Commanders fans have been waiting a long time for a real kicking competition, and this summer finally looks like it might deliver one.
Washington heads into training camp with plenty to sort out after a strong offseason program, and head coach Dan Quinn and general manager Adam Peters have already reshaped the roster through free agency and the 2026 NFL Draft. But the most interesting fight might be the one between the uprights.
For years, the Commanders have cycled through kicking options without finding much peace. Peters took a swing on Matt Gay around this time last year, but that move didn’t last.
Gay was cut during the season after a rough stretch, and Washington turned to Jake Moody, claiming him off the Chicago Bears practice squad in a move meant to steady the position. The results were uneven, but Moody showed enough for the Commanders to bring him back on a one-year deal.
That still didn’t settle things for the fan base. Many expected Moody to have the job handed to him, but Peters added another name to the mix in Drew Stevens, who signed as an undrafted free agent. Washington moved fast when other teams showed interest, and the Iowa kicker quickly made his presence felt.
Stevens brings accuracy, leg strength and plenty of confidence, and he has already put pressure on Moody. Quinn has said the competition will run all the way through the preseason before a winner is chosen, and right now it looks like a true toss-up. Moody isn’t going quietly, though, and he’s clearly treating this like a job he still intends to keep.
That’s what makes this battle so important. The Commanders need stability at kicker, and both players have something to prove.
Moody has the experience. Stevens is the younger option with a chance to become part of the team’s long-term plans.
There’s also a little natural pull toward Stevens, simply because he’s the new face in the room. But if he wants to land on the 53-man roster, he’s going to have to win it outright.
And Moody, sitting at a career crossroads, is hardly the kind of veteran who will make that easy. If he raises the level in camp, Stevens will have to answer every time.
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That kind of surplus usually forces a team to make a choice before final cuts, whether it means moving a player, keeping him as insurance, or risking a release. Washington also has other backs competing for the same limited room, so the next few weeks could reveal whether the Commanders see Ford as a useful depth piece or as an asset they can turn into something else before the roster gets trimmed. [Read more 🡒]
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Commanders Fans Already Feared How This Tyler Biadasz Move Could Age
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For Washington, the center spot now shifts to Nick Allegretti and rookie Matt Gulbin, a combination that puts the focus squarely on how the line holds up without the veteran presence Biadasz provided. If he keeps trending up with the Chargers, the conversation around the Commanders choice to move on from him is only going to get louder, especially with the position still in the middle of its own reset. [Read more 🡒]
