Updates on Jackson, Waller Highlight Dolphins' First Week 13 Injury Report
The Miami Dolphins’ first injury report for their Week 13 game against the New Orleans Saints dropped Wednesday, and it includes updates for a couple of players hoping to return to action this weekend.
Dolphins' First Week 13 Injury Report
The report is highlighted by Austin Jackson and Darren Waller being limited. Jackson hasn’t played since Week 1, but had his 21-day practice window opened before the team’s Week 11 game against the Commanders.
Waller last played against the Browns after suffering a pec injury, and he missed the team’s first three games with an injury as well.
Miami’s injury report also includes a slew of other players listed as “limited.” Jaylen Waddle (foot), Aaron Brewer (ankle/foot), Bradley Chubb (foot), Rasul Douglas (foot/ankle), and Benito Jones (ankle) were also listed as limited.
Chubb and Waddle weren’t seen participating during the open portions of practice on Monday. Chubb’s injury popped up late in the week before the team’s game against the Commanders. He played against Washington, but it’s clearly still bothering him.
Waddle’s injury is new. He wasn’t on the injury report before the game against Washington, and the team didn’t release any last week because it was on a bye.
Miami did get some players moving in the right direction, though. Dee Eskridge (shoulder), Matthew Judon (knee), and Ifeatu Melifonwu (thumb) were all listed as full participants Wednesday.
Eskridge hasn’t played since Week 9 against the Baltimore Ravens. He was listed as questionable against Washington but was ultimately inactive for the game.
Melifonwu was listed with a thumb and foot injury in Week 11 but did suit up against Washington, while Judon wasn’t on the report at all before popping up with the knee injury this week.
Saints’ First Week 13 Injury Report
The Saints’ injury report lists fewer names, but that small group is critical to the team’s offense. The top name is probably running back Alvin Kamara, who was the team’s only DNP as he recovers from a knee injury.
Kamara suffered an MCL sprain last week against the Atlanta Falcons, and it would be pretty surprising if he suited up against the Dolphins this week.
New Orleans had three players listed as limited: starting tackle Taliese Fuaga (ankle), star receiver Chris Olave (back), and depth running back Devin Neal (ankle).
Olave is the team’s best receiver, and Fuaga is one of its better offensive linemen. Combine that with Kamara’s absence, and you could argue the Saints would be missing the most important parts of their offense against the Dolphins.
Don’t overlook Neal’s potential absence, either. He hasn’t been overly productive this season, but he’s the primary backup for Kamara. If neither can play Sunday, Audric Estime is listed as the Saints’ third-string running back.
Estime hasn’t carried the ball a single time this season, so it would likely be an uphill climb for the Saints to run the ball with him.
Canucks: Is Quinn Hughes worth a $17 million salary?

Way back in 1970, it cost the original ownership of the Vancouver Canucks a $6 million expansion fee to get the franchise up and running. Now, some 55 years later, it could cost the team more than double that to keep their franchise player in the fold.
We’re talking, of course, about captain Quinn Hughes, upon whose future contract status everything seems to be riding on right now. Even the latest burst of ‘rebuild’ talk has been centred around a feeling that the
In the meantime, the Canucks still hold Hughes contractual rights for this season and the next, and should they hold onto him until July 1, 2026, they’ll be the first to be able to offer him his next contract. And, due to some changes in the new CBA, if they hold onto him for that long,
Changes to bonus structure also means that, prior to September 16, the Canucks will be able to offer Hughes the majority of his compensation via signing bonuses, whereas after September 16, signing bonuses are capped at 60% of a contract’s value.
In other words, the Canucks, if they choose to press the advantage, will be able to offer Hughes more term and far more of his money up front than anyone else will thereafter. That means they should be able to make Hughes the largest offer he receives, by far. And that’s especially true if they negotiate openly on salary on top of those aforementioned advantages, by which we mean handing Hughes a blank cheque and allowing him to name his price.
