The NFL’s 2024 mandatory minicamps kicked into full gear on Tuesday, with the 49ers, Bears, Colts, Cowboys, Dolphins, Eagles, Lions, Texans, Titans and Vikings all scheduled for spring session work this week. ESPN’s team of NFL reporters could be found at each location, providing information on position battles, notable appearances from new faces, compelling quotes from coaches and players and updates on injuries and holdout situations.
We will have updates every day of camp to keep you informed on all the latest. Here’s what you need to know from camps across the league:
Top NFL news of the day
Lamb, who is seeking a contract extension, is not expected to attend the team’s mandatory minicamp that opened Tuesday, a source told ESPN’s Adam Schefter. Lamb also has not attended the team’s OTAs, which are voluntary. He will be subject to fines by missing the team’s minicamp, however. Lamb is set to play this season on the fifth-year option in his rookie contract, worth $17.991 million fully guaranteed. He will be an unrestricted free agent after this season without an extension.
Sources: 49ers give Christian McCaffrey 2-year, $38M extension
McCaffrey, the NFL’s reigning Offensive Player of the Year, once again has reset the running back market, signing a two-year extension with the San Francisco 49ers, averaging $19 million per year, sources told ESPN’s Adam Schefter on Tuesday. McCaffrey will receive an additional $8 million over what he was scheduled to make in the first two years while adding $24 million in guarantees. The deal was negotiated by WME Football.
Tagovailoa not concerned yet about contract
Dolphins quarterback Tua Tagovailoa said he’s confident he and the team will reach an extension before the start of the regular season, although the process has taken longer than expected.
Speaking to the media after the Dolphins’ first day of mandatory minicamp Tuesday, a noticeably terse Tagovailoa said he has taken note of the recent contracts other NFL quarterbacks have received, although he stopped short of admitting concern about any offers the team has made.
What our NFL Nation reporters saw today
The last team with a pair of players with 1,000 rushing yards in a single season, neither of which was a QB, was the Carolina Panthers in 2009 with Jonathan Stewart and DeAngelo Williams. However, Detroit Lions duo Jahmyr Gibbs (945) and David Montgomery (1,015) were close last year as they look to hit another notch this upcoming season. Lions RBs coach Scottie Montgomery feels that the tape shows that this tandem can reach another gear as they’re striving to go from good to great, while cleaning up areas in the running and passing game. “I definitely think what makes us like peanut butter and jelly and I guess what makes us work is we’re so different, but we’re very good in our own way,” Montgomery said at Tuesday’s minicamp. “It’s hard for teams to prepare for us, but we’ve got high expectations for ourselves and both of us together, we didn’t think that was good enough. So, we want to be better this year and we will.” — Eric Woodyard
Former All-Pro cornerback James Bradberry IV appears to be in line for a position switch. Coach Nick Sirianni revealed before the start of Tuesday’s practice that Bradberry would see some time at safety starting in minicamp. “You’ve seen a lot of good corners in this league — the first guy that comes to my mind is Chales Woodson. He went from being an elite corner to an elite nickel to an elite safety. So I’m excited about that for James — that he’s able to do more,” Sirianni said. Bradberry, 30, had one of his best seasons as a pro in 2022 but fell off significantly last season. The Eagles drafted corners Quinyon Mitchell and Cooper DeJean in the first two rounds of April’s draft to help a secondary that finished second-to-last in passing yards and passing touchdowns allowed. This gives Bradberry an opportunity to find a new role. Bradberry didn’t have a chance to work at safety Tuesday, as an injury early in the session left him sidelined. — Tim McManus
The Titans had some new faces at gunner during special teams period when former first-round picks Caleb Farley and Treylon Burks lined up at the position. Injuries have kept Farley from being in the lineup over the last year and a half. The addition of veteran free agent Chidobe Awuzie and trade for L’Jarius Sneed will keep Farley out of the starting lineup. Burks was relegated to a backup role after the Titans signed free-agent receivers Calvin Ridley and Tyler Boyd. They’ll have to find a new role if they plan to suit up on Sundays. “If you’re not one of the top two or three guys, you’re going to have to contribute on [special] teams,” coach Brain Callahan said. “If you’re trying to get a hat on game day and be one of the 46 active, you got to play a role on special teams, especially as a skill player.” –Turron Davenport