout intended to sign.
That news initially sent shockwaves through the league on Thursday, as Pickens signing the one-year deal would make him eligible for any potential trades during ā and after ā the draft. ESPNās Adam Schefter reported on a Monday appearance on āThe Pat McAfee Showā that Pickens wanted a long-term contract or a trade. However, a video featuring those comments from the ESPN insider was later taken down from the showās X account, and Schefter later made an additional appearance reporting that Pickensā franchise tag remained unsigned.
The confusion ā and Pickensā lack of signing the tag ā potentially sets up another roller coaster summer for the Cowboys, who spent last offseason grappling with contract extension and trade reports surrounding star pass rusher Micah Parsons. Parsons and Pickens share the same agent, David Mulugheta of Athletes First. Parsons was ultimately traded to the Green Bay Packers prior to the season, after rounds of public jousting between the Cowboys and their edge rusher.
Now Pickensā contract situation will come into acute focus over the next several weeks and months. He has until July 15 to negotiate a long-term deal with the Cowboys. After that point, he will have to play out the 2026 season on a one-year fully-guaranteed deal for $27.3 million. Nearly two weeks ago, Cowboys executive vice president Stephen Jones informed Mulugheta that the team would not be doing a long-term extension with Pickens this offseason. Until Pickens signs the franchise tag, Dallas will not have the ability to fine him for missing mandatory activities ā effectively giving Pickens the ability to hold out as long as 10 weeks into the regular season.
The first significant marker for the Cowboys and Pickens is now the full-squad mandatory minicamp that is scheduled for June 16-18. As of now, it appears Dallas has no plans to trade Pickens ā but that was the belief about trading Parsons at this time last year. The timeline of happens next and when (or if) Pickens signs his tag is now in his hands.
Of course, heās not the only headlining player that is going to draw a spotlight heading toward the June mandatory camps. Brown is still in a holding pattern with the Philadelphia Eagles as he awaits an anticipated trade to the New England Patriots, while the Pittsburgh Steelers are still waiting on word from quarterback Aaron Rodgers about his plans for the 2026 season.
What we know about those two situations ā¦
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A.J. Brown and the Philadelphia Eagles
Any trade of Brown has been on hold until after June 1, when the Eagles can split his $43.4 million salary cap hit over the next two seasons, rather than taking the full accelerated hit on the 2026 books. That has put Brownās availability on a back burner for the entirety of this offseason.
However, the Eaglesā pursuit of a package containing a first-round pick in exchange for Brown had not changed as recently as last week, according to several league sources that spoke to Yahoo Sports about Philadelphiaās asking price. With the New England Patriots believed to be the Eaglesā chosen trade partner, that demand of a first-round pick complicates a deal. With the 2027 draft expected to yield a deep and talented class of prospects, many franchises have balked at giving up 2027 draft capital in trades.
However, where it concerns Brown, thereās a possibility the Eagles would be open to pushing first-round draft compensation back one year, giving the Patriots the flexibility to deal a 2028 first rather than a choice in 2027. As of now, itās believed a deal is still on track for a resolution in June.
Aaron Rodgers and the Pittsburgh Steelers
The Steelersā offseason at quarterback seems to following last yearās design, which was a sustained preparation to sign Rodgers and surround him with a āwin nowā team. With that in mind, Pittsburgh didnāt address the quarterback room until the sixth round of the 2025 draft ā clearly keeping the teamās starting job open for Rodgers.
Last weekās draft featured much of the same under new head coach Mike McCarthy, as the Steelers waited until the middle of the third round to select Penn State quarterback Drew Allar. That shaped up Pittsburghās quarterback depth chart into the trio of Allar, second-year player Will Howard and veteran Mason Rudolph. Which once again leaves a door wide open for Rodgers, who has kept a low profile for most of this offseason.
The key date here? The Steelersā mandatory veteran minicamp is slated for June 2-4. While Pittsburgh hasnāt set any hard deadlines publicly, itās believed the coaching staff would like to have Rodgers in the fold by that camp ā if he is ultimately planning to continue his career for another season. Interestingly, his former coach Mike Tomlin opined about Rodgersā future in his new job as an analyst for NBC, predicting the veteran quarterback would indeed pay for the Steelers in 2026.
āMan, if youāve got a gun to my head, Iād say itās AR ā Aaron,ā Tomlin said of the Steelersā starting QB next season. āI just think, being around him for the 12 months Iām around him, heās got a love affair with the game of football. And not only the game, but the process.
āI think he has an addiction to that. And thereās only one way to feed it. And certainly, he is still capable and in really good shape. I think at the end of the day, heāll play football.ā
Source: āAOL Sportsā