Cardinals Suddenly Face An Uncomfortable Question About A Franchise Veteran

As NFL teams gear up for the 2026 season, each NFC team has a potential trade candidate poised to shape the roster adjustments during training camp.

The trade market may be quiet on paper, but once training camps open, the phone lines usually start buzzing. Roster cuts get real, injuries hit, and teams begin figuring out who actually fits when the pads come on. That’s when a few NFC names could move from speculation to serious conversations.

In the NFC, a handful of veterans stand out as the most obvious candidates if a team decides to make a deal before the season gets rolling.

Arizona’s Budda Baker is one of the clearest possibilities. The Cardinals may not be eager to move him, but the financial angle is hard to ignore: a trade before the season could clear more than $15 million in cap space.

For a team entering a rebuilding year, that kind of savings plus a decent draft pick would at least be worth considering. Arizona already has Dadrian Taylor-Demerson at one safety spot and added Andrew Wingard in free agency, so there are replacement options in place.

Baker has been a tackling machine over the last two seasons, piling up 284 total tackles, and he has made seven straight Pro Bowls. Still, he has just one interception over the past three seasons and is 30 years old, so if the right offer lands, the Cardinals could be tempted.

Kayvon Thibodeaux is another name that keeps coming up in New York. The Giants have loaded up on pass rushers, using their top pick last year on Abdul Carter and their top pick this year on Arvell Reese, while Brian Burns already gives them an established edge presence.

That doesn’t make Thibodeaux useless, but it does make his fit a little murkier, especially with a contract year ahead and the Giants clearly investing heavily at the position. He’s only 25, which only adds to the intrigue for teams looking for help off the edge.

Washington’s Daron Payne sits in a different spot. The Commanders probably aren’t eager to move one of their best defensive linemen after giving up more yards than any other NFL team last season.

But the contract situation matters. Payne is entering the final year of his deal, and Washington could free up more than $17 million by dealing him.

If the team doesn’t want to commit long term, there’s a logic to getting value now instead of waiting. Dean Jones of Riggo's Rag believes Payne only gets moved if general manager Adam Peters receives an offer he can’t turn down, and that seems to be the right read.

Even so, if the Commanders stumble and teams start calling, his name is one to watch.

Then there’s Alvin Kamara in New Orleans, the NFC running back who has drawn the most trade chatter this offseason. The Saints signed Travis Etienne in free agency, and with Kamara carrying a $10.45 million cap hit, he suddenly looks a bit redundant.

New Orleans also has Kendre Miller, Devin Neal, Audric Estimé, and former Vikings back Ty Chandler in the mix, which only adds to the congestion. Kamara doesn’t appear to have much trade value, which helps explain why he’s still there, and he hasn’t signaled any desire to leave.

But if injuries start piling up at running back during camp and preseason, the Saints should expect their share of calls.

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