But what might that price be, and is Hughes for sure worth any cost it might entail to retain him? That’s what we’re here to ponder today.
The National Hockey League has seen some truly staggering contracts signed of late. Sure, the big
Auston Matthews set a new standard two years ago with a four-year, $13.25 million extension. That was bettered a year later by Leon Draisaitl’s eight-year, $14 million deal. We’ve put
But Draisaitl’s deal will be almost two years old by the time Hughes signs his next deal, and that means two years out of date. Other, less-impactful players have signed in the interim, and signed for as much or even more. We’re talking Jack Eichel (eight years, $13.5 million), we’re talking Kyle Connor (eight years, $12 million), but we’re especially talking Kirill Kaprizov (eight years, $17 million).
Kaprizov, with his 408 points in 336 NHL games as of this count, is a genuine superstar and easily the greatest player in Minnesota Wild franchise history. We’re not here to perform a referendum on his contract, even if it is very clearly a case of someone absolutely maximizing their value. But we are here to state that, of the two, Hughes is the more impactful player, essentially across the board. Hughes is a one-time Norris winner and three-time nominee, whereas Kaprizov has finished in seventh place for the Hart Trophy once. With all due respect, it’s not even close.
Which means that, if he wants it to be, $17 million is the new bar of compensation on Hughes’ next contract. Really, the comparable is obvious: Kaprizov named his price for the Wild to hang on to him, knowing how desperate they were to do so. This closely mirrors at least the context of Hughes’ upcoming situation with the Canucks.
And there will be precious few other comparables to choose from. Right now the defender with the highest cap hit in the league is Erik Karlsson at $11.5 million, a number that Hughes should clearly eclipse. After that, it’s an open question – unless, of course, Cale Makar signs his own extension prior to Hughes, at which point he becomes the obvious standard. Those two are so far ahead of the rest of the pack of league defenders so as to be each other’s only real mutual comparable.
Even then, however, there’s really nothing to prevent Hughes from pointing at Kaprizov and saying, “Me too.” We don’t know that that’s necessarily going to happen, but it’s enough of a possibility to make it worth wondering: Is Hughes worth $17 million a year?
The shortest and simplest answer is probably that, if anyone is worth that, it’s Hughes. He’s currently leading the NHL in average ice-time at a staggering 26:54 a game, and doing his absolute best to hold his franchise up from total collapse as he does so. He’s this franchise’s all-time MVP in more ways than one.
A $17 million AAV extension, signed on July 1, 2026, would cover Hughes from ages 28 to 35, which isn’t exactly ‘prime,’ but is at least prime-adjacent. When signed, it would represent 14.9% of the projected cap for the eventual 2027-28 season, which is when the contract would take effect.
And when you put it in those percentage-based terms, it becomes tough to argue against. That 14.9% of the cap is barely more than the 13.2% that was represented by Elias Pettersson’s much-maligned $11.6 million AAV extension when it took effect as of last season. Are we really going to say that Hughes isn’t worth 1.7% more of the cap than Pettersson? Not likely.
Three players in NHL history have already had cap hits worth 15% or more of the total cap, those being McDavid, Matthews, and Nathan MacKinnon. When Kaprizov’s kicks in next year, it will be at 16.35%, setting a new standard.
At the end of the day, if anyone at all is worth such a large chunk of the cap, it’s difficult to say that Hughes is not one such player. Would a $17 million cap hit be difficult to navigate and construct the rest of a roster around? Sure, probably. Would it make it harder to build a winner? Almost certainly.
But if we’re talking just a pure, individual basis, then, yes, Quinn Hughes is worth $17 million a season, and will continue to be in seven months’ time when he actually becomes extension eligible. An eight-year contract at a $17 million cap hit equals a total value of $136 million, which will be far more than anyone else is ever able to offer Hughes, barring a pre-signing trade. From the Canucks’ perspective, that’s worth the price to retain their franchise player. Is it enough to make it worth that player’s while to stick around?
That will have to be waited upon and seen.