OTAs and minicamps are not full football, but they are still the first honest sorting mechanism of the offseason. Teams move from meetings and conditioning into on-field teaching, then into non-contact team periods where coaches can finally compare timing, communication, and assignment discipline. That is why position battles start to take shape here, even if they are not fully decided until August. The best way to watch spring football is not to chase highlight clips. It is to track where teams still have real jobs available. Source
What they can tell us
What they cannot tell us
With that in mind, these are the most important position battles to monitor before training camp opens. Source
The Titans may have improved at wide receiver, but the interior offensive line still looks unsettled. ESPN’s post-draft reporting identified center and right guard as live competitions involving Austin Schlottmann, Jackson Slater, Cordell Volson, Fernando Carmona, and Pat Coogan. That matters because Brian Daboll’s offense can only get to its timing throws and play-action layers if the middle of the pocket stays clean. Source
This battle also has a trickle-down effect on fantasy and rookie development. A stable interior helps Cam Ward, helps the run game, and helps Carnell Tate settle in faster. If one player separates early, Tennessee’s offense becomes easier to trust. If the competition drags into August, the whole unit remains volatile.
San Francisco did not fully solve the left guard issue in the draft, and ESPN expects that competition to linger. The names to know are Connor Colby, Robert Jones, Carver Willis, and Enrique Cruz Jr. That sounds like a mid-level story until you remember how much the 49ers ask from interior linemen in a movement-heavy offense. Source
This one matters because coaches usually reveal their confidence level through rotation patterns. If one player starts taking the bulk of first-team work during team periods, that is useful information. If the shuffling never stops, the 49ers are still searching rather than refining.
Not every offensive line battle gets national attention, but Arizona’s should. ESPN flagged the Cardinals’ starting right tackle job as a three-man race involving Elijah Wilkinson, Chase Bisontis, and Jayden Williams. That matters because the Cardinals already made running back a major offseason investment area, and any ground-game optimism starts with edge blocking. Source
A clean winner would bring structure to the offense. A messy battle would keep the right side of the line under the microscope all summer. That is exactly the kind of spring story that becomes a September problem if nobody claims it.
Carolina’s left tackle picture is one of the more important injury-related battles in the league. ESPN reported that rookie Monroe Freeling and veteran Rasheed Walker could compete for the Week 1 job while Ikem Ekwonu recovers. That puts a premium on every spring rep because blindside jobs are not handed out casually. Source
For a young offense, this is more than a roster note. It affects pass protection, play-calling comfort, and how aggressively Carolina can push the ball downfield. If Freeling looks ready quickly, it changes the developmental arc of the whole offense.
Cornerback battles can look noisy in the spring because there is no live tackling, but Tampa Bay’s outside competition still matters. ESPN identified Jacob Parrish, Zyon McCollum, and Benjamin Morrison as key names in that race. When a defense asks corners to hold up outside, technique and trust become the first things coaches evaluate, even before the pads come on. Source
This battle belongs high on the list because the Buccaneers are trying to stay competitive, not rebuild. That changes the standard. The winner has to be assignment-sound early, not just physically gifted.
ESPN’s roster-holes analysis pointed to a real competition in Chicago between veteran Kalif Raymond and rookie Zavion Thomas for the WR3 role. That may sound smaller than a left tackle battle, but it can shape the weekly rhythm of the offense. Slot reps are where quarterbacks build easy completions and coordinators build sequencing.
If Thomas forces his way onto the field quickly, the Bears get more speed and more development upside. If Raymond holds the job, the coaching staff is choosing reliability. Either outcome tells us something important about what Chicago wants its offense to look like.
The Bills lost a piece up front and still seem to be sorting through the replacement plan. ESPN named Austin Corbett, Alec Anderson, and rookie Jude Bowry as credible competitors. For a contender, that makes this one of the most important quiet battles in the league.
The spring takeaway here is straightforward: if Buffalo identifies a winner early, that is a good sign for continuity. If it keeps rotating all three players deep into camp, the coaching staff may not love any of the options.
The best spring battles are not always the loudest ones. Quarterback dominates headlines, but offensive line jobs, slot roles, and cornerback spots often tell you more about how ready a team really is. The Titans, 49ers, Cardinals, Panthers, Buccaneers, Bears, and Bills all have positions that deserve real attention during OTAs and minicamps. Watch the rep distribution, not the highlight reel. That is where the real clues live.
Confirmed 2026 offseason data used here: official OTA/minicamp structure, post-draft roster questions, and named position battles reported by NFL.com and ESPN.
Analytical projections used here: the importance ranking and likely ripple effects of each battle are projections based on current roster construction.
Sources:
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