It has been two months since the Seattle Seahawks hoisted their second Lombardi Trophy in Super Bowl 60, but the NFL never truly sleeps. While the September 9th kickoff, a rare Wednesday start to the season, still feels like a distant light on the horizon, the 2026 NFL Draft is now a mere two weeks away.
The free agency frenzy has already reshaped the league’s landscape, but the real fireworks are expected on draft night. While the consensus suggests Fernando Mendoza is virtually a lock for the Las Vegas Raiders at number one overall, the true chaos begins immediately after. Between rumored trade-ups and teams desperate to land a franchise cornerstone, the next fourteen days will be a whirlwind of smoke screens and high-stakes scouting.
The $50 Million Back: Jeremiyah Love and the RB Market Correction
Among the names generating the most “war room” buzz is Notre Dame standout Jeremiyah Love. A Heisman finalist and a human highlight reel, Love is arguably the most polished offensive weapon in the 2026 class. His statistical output last season was nothing short of legendary: 1,372 rushing yards at a blistering 6.9 average, paired with 21 total touchdowns to shatter the Notre Dame single-season record.
For teams holding top-five picks, the dilemma is real: do you address a traditional “premium” position, or do you take the best football player on the board? The Arizona Cardinals (#3), Tennessee Titans (#4), and New York Giants (#5) are all squarely in the mix. If Love is selected in that 3-5 range, he is projected to sign a four-year rookie contract valued between $45 million and $50 million.
This would instantly make him the highest-paid running back in the league by total contract value, leapfrogging the $48M marks held by Travis Etienne Jr. and Josh Jacobs, and moving ahead of James Cook ($46M). If he somehow slides past the Washington Commanders at #7, it would be the biggest shock of the night.
Draft Economics: Why Every Slot Matters in the 2026 Class
For the modern NFL prospect, draft position isn’t just about prestige-it’s about the massive financial chasm between being a top-five lock and a late-round selection. According to Spotrac projections, the first overall pick in 2026 will command a total contract value of roughly $55 million. In stark contrast, the player taken at 32nd overall will see that number plummet to just over $16 million.
This is why the Jeremiyah Love sweepstakes is so fascinating. If Love secures a $50M deal as a rookie, it represents a significant market correction for the running back position, proving that generational talent can still command elite-tier money regardless of the “running backs don’t matter” narrative.
For the fans, this adds a layer of tension to every pick. As Fernando Mendoza prepares to head to the desert, the real story for the “business of football” junkies is whether Love can force a team to break the bank for a backfield superstar.









