The Los Angeles Chargers have been looking for a chance to get aggressive, and a possible Denzel Ward trade checks that box in a big way.
With the Cleveland Browns moving Myles Garrett, the door appears open for more moves, and Ward fits the kind of premium defensive upgrade the Chargers could use as they try to settle in under a new coordinator. The idea is continuity, sure, but that doesn’t mean the front office should ignore a chance to land a difference-maker.
There are real complications here. Ward has unusual void years attached to his deal, and Cleveland would have to deal with accelerated dead cap if it moved him. That alone could make the Browns pause, even before getting into the fact that he’s still a strong player at a tough position to replace.
Still, if the price is close to what one projection suggests, the Chargers ought to be seriously interested.
CBS Sports’ Garrett Podell listed Ward among five superstars who could still be traded this summer and pegged the return at a fourth-round pick. As Podell put it: "Teams will be stingy with their 2027 draft picks ahead of a draft class everyone and their grandma expects to be full of stars and value selections. Plus at 29 years old, Ward plays a position that typically isn't known for players aging all that well into their 30s."
A fourth-rounder is not nothing, but it’s also not the kind of price that should scare off a team in the Chargers’ position. Yes, the 2027 class may end up loaded, even if people say that every year.
And yes, Los Angeles has done fine finding useful players in the middle rounds. But this is the tradeoff: a draft swing versus a proven cornerback who can raise the ceiling of the secondary right now.
That matters even more with the Chargers building around Justin Herbert’s offense and trying to keep the roster pointed toward the present. Ward would come with a $30.8 million cap hit in 2026, plus the possibility of a post-trade extension. That is not cheap, but the Chargers have been saving cap space for exactly this kind of move.
The current cornerback group has some encouraging pieces. Tarheeb Still and Cam Hart have flashed as later-round finds, Donte Jackson gave them a breakout after arriving in free agency, and Nikko Reed is another young name worth developing. But adding Ward to a defense that already has Derwin James would be a different level of move.
For a fourth-round pick, it would be the kind of win-now swing that makes plenty of sense without feeling like a franchise-breaking gamble.
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