The Miami Dolphins are not trading Pro Bowl running back De’Von Achane this offseason, multiple teams have been told, despite the franchise clearing out multiple star salaries. Achane’s elite 2025 production and affordable contract make him the rare cornerstone a rebuilding team cannot afford to move.
The Miami Dolphins’ offseason has been defined by shockwaves. The releases of franchise icons Tua Tagovailoa and Tyreek Hill, coupled with the trade of Jaylen Waddle, signaled a full teardown. New head coach Jeff Hafley and general manager Jon-Eric Sullivan, both imports from the Green Bay Packers’ front office, inherited a roster purge and a 7-10 record from 2025.
Amid this fire sale, one question burned among fanatics and rival executives: Is explosive young running back De’Von Achane next? At 24 years old with one year remaining on his rookie contract, he represents a valuable asset on a cheap deal. Adam Schefter of ESPN reported that teams inquiring about a trade “have been told that he is not available,” a definitive statement from the Dolphins’ front office.
The Statistical Case for Achane’s Untouchable Status
This isn’t sentimentality; it’s cold, hard asset evaluation. Achane’s 2025 season was historically great, placing him among the NFL’s elite at his position.
- Rushing Dominance: 1,350 yards on 238 carries (5.7 yards per carry) and 8 touchdowns, ranking fifth league-wide in rushing yards.
- Passing Game Threat: 67 receptions for 488 yards (7.3 yards per reception) and 4 receiving touchdowns.
- Pro Bowl Pedigree: His selection to the Pro Bowl is not just a honor; it’s a market indicator of his top-10 value at running back.
These numbers, verified by his ESPN player profile, paint a picture of a complete, game-changing back. Trading a player of this caliber entering his prime, for likely a mid-round draft pick, would be a catastrophic mismanagement of assets for any team, let alone one trying to rebuild.
Rebuild Logic vs. Asset Value: Why This Makes Sense
The Dolphins’ path forward is murky after losing their offensive stars. Signing quarterback Malik Willis to a three-year deal suggests a plan to develop a low-cost, high-upside quarterback. In this scenario, having a cheap, superstar running back on his final rookie deal is a strategic dream.
Achane’s 2026 salary is a bargain for a player of his production. The Dolphins can either:
- Extend him long-term at a reasonable rate after this season, locking in a building block.
- Play the franchise tag in 2027 if an extension isn’t reached, gaining two more years of control.
- Let him walk in free agency after 2026 only if they receive a transformative trade offer—a scenario leagues away from current reports.
Option 3 is currently off the table. The message from Schefter’s report is clear: the Dolphins’ asking price would be a king’s ransom, likely a first-round pick plus additional assets, which no team has been willing to meet.
The Fan “What-If”: A Future Trade Still Possible?
Skeptics argue that with the team clearly in a down cycle, why not maximize a tradeable asset now? The counterargument is timing. The Dolphins hold all the leverage with one year of cheap control. If they have a disastrous 2026 season, Achane’s value could plummet due to team performance. By keeping him, they maintain the possibility of a contender’s trade package after a strong individual season, not before.
Furthermore, moving Achane would signal to remaining players and future free agents that Miami is a full rebuild, willing to jettison any talent. Retaining him serves as a token of competence—a signal that even in a down year, the organization recognizes and keeps true talent. This is crucial for attracting new leadership and players in the coming years.
The Bottom Line: Achane is Dolphins’ Rebuild Centerpiece
The Dolphins are gutting the roster but are drawing a bright line at De’Von Achane. This decision blends financial prudence, roster construction, and long-term brand management. His contract is a perfect fit for a rebuilding team: cheap, controllable, and elite. Trading him now would replace a known superstar for unknown draft capital, a move that rarely benefits teams in Miami’s position.
The “trade block” noise was a natural rumor given the surrounding cuts. The swift denial from teams that have called, as reported by ESPN, silences that chatter. The Dolphins’ new regime understands asset valuation. Achane is not a salary dump; he is the prototype of a player you build around during a transition. The immediate future of Dolphins football will be powered by the dynamic running back they wisely decided to keep.
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