With no games on Tuesday, May 19, the NFL day turns to the league calendar and owner-level decisions. Readers are walking into a quiet on-field window in the offseason, with attention shifting to scheduling checkpoints, hosting votes and the restored supplemental draft process.
ON THE SLATE
There are no NFL games scheduled for Tuesday, and no kickoff times, venues or broadcasts to track. In that kind of offseason pocket, the practical agenda shifts to league meetings, front-office preparation and the next administrative markers on the calendar. Clubs remain in the part of the spring where roster evaluation, travel planning and event logistics can carry as much relevance as anything on the field. For readers, that makes today less about a scoreboard and more about what is moving behind the scenes: where future tentpole events will land, how teams and prospects respond to the supplemental draft timeline, and what formal decisions may come out of the league’s spring gathering.
LOOKING AHEAD
Wednesday’s slate is also clear, with no confirmed games on the NFL calendar. That leaves the next meaningful dates outside game action, beginning with outcomes from this week’s owner meetings and then the newly restored supplemental draft process, which now carries a June 22 paperwork deadline before a late-July selection window. In the short term, the wait is about league business rather than competition. The more immediate value for readers is tracking which decisions become official and how those rulings shape the summer runway toward training camp and the broader preseason build.
FROM THE WIRE
Three developments have defined the last 36 hours. The league has restored the supplemental draft to its calendar, setting a June 22 deadline for paperwork and a late-July selection window, with Brendan Sorsby’s decision looming over that process. Separately, Minneapolis is in line to host the 2028 NFL Draft as owners prepare to vote at the spring meeting, a move that would place another major league event with the Vikings as local partners. Nashville is also positioned for a decision, with owners expected to vote on awarding Super Bowl LXIV in February 2030 to the city, which would give Nashville its first turn as Super Bowl host.
The next major checkpoint is the spring meeting vote slate, followed by the June 22 supplemental draft deadline